I don't think making and calling it the ship would be the right thing it would be better off just being a massive building/City that is floating and anything with freedom in it is usually not free the Freedom phone freedom ship the fact that USA is free apparently...
Yeah, The same goes for the weight. In general, people think ships weight alot less than than they really do. For instance, people think Titanic weight as much as 100 average sized cars, while in actuality, She weights as much as 63 000 average sized cars
The ships stay afloat cus they displace lots of water and even though the ship is heavier than the water, the ships filled with air which is lighter and the bottom of a ship is pointed so air is forced "into" the water. The ships can get bigger and bigger only if there is a good displacement of water underneath and strong materials.
You first would have to define what you mean by strength... I'm convinced that a Maersk Triple E is not the ship you want to be in when getting shot at with 16 inch shells while I'm also pretty sure that USS Iowa wouldn't be able to carry 18 000 TEU over the ocean...
Sam the ships can float because of how giant they are. They are heavy sure but the amount of air inside of one counteracts the massive weight. Basically if a ship weighs less than the displacement of water it will float.
Yeah as long the water weights more than the ship it’ll float. Edit: Same with clouds. Edit 2: when water enters a ship, then it weights more than the water it self and it’ll sink.
Ok as a current studying engineer major, I can somewhat explain. So how all this works is by 2 simple things, mass and displacement. Didplacement for ships is when you displace the water surrounding the ship with the volume of the ship. The mass of the ship is directly proportional to it's displacement so the greater the mass the more it displaces and the easier it floats.
Cruise ship & Cargo Ship Navigational Officer here. *ACTUAL ANSWER* A ship floats due to Archimede’s Principle: “the buoyant force acting on an object immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces.” A ship which weighs 100,000 tonnes, must displace 100,000 tonnes of water in order for it to float. This equals the underwater volume of the ship x density of the water. (Ship’s draft changes due to density. I.e, a ship moving from salt water to fresh water environment will sink further down in order to displace the same amount of fluid, FW = 1.000 t/m3 & SW = 1.025 t/m3. It has nothing to do with air, as a lot of comments suggest. The object must weigh less than the water volume it is displacing! Example: A 1 cubic metre box weighing 0.5 tonnes will float at the 50cm mark in fresh water. Half immersed, because of archimedes principle: the underwater volume = 1m x 1m x 0.5m =0.5 tonnes. Of underwater volume water being displaced And fun fact: if you moved the ship and the water to a different planet which has a greater gravitational pull, it would still float the same as BOTH ship weight and displacement of water volume increases proportionally!
Engineer here. Here’s how this stuff works. Boat full of air. Boat sink a little in water because of its weight but the amount of light air in it wants to fill with water and push the air out. This is because when you put something in a liquid (like water) the water level rises around it. This increases the weight of the water pushing on it from the sides and bottom because it’s taking up less space and the air inside is lighter. So it’s not the air lifting it up it’s the water around it trying to squeeze it out to return back to its regular height but since air is light it’s easier to squeeze compared to the heavy water. Hope this helps! 😁
I love this video the name of the 2 ocean liners names are the RMS Titanic , and the RMS Queen Marry 2 I'm a big ship enthusiast, I love ships especially ocean liners, I can name any ocean liner just by looking at them even if the names aren't provided simply because I have I have the way they look on the exterior memorized.
To answer his question at the end, the bigger the ship, the larger volume of air the ship holds inside it, air being lighter than water makes the ship float, that’s the extreme basics of it
Don't quote me on this but I think the reason you can theoretically build gigantic ships is because the way ships work isn't restricted to a certain size. The only limitations for big ships is their cost
The freedom ship was a supposed, “Floating City” , it *was* supposed to be an estimated 5,000 ft or 1,371 meters long. The reason this project failed was due to it being a price of well over a trillion dollars and it would be physically impossible make the ship across the ocean as it would sink costing more damage than it actually costs and who knows how many people will suffer from fatal injures due to glass being chucked at them or just dying instantly. Overall, Freedom Ship would cost well over a couple grand to even step foot on as well. This ship would also take years to construct as well so it wouldn’t be worth the while. Solution: Go to a real city instead of a “Floating City”.
