67newport
Old Man with a Hat
Schoenichen-Hartmann’s United Ship, Machine and Boiler Factory pavilion at the Millennium Exhibition, Budapest, 1896.
While we discuss big metal things , this is a reminder of how massive the oceans are:
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learn somethin' every day.View attachment 677565
USS Oklahoma met a similar fate. When Pearl Harbor was attacked, she was berthed next to USS Maryland. Because of that, Maryland was spared serious damage, but Oklahoma was torpedoed and bombed and the torpedo damage caused her to capsize. Salvage operations began in mid 1942 and lasted almost a year. After she was righted it was determined that she would not be repaired and returned to the battle line partly because of the extent of the damage but also because she still had the reciprocating engines she was originally built with (her sister Nevada was built with turbines). She remained at Pearl until May of 1947 when she was set to be towed to San Francisco to be scrapped. Around 500 miles from Hawaii, while being towed by two ocean going tugs, the trio were hit by a storm and Oklahoma began taking on water. The tug captains saw that she was listing, contacted Pearl and were told to return. However the list was increasing rapidly and the tug captains had to loose the cables or risk being dragged down with her. Oklahoma sank almost straight down. Her exact location is unknown.
While the Martin Mars was the biggest flying boat to ever go into production there are bigger examples. The Saunders-Roe Princess was over 30 ft longer, had a longer wingspan by almost 20 ft, and it was considerably heavier. Only one Princess ever flew which happened first on this day, August 22, 1952. This was too late to become a commercial success. Land-based jet airliners were the future. Here is the Princess compared with Philippine Mars scheduled to arrive later this year.
Saunders-Roe Princess - Wikipedia
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Dunno if #2,474 was a new build, or a refurb, I suspect some form of the latter (Shorpy.com)With Diesels coming on string in the '40s, I can't believe that someone would still build a new Steam Engine in 1943. It couldn't have had much of a service life.