I visited her as a schoolboy in the early 70s. I was 10 years old then. 50 years later her restoration is magnificent and I am beggining to look like an old wreck. Life has a funny way of giving and taking.
I was there in 2017 and what impressed me most was the brilliantly conceived water level ie glass plates with water in between, making the ship look as if it was on the water. and also the fact that you could inspect the hull
The ''Engines' and other large Parts, are mock-up's, made to Brunels drawings, by the Apprentices of the Bristol Aero Company (not sure WHAT they call themselves these days) and driven by electric motors. A fantastic sight, and what a size.
breath taking restoration.... As only the British can do... the idea to preserve the ship out of the water, in a dry dock is the only viable way to save ships in the long run... the glass water adds realism & shelter for those parts below the water line. Those museum ships kept in the water inevitable succumb to rust...sooner or later... The narrator has a distinct & clear voice
What a wonderful video, I had heard of the Great Eastern ship, but this the first time I've heard of this ship. Bravo to the folks who have restored her!
Brunel started with the ''Great Western'' a Steam Paddle and Sail ship, then the SS Great Britain, then the greatest of all, the Monster--''Great Eastern''.
Brunels Museum alongside the ship, is the best in the world, with amazing personal items, and they recreated his drawing office too, with his original tools on display.
If I should ever be able to come to the U.K. ,this would be an absolute must see for me. A beautiful ship,great restoration,and some impressive engineering of the ''water ceiling'' protecting the hull.
Come visit the lake district as well, we have some good steam railways, even the ravenglass and eskdale railway, they're better than American trains when it comes to beauty and elegance.
After all those years sitting in the muck and filth on the bottom in the Falklands... she was picked up off the bottom and brought back home... and now look; she's gorgeous... the classic black hull with the white stripe and false gun deck... and with the clipper bow, gilded foc'sle and stern... she looks like she's moving fast while standing still. Visiting her is on my bucket list before I die.
The Clifton Suspension Bridge, that His Ship sailed under, when returning, wasn't built when the ship first left, via the Avon River. There are many creations of Brunels still scattered around Britain.
If only, my all-time favourite ocean-going MONSTER. BRUNEL--great engineer, poor businessman. The leaps he made, were far too ahead of it's time, and the huge back-up needs, and servicing of the ocean travelling public too. Still, it had to start somewhere.
Part of the ship is still in Port Stanley, On the shore there is one of SS Great Britain Mast. Nice to see the work that's been done on this ship. She is a VIP in the mariners world of shipping
Wundervoll - dieses Schiff ist eine Sensation! Wir haben vor zwei Monaten dieses Schiff besichtigt und wir waren begeistert! Eine tolle Leistung, dieses Schiff zu retten. Grüße aus Düsseldorf/Germany.
I took my three children aged 12,9 and 8 to Bristol to see the SS GB. After a very happy 40 mins or so and when we were at the stern looking at the props (kind of the point) I asked them if they had been taught about Isambard Kingdom Brunel or even heard of him. We all know what the answer is: I was quietly appalled yet so glad that we had made the three hour trip.
yep---that's marxist lefty-Lib, deliberate brainwashing of the young for you. Our 'education' system is destroying the GREAT history or our GREAT country.
@@MrDaiseymay As an update...the four accused of criminal damage of the Colston Statue in Bristol...were found "not guilty". So, it's OK now for anyone to commit Wilful Damage of public property....... That's the world we now live in. Law & Order? Forget it. Anarchy Rules, UK.
This would be a must see if I ever get "over there"! BTW, she is described as propeller driven, however with the description of the engines, very large paddlewheels are shown, similar to Great Western.
