‘We were Walking on the Walls” Crew member speaks of Sinking Yacht Bayesian | SY News Ep381

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
  • #superyacht #superyachts #yachts #boats
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Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @FawazShalan
    @FawazShalan 14 дней назад +277

    Syssman is knowledgeable, respectful and serious. Credit to him

    • @annmcdonald6180
      @annmcdonald6180 14 дней назад +13

      absolutely, excellent videos

    • @alias19
      @alias19 12 дней назад

      I’d say he is certainly a trusted reference, but I’m questioning the use/timing of the clip @4:24 which is not a clip of the subject vessel but it’s implied without explanation.

    • @JacquelineDelaitre
      @JacquelineDelaitre 11 дней назад +1

      Hello,
      I share your opinion. He's really a respectful and serious person, I encourage him!

    • @seymourWilson-do8xj
      @seymourWilson-do8xj 7 дней назад +1

      I thought it was the subject vessel

  • @livelongandtroll9108
    @livelongandtroll9108 14 дней назад +327

    I think it was really gross that representatives of Italian Sea Group started blaming the crew a few days after the sinking and, on top of that, claiming that the just recently sunken vessel was unsinkable.
    Of course, there is still work to be done to determine if there is any responsibility from both parties -crew and builders- and to what extent. However, blaming the crew without any evidence was despicable.

    • @regig.9493
      @regig.9493 14 дней назад +49

      It's not just despicable, it's suspicious. As if they knew something wasn't quite right with the design ( it's the only one in that series of sister ships with one single mast), and they quickly need a scapegoat to shift attention away from design flaws.

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +54

      @@regig.9493 I can already list over half a dozen design flaws that led to the sinking: 1. The out-of-proportion mast. 2. The falling-open sliding lounge doors. 3. 45-degree maximum angle of heel (on a SAILBOAT???). 4. 80-degree maximum angle of recovery (on a SAILBOAT???). 5. Vents in the hull sides (WTF???). 6. A low cockpit opening to starboard where a normal sailboat has a raised combing. 7. A heavy moveable centerboard approved to be raised while motoring or at anchor, because it made a little noise when down. I'm sure I could think of a few more by now. The one interview with a motor yacht designer I saw elsewhere got one thing right: Bayesian wasn't really a sailboat.

    • @marinaperkins9648
      @marinaperkins9648 14 дней назад +2

      ​@@regig.9493And who was the designer ??? A Kiwi... !

    • @festerofest4374
      @festerofest4374 14 дней назад +3

      @@angelikaopland7880 I've not spent that much time on ocean sailing boats to be by any means expert in anything, BUT, when those questions are laid-out and and I think about my basic experiences; This seems like a very vulnerable set of design factors.... not the makings of seaworthy craft, really!

    • @seancidy6008
      @seancidy6008 14 дней назад

      @@regig.9493 "80-degree maximum angle of recovery (on a SAILBOAT???@ Yes quite a lot of people in the industry have thought that detail merits comment.

  • @bamagal1992
    @bamagal1992 11 дней назад +15

    The main reason I am about to subscribe is not because I am a “yachtie” but because the host is fair, intelligent, and doesn’t appear to have an agenda.

  • @mrl22222
    @mrl22222 14 дней назад +208

    I was on a large catamaran which flipped over. I had been crew for a couple of years, and being upside down is exceptionally disorienting.

    • @wisdomsleuth77777
      @wisdomsleuth77777 14 дней назад +39

      That's what people don't understand is especially if you're down below in the cabin it will be pitch dark and your door will not be where it's supposed to especially if you were awoken by being tossed out of the bed because you went sideways. Unless you have something that you can use to reach the doorway you're not going to be able to get out

    • @adamcarver5736
      @adamcarver5736 14 дней назад +20

      @@wisdomsleuth77777Not only that but I would imagine being tossed out of bed on a yacht like this would result in a person landing hard against cabinetry, causing at least minor injury and further disorienting them.

    • @ChristopherHaws90
      @ChristopherHaws90 14 дней назад +25

      @@wisdomsleuth77777 Are there not emergency lighting in vessels like this? It seems like as soon as the main power went out that emergency lighting should have kicked on.

    • @bobansak2583
      @bobansak2583 14 дней назад +31

      I raced sailboat/yachts quite a bit over a ~30 year period. I've had the mast in the water in way too many times to remember. Including while racing ~20,000nm in the ocean. The "scariest incident" was being pinned down w/the storm spinnaker,( hoisted on a ~30 M mast) filling w/water about 1,000nm from any land. This was on a racing -yacht, Kialoa II, designed for the ocean w/3-4 pretty, to just 3-5 "average" experienced amateur crew. A couple of the other less to almost no experienced crew got so spooked they were not helpful in the situation at all. Others, were initially "stunned" but recovered in a minute or so. While this situation wasn't exactly "trained for", it was "expected" and somewhat planned for. We were more prepared than the guests, owners, some of the crew of the Bayesian and some still panicked.

    • @davidloewen5528
      @davidloewen5528 14 дней назад +6

      @@mrl22222 some of the large catamaran’s I have toured had a port below knee level, in the water, designed to be opened in the event of a “turtle”. I am wondering, did you have one? If so, was it useful?

  • @alanhumberstone9989
    @alanhumberstone9989 14 дней назад +183

    It’s such a pleasure to listen to well informed commentary over the past few weeks

    • @ralphvandereb66
      @ralphvandereb66 14 дней назад +1

      What would you know ? How would you know this is accurate

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 13 дней назад +4

      @@ralphvandereb66 eSysMan's approach is calm and thoughtful, which is in marked contrast to other sources, including the mainstream media.

    • @juliettedonohue7069
      @juliettedonohue7069 13 дней назад

      absolutely, very few new facts (more very brief and limited testimonies from crew members) and still so many unanswered questions. I don't understand how the testimony about the captain going to fetch mother and child is consistent with the mother's testimony; maybe we will have clearer view later, and maybe not. Was no one on the crew aware that such severe storms could happen in this particular area (it this to be specific to this place)? surely the captain who has mostly navigated in Med had some knowledge?

    • @user-hw7ny8ts3z
      @user-hw7ny8ts3z 13 дней назад +1

      ​@juliettedonohue7069 Sounds like they were all in the dark and thrown in cold water - statement made was that the Captain helped save the baby & mother (Not "fetched")? Reports were the mother lost the baby in the water for a few seconds?

    • @alias19
      @alias19 12 дней назад

      @@ralphvandereb66 LOL Ralphy! You bring SO much credibility! What’s YOUR channel with 300k loyal subscribers??

  • @davidhoy7605
    @davidhoy7605 14 дней назад +159

    Another possibility for the strange movement of the boat (according to the AIS data) was the anchor chain getting wrapped around the keel or rudder. This has happened to me during a sudden squall, and my boat was pinned sideways. Being pinned sideways in conditions like that would have been unrecoverable. In my case the squall spun me around and wrapped the keel, and then the current helped to keep me pinned. I was alone, at night, and worried about the chain's proximity to the prop if I tried to use the engine to rescue myself. Fortunately there was a TowboatUS station nearby, and they quickly dispatched a boat to help me. The towboat captain had no idea how to free me, so I guided him through the maneuver, and all was well. But the conditions I experienced were nothing compared to what hit Bayesian!