Large ships are possible due to the property of bouancy. Basically, the fluid, in the case sea water, is exerting more upward thrust than the downward pressure of the ship. This is based by how much of an object is submerged in the fluid. I am no engineer or physics genius and that is the best I can explain it
Engineering here. It’s really easy to explain. If you want to carry 5 lbs above water, you make a hull large enough to displace at least 5 lbs of water. It just gets scaled after that.
I'm sorry to hear that my great grandfather passed away before I was born to and the only memory I have of him is a leather jacket and my great grandmother.
Engineering student here, buoyancy force upwards is based on the amount of water displaced by the object, so because these carriers move so much water it creates an enormous upward force that can support the whole ship.
Well this is more possible because the air in the bottom of the ship is more than that top so it is able to float and the tech/machines used are light than usual and have less wires/parts in them and therefore the ship has less weight and can hold more people/items
For centuries (millenniums) - the limiting factor in size of ships was that if they got too long they’d break. In the 1800s they figured out the math to appropriate length to width ratios for strength and such. Oddly enough- dimensions in Genesis for Noah’s Ark fits within the standard for length to width ratios.
Fun fact: Project Habakkuk’s hull was intentionally gonna be made out of ice but they needed steel and aluminium to enforce it so it doesn’t sag but steel and aluminium was the very things they didn’t want to use for the hull so it was cancelled
Fun fact the reason why Carriers aren't the largest ships is because it would be a serious disadvantage compare to the advantages of more planes. They need speed as well.
Buoyancy basically works because the weight of the water being displaced by the boat is greater than the weight of the boat itself. In a sense, these bigger a boat is, the heavier it’s allowed to be, and actually the heavier it physically needs to be to displace enough water to stay afloat too.
Project Habakkuk was a British design (ww2) where wood and ice would be mixed together and formed into a massive aircraft carrier. Basically a floating iceberg with a runway on it
“The Ship meta” lmao
You had a bot reply, and 2 bots copied your comment. I am truly sorry for you.
@@Dsquarius_Green_Jr. today just isn’t my day
Frr
@@tylerpekofsky7954 but now your the most liked comment lol
@@Dsquarius_Green_Jr. honestly
I'm pretty sure the freedom ship never even left the planning phase
It didn’t
Yeah
Yeah, they tried to build it in the ocean but it would take like 45 years????
@@gliese667ce8 nah with how inflation today it would never exist
Got scrapped ran out of material’s
The freedom ship never was a thing its a concept out of the 90s or something and probably just wouldn't work, but the ideas pretty cool
Thank you for the clarification
Imagine freedom ship got destroyed... The budget and resources just got wasted and the worst of it... The parts are polluting the ocean
I do agree it would be pretty cool
Yeah they were not able to make that due to material constraints
I don't think making and calling it the ship would be the right thing it would be better off just being a massive building/City that is floating and anything with freedom in it is usually not free the
Freedom phone
freedom ship
the fact that USA is free apparently...
Imagine declaring war on a country and it sails to the middle of the ocean
So basically the British
@@Jamo_7811 maybe
So bismarck
The principality of sealand
@@Jamo_7811 💀
“It’s so big it’s actually crazy how big these things get” that’s what she said
💀why
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Lmao
Nice pfp
Stop it, get some help
Him: can an engineer explain this to me?
The Engineer: one word “Buoyancy”
Alot of these ships are alot bigger then king Kong and Godzilla combined
Hoe big are they
Yeah, The same goes for the weight. In general, people think ships weight alot less than than they really do. For instance, people think Titanic weight as much as 100 average sized cars, while in actuality, She weights as much as 63 000 average sized cars
@@loganfore king Kong is 100 metres tall and Godzilla is 120 metres tall. Some of the giant ships are more than 380+ or 430+ metres long.