May I presume to.plan your itinerary ? Fly into Heathrow. Hire a car and drive to Bristol(it's two hours) on the way in you will pass under the Clifton suspension bridge. Stay in Bristol, it's nice, the harbours bars and restaurants are worth spending a night out at. and it's cheaper and nicer than London. Go to the SS Great Britain. It's very good, Oh I forgot, the Mathew a reconstruction of Cabot's ship is often at Bristol harbour. Personally I would go across to Wales and visit Chepstow Castle, it's picturesque and only one hour away and you get to cross another bridge. You may as well get some lunch somewhere in the Wye valley, maybe see Tinturn abbey, the countryside is nice, winding rivers and probably more green than your used to or if you like books perhaps Hay on Wye would suit. Stay the night somewhere. Choose which way you wish to go. West into Wales, Cardiff, Cardigan bay, Snowdonia, Anglesey etc. North into the Midlands, free museums galore, Shakespeare and all that, and if you get lost and end up in Birmingham Sarhole mill is a hidden gem (it's where Tolkien wrote that Hobbity book). Or you could cross the bridge and head south. It don't really matter which way you go, there's interesting things everywhere but I would give a special mention the the shuttle worth collection at biggleswade, Bedfordshire, Bath is worth seeing, esp the Roman baths, and if you like Georgian architecture. Neolithic sites, castles, museums, cathedral's etc, etc there's loads. There's bigger, better of all of these things on the continent France,Italy,Spain etc, but in Britain they are all so close together and so many. London is NOT Britain.
They did a great job re building the interior and even the engines as the ship salvaged from the faulklands was just the hull, absolutley none of the interior not even its decks remained, i dont know if it was a 100% accurate copy of the interior from origonal blue prints but i did notice the masts on the exterior were alot thinner and smaller than the origonals which were tge biggest ever made for a sailing ship, they were cut in half when being salvaged from the faulklands by the German salvage company! Im glad the UK saved this piece of history as most countrys would have let her rot, however its Brunnels design using steel that gave her enough time to be saved, if it had just been wood then she would have either rotted away or broken up for salvage decades ago, being too big and made from steel is what acually saved her all those years stranded
She was made of IRON. The masts are the same height, but ,as you say, thinner, probably because they are made of Harder wood ? Also, the originals look to be composite, with much planking around them to strengthem them.
@@MrDaiseymay I think too, that the restorers reasoned that the masts could be thinner and possibly of oak because there would never be sails raised to stress them. Also, a harder wood would last much longer into her future life. Interesting fact: The masts, even on wooden sailing ships, would invariably be made of spruce or pine, whilst the hull would be of stronger, harder wood like oak. Why? Because: 1) Spruce & pine are lighter in weight, thus reducing the vessels "top-heaviness" & therefore "rolling" of the vessel.. 2) Spruce & pine will creak and groan before they actually fail....giving the crew due warning..... Harder woods would simply snap without such warning, possibly causing catastrophic consequences. 3) The natural "straight" growth of spruce & pine.... makes making a mast a whole lot easier! Take your pick. 👍
Lovely put together video, I saw the ship last year, I was very impressed with the restoration and the Brunel's museum there to. I made a small vlog also but not a patch on yours. Please give it a look, also done the Clifton suspension bridge to.
Inside toilets, wow, no going forwards to the heads then. I'm glad they restored the steam power plant, or did they? They kept showing what appears to be a paddle wheel. Impressive menu indeed for first class. I'm so glad such wonders are kept and restored.
This ship was made to transport people. It was before "vacation cruises" were invented. She is also relatively small, even if she was the largest ship of her time. The journeys must have been a little bumpy during storms.
900 passengers were mentioned, I think the interior had been modelled on the ship as it was for the Australian route. It had half the passengers for the Atlantic route and was described as a luxury ship so the cabins would have been larger I presume and better fitted out.
@@DanielCPurdy That's absolutely true.......there are many examples in museums etc that make that obvious: shoe & dress sizes. But of course....this was all before McDonald's & KFC came on the scene!
He is in Britain, and particularly in Bristol. Many of his greatest creations and ides were formed here. There's a recently opened new Museum ,entirely of original and personal Brunel articles; a fantastic visit.
12:22-Maybe your of the direct acting type. But seriously, this guy seems like he's trying to sound enthusiastic about this, while trying to hide that he's done with this. Someone pls help him.
Been round Great Britain twice, once not longer after she returned and made an exhibit, more recently about 4 years ago. The cabins are tiny. Ive a bigger broom cupboard! The 3rd class was just like racking and bunk beds!