    • @TerryKeever
      @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +22

      Thanks for sharing. I've heard no one else mention this possibilty. Sounds like it would explain the yachts movements if the AIS is correct.

    • @karenholmes9560
      @karenholmes9560 14 дней назад +19

      After reading your comment im wondering if the engine was started but the wind was blowing the yacht over the chain and it actually went round the prop and dragged the boat towards the anchor or at least held it in a side n position where the wind was able yo blow it flat and then it couldnt right itself because the chain was wrapped tight around the prop and holding it in that degree of position from sideways under the yacht, if you can understand what i am saying. I know i had an anchor chain round my prop once and in strong wind its so scarey and you cant move

    • @toniking8386
      @toniking8386 14 дней назад +17

      I believe the anchor was a big issue for them also, based on the AIS tracking. May have even pinned them "stern to" the waves if chain was wrapped around the prop.

    • @Denali1600
      @Denali1600 14 дней назад +15

      I think there may have been multiple factors at play, but I do believe the anchor may well have a role here, possibly a key role, pinning the boat.

    • @karenholmes9560
      @karenholmes9560 14 дней назад +13

      @@toniking8386 Yes i think the anchor could have had something to do with it. If the chain was under the boat round prop and the wind was blowing side on it would be like being pinned flat to the sea and would happen very quickly. Be interesting to see what is found out. None of the fivers mentioned the anchor or where it was.

  • @mtngal5853
    @mtngal5853 14 дней назад +219

    At this time, I wait for The Yacht Report
    to get accurate Bayesian updates.
    Always informative and timely.
    Listening in Asheville, North Carolina USA

    • @Woof341
      @Woof341 14 дней назад +7

      Viewing from Asheville NC as well :)

    • @JodyLSumrall
      @JodyLSumrall 14 дней назад +4

      Me also!

    • @gern5168
      @gern5168 14 дней назад +5

      Same here! From Berwick PA!

    • @Woof341
      @Woof341 14 дней назад +10

      ​@@JodyLSumrallhow interesting! I lived in and sailed the virgin islands for many years before moving to the mountains full time. Hence my interest as a former Captain. Have a nice rest of the weekend!

    • @mtngal5853
      @mtngal5853 14 дней назад +3

      @@Woof341 is your name Tom?

  • @nicholascoombes6919
    @nicholascoombes6919 12 дней назад +15

    I’ve been a ships captain for 30 years, many on super yachts, and have commanded Pereni Navi yachts during my career. It is a miracle that so many people survived this freak weather incident. In time, the crew will be honoured for their actions - provided the Italian investigators decide to treat this fairly, and not just side with the Italian yacht builder.

    • @gha9543
      @gha9543 12 дней назад

      If the yacht design is at fault, how did they get British Marine to insured and flying a British flag means it had been certified by the British Navy? Not seaworthy and yet insured by British Marine . Wanker

    • @flowsnake8732
      @flowsnake8732 11 дней назад +1

      ​@@gha9543I'd just like to say I wasn't entirely convinced about your argument at first, but when I got to the end and discovered your final masterstroke, namely calling the OP a w4nker, I realised that you must be right. Thanks for helping me to understand the truth.
      Tw4t.

    • @patciava3398
      @patciava3398 10 дней назад +2

      Your comment appears quite biased. Investigators are approaching the situation with a systematic and evidence-based methodology. They are focusing on whether the captain and crew took all the necessary safety precautions to prevent this tragedy. One key question is why all the crew members survived, while six guests and the chef tragically lost their lives. It seems likely that the water entered from somewhere, otherwise, a boat like this wouldn’t have sunk so quickly. Divers who carried out underwater inspections of the boat reported that the hatch was open. The strong wind arrived at 3.50am. Up until that moment, the Bayesian was still anchored. From 3.50 to 4.03, the ship moved as it was dragged by the wind. A lateral hatch that leads to the garage [where jetskis, inflatables and other water sports kit is stored] was open. This garage has direct access to the engine room, so if the door between them was also open, water would have quickly flooded the engine room, leading to the ship’s sinking. Furthermore, the boat’s mobile keel was partially raised. It’s clear that a lowered keel would have provided more stability to the sailboat in case of strong winds. Do you think the yacht builder made his claims lightly? “I can tell you with certainty that the ship took on water in these 13 minutes. It took on water not only flooding the garage but also the engine room,” he said. The local fishermen did not go out that night. These people took the weather conditions seriously. How did the crew of the Bayesian not take the meteorological bulletin seriously? I struggle to explain it. How did they, when they realised they were losing the ship, not think of rescuing the passengers who were in the cabins?

    • @christianwall7181
      @christianwall7181 8 дней назад +2

      @@patciava3398 We do not know some of that as fact and nor does the designer or ceo of the company that bought the shipyard. The port side of the yacht is upper most and the divers have not reported the garage as open and it would be a strange vessel that sank on the opposite side to its flooding. There are a whole host of reasons why it could have taken on water once the weather hit: the hvac and engine room intakes; after it rolled, passengers and crew trying to escape out of the lower cockpit - a crew member may have already said he escaped that way; or passengers could have tried to escape forwards and opened that watertight door. It is not clear the retractable keel made a significant difference and if it would have done, the fault lies with procedures that did not require its use as much as the crew and there is a big difference between a glorified centre board that reduces leeway and a fully ballasted keel to ensure self righting. The weather forecast was not for weather the yacht could not withstand and that is why the CEO that bought the shipyard is attracting criticism given the Italian navy has said the weather forecast was not that bad. He is in any case, utterly illogical because if the yacht was as safe as he suggests, why would anyone don life jackets and muster on deck? He cannot have it both ways. In the case of most seaworthy yachts, it is safer to close everything up stay inside because they do self right as he maintains Bayesian should have done. He is not the designer as far as I am aware and has every incentive to blame the crew if he was or liked most people will not be able to conceive when the design fails - air crashes are a great parallel. Accidents do happen at sea and they need not have someone to blame - extreme weather is weather. It is more likely than anything there is a string of causes none of which would be significant on their own, but cumulatively were fatal and if any one part of that chain were broken, the yacht would not have gone down. Shipping and aviation have learned the hard way there is rarely only one source of failure.

    • @deboerkanna1
      @deboerkanna1 7 дней назад +1

      Were there multiple anchors? I mean also one on the rear to prevent the ships movement?

  • @Private-GtngxNMBKvYzXyPq
    @Private-GtngxNMBKvYzXyPq 14 дней назад +23

    I experienced a downdraft. It was instant. There was some wind and rain, but then in a few seconds the trees were all pushed over onto my house. If my house had been this ship, it would have been turned on its side just as quickly. I personally am not inclined to blame anyone. Some forces of nature you just can’t fight in the moment.