@@jarlivwilmerus8353 Who would think the Titanic is so light???
@@kirakira9906 indeed
The ships stay afloat cus they displace lots of water and even though the ship is heavier than the water, the ships filled with air which is lighter and the bottom of a ship is pointed so air is forced "into" the water. The ships can get bigger and bigger only if there is a good displacement of water underneath and strong materials.
Archemedies principle
Well the ship is technically the same weight as the water it displaces
just bigger volume per mass
And not top heavy
If the ship is top heavy it's gonna be so hard to turn without tipping over and if the ship tip over it's gonna sink (obviously)
@@petrik6714 depends on the ship.
@@ispartacus1337 For example?
The anime ‘girls Und panzer’ actually features a ‘freedom ship’ type boat that the anime takes place on.
Not really all the school ships are based upon either planned or built aircraft carriers from about World War 2 to I want to say the 50’s.
Yeah pretty awesome
Anime is for children and creeps 💀
Yes someone who knows girl und panzer
@@WesleyKwong no it's really not
"The size of ship doesn't define it's strength"
More bigger, more guns, more guns, more power.
You first would have to define what you mean by strength...
I'm convinced that a Maersk Triple E is not the ship you want to be in when getting shot at with 16 inch shells while I'm also pretty sure that USS Iowa wouldn't be able to carry 18 000 TEU over the ocean...
@@wacky_duck1095 ships don't need to be big to carry torpedoes though. Torpedo > 16inch gun
@@Jamo_7811 its like a trade off, more powerful weapons, but weaker ship.
Big ship = bigger gun = more weight > looks cool, power, intimidation
“Floating city”
Sam the ships can float because of how giant they are. They are heavy sure but the amount of air inside of one counteracts the massive weight. Basically if a ship weighs less than the displacement of water it will float.
Yeah as long the water weights more than the ship it’ll float.
Edit: Same with clouds.
Edit 2: when water enters a ship, then it weights more than the water it self and it’ll sink.
Ok as a current studying engineer major, I can somewhat explain. So how all this works is by 2 simple things, mass and displacement. Didplacement for ships is when you displace the water surrounding the ship with the volume of the ship. The mass of the ship is directly proportional to it's displacement so the greater the mass the more it displaces and the easier it floats.
For real
It’s impressive how much it evolved
"USS America"
Proceeds to show Nimitz-Class carrier
I've been on the hms victory im lucky to be able to look about my bedroom window and see it every day
sounds neat, how was it?
@@itzwizory9556 its cool boring after the 6-7 time going on it tho
Cruise ship & Cargo Ship Navigational Officer here.
*ACTUAL ANSWER*
A ship floats due to Archimede’s Principle: “the buoyant force acting on an object immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces.”
A ship which weighs 100,000 tonnes, must displace 100,000 tonnes of water in order for it to float. This equals the underwater volume of the ship x density of the water. (Ship’s draft changes due to density. I.e, a ship moving from salt water to fresh water environment will sink further down in order to displace the same amount of fluid, FW = 1.000 t/m3 & SW = 1.025 t/m3.
It has nothing to do with air, as a lot of comments suggest. The object must weigh less than the water volume it is displacing!
Example:
A 1 cubic metre box weighing 0.5 tonnes will float at the 50cm mark in fresh water. Half immersed, because of archimedes principle: the underwater volume = 1m x 1m x 0.5m
=0.5 tonnes. Of underwater volume water being displaced
And fun fact: if you moved the ship and the water to a different planet which has a greater gravitational pull, it would still float the same as BOTH ship weight and displacement of water volume increases proportionally!