It's a little disappointing that they couldn't repair the bottom of the ship especially with today's technology such a shame as the top half is so beautiful
The hull is the only original part everything else is new and has never been used, if they would have repaired or replaced the hull then the entire ship would have just been a replica! A very expensive replica with no original parts, the whole reason this ship is famous is due to its design by Brunnel and it being the first ship built from steel, theres nothing inovative or special about the interior
As others have said, Michael....the original ship's hull could have been replaced...as is possible with today's technology: But, we don't want a mere replica. This is the Real Deal. (Replicas? That's for Disney Land & Las Vegas aficionados)
Well I think that it good that they could save there's been a lot of it restored and from what I've seen on the videos it looks good but what I do not understand that if that much of the ship can be restored why not the rest of the ship be restored as well I've been restoring old cars truck and tractor and more all may life so I think I can judge as to weather something can be restored or not and from what I can see on the videos in my judgment it looks like the bottom could be restored from what I can see they took the s cheep way and ez way out so I know that it would take time and money to restore the bottom of the ship but I think it would be worth the time as well as the money to do. And that someone could take it on themselves to do so it would be great to see the ship back in the water once again sailing as it could and as I sail I believe that this could be done
You have to take into consideration the age of this ship and it is mostly wrought iron. Metal fatigue would prevent it ever being subjected to the stresses of sea travel unless it was not so much restored but the hull completely replaced. As it is,this is still a monument to the past and the talent of that age to create something that not only did its job, but looked beautiful doing it, something that today is often overlooked.
A maritime museum is all it is today. She will never set sail again. Better a museum relic back home in England rather than a rusted hulk junk pile in the Falklands.
I strongly doubt by that theme in history that would be doing something as ridiculous as building square boilers even at 5psi. They may have been in a square well looks square boiler casing. They knew enough by Brunel’s time that a cylindrical boiler shell was the only thing that could maintain its shape as except for the ends (most likely using tie rods to withstand the pressure. I do know that 5psi isn’t much on the scheme of things) the cylinder has equal pressure acting on it. So please I hope you don’t continue to disseminate false information.
No when you replace the rusted metal you put back the new metal the same way it was first done so in the end she will be the same as before art to detailes and it will loose nothing just be new again the ship is made of metal metel van airway be replaced and restored I know this is true as I've been doing restoring all my life and I've seen meany very badly rust cars trucks ECT that you would think that were to fare gone and I've seen then to came back again so if someone wanted to bad enuff this ship could be restored and came back again. Us it wouldn't be ez but it could be done
John. Could you edit this to English? You know, clean up the misspellings, trying to be coherent and using punctuation. Also, Et Cetera is abbreviated as ETC.
I visited her as a schoolboy in the early 70s. I was 10 years old then. 50 years later her restoration is magnificent and I am beggining to look like an old wreck. Life has a funny way of giving and taking.
Wow! Magnificent restoration. I love it when people bring old, historic ships and buildings back to life.
I was there in 2017 and what impressed me most was the brilliantly conceived water level ie glass plates with water in between, making the ship look as if it was on the water. and also the fact that you could inspect the hull
YEP a first I beleive.
Just A Beautiful ship! I'm so glad they were able to restore it.
What a lovely restoration. So many skills involved.
The ''Engines' and other large Parts, are mock-up's, made to Brunels drawings, by the Apprentices of the Bristol Aero Company (not sure WHAT they call themselves these days) and driven by electric motors. A fantastic sight, and what a size.
So glad this vessel was saved,well done!
breath taking restoration.... As only the British can do... the idea to preserve the ship out of the water, in a dry dock is the only viable way to save ships in the long run... the glass water adds realism & shelter for those parts below the water line. Those museum ships kept in the water inevitable succumb to rust...sooner or later... The narrator has a distinct & clear voice
true, but he's bloody irritating
What a wonderful video, I had heard of the Great Eastern ship, but this the first time I've heard of this ship. Bravo to the folks who have restored her!
Brunel started with the ''Great Western'' a Steam Paddle and Sail ship, then the SS Great Britain, then the greatest of all, the Monster--''Great Eastern''.
Magnificent ship....a real beauty. Well done to all the rescuers
A great deal of labor and money went into preserving this great ship! Incredible technology from a 160 yrs.old vessel!
What Glenn said.
i've visited the SS great britain 4 times and every time i've been its amazing
That is fantastic was there a couple of years ago
The whole display is amazing
Wow! A truly heroic restoration. And a first class video.
Such a drone of a narration!
Put it on 1.25x it sounds much better
I was there about 2000 and they have done so much great work on her since then.
Brunels Museum alongside the ship, is the best in the world, with amazing personal items, and they recreated his drawing office too, with his original tools on display.