    • @RexHeuermann
      @RexHeuermann 8 дней назад

      I played with my downdraft yesterday. A huge waterspout came out.

  • @beverlysnow9315
    @beverlysnow9315 14 дней назад +133

    Thank you for your clear reporting on this tragedy. I don't need to read about this on any other media, you have spot-on reporting. From Cuttyhunk Island, Massachusetts, US.

    • @andresinsurriaga1082
      @andresinsurriaga1082 14 дней назад +3

      I concur with this opinion of these helpful and objective reports. From San Antonio, Texas.

    • @michaelcrane2475
      @michaelcrane2475 14 дней назад +5

      I actually learned about the deckhands statement here about 8hrs ago from an Italian bloke in the comments of a previous post and have been waiting for confirmation. So yes, this is by far the best place to come for updates

    • @martiwilliams4592
      @martiwilliams4592 13 дней назад +2

      Ditto from Denmark

    • @khriswildt5633
      @khriswildt5633 12 дней назад +1

      Your statement about you don't need to see any other media because this one has to be right makes you I'm sure CNN viewer!

    • @michaelcrane2475
      @michaelcrane2475 12 дней назад +1

      @khriswildt5633 Dude, this is about accurate reporting from an outlet outside the United States of anarchy. We don't follow some nutcase who tells us what news to watch. We can decide for ourselves thanks.

  • @LawrenceBroussard
    @LawrenceBroussard 14 дней назад +65

    I lived through a microburst on the water in the day time. It just look like a normal rain shower in the summer. I just happen to be close to land where the wind was all of a sudden blowing over a 100 mph. It was crazy in just a few seconds I do not remember how many minutes it lasted, but it was extremely intense and a few boats where turned over that day.

    • @LiveFromLondon2
      @LiveFromLondon2 14 дней назад

      something that never happened except in your fantasies.

    • @natscat4752
      @natscat4752 13 дней назад +4

      @@LiveFromLondon2 do you know the commenter personally?

    • @mmullaley
      @mmullaley 12 дней назад +4

      17 years back. Saw what looked like thunder clouds rolling coming up the harbour. Increased gusting winds...started motor, headed for shelter off point of land. Dropped main and tied it down, furled jib while motoring for shelter. Getting closer, lots of wind on nose. Threw off anchor in 18 feet and she blew back with 150 feet out in seconds. Felt anchor grab and hold. Kept engine running and wind and driving rain came. Rain was hitting me so hard had to check it wasn't hail. Took cover under Dodger as it increased. A seagull was perched on the transom and we just looked at each other. It passed in mere minutes...the sea gull left and I put my mainsail cover on, recovered my anchor and motored 10 minutes back to the club. I was that close to the club but those tumbling black clouds looked so ominous that I got everything down and dropped the anchor. I know of one ther boat that was out in it and they too dropped sail. They had a harder time of it but were OK . Visibility was very limited once it hit. I did note trees blown down, not one or two, whole sections of trees blown over.
      I was headed back to the club anyway because I thought a thunderstorm was coming but had never experienced anything like that on land or on the water.

  • @cqbarnieify
    @cqbarnieify 14 дней назад +68

    Your reports are thorough and thoughtful. Thank you.

  • @simonwhittaker6455
    @simonwhittaker6455 14 дней назад +53

    Well done Yacht Report, as many others have previously said, your presentation is excellent.

  • @stephennowlan2637
    @stephennowlan2637 14 дней назад +26

    Excellent reporting, this is the only outlet that has been fair and impartial from the beginning of this tragedy. Hopefully this statement will help to reduced the potentially slanderous and defacing comments about the crew that have been so quick to flood the internet by people who don’t understand the marine industry.

  • @mandymoo7406
    @mandymoo7406 14 дней назад +42

    Thank you for this because frankly until the full report comes out you are the only person i trust in relation to anything relating to these type of boats

  • @SanClara
    @SanClara 13 дней назад +6

    I don’t have any nautical experience, but I do have many years of experience reporting on big breaking news stories as a journalist. I appreciate your thorough reporting, and also the great care you are taking to verify facts and urge caution about jumping to conclusions. Credibility is everything, which I’m sure you know. People may quibble over your choices, but your sincere efforts to be fair is undeniable as far as I’m concerned. Your work will help make the industry safer and better for yachting and also the local communities that have relied on these ports for many centuries.

  • @dianeschenkelberg8270
    @dianeschenkelberg8270 14 дней назад +42

    You have given very unbiased coverage of this event. However, I wish when YT channels show the footage that you show at 4:26, it is clarified that this is not the Bayesian!

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +4

      Some RUclips channels show whatever images they like & only accidently show whatever their AI narrator is talking about now & then. Some seem to get EVERYTHING wrong.

    • @cindycreateforlife
      @cindycreateforlife 14 дней назад +5

      Yes, he already covered that in previous videos

    • @gerarteuben3333
      @gerarteuben3333 13 дней назад +11

      @@cindycreateforlifei know that, but many people wouldn’t know this so a disclaimer would be appropriate to clarify the fact that it’s a different vessel.

  • @robertgregory8936
    @robertgregory8936 13 дней назад +7

    Maritime ships will never be land resorts, and shouldn’t be designed to look like a land resort. Every vessel on the sea (or inland waters) needs to be rigged for rough weather. That means no sliding glass doors, but instead small portholes. It means no loose furniture, but instead fixed furniture, handholds everywhere.
    I’ve been at sea in 55 knots wind in Sea of Cortez with breaking seas washing across the deck. Been dismasted 300 miles off San Diego, and lost rudder on a 84’ ‘maxi’ sail boat 80 miles off Baja Calif. The sea will find every weakness in a boat and crew, and tear everything apart. I’ve seen it.

    • @dodystiller3718
      @dodystiller3718 13 дней назад +3

      Thank you, me too!
      The tragic in this whole situation is that these days people wanting to buy a vessel come along with the idea that modern technology solves all problems of the past and one can happily step on a boat to sail anywhere.
      Please don't ask me to tell anything about the sailors coming through the place I'm re-building my ship for the last years but much of it is shocking to put it carefully.
      Manufacturers have caught up on this trend. They are more than happy that the amount of "proper" sailors asking questions they do not enjoy to answer has been mainly replaced by people who don't know any better.
      Suddenly more and more silly designs popped up. In the small scale and the large scale including "super-yachts". And most of it focussing on entertaining people.
      I haven't got a clue where this is leading to and if there might be a wakeup call one day.
      It is sad. For the people who lost their loved ones and friends.
      But, the sea knows no mercy. Even going out with proper boats there is no guarantee. Nature is stronger.