He says “Ship meta” like it’s war zone
Engineer here. Here’s how this stuff works. Boat full of air. Boat sink a little in water because of its weight but the amount of light air in it wants to fill with water and push the air out. This is because when you put something in a liquid (like water) the water level rises around it. This increases the weight of the water pushing on it from the sides and bottom because it’s taking up less space and the air inside is lighter. So it’s not the air lifting it up it’s the water around it trying to squeeze it out to return back to its regular height but since air is light it’s easier to squeeze compared to the heavy water. Hope this helps! 😁
I may be wrong but I think the law a buoyancy is that a object has to weigh less than the water or displaces
I love this video the name of the 2 ocean liners names are the RMS Titanic , and the RMS Queen Marry 2 I'm a big ship enthusiast, I love ships especially ocean liners, I can name any ocean liner just by looking at them even if the names aren't provided simply because I have I have the way they look on the exterior memorized.
I’ve been on the Queen Mary 2, and that’s crazy how big it is.
To answer his question at the end, the bigger the ship, the larger volume of air the ship holds inside it, air being lighter than water makes the ship float, that’s the extreme basics of it
Noah:
"Look how they mimic a fraction of my power"
I am always getting scared when I am next to a really big ship, like the container ships
Everyone is gangsta until ever give gets stuck in suez canal
Don't quote me on this but I think the reason you can theoretically build gigantic ships is because the way ships work isn't restricted to a certain size. The only limitations for big ships is their cost
69 meters on HMS Victory and 609 meters on HMS Habakkuk
I like how everyone here just ignored the fact that the titanic is missing part of its texture
Engineer here, “how does it work?”
If brute force isn’t working then you’re not using enough of it.
Lol
Project Habukk was the proposed idea to make an aircraft carrier out of pykrete, a mixture of ice and wood. It was quickly canceled.
The freedom ship was a supposed, “Floating City” , it *was* supposed to be an estimated 5,000 ft or 1,371 meters long.
The reason this project failed was due to it being a price of well over a trillion dollars and it would be physically impossible make the ship across the ocean as it would sink costing more damage than it actually costs and who knows how many people will suffer from fatal injures due to glass being chucked at them or just dying instantly.
Overall, Freedom Ship would cost well over a couple grand to even step foot on as well. This ship would also take years to construct as well so it wouldn’t be worth the while.
Solution: Go to a real city instead of a “Floating City”.
Thank man so its like bioshock under ochen city but flowting still thx for clarification
For real
I think a trillion dollar is a bit the estimation, a stretch, it would cost way less... considering the biggest aircraft carriers cost around $10bn...
Titanic better sinking thing
Its called water displacement
Look it up
Large ships are possible due to the property of bouancy. Basically, the fluid, in the case sea water, is exerting more upward thrust than the downward pressure of the ship. This is based by how much of an object is submerged in the fluid. I am no engineer or physics genius and that is the best I can explain it
Damn great video, really original
Engineering here. It’s really easy to explain. If you want to carry 5 lbs above water, you make a hull large enough to displace at least 5 lbs of water. It just gets scaled after that.
Quantum of the Seas: *Am I a joke to you?*
My great grandfather passed away before I was born and the only memory I have of him is a statue of the h m s victory and he hand made boats
Tragic
I'm sorry to hear that my great grandfather passed away before I was born to and the only memory I have of him is a leather jacket and my great grandmother.
I can relate to you.
I feel the pain I really do
I feel the pain I really do
“Watch me watch this video and add no value to it”
So the ship basically just pushes water out of the way to be lighter than the water and float if anybody was wondering how they float
I love how his videos always have that jojo opening
please give the name
nvm found it
Anyways it’s called bloody stream
surprisingly, this guy’s commentary has actually gotten more interesting. Usually people get more boring as they run out of content, good job man.
Engineering student here, buoyancy force upwards is based on the amount of water displaced by the object, so because these carriers move so much water it creates an enormous upward force that can support the whole ship.
So it's like the reverse of a sinking ship where everything is sucked under
For those who don't know, habbakuk was a proposed canadian vessel to made of ice and sawdust.
Its actually pretty cool.
A floating city????😱😂
The last 2 don’t count the biggest is the seawise giant
“A floating city?”
