The Amazing Engineering of the Largest Vessel Ever | Shell's Prelude

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  • Опубликовано: 17 июл 2024
  • The Shell Prelude is the biggest thing constructed by man ever put in the water.
    Displacing more than six aircraft carriers, it's hundreds of miles off Australia's coast.
    Built in 2017, it's an LNG platform, chained to the seabed with sixteen of the largest chains ever made.
    It's been prone to teething troubles and shutdowns since it began. So the question is whether the Prelude is the beginning of a new age
    Or a costly failed experiment.
    Chapters
    00:00 - What's the biggest man-made object on water?
    00:54 - What is the size of the Shell Prelude?
    01:29 - What is the Shell Prelude?
    02:45 - Where does the Shell Prelude operate/ The Concerto Fields
    04:00 - How was the shell prelude built?
    05:16 - Problems with the Shell Prelude
    06:12 - How does the Shell Prelude cope with storms?
    07:35 - What does the Shell Prelude use for power
    08:15 - How the Shell Prelude exports the gas
    09:00 - How does the Shell Prelude move
    09:51 - The Future of the Prelude
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Комментарии • 40

  • @Machines.In.Action
    @Machines.In.Action 14 дней назад +4

    The scale and complexity of this vessel are mind-blowing. It’s amazing what human ingenuity can achieve! ☺

  • @Skidderoperator
    @Skidderoperator 13 дней назад +7

    Much bigger than a Honda Prelude.

    • @jblob5764
      @jblob5764 13 дней назад +1

      Yea but this prelude makes it own gas 😅

  • @BrilliantDesignOnline
    @BrilliantDesignOnline 14 дней назад +3

    Dang! THAT is a MASSIVE structure and on top of that it is 'mobile' and an industrial processing plant. Good vid.

  • @chrislaarman7532
    @chrislaarman7532 13 дней назад +1

    Interesting! - For those much younger than me (1956):
    When I was to become a ship engineer (sponsored by Shell Tankers NL), the size of "crude carriers" had recently jumped up from around 80,000 tons to just over 200,000 tons - if I remember correctly: due to the 1967 war that closed the Suez Canal. Around 1975, Shell Tankers (France) added two crude carriers of some 540,000 tons. Other ship owners even went closer to 600,000 tons. These huge ones didn't exist long.
    Coming to think of it, this second size jump may have accelerated the demise of big-ship building at least in the Netherlands. Just no room...

  • @ronblack7870
    @ronblack7870 13 дней назад +1

    i think there is a larger ship called pioneering spirit and is used for removing ocean oil platforms and also for pipeline laying in it's off time. it displaces 1,000,000 tons fully loaded

  • @melisgurdal6965
    @melisgurdal6965 14 дней назад +2

    Thank you for great content and editing 🎉🎉

  • @Kriss_L
    @Kriss_L 13 дней назад +2

    Not even close to the biggest ship. The Pioneering Spirit displaces 1 million tons.

  • @damegaKing
    @damegaKing 13 дней назад +2

    This is by far not the biggest man made object put into the sea, that would be the Gullfaks C plattform with a weight of 870000 tons hand displacement of 1.5 mio

  • @JohanFasth
    @JohanFasth 13 дней назад

    It's truly amazing that mankind even can construct it with all logistics that is needed to be made. How do one even plan for it? Mind boggling.

  • @lovrorb
    @lovrorb 13 дней назад +1

    Been there, during build in SHI, Korea 😎
    It's not it's length that is breathtaking, it is width and especially height, dwarfing everything else in the yard.
    Going all the way up to hose handling crane every day was some serious training

  • @Brandon-305
    @Brandon-305 14 дней назад +2

    Truly a Marvel of engineering..👏

  • @militarymechanicsie
    @militarymechanicsie 14 дней назад +1

    Great video, guys.

  • @gouravmisra2317
    @gouravmisra2317 14 дней назад +2

    Excellent 👌👌

  • @ross123540
    @ross123540 14 дней назад +6

    Most the stuff you said in the last 5 mins was complete bull. Correct words put together in wrong order.

  • @EmirhanSonmezsk-mi4jf
    @EmirhanSonmezsk-mi4jf 14 дней назад +1

    Great content 🚢🛳

  • @pelinssener
    @pelinssener 14 дней назад +1

    Great content 👌

  • @dougmoore4326
    @dougmoore4326 13 дней назад +1

    The icon class ships weigh 100,000 tons, the other is a cubic space measurement

    • @adamking882
      @adamking882 9 дней назад +1

      Yeah, they confused displacement (weight) with gross tonnage (volume). While that's a common mistake, I'd expect more from an engineering channel.

  • @SevvalSurmeli
    @SevvalSurmeli 14 дней назад +2

    perfect

  • @davidoldboy5425
    @davidoldboy5425 13 дней назад +1

    Where does it drydock if needed ?(and it will be) and no matter how big nature has a habit of sinking things

  • @Sibl3o
    @Sibl3o 9 дней назад

    Has never worked, launched 3 years late and has had a large fire onboard. I was in S Korea in 2013 when the hull was launched.
    No gas has made it onboard

  • @adamking882
    @adamking882 9 дней назад +1

    When comparing the Icon of the Seas to Titanic, I think you confused displacement (weight) with gross tonnage (volume). While that's a common mistake, I'd expect more from an engineering channel.

  • @ricklee4220
    @ricklee4220 13 дней назад

    So the heaviest floating ship not the largest, got it

  • @glike2
    @glike2 9 дней назад

    This biggest polluter needs to add CCS or gas to plastics for zero carbon emissions along with the customers

  • @Tuly03
    @Tuly03 9 дней назад

    Largest Vessel ever ?? Ever heard of Immersive Translate?? It is a tool with meticulously crafted prompts, that allows translations in the technology field become more accurate and professional.

  • @dougmoore4326
    @dougmoore4326 13 дней назад

    The vessel does not “bring” storms🙄🙄🙄🙄

  • @jamiebizness1
    @jamiebizness1 13 дней назад

    Kraken? Bro. Also industrial acrion? 8 preaime you mean a strike in the workforce. Lwt me guess . The owners didn't want to pay the workers during then downtime so theunredused tk work. They found a way to can the workers and hire cheap now work has resumed

  • @Aendavenau
    @Aendavenau 11 дней назад

    Long tonnes? Are there short ones? Use the metric system :D

  • @xx_insert_cool_username_he6876
    @xx_insert_cool_username_he6876 14 дней назад +2

    First Comment and View

    • @bobmahnamahknob
      @bobmahnamahknob 13 дней назад +1

      .....and this is what you came up with?
      Congratulations on your amazing feat of skill and knowledge that will surely stand the test of time. Your prize will arrive on the second Tuesday of next week.

    • @dancer20617
      @dancer20617 12 дней назад

      Cringe

  • @GokberkKorkmaz
    @GokberkKorkmaz 14 дней назад +3

    Excellent content detailed and accurate information