  • @sajahf
    @sajahf 10 дней назад +3

    So glad you're here to counter so much misinformation and sloppiness. Thoughts to all the bereaved and all the crew too

  • @thecaptainwoody
    @thecaptainwoody 13 дней назад +7

    Thank you for your calm, knowledgeable, informative recaps of available info.
    A couple of thoughts ...
    -Ais, if it is not receiving heading info could have 'guessed' that the yacht was pointed the direction it was traveling when it was dragging anchor and turned the icon incorrectly. Boats tend to remain pointed into the wind when dragging back or lay perpendicular.
    -The skipper is always responsible for everything that happens on their boat.
    -If dragging in 20-30 knots, the yacht probably was not anchored properly. Not seeing a proper backdown on the graphic. A microburst would not last long enough to drag that far.
    -It was peak season for waterspouts and associated extreme wind bursts. This season has had the hottest water recorded. It was stormy weather. The skipper knew all this and that the odds of a knockdown were relatively high.
    -If the bulkheads were open (the only way to sink this boat) in these conditions, the skipper is liable.
    -Taking the 5th. Refusing to comment to authorities doesn't look good for the skipper. Hopefully he is cooperating with the investigation that will help MCA and others responsible for this boat design, to improve.
    -Venting. I have skippered some smaller yachts and ships to 110'. I have never seen an open vent to the engine room as proposed. Aircon is cooled by the seawater of course. Engineroom blowers run air through large hoses or ducts, I don't see how they could allow a sinking amount of water in.
    -Bulkheads. I keep coming back to this as the only way to sink this yacht.

  • @stuartf2946
    @stuartf2946 13 дней назад +9

    I'm not a sailor of any kind, the sea isn't a place for me but I find your channel very informative and enjoy, very much seeing the thing that terrifies me.

  • @MLIOGJXNUYAT
    @MLIOGJXNUYAT 14 дней назад +40

    I understand the woman and her child were were out on the deck, which is why they survived. She can presumably speak to what role the captain played in saving them.

    • @lazygardens
      @lazygardens 14 дней назад +5

      Also ... if he was saving them, he was occupied and couldn't leave them to go get any others.

    • @gha9543
      @gha9543 14 дней назад +6

      @@lazygardens what did her husband do when he also survived

    • @lazygardens
      @lazygardens 14 дней назад +1

      @@gha9543 I have not read any statements from him as to where he was on the yacht and what his actions were.

    • @user-hw7ny8ts3z
      @user-hw7ny8ts3z 13 дней назад +1

      ​@@lazygardensObviously they were all "in the dark" & it is a 1 yr old "baby"! What would you do? Watch the baby die?

    • @user-hw7ny8ts3z
      @user-hw7ny8ts3z 13 дней назад +1

      ​@@gha9543These people were thrown all over the place in the dark & in cold water &:you want to know what did her husband do? Dumb?

  • @michellenz5529
    @michellenz5529 14 дней назад +62

    The crew are all heroes, they literally saved 15 people while in a nightmare❤

    • @todortodorov6056
      @todortodorov6056 14 дней назад +6

      ... or their actions created this tragic situation. Don't make conclusions without knowing all the facts. The Kegworth air disaster should have thought us some lessons that can be applied to the sea as well.

    • @Horatio1886build
      @Horatio1886build 13 дней назад +8

      The Captain saving the mother and girl ! I would really like to stick this in the face of some people that are blaming the captain and crew. I have 50 years in yachting, this could have happened to I think any professional or amateur captain out there no matter how experienced and cautious. A 20-27 knot forecast is nothing that would have caused any concern about a catastrophic weather event. This was a freak event. If any finger pointing it should be of a design with 45 degree down flooding angle and board up VS angle of 78 degrees that is terrible for any sailing yacht or any yacht really in my experienced opinion.

    • @mammadijacopo3347
      @mammadijacopo3347 13 дней назад

      What are you on about? The people (non crew) saved themselves.
      If it were up to the crew all passengers would be dead

    • @edelweiss2.076
      @edelweiss2.076 13 дней назад +1

      It's a miracle that anyone who was below deck made it up and survived. The woman survivor and her small child may have been in the cabin closest to an exit.

    • @juliettedonohue7069
      @juliettedonohue7069 13 дней назад +2

      @@edelweiss2.076 she had decided to sleep on deck rather than in the cabin.

  • @gerhardris
    @gerhardris 14 дней назад +47

    Although I'm a rower and as a former DA into Bayesian probabilistic reasoning and air crash investigation the way you handle this topic is spot on.
    You give the trial by media a positive twist.
    Keeping it simply taking all data into evidence including well founded opinions of experts and critically giving that a rigourous scrutiny as well.
    I'm also convinced that you are a type to change in review a stated position as wrong when new data taken into evidence points to that.
    Excellent job!

    • @TerryKeever
      @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +10

      Esysman is known for correcting any mistakes or errors in the next video. One of many reasons, I watch his videos.

    • @wisdomsleuth77777
      @wisdomsleuth77777 14 дней назад +9

      The biggest thing I think that people don't realize is when you're turned sideways your door is completely unreachable depending on the circumstances and you're trying to do it in the pitch dark

  • @albinmuc2714
    @albinmuc2714 14 дней назад +10

    Thanks for striving to stay with validated facts and avoid speculation. As with aircraft accidents, we all only learn from proven / validated facts. Only learnings based on those facts will lead to more safety in the future.
    No finger pointing, no blame game.

  • @MrDeepseadweller
    @MrDeepseadweller 14 дней назад +15

    I do recommend the Nexus report (on RUclips) to everyone. It was a very good summary of known facts thus far. Thanks too for your top-notch reporting. I look forward to very new report.

  • @hallowedmeadow4636
    @hallowedmeadow4636 14 дней назад +8

    Love the channel. As the proud owner / captain of a jenneau 1095f, it makes me smile when you refer to this yacht as small. However I try and apply the concepts and lessons you describe on this channel for larger ships, and feel it makes me a better and safer small yacht captain for my family as many of these considerations are not typically shared with or covered in the limited training provided to small private yacht owners. Thank you.

  • @jerrycoon3369
    @jerrycoon3369 14 дней назад +33

    Something I keep thinking about also is that as soon as that boat went on it's side, it would have gone dark. If you are on an unfamiliar boat and now it's on it's side making it more confusing now it's dark and you are blind. Pretty scary.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      Although all luxury yachts must have emergency lighting lighting up the cabins and the emergency exits and this emergency lighting comes on automatically and lasts 3-8hours?

    • @jerrycoon3369
      @jerrycoon3369 14 дней назад

      @@dianamincher6479 Underwater?

    • @antonomaseapophasis5142
      @antonomaseapophasis5142 14 дней назад +1

      Plus, there is the possibility the mattress from the bed was tossed onto the door to the room. You would be standing on something which is blocking the exit.

    • @edelweiss2.076
      @edelweiss2.076 13 дней назад +1

      In video from land, it did appear the lights went out very quickly after the boat went on its side. What a nightmare.

    • @jerrycoon3369
      @jerrycoon3369 13 дней назад +2

      @@antonomaseapophasis5142 Yeah it's hard to even imagine what that situation would be like.