Well this is more possible because the air in the bottom of the ship is more than that top so it is able to float and the tech/machines used are light than usual and have less wires/parts in them and therefore the ship has less weight and can hold more people/items
For centuries (millenniums) - the limiting factor in size of ships was that if they got too long they’d break. In the 1800s they figured out the math to appropriate length to width ratios for strength and such.
Oddly enough- dimensions in Genesis for Noah’s Ark fits within the standard for length to width ratios.
“There so big it’s actually how big theese things get.” Sambucha 2022
Titanic looks dwarf to Freedom.
Actually the titanic was not that big, not as much as yamato
I love titanic
I love the Bloody Stream in the background
The one billion dollar cruise ship in the mr beast video:
"floating city?!"
brighton watchin this like 👁 👄 👁
I never realized how big container ships actually were until I saw one
“Thriller Bark”
Fun fact: Project Habakkuk’s hull was intentionally gonna be made out of ice but they needed steel and aluminium to enforce it so it doesn’t sag but steel and aluminium was the very things they didn’t want to use for the hull so it was cancelled
Big boy ships
They used the wrong model for “USS America” the model show is a Nimitz class aircraft carrier, not an assault ship
The last one
Zombie apocalypse floating city
The Madrid legit scared el mao
Giantwise Laugh behind 😂😊
Boyancy is an incredible thing
That last ship is a stand
If you put the last ship upward it will be bigger than the Burj khalifa
VLCCs are the largest type
What about the Bismarck
should be just before the IJN Yamato
Also me: oh wait nvm it’s there
Ships float due to buoyancy
Where is the Bismark
Kraken is having a good metal today
Meal
Extremely useful commentary as usual
Fun fact the reason why Carriers aren't the largest ships is because it would be a serious disadvantage compare to the advantages of more planes. They need speed as well.
Weird to see HMS victory on here because I pass by it almost everyday😂
the jojo background music tho
That’s a big freaking Tsunami buoy
I can explain how it's possible and im not even an engineer.
Ready?
Shit floats. Thank you.
Lol the HMS VICTORY is 69 meters 🤣🤣🤣👌
BRO TITANIC 269 METERS 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂🤣😂
LOOL THE PROJECT HABAKKUK IS 609 👌👌🤣😂🤣🤣👌😂🤣
Orp Błyskawica: am i a joke to you?
They just spawn into existence
they forgot abt the USS Enterprise
Which one?
@@niclas8777 uss enterprise, the biggest aircraft carrier ever to exist
Buoyancy basically works because the weight of the water being displaced by the boat is greater than the weight of the boat itself. In a sense, these bigger a boat is, the heavier it’s allowed to be, and actually the heavier it physically needs to be to displace enough water to stay afloat too.
The HMS Victory is already bigger than the colossal Titan
The only oil rig ship is about 100 feet taller then the "Floating City".
Habbakuk was intended to be an ice aircraft carrier made to be indestructible during WWII
Where Noah AS ship?
I love this guys voice
Can we appreciate how much effort he puts into these videos for us 🥰.
he literally reacts no effort
Freedom city is just underwater...it's waiting;)
Whats more crazy is what vikings sailed across the ocean with. Compared to what Columbus sailed with.
did not expect it to be there
THE NIÑA AND THE PINTA AND THE SANTA MARIIIA
That guy who made the video missed the biggest ship currently existent
Project Habakkuk was a British design (ww2) where wood and ice would be mixed together and formed into a massive aircraft carrier. Basically a floating iceberg with a runway on it
Please tell me I am not the only person who heard ‘this video shows how big shits actually are’
Freedom ship was going to be awesome, too bad what happened.
The ship was too damn big to be built it would cost you much to build and have a cost-effective ship God forbid the ships sunk
@@spyro3412 They had investors already lined up for it lol, and it was never supposed to stay anywhere it could have issues with underwater rocks
THE FREEDOM SHIP!!!! AMERICA FUCK YEAH!!!
And i thought the titanic wad big😶