Sida  7b.  Military boats in the Baltic Sea

Sida    8.  Eyewitnesses

Sida    9.  Holes in the hull?

Sida  10.  Sinking process

Sida  11.  Other boating accidents

Sida  12.  Questions & answers

Sida  13.  Miscellaneous

Sida  14.  Conclusions

The bow visor damage.

 

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

Text Box: Ca 5,5 meter

Copyright 2010 L.Remstam@itdemokrati.nu All rights reserved.

It looks like a skewer been driven into the ground, and then wiggle the skewer.

As I see the damage on the bow visor now:
It is made by an object with straight edges fixed at different angles.
The object have hit the bow visor of the line A-B or even A-C, an mark that may be, 5.5 meters to about 7.5 meters.
The object have moved in the motion D first and then E, and left the bow visor in line F.
Great energy, how much I do not know yet.
Thanks to the great self-importance on the MV
Estonia and the subject she have collided the bow visor have been pushed to the right a few degrees at the bottom (thanks to its wedge-shaped appearance) as arrow G shows.
The force has been so great that the subject also have lift up the bow visor, arrow H, locking devices have been scratching away.

They yellow arrows shows that there have been a hole in the hull, 8 mm plate, in the collision.

No way the MV Estonia bulb has caused these damage, the bulb has not the long straight edge and the tip of the
object has become bogged down in the bow visor of the object that hits the turn to the left with a strange look and strange angles, it is another boat that has done this.

There is only one way that this damage has occurred in, not more.
Everything has to follow a program, millisecond for millisecond.

This type is common automotive sheet, the difference is that it is 10 times thicker, 8-10 millimeters thick.
You could almost draw a comparison with the flat bar on a railing in a stairwell or flat bar at the top of the railing on an iron balcony.
A typical U-boat has a hull thickness of 30 mm and thicker.

Home

Sida    1.  Intro & Links

Sida    2.  MV Estonia

Sida  3a.  The bow visor

Sida  3b.  The bow visor, damage

Sida    4.  The bow ramp

Sida    5.  Other technical details

Sida    6.  The sonar image

Sida  7a.  Baltic Sea