If I should ever be able to come to the U.K. ,this would be an absolute must see for me. A beautiful ship,great restoration,and some impressive engineering of the ''water ceiling'' protecting the hull.
The Glass water 'cover' is really strange to view, especially from below.
Come visit the lake district as well, we have some good steam railways, even the ravenglass and eskdale railway, they're better than American trains when it comes to beauty and elegance.
@@thomashambly3718 get saving come on over she is worth it!
Wonderful video. Kudos to the craftsmen who so lovingly brought this important piece of history back home, and back to her deserved grandeur.
After all those years sitting in the muck and filth on the bottom in the Falklands... she was picked up off the bottom and brought back home... and now look; she's gorgeous... the classic black hull with the white stripe and false gun deck... and with the clipper bow, gilded foc'sle and stern... she looks like she's moving fast while standing still. Visiting her is on my bucket list before I die.
just do it------
Thank you Mr. Kilpatric for your video. I was so excited to see that a work of Brunel still existed and you covered so many details.
The Clifton Suspension Bridge, that His Ship sailed under, when returning, wasn't built when the ship first left, via the Avon River. There are many creations of Brunels still scattered around Britain.
1.25 speed will allow your ears to suffer through this guy CMON MAN SPEAK
Yhis is what I came for. Worst speaker on RUclips.
imagine if the ss great eastern was preserved
If only, my all-time favourite ocean-going MONSTER. BRUNEL--great engineer, poor businessman. The leaps he made, were far too ahead of it's time, and the huge back-up needs, and servicing of the ocean travelling public too. Still, it had to start somewhere.
Yeah she was just turned into a billboard
Part of the ship is still in Port Stanley, On the shore there is one of SS Great Britain Mast. Nice to see the work that's been done on this ship. She is a VIP in the mariners world of shipping
Incredible story I have been on her in Bristol Brilliant
Wundervoll - dieses Schiff ist eine Sensation! Wir haben vor zwei Monaten dieses Schiff besichtigt und wir waren begeistert! Eine tolle Leistung, dieses Schiff zu retten.
Grüße aus Düsseldorf/Germany.
I AGREED WITH ALL YOU SAID
I took my three children aged 12,9 and 8 to Bristol to see the SS GB. After a very happy 40 mins or so and when we were at the stern looking at the props (kind of the point) I asked them if they had been taught about Isambard Kingdom Brunel or even heard of him. We all know what the answer is: I was quietly appalled yet so glad that we had made the three hour trip.
yep---that's marxist lefty-Lib, deliberate brainwashing of the young for you. Our 'education' system is destroying the GREAT history or our GREAT country.
@@MrDaiseymay As an update...the four accused of criminal damage of the Colston Statue in Bristol...were found "not guilty".
So, it's OK now for anyone to commit Wilful Damage of public property....... That's the world we now live in.
Law & Order? Forget it. Anarchy Rules, UK.
This would be a must see if I ever get "over there"!
BTW, she is described as propeller driven, however with the description of the engines, very large paddlewheels are shown, similar to Great Western.
May I presume to.plan your itinerary ?
Fly into Heathrow. Hire a car and drive to Bristol(it's two hours) on the way in you will pass under the Clifton suspension bridge. Stay in Bristol, it's nice, the harbours bars and restaurants are worth spending a night out at. and it's cheaper and nicer than London.
Go to the SS Great Britain. It's very good, Oh I forgot, the Mathew a reconstruction of Cabot's ship is often at Bristol harbour.
Personally I would go across to Wales and visit Chepstow Castle, it's picturesque and only one hour away and you get to cross another bridge.
You may as well get some lunch somewhere in the Wye valley, maybe see Tinturn abbey, the countryside is nice, winding rivers and probably more green than your used to or if you like books perhaps Hay on Wye would suit.
Stay the night somewhere.
Choose which way you wish to go.
West into Wales, Cardiff, Cardigan bay, Snowdonia, Anglesey etc.
North into the Midlands, free museums galore, Shakespeare and all that, and if you get lost and end up in Birmingham Sarhole mill is a hidden gem (it's where Tolkien wrote that Hobbity book).
Or you could cross the bridge and head south.
It don't really matter which way you go, there's interesting things everywhere but I would give a special mention the the shuttle worth collection at biggleswade, Bedfordshire, Bath is worth seeing, esp the Roman baths, and if you like Georgian architecture.
