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In reply to the discussion: North Korea's new warship sinks at launch in front of Kim Jong-un [View all]progree
(12,112 posts)39. Wow! Thanks for picture. More from CNN
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/kim-jong-un-s-fury-after-watching-north-korea-s-new-navy-destroyer-crippled-in-botched-launch/ar-AA1Ffq5E
Engines, who needs those? That's what tug boats are for
The hosting website is msn.com, but the article is from/by CNN
The official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said a malfunction in the launch mechanism caused the stern of the as-yet unnamed 5,000-ton destroyer to slide prematurely into the water, crushing parts of the hull and leaving the bow stranded on the shipway.
. . . If the ship does not move together, the stresses will tear the hull apart, Sal Mercogliano, a professor at Campbell University in North Carolina and a maritime expert, told CNN.
Naval analyst Carl Schuster in Hawaii, after reviewing the KCNA account, said he thinks the stresses would warp the hull, induce cracks and (possibly) snap the keel depending on where the greatest stress falls.
Retired South Korean Adm. Kim Duk-ki told CNN that North Korea appeared to lack the necessary infrastructure a dry dock to launch a 5,000-ton destroyer, let alone recover and repair it. A dry dock is a basin facility that can be filled with water to float a ship or drain out to build or repair one. Dry dock is an expensive facility, and North Korea probably doesnt have one
... Mercogliano, the US professor, said its unclear whether Pyongyangs new warships even have engines as state media has provided no images of them underway. ((previous sentences were about NK's rushing the new warships' construction and launches for prestige purposes, and that this launch was an example of what can happen when things are rushed -Progree))
. . . If the ship does not move together, the stresses will tear the hull apart, Sal Mercogliano, a professor at Campbell University in North Carolina and a maritime expert, told CNN.
Naval analyst Carl Schuster in Hawaii, after reviewing the KCNA account, said he thinks the stresses would warp the hull, induce cracks and (possibly) snap the keel depending on where the greatest stress falls.
Retired South Korean Adm. Kim Duk-ki told CNN that North Korea appeared to lack the necessary infrastructure a dry dock to launch a 5,000-ton destroyer, let alone recover and repair it. A dry dock is a basin facility that can be filled with water to float a ship or drain out to build or repair one. Dry dock is an expensive facility, and North Korea probably doesnt have one
... Mercogliano, the US professor, said its unclear whether Pyongyangs new warships even have engines as state media has provided no images of them underway. ((previous sentences were about NK's rushing the new warships' construction and launches for prestige purposes, and that this launch was an example of what can happen when things are rushed -Progree))
Engines, who needs those? That's what tug boats are for
The hosting website is msn.com, but the article is from/by CNN
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I'd pay to see his face. Heck, his face would become a viral meme worth good money.
Silent Type
May 21
#7
The source is the Daily Record. MSN.com is merely hosting the article amongst hundreds from a wide variety of news
progree
May 22
#24
nbc: In a rare public admission of failure, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un described the accident involving the
riversedge
May 22
#25
An interesting tidbit from your source (NBC), "likely side-launched ... a method not previously observed in N.K."
progree
May 22
#28