All I can say is, the guy's a frikkin' genius and what's more, he knew it.
![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
Oh how I miss the Empire...
Moderator: Edi
That was the original plan. I believe bunkerage concerns were what, in part, halted that.Sea Skimmer wrote:I wouldn't call him a genius, not after his bright idea to place the world's largest ship on one of the shortest major of the major liner routes, from Britain to America. He should have had the thing going from Britain to India or Australia, which would have attracted full bookings of passengers. As it was the ship was a financial disaster.
Some schmuck opened the Suez canal halfway through building the ship, this led to the ship being put on such a short route and having a dismal financial life, but engineering wise, Brunel was a genius in every sense. And like many great minds at the time, he knew it and his ego did too.Sea Skimmer wrote:I wouldn't call him a genius, not after his bright idea to place the world's largest ship on one of the shortest major of the major liner routes, from Britain to America. He should have had the thing going from Britain to India or Australia, which would have attracted full bookings of passengers. As it was the ship was a financial disaster.
Yep, escorted by the HMS Terrible and some US vessels.Colonel Olrik wrote:Wasn't that the ship later used to put in place the first com cable between Europe and the U.S?
Yes, though her first cabal broke after three weeks. However not long after she succeeded on the second attempt which held that a purpose built vessel was completed for the job and she never laid a cabal again.Colonel Olrik wrote:Wasn't that the ship later used to put in place the first telegraph cable between Europe and the U.S?
I thought she entered service a couple years before the canal was completed...Some schmuck opened the Suez canal halfway through building the ship, this led to the ship being put on such a short route and having a dismal financial life, but engineering wise, Brunel was a genius in every sense. And like many great minds at the time, he knew it and his ego did too.
My web search turned up very little but this. But I've seen some very nice color paintings of her and quite a few photos. I'll search further.Jadeite wrote:I've heard of the Great Eastern before, but don't remember what it looked like. Got any pics?
Me thinks your date is off, since the ship was being used as a floating advertisement board at that point. She actually laid the cable in 1865 and the second in 1866Admiral Valdemar wrote:
Yep, escorted by the HMS Terrible and some US vessels.
"We have achieved our great object and laid our cable from shore to shore, along which the lightning may now flash messages of peace and goodwill between two kindred nations."
Sir. Daniel Gooch, chief engineer, 26 July 1886
Brunel was French!Admiral Valdemar wrote: Oh how I miss the Empire...
He was English, deal.The Third Man wrote:Brunel was French!Admiral Valdemar wrote: Oh how I miss the Empire...![]()
Well, OK. his old man, Marc was. And American too, before he was part of the Empire. Marc KB was a big mate of Henry Maudsley who truly was a great engineer, and was responsible for making many of Marc KBs ideas work. Does Maudsley get any mention on the show? IRC Maudsley's son made the engines for Isambard KBs Great Western?
Where was the gash made?Firstly, the ship hit some submerged rocks on one trip which made a huge gash along most of the hull. The crew and passengers never even noticed it until they got back to port. A far smaller brush against an iceberg sank the "unsinkable" Titanic.
Thirty years service is very high for a passenger vessel, actually. For a ship so underused like the Great Eastern, it is a shame it sat and did nothing for so long, though.Secondly, when the horrible scrap team got their hands on the ship after only 30 years service, they found in one of the sealed bulkheads the bodies of two people, one a child. They said that the riveters that died when making this ship and locked inside cursed it from there on.
It was on the ships bottom, and it only pierced one hull layer. The inner hull held and flooding was minimal as a result. However since no dry-dock could possibul take the ship they had to build an elaborate underwater cofferdam around the gash, with a pipe leading to the surface. Workmen could then go down and repair the plating.StarshipTitanic wrote: Where was the gash made?
When I was younger I used to wonder how large a battery of Rifled Muzzle Loaders the ship could have taken. The iron hull could have been a problem, since without heavy wood backing it would splinter horribly and stop little in the way of gunfire. However if employed as a commerce destroying cruiser which could avoid most action some real fun could occur. Especially if she wasn't in British service. Just imagine the endurance the thing would have under sail and with its vast holds filled with stores and ammo.StarshipTitanic wrote: Thirty years service is very high for a passenger vessel, actually. For a ship so underused like the Great Eastern, it is a shame it sat and did nothing for so long, though.