Neolithic sites, castles, museums, cathedral's etc, etc there's loads.
There's bigger, better of all of these things on the continent France,Italy,Spain etc, but in Britain they are all so close together and so many.
London is NOT Britain.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Great_Britain#Machinery
@@garyhewitt489 Thanks so much for this detailed itinerary. I could definitely follow it because it all seems to be "right up my alley".
They did a great job re building the interior and even the engines as the ship salvaged from the faulklands was just the hull, absolutley none of the interior not even its decks remained, i dont know if it was a 100% accurate copy of the interior from origonal blue prints but i did notice the masts on the exterior were alot thinner and smaller than the origonals which were tge biggest ever made for a sailing ship, they were cut in half when being salvaged from the faulklands by the German salvage company! Im glad the UK saved this piece of history as most countrys would have let her rot, however its Brunnels design using steel that gave her enough time to be saved, if it had just been wood then she would have either rotted away or broken up for salvage decades ago, being too big and made from steel is what acually saved her all those years stranded
She was made of IRON. The masts are the same height, but ,as you say, thinner, probably because they are made of Harder wood ? Also, the originals look to be composite, with much planking around them to strengthem them.
@@MrDaiseymay I think too, that the restorers reasoned that the masts could be thinner and possibly of oak because there would never be sails raised to stress them. Also, a harder wood would last much longer into her future life.
Interesting fact:
The masts, even on wooden sailing ships, would invariably be made of spruce or pine, whilst the hull would be of stronger, harder wood like oak. Why? Because:
1) Spruce & pine are lighter in weight, thus reducing the vessels "top-heaviness" & therefore "rolling" of the vessel..
2) Spruce & pine will creak and groan before they actually fail....giving the crew due warning.....
Harder woods would simply snap without such warning, possibly causing catastrophic consequences.
3) The natural "straight" growth of spruce & pine.... makes making a mast a whole lot easier!
Take your pick. 👍
Lovely put together video, I saw the ship last year, I was very impressed with the restoration and the Brunel's museum there to. I made a small vlog also but not a patch on yours. Please give it a look, also done the Clifton suspension bridge to.
HE MADE THE BRIDGE ONE SPARE WEEKEND.
Love the epicness of the narration
Stopped just as things were getting (more) interesting!
I been there on 24 of june 2015 it was so amazing inside
Inside toilets, wow, no going forwards to the heads then. I'm glad they restored the steam power plant, or did they? They kept showing what appears to be a paddle wheel. Impressive menu indeed for first class. I'm so glad such wonders are kept and restored.
It's a reproduction, powered by electric motors, and was made by local engineering apprentices, Up close, it's huge and very impressive.
Beautiful ship.
We visited this ship its wonderful - the cabins and beds are so small
This ship was made to transport people. It was before "vacation cruises" were invented. She is also relatively small, even if she was the largest ship of her time. The journeys must have been a little bumpy during storms.
900 passengers were mentioned, I think the interior had been modelled on the ship as it was for the Australian route. It had half the passengers for the Atlantic route and was described as a luxury ship so the cabins would have been larger I presume and better fitted out.
People then were smaller. The average man was somewhere under 5’6” then.
@@DanielCPurdy
That's absolutely true.......there are many examples in museums etc that make that obvious: shoe & dress sizes.
But of course....this was all before McDonald's & KFC came on the scene!
I saw her being towed back,whilst i was in the west indies 1970, serving on HMS Sirius
LUCKY YOU. I HOPE YOU TOOK SOME PHOTOGRAPHS
THIS IS ONE REALLY GOOD MADE DOCU-VIDEO !!!
ALL THE BEST.
except the choice of a really annoying voice-over.
BRUNEL was a genius who is not by far appreciated as he deserves
He is in Britain, and particularly in Bristol. Many of his greatest creations and ides were formed here. There's a recently opened new Museum ,entirely of original and personal Brunel articles; a fantastic visit.
@@MrDaiseymay
glad to hear that
thanks for info :)
12:22-Maybe your of the direct acting type. But seriously, this guy seems like he's trying to sound enthusiastic about this, while trying to hide that he's done with this. Someone pls help him.
I've watched a couple of videos on the recovery of this vessel. Amazing work by all. Are the new masts as large as the originals?
yes
@@MrDaiseymay They may be as tall, but they are certainly not of the same circumference.