  • @SailsDaily
    @SailsDaily 14 дней назад +9

    I think you are totally correct with your deductions of anchor wrap around the keel Davidhoy and I dont understand why this possibility has not been bought up by the "?experts" before now.
    I experienced that very scenario on a 40ft sailing cat when tide pushed the boat up on the anchor, the boat rotated and caught the rope around one of the centre boards that had been left partially down. Being a cat she still sat flat on the water but sideways on to the flow of the outgoing tide.
    If Bayesian was connected to the anchor from the bow as normal it would have streamed away from the anchor when the wind first came in and would have rotated with the wind direction as that changed. Even if the boat was hit by a strong side blast it would have still moved in the direction of the wind and would have self righted (according to the builders) as the wind passed. As anyone who has spent any serious time at sea on yachts would know, when at anchor boats move to the wind and also to the current or tide. It is not uncommon to see boats riding up on their anchor as the weight of the chain overcomes the weight of the boat, or the tide changes and pushes the boat towards the anchor, leaving slack in the chain or anchor rope which is then hanging directly down from the bow. I believe the boat was originally anchored in 30M of water, so she should have had at minimum 150M of chain or rope out. With that as a probability, it is easy to see how an incoming storm could cause the boat to rotate to the changing wind angle while at the same time being pushed over the slack chain or rope allowing it to wrap around the keel or rudder or props. Once she is tethered mid ships and comes up hard on the anchor then the wind hits her side on and she has to list to the wind, which is probably what happened as the crew say she went over to 20 degrees and then over to 45 degrees. The crew would have been totally confused trying to understand what was happening.
    The evidence will be lying on the sea bed and should have been documented by now so we have to wait to see if that evidence is released to the public or held by the insurers or salvers.

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +5

      Divers have reported nothing that I know of about the anchor chain being snagged on the keel, & it is only a shoal-draft keel with board still up.

  • @JamesDoylesGarage
    @JamesDoylesGarage 14 дней назад +82

    My sympathy's for the Crew and survives that will carry this nightmare with them for ever. What really making me angry, is the efforts of a rep for the boat manufacturer, pointing at the crew and away from the boat design. There was no reason for the crew to do anything different than what they did with the forecast given for a "20 knot breeze". Let's get real. This boat should have been able to handle a 20 knot breeze, but it was a freak storm. The crew is being slandered by assumptions to protect the interests of everyone else. The Captain and crew are hero's doing what they could to save lives in such a short moment.

    • @TerryKeever
      @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +13

      Looks like the crew did all they could

    • @PetarPopara
      @PetarPopara 14 дней назад +4

      That's corporate culture--the 'company first' mentality. Business and the protection of life at sea (or elsewhere, for that matter) often are at odds with each other.

  • @dnaphysics
    @dnaphysics 14 дней назад +67

    Educated guess:
    - in a regular old rainstorm a few of the crew went out on deck to clean things up
    - the wind abruptly picked up due to a microburst
    - the anchor started dragging and the boat turned broadside to both wind and waves
    - because the keel was up and the mast unusually tall the boat unexpectedly heeled way over
    - those on deck slid overboard
    - large external doors and vents were still open and she took on water very fast
    - the crew eventually climbed back on board to rescue passengers but there was too little time to go below deck,
    sadly

    • @TerryKeever
      @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +16

      The keel being up is being made into too much of talking point. The ballast required by the design is supposed to be enough for stability with the keel UP. It is designed for stability with keel up except while under sail. Not down at anchor or while motoring.

    • @DavidGarcia-kf9wo
      @DavidGarcia-kf9wo 14 дней назад +10

      Tell to italian engineers who said It was unsinkable 😉

    • @fabioprimaio8503
      @fabioprimaio8503 14 дней назад +4

      @@DavidGarcia-kf9wo If you close the nine watertight compartiment, yes. btw Ron Holland from NZ was the engineer

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +19

      @@fabioprimaio8503 Mr. Holland did not design the rig on Bayesian, he designed this yacht as a ketch. A couple of motor yacht "experts" on another channel didn't even touch on the mast height, which I as a sailor view as a major contributing factor in this tragedy.

    • @dulls8475
      @dulls8475 14 дней назад +4

      @@TerryKeever Agree.

  • @pauls3075
    @pauls3075 14 дней назад +225

    Giovanni Costantino is trying desperately to avoid ANY hint of blame, throwing the crew under the nearest bus. If I had the money to buy a yacht like that it wouldnt be one of his. The crew is not able to speak publicly for legal reasons, and he should shut his mouth too. No respect for the dead, just divert the blame.

    • @fredkite9330
      @fredkite9330 14 дней назад +22

      Great comment, agree 💯

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад

      He's exposed himself as a world-class idiot with that "unsinkable" claim, so there's that.

    • @isaacchassman6453
      @isaacchassman6453 14 дней назад +12

      Clearly they left a hatch open, how is that not the crews fault

    • @LanceJapan
      @LanceJapan 14 дней назад +1

      Yep, looks like that to me too.

    • @todortodorov6056
      @todortodorov6056 14 дней назад +21

      Giovanni Costantino's company build a yacht that overwhelmed the crew. On the other hand, the crew did non understand the severity of the situation. Who will go out on deck to collect pillows and flowers if they knew that the storm was endangering their ship.

  • @Mack6234
    @Mack6234 14 дней назад +7

    Thanks for constantly keeping us updated and informed. Much appreciated.

  • @billsprague7094
    @billsprague7094 14 дней назад +68

    A 20 knot wind is nothing to worry about in a boat of this size. Asking the crew to keeping cushions etc from blowing overboard would be a very reasonable course of action for the crew.
    The boat was blown over by the laws of physics. The formula for energy is E=1/2mv2, m is the mass of the moving air, v is the velocity of the wind. The wind energy increases exponentially in proportion to the velocity squared.
    An 80 knot wind is 4x the velocity of a 20 knot wind, but the wind energy applied against the mast and hull is 16x greater, a huge difference.

    • @DavidGarcia-kf9wo
      @DavidGarcia-kf9wo 14 дней назад +5

      Tell to italian engineers 😜

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +10

      Now run this calculation with the assumption that the air mass holds a high volume of water, is now more dense & thus packs more punch per knot of wind speed. There are more variables, I suspect, than the manufacturer wants to pay engineers to recalculate for. Same goes for the revised mast height on Bayesian vs. the designed ketch rig...or what happens when a hull this size is rotated at high speed to near it's designed maximum list angle. It's not going to stop spinning before the mast hits the water, no matter what the math claims.

    • @AndreRiviera
      @AndreRiviera 14 дней назад +20

      I was on the island of Corsica in October 2003 and in beautiful cloudless weather, from the top of a cliff I observed the calm wind rise to 75 knots in a few minutes. The sea had turned white because the water was flying into the air. It was impossible to stand up. I have never observed this unpredictable phenomenon with the Atlantic Ocean. For me the Mediterranean is an unpredictable sea, especially after August 15 when the water temperature is very warm. As a French sailor, wanting to sleep on a boat at anchor outside a secure port in the Mediterranean is a very big risk, a lack of awareness or a lack of knowledge of this sea in particular. In France we have an expression for this type of known phenomenon: "a Mistral blow" !

