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Comments (14)
| pdunn @ 2005-10-24 17:48:20 | |
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Cool find.
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| jef @ 2005-10-24 18:15:18 | |
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Look at the shadows on the four round areas. They are not gun turrets, they are holes.
I wonder if it's the USS Cabot, partially disassembled. |
| kjfitz @ 2005-10-24 18:59:47 | |
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They are the wells in which the turrets sat.
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| Analogman @ 2005-10-24 19:47:04 | |
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The USS Cabot was an aircraft carrier and, as such, would have no turret wells.
You can find a picture of the mostly cut up Cabot here: http://www.usscabot.com/june52002.htm and here: http://www.usscabot.com/cabot42101.htm |
| AlbinoFlea @ 2005-10-24 19:53:08 | |
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This whole area seems to be part of International Shipbreaking Limited's operations. There's a list of ships they've hacked up here: http://www.shiprecycling.com/cutshp.html That should help to narrow things down. |
| Analogman @ 2005-10-24 20:08:37 | |
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Unfortunately, none of the ships on that list fit the ship in the photo.
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| AlbinoFlea @ 2005-10-24 21:19:19 | |
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My bad. International Shipbreaking's slips are on the north side of the channel, along with ESCO Marine. These slips belong to Transforma Marine. Google Earth says the shot dates from Feb. 17, 2004. |
| jef @ 2005-10-24 22:05:43 | |
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I didn't realize that gun turrets went so deep!
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| kjfitz @ 2005-10-24 22:11:11 | |
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http://www.ussiowa.org/pics/turrets/pics/whole_turret_cutaway.jpg
and http://www.cyber-heritage.co.uk/cutaway/ture.jpg There is even the story about the Brazillian Battleship Rio de Janeiro that suffered structural difficulties due to the size and depth of its seven turret wells. http://www.combinedfleet.com/furashita/riodej_f.htm |
| Analogman @ 2005-10-25 18:34:36 | |
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It's not just the turrets but the magazines, ammo handling rooms, and equipment to rotate and power the turrets.
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| Anonymous @ 2006-04-01 16:29:07 | |
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I do believe that it is the repair ship Ajax sold for scrap in 1997 since the bow and stern are pointy. This was common to U.S. Navy repair ships of the 1930,s .
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| kjfitz @ 2006-04-01 19:08:15 | |
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Ajax was 539 feet long. This is only 429. There were no cruisers that I can find listed. Maybe a German, Brit, or Japanese battleship.
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| Gosell @ 2007-03-26 18:30:38 | |
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I think this may be a cable laying ship. The round wells are where they stored the cable. It has about the same LOA and Beam as the one shown in this link.
There also appears to be what could be a fitting to feed the cable over the stern. Thanks to Pdunn's Viscount post for getting me in the Brownsville neighborhood. That's a plane I flew on several times as a kid. |
| Anonymous @ 2008-01-02 21:32:19 | |
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That is not a battleship. Just north of that across the channel appears to be a Salem class Heavy Cruiser from WW2, and as you can tell is much bigger.
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