@@MrDorbel WAL---thats progress, She wasn't going to be battling great storms at sea.
Been round Great Britain twice, once not longer after she returned and made an exhibit, more recently about 4 years ago. The cabins are tiny. Ive a bigger broom cupboard! The 3rd class was just like racking and bunk beds!
Much more on the crewing How many? what did they do exactly ? You could do an entire unit on that.
This is a great vid....
Thank you!
I was about to ask if she was now sea worthy, but my question was answered even before I asked it! But at last, she came back home!
12:44 thought you where going to pass out there
LOL, you are a "smart guy".
9:14 Let's hope nobody mistook that for a sink...
that is very VERY helpful thx
Would you, please, also show the toilet and shower facilities?
Magnific!!!!!
I went there today so cool
Had a longer run than Titanic
It's a little disappointing that they couldn't repair the bottom of the ship especially with today's technology such a shame as the top half is so beautiful
ruclips.net/video/7F6aDdHPJfI/видео.html I think you will like this, and it explains a lot about why complete restoration wasn't feasible.
The hull is the only original part everything else is new and has never been used, if they would have repaired or replaced the hull then the entire ship would have just been a replica! A very expensive replica with no original parts, the whole reason this ship is famous is due to its design by Brunnel and it being the first ship built from steel, theres nothing inovative or special about the interior
Besides with the plates it tells a story
As others have said, Michael....the original ship's hull could have been replaced...as is possible with today's technology:
But, we don't want a mere replica. This is the Real Deal. (Replicas? That's for Disney Land & Las Vegas aficionados)
@@martyndyson9501 Correct 100%. Might as well have used glass fibre!🤣
1.5 times speed makes thid bearable.
1.25 sounds more normal.
Very interesting thankyou
this guy is enthusiatick
speed it up to 1.5 and he'll have a heart attack
great doc but the guy narrating it OH DEAR!!!!!!
he sounds like has a cold and a bit. slow in the head.
just play the video at 1.5x speed and then he'll sound more normal
colin warn its called being English racist fuck
What a doom-laden pillock, he really spoils this
so it does !
Eventually they will have to restore her hull. She's going to continue to rust, nothing will stop that.
Maybe technology will provide the answer.
Those mice in the galley seemed very real! Unlike the cat.
I'm wondering if this sounds better when I speed it up twice normal speed...
Anything would improve. How the hell did he get approval.
Not a Liner. It was a steamship.
well quite
Very nice! Would have been even nicer if it had an ending.
Who knows which parts of the ship has been there since day 1.
Well I think that it good that they could save there's been a lot of it restored and from what I've seen on the videos it looks good but what I do not understand that if that much of the ship can be restored why not the rest of the ship be restored as well I've been restoring old cars truck and tractor and more all may life so I think I can judge as to weather something can be restored or not and from what I can see on the videos in my judgment it looks like the bottom could be restored from what I can see they took the s cheep way and ez way out so I know that it would take time and money to restore the bottom of the ship but I think it would be worth the time as well as the money to do. And that someone could take it on themselves to do so it would be great to see the ship back in the water once again sailing as it could and as I sail I believe that this could be done
If you restore too much you lose the character of the ship.
You have to take into consideration the age of this ship and it is mostly wrought iron. Metal fatigue would prevent it ever being subjected to the stresses of sea travel unless it was not so much restored but the hull completely replaced. As it is,this is still a monument to the past and the talent of that age to create something that not only did its job, but looked beautiful doing it, something that today is often overlooked.
Together with the Eastern
Хотелось бы увидеть металлообрабатывающии станки того времени.
50 seconds in, cant listen to that awful sarcastic tone any longer. just no way
Ditto, just awful
AAAND the NAAARATOR strUUUGGLing with his EEENNNglish...
I have a stutter, I have to do this sometimes otherwise I will try for 2 minutes to say certain words
And why do video makers suppose that music is necessary at all? I turned all sound off in order to finish.
At 1.25 speed it sounds much more natural, which makes me think it was slowed down in the first place.
I wish I can travel to American to Bristol to go see the ship
It's in England
BEFORE NEW VIEWER'S START---ALTER THE SPEED TO 1.25 OR 1.5. MUCH BETTER ON THE LUGGS
POOR USS TEXAS NEEDS THIS DRY DOCK REALLY BAD
SHARE THIS VIDEO WITH ALL THOSE YOU THINK MAY BE INTERESTED, TO SHOW IT CAN BE DONE. SO LONG AS THE TEXAS IS IN A DRY DOCK.