    • @mvl6827
      @mvl6827 14 дней назад +9

      The captain neighbouring vessel had more sense, was more alert and took sensible precautions...

    • @ChimeraActual
      @ChimeraActual 14 дней назад +2

      @@angelikaopland7880 No disagreement, just a note. Water vapor is less dense than dry air, but you are probably correct in that the actual water in the air probably adds to the mass hitting the superstructure.

  • @shaylabinder4604
    @shaylabinder4604 14 дней назад +4

    New member here in Michigan bc of the tragic news/loss of these people. Prayers for the families, first responders, divers 🙏💜

  • @lizschmitt2228
    @lizschmitt2228 14 дней назад +7

    Thank you so much much for all your diligence on such a sad story

  • @BrianSmith-gp9xr
    @BrianSmith-gp9xr 14 дней назад +29

    Found a nice niche and do it well. Good for you.

  • @TerryKeever
    @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +6

    Thanks for the update and knowledgeable explanations. Ii hope the many blaming the crew with no information are watching as information comes out. Good questions that I hope those investigating are asking. Looking for your next update.

  • @type1krush205
    @type1krush205 14 дней назад +23

    The fact that all the survivors in this rapidly changing chain of events includes all the Crew kinda confirms that if you value your life you shouldn't really go near the Sea if you can't Crew a Vessel in any way shape or form
    Now unfortunately the passengers thought they were staying in a Boutique hotel on land with a Sea view
    In truth they were sleeping above 50 meters of water with just the skin of the Hull between them and the Seabed
    I've been on the North Sea for over 20 years now and there's nothing Glamorous about it whatsoever and many times through tiredness and fatigue the Sea could have easily taken me if she wanted to.
    I can't see how the Captain/Crew could be liable for a freak weather system in this instance tbh?

    • @sailorlac
      @sailorlac 14 дней назад +5

      The chef died. He was part of the crew too.

    • @regig.9493
      @regig.9493 14 дней назад +4

      Combine that with the last video on no safety training of guests and small signs and hidden safety features for aesthetics and sleep deprivation of the crew. Not good.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      The most lethal cabins were the VIP ones as the VIPs had to negotiate a narrow staircase to the upper deck to safety and they couldn't manage this timeously! Angela Bacares acted on instinct and rushed up the narrow staircase to safety just in time? She must have appreciated the lethality of the position of the VIP cabins in the hull! Pity she didn't raise the alarm?

    • @RayThackeray
      @RayThackeray 14 дней назад

      I am trying to visualise how there can be "nothing glamorous" about being an owner or passenger on a 50 meter superyacht. Nope, I am failing. BTW I am now into my 20th year living aboard and covered 50,000nm.

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 13 дней назад +2

      @@dianamincher6479 Nope. She was wakened by some part of the disturbance and decided to investigate. She was just lucky.

  • @vernicethompson4825
    @vernicethompson4825 14 дней назад +4

    Good list of questions! Yes, I hope they all get answered. Thank you for this update! Fascinating testimony from the crew member. I was struck by his saying that the vessel had capsized yet he and the captain had enough time to climb the hull and attempt to rescue others. That suggests that the sinking was not immediate, and that water intrusion occurred after the capsize and did not directly cause the capsize. The wind knocked the vessel over, then water began to get in via various openings. That is what I surmise anyway from what the information provided. I hope you continue to provide more testimony as it is reported.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      Also there was insufficient emergency signage so that the six passengers could escape timeously through the narrow staircase to the upper deck and to relative safety? There should also have been emergency lighting and warning alarms in the VIP cabins!

    • @user-hw7ny8ts3z
      @user-hw7ny8ts3z 13 дней назад

      ​@@dianamincher6479Maybe "designers" will take these "on board" (sorry about the pun) in future!!!

  • @RayThackeray
    @RayThackeray 14 дней назад +3

    @eSysmanTech, from another Mersysider (I'm from Southport), thank you for an excellent channel with nonbiased, clear and salient commentary and information.

  • @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461
    @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461 14 дней назад +9

    🙋‍♂️THANKS FOR THE UPDATES AND WE AWAIT THE ANSWERS WHEN THEY ARE AVAILABLE 💚💚💚

  • @johnwright291
    @johnwright291 14 дней назад +104

    At 68 I worked on tugboats for most of my life and this is probably the strangest incident I have ever seen. Having had a while to digest the news on it I have to conclude that the design of the hull to be the main factor. I'm very sure that had the retractable keel been in the down position it wouldn't have capsized. You can check out an eerily similar incident 125 years ago Google the wreck of the sailing ship Andelana in tacoma Washington in 1899. It was a very modern vessel for the time.

    • @BalthazarMyrrh70
      @BalthazarMyrrh70 14 дней назад +31

      There is a video of baylesian being retrofitted with the tallest mast ever built at the time.
      It was not of the original design. It was much taller & heavier. The vid is a few years old. They are bragging about the height of the mast & the challenge of the installation.
      One could easily imagine that extra height & weight taking on more wind... & with the keel elevated at all, with waves... I think it will be concluded that this retrofit mast was at least partially to blame.

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 14 дней назад +19

      The keel being retracted is SOP at anchor. No more discussion is necessary.

    • @dulls8475
      @dulls8475 14 дней назад +20

      @@oldmech619 Well said. This is an act of God well beyond the act of any man to stop it. I hate the fact there is a witch-hunt on the crew.

    • @seancidy6008
      @seancidy6008 14 дней назад +4

      @@dulls8475 Yes, the rats are complaining that they ought to have be the first deserting the sinking ship, and the crew beat them to it

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 14 дней назад +17

      Several days ago, the prosecutor said he already had enough information to prosecute two of the crew members. He is not waiting for the investigation to conclude. This is Italian justice. Seriously.

  • @lindsayjenions2795
    @lindsayjenions2795 14 дней назад +19

    As with air crashes, it is usually a chain of events that results in the tragedy... same here... there are a whole lot of questions still to be asked and answered,. and it will take time to ascertain all the information to accurately report the cause of this yacht sinking.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      And the VIP guests should rather have slept on the deck with the others! Much safer and no narrow staircase to safety to negotiate!

    • @user-hw7ny8ts3z
      @user-hw7ny8ts3z 13 дней назад +1

      ​@@dianamincher6479Who knows what fate has in store? When it's your time to go, you can't fight it!

  • @samgentile7494
    @samgentile7494 14 дней назад +30

    The lack of 'Common sense' in this investigation is simply amazing.
    The biggest and best clue we have is that the mother was on deck with her infant child.
    She would NOT have been out on the deck at 4 AM with her baby IF it was stormy outside. She was on the deck trying to sooth and calm her crying baby so the baby did not disturb the other sleeping guests. It was calm on deck when the mother went outside and a moment later the ship was hit with a violent gust of wind and quickly capsized and sank.
    No one could have done anything to prevent it. Common sense tells us that if it was getting nasty and stormy with higher wind speeds the mother would have gone inside the cabin with her child. Instead, there was no time to get inside the cabin and she went overboard with her child because the event was sudden with no time to react. Sort of like being run down by a freight train you did not see coming.

    • @seancidy6008
      @seancidy6008 14 дней назад +4

      Exactly. And the infant was by itself in the sea for a time.

    • @regig.9493
      @regig.9493 14 дней назад +4

      However both the AIS and the captain of the other ship report that both ships were next to each other struggling for a little while, according to the AIS for about 16 minutes before sinking.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад

      The mother was sleeping on the deck with her baby as it was very hot?

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 14 дней назад

      The mother and child WERE NOT on deck. The Captain went back on board (after being thrown off the ship by the knock down) to rescue her as the yacht was sinking.

    • @LiveFromLondon2
      @LiveFromLondon2 14 дней назад +3

      @@allangibson8494 the mother stated clearly that she was asleep on deck. And got thrown into the water. Captain had nothing to so with it.

  • @wjhann4836
    @wjhann4836 14 дней назад +21

    AIS:
    As an electrician, I have some questions that may be answered by people working in GB:
    - In smaller vessels the AIS is FORBIDDEN to use signals from the normal navigation equipment. It has it's own GPS and with this it calculates every other datum. So the heading of the boat is not reliable if it is only moving slowly. This might explain the data from Marinetraffic due to a slowly dragging anchor.
    - if the AIS may take compass or other data from the navigation system may depend on the regulations for that ship size and flag state.

    • @sventhormodpetersen1752
      @sventhormodpetersen1752 12 дней назад

      Is the arrow's direction dictated by CoG or by heading? Class A AIS will normally report both

    • @WJHARXT
      @WJHARXT 12 дней назад

      @sventhormodpetersen1752 I'm only familiar with small vessels.
      - AIS shall not take the position from navigation bus - it has to have it's OWN GPS.
      - the AIS is NOT ALLOWED to announce it's position to navigation bus
      Can ask a friend if he would run AIS over night but nav not - interesting how the readings on marinetraffic will be

  • @pacoxxi3302
    @pacoxxi3302 14 дней назад +17

    the firefighters reported in newspaper interviews that when they went down to the depths they found the anchor attached to the ship and the doors of the saloon were closed
    they found that on the seabed there are signs of the anchor being dragged.

    • @pacoxxi3302
      @pacoxxi3302 14 дней назад +2

      and they asked how much chain was available on the anchor
      and they couldn't answer that

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +2

      The boat dragged its anchor around 1 hour before the boat sank?

    • @pacoxxi3302
      @pacoxxi3302 14 дней назад +5

      @@dianamincher6479 16minutes 3,50 until 4,06

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 13 дней назад +2

      @@pacoxxi3302 They were intent on recovering bodies, and had to limit each dive to 10 minutes at the wreck.

    • @pacoxxi3302
      @pacoxxi3302 13 дней назад +1

      @@hb1338
      yes but there were explorations first and to understand how to enter.
      and each dive max 12 minutes

  • @patrickvonstieglitz5836
    @patrickvonstieglitz5836 14 дней назад +13

    I have at sea for most of my life I started at six years old and finished with last ship 7 years ago a three hundred tonne marine research ship built in Japan. I have been thru or experienced 5 cyclones two as a young fisherman in my late teens and three others in the last 10 years. The last in March 2017 which I lost my ship when the eye of a cyclone with 311km wind went over top her and put her on the beach . Let me say this over the years I have learnt in many cases the hard way, that proper preparation is the key to safety at sea. There is only one way that you can be prepared properly and that is if you have advanced warning. It’s becoming clearer every day that the captain and crew acted in accordance with their responsibility. It’s impossible to prepare for a severe weather event if it comes out of nowhere. Don’t let me hear comparisons with the vessel nearby it is a totally different equation . This was an unusual unexpected event that was not forecast. The crew are hero’s for saving the lives of so many in very adverse conditions. Unless you have been there you do not have any idea related to how tough it is to survive. Can’t talk can’t hear and sometimes can’t even see.

    • @louispaparella5766
      @louispaparella5766 14 дней назад +1

      Proper Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance!.....Sometimes! Never underestimate Mother Nature!!!

    • @patrickvonstieglitz5836
      @patrickvonstieglitz5836 14 дней назад

      Proper preparation in this case is to ensure that the ship is properly manned and crewed by competent people

    • @louispaparella5766
      @louispaparella5766 13 дней назад

      @@patrickvonstieglitz5836 Agree! Good luck finding that kind of folks.

    • @JacquelineDelaitre
      @JacquelineDelaitre 11 дней назад

    • @JacquelineDelaitre
      @JacquelineDelaitre 11 дней назад

      hello

  • @pugman99
    @pugman99 13 дней назад +1

    I, like others I read here, only source yachting news from your channel, because it is succinct, balanced and professional in every way.
    How I wish big network news services did the same!
    Cheers from Australia🐨

  • @wisdomsleuth77777
    @wisdomsleuth77777 14 дней назад +10

    This is what I've been saying since it happened people don't understand that your door is completely in a different place could be unreachable especially if you're trying to deal with it in the dark I don't think anybody accounts for that in the General Public

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      Sounds like te emergency lighting wasn't functioning and there were no alarm systems?

    • @user-hw7ny8ts3z
      @user-hw7ny8ts3z 13 дней назад

      ​@@dianamincher6479All show! Designers responsible!!!

  • @johngibson3837
    @johngibson3837 14 дней назад +12

    More good reporting sysman from you and your team

  • @bethanygonzalez7760
    @bethanygonzalez7760 14 дней назад +84

    It’s terrible that the representative from the boat building company tried to throw the captain under the bus without any real information or details. Sounds like he was simply trying to protect the company’s reputation. No ship is unsinkable

    • @terebrate
      @terebrate 14 дней назад +12

      "protect the company's reputation", and to lessen the monetary damage from eventual lawsuits, most likely "civil" in nature. Lawyers will find a way to sue the builder, I'm betting.

    • @peterwilliams1119
      @peterwilliams1119 14 дней назад +11

      The Bayesian takes on water at 46deg. That's a normal tack to windward.

    • @DavidGarcia-kf9wo
      @DavidGarcia-kf9wo 14 дней назад +6

      "sounds like" 😏? Italian company and italian prosecutors... It will be easy for that "team" to conclude the boat was really unsinkable but crew do all wrong.

    • @tarverr.mcknightjr4439
      @tarverr.mcknightjr4439 14 дней назад +2

      You are really funny. All the crew are SAFE, they got into the lifeboat safely in a storm!!! None of the guests did. The night of a severe storm you have a “ deckhand” on your bridge watch?!?! Oh, wait one that could not even close the watertight doors from the bridge?!?!

    • @dulls8475
      @dulls8475 14 дней назад +10

      @@tarverr.mcknightjr4439 Real life means no one is on full alert when the weather predicted was not the weather they got. Which hunting the crew is shameful.