Philip Croft I'm really happy to see another Texas Fan she's the last of her kind we must save her cuz she saved us
@@davidjones341 A very good starting point. Attack their sense of guilt.
A maritime museum is all it is today. She will never set sail again. Better a museum relic back home in England rather than a rusted hulk junk pile in the Falklands.
They should have also kept the great eastern
Please key down om pathos.
my g g grand mum was on that first voyage to oz
I want a doctor who episode set on it.
OMG yes that would be so awesome!
I think Most Haunted went on it
We are far less than what we were.....If Brunel was alive today Britain would`ve already colonised Mars
I was thinking that this morning when I saw his bridge
By steam powered spaceships
@@MrDaiseymay Hey Phil, Brunel could do anything.
I went there on wendsday it was soooooooooo cool then i found out it was haunted
I strongly doubt by that theme in history that would be doing something as ridiculous as building square boilers even at 5psi. They may have been in a square well looks square boiler casing. They knew enough by Brunel’s time that a cylindrical boiler shell was the only thing that could maintain its shape as except for the ends (most likely using tie rods to withstand the pressure. I do know that 5psi isn’t much on the scheme of things) the cylinder has equal pressure acting on it. So please I hope you don’t continue to disseminate false information.
How ironic that the ship propeller was invented by an Austrian.
Interesting, but the narrator sounds like a minister delivering a eulogy.
Toll restauriert. Well done. Aber warum spricht der Mann so dramatisch? Das ist ja furchtbar.
im going today
have ya got there yet?
born and bread in Bristol never been
and very pleased too, aren't ya ?
Speed is wrong...alter the speed and it becomes normal voiced, but then the music is strange. Definitely a speed issue.
No, he just has a weird kind of annoying voice
work on her hull patching hole with fibreglass for six weeks summer 1976. hull solid rust
No when you replace the rusted metal you put back the new metal the same way it was first done so in the end she will be the same as before art to detailes and it will loose nothing just be new again the ship is made of metal metel van airway be replaced and restored I know this is true as I've been doing restoring all my life and I've seen meany very badly rust cars trucks ECT that you would think that were to fare gone and I've seen then to came back again so if someone wanted to bad enuff this ship could be restored and came back again. Us it wouldn't be ez but it could be done
John. Could you edit this to English? You know, clean up the misspellings, trying to be coherent and using punctuation. Also, Et Cetera is abbreviated as ETC.
yeah---lets patch the pyramids with concrete or fibreglass.
I’d love to hear about this ship but not from a drugged, painfully slowed copy of robin leach. 👎🏻👎🏻👎🏻👎🏻
lol... just lol :)
The man spoke clearly and articulately. I thought he did well and enjoyed it.
watch at 1.25x
A remnant of the ROARING twenties
1820's surely?
nope
ruclips.net/video/7F6aDdHPJfI/видео.html and here is it, still in black and white, how it all begun!
Surely they could get a better narrator? It is a fantastic story after all!
I could do a better job I’m sure! And I’m a rough Geordie!
speed 1.25. Thank me later
Awful narration after a couple of minutes watched rest of video with the sound off
Sadly only 20% original
The narrator sounds like he he’s giving a memorial to a recently passed person. So dreary.
You know what they say, “if you can’t say anything nice keep your yap shut.”
C McCoy Works for you too. Get it?
Kawał historii. Jak widać Anglicy dbają o przekaz, ale montaż i narracja ledwo dostateczna.
Do you have Prince Albert in a can? Well then let him out.
and you thought the clear eyes guy was bad............
Sorry, but the narrator makes this video unwatchable.
sounds like "champagne wishes and caviar dreams"
Lockbar That’s what I told my wife! Robin Leech. Talk about your name fitting your job; leeching after the Rich and Famous!
Trying so hard to sound like Robin Leach in "Lifestyles of the rich and famous" program...
Clicked off immediately. Can't put up with that faked Claekson voice. Why do that? Speak normal.
Did the narrator record this then slow his voice track down 50% ?? What a dreadful piece of work. Utterly ruined the video.
It sounds like it put it on 1.25 speed it sounds much more natural
No you do not