  • @MikeJames-l3v
    @MikeJames-l3v 14 дней назад +18

    Everything is panning out as expected...vessel
    was not in immediate danger, then they got smacked by the unexpected, and unpredictable microburst.
    The fact they were able to get back on board and rescue some passengers is is indicating ,that perhaps the boat didn't sink as fast as we thought.
    I imagine that If, they were walking on the walls, any doorways along the boats centerline, may well have been out of reach...both to them and passengers trapped below.

    • @testboga5991
      @testboga5991 14 дней назад +3

      5 minutes under these circumstances is nothing

    • @MindbodyMedic
      @MindbodyMedic 14 дней назад +4

      ​@@testboga5991yes the rapidity of the sinking is the big issue from what I can gather from other commentators. A boat like this should be able to be in this position and not sink rapidly. I can picture crew remaining relatively calm as they couldn't imagine it actually sinking.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      The point is the Captain and the operating crew had 4 hours to prepare for the worst and should have been adequately prepared for the worst?

    • @MikeJames-l3v
      @MikeJames-l3v 14 дней назад +5

      @dianamincher6479 preparing for what? The weather Forcast was minor for this size of vessel. Easily withstood...until very suddenly it couldn't be .
      Preparing for a major storm would turn the boat into something resembling a submarine. Not what you want for the passengers on a luxury yacht at anchor...in fact if the weather was Forcast to be truly severe, the passengers would more than likely have been sent ashore.

    • @PetarPopara
      @PetarPopara 14 дней назад +1

      The lady with the infant were already on the deck (as per her own statement) when the boat heeled and they fell into the water. Why isn't everyone interviewed? The picture would get more complete and clear.

  • @SeaJayBelfast
    @SeaJayBelfast 14 дней назад +21

    Good job changing your name. It made you seem like a software company like Linksys or Infosys

  • @chrisedwards2539
    @chrisedwards2539 13 дней назад

    This channel is top notch and provides insight not generally available thru the mainstream media.
    Ditto What's going on with shipping RUclips channel for ships

  • @dougfitch3649
    @dougfitch3649 14 дней назад +21

    Here's a weird one that is pertinent: My brother, a former USCG SAR Officer, and I were discussing this tragedy and the unlikelihood of a cyclone or downburst exactly hitting any boat. Astonishingly, he said his first ever SAR incident was exactly that!: A fishing boat with Vietnamese crew had been directly hit by a cyclone. Wow! The report that Captain and crew of the Bayesian crawled back onto the boat to rescue guests would be nothing short of heroism. Should that be confirmed by the investigation, perhaps these traumatized professionals could be recognized formally and publicly with some sort of civilian commendation for fulfilling their duties in the worst of situations (walking on the walls!) The huge balls award perhaps.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +3

      The Captain and the crew had four hours to prepare for the storm and needed to consult the weather charts and to prepare for the worst!

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      There was a lot of hubris around and this was a large glamorous super yacht!

    • @LiveFromLondon2
      @LiveFromLondon2 14 дней назад +1

      yeah, crawled back on to a boat during a downburst? There was no downburst, the water was a bit choppy thats all. Anyway, their efforts will be recognised formally, they are going to jail.

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 13 дней назад +4

      @@LiveFromLondon2 "There was no downburst". Says a man who has never worked at sea and was 1000 miles from the incident. Your grandmother would be very unhappy with you.

    • @DrJuan-ev8lu
      @DrJuan-ev8lu 13 дней назад +1

      @@dianamincher6479 The predicted worse was not too alarming. What is alarming is the 45 degree down-flood angle. That is motor yacht territory and I would think ridiculous for anything sprouting a record height mast and of such high windage and momentum. Note that during a heavy deluge water can work its way into the bilge and reduce that angle and furthermore destabilize the ship and reduce self-righting angle. Perhaps the only thing that could have saved that ship is cutter charges that could be fired to sever the mast and prevent its leverage from maintaining a capsize.
      PS: I would like to know if and when any bilge alarms went off or if automatic bilge pumps had started to ascertain to likelihood of any destabilization.

  • @MarjanKaykavoosi
    @MarjanKaykavoosi 14 дней назад +1

    You are the best person given out information about this case. Thank You 🙏🏽💙💙

  • @juliendufour4513
    @juliendufour4513 14 дней назад +3

    It's really hepful to leverage on your experience and bring clarity to those events.

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 14 дней назад +10

    Thank you eSyssman for the update on this very sad sinking......🇺🇸

    • @JacquelineDelaitre
      @JacquelineDelaitre 11 дней назад

      Hello,
      Thank you Sysman for this update on this very unfortunate shipwreck.
      I was really depressed by this tragedy.
      I wish you a good rest of the week. .

  • @patrikfloding7985
    @patrikfloding7985 14 дней назад +85

    20 knots of wind is unremarkable, and no reason to wake up any guests. The boat listing notably with no sails set at 20 knots of wind is alarming.
    Constantino is partial, and not an independent expert.

    • @01rnr01
      @01rnr01 14 дней назад

      @@patrikfloding7985 +1 - 20 is when sailing actually starts ;)

    • @davidloewen5528
      @davidloewen5528 14 дней назад +28

      The testimony did not say the boat was listing at 20 knots, it said he woke the captain at 20 knots. The wind probably increased subsequently.

    • @CapitanHarlockisback
      @CapitanHarlockisback 14 дней назад +15

      20 knots are unremarkable, but no fisherman went out that night. Something doesn’t add up.

    • @WM37980
      @WM37980 14 дней назад +18

      @@CapitanHarlockisback Whenever the sea is choppy the fish dive and disappear. Fishermen know this.

    • @CapitanHarlockisback
      @CapitanHarlockisback 14 дней назад +10

      @@WM37980 So everybody but the crew knew the storm was coming… even the fishes.

  • @terrylawrence4121
    @terrylawrence4121 14 дней назад

    Thank you for this informative reporting. When you speculate, it's from experience and knowledge and not sensationalized. I trust you.

  • @ycplum7062
    @ycplum7062 14 дней назад +18

    There is a huge difference between 20 mph winds and a downburst. A downburst can get up to 150 mph. The captain was responding to a report of 20 mph winds. You then have the question of when the captain was able to acertain the true situation.
    I do have a question on how well the AIS functions if the ship has significant heel.

    • @irtnyc
      @irtnyc 14 дней назад +7

      Yes this is important. As is the amount of water (mass) in the wind.
      Separately, do we have definitive answer yet to the meteorology question whether they experienced a downburst (water goes down) vs a waterspout (water goes up) vs an exceptionally powerful squall (water goes sideways) etc.

    • @k53847
      @k53847 14 дней назад +9

      I suspect he didn't understand the true situation until the ship was hit and rolled.

    • @maggieyoung8090
      @maggieyoung8090 14 дней назад +6

      @@irtnyc
      I think the (Italian Air Force?) confirmed it was a down burst.
      The yacht report confirmed this in an earlier video.

    • @GrahamPearce-ib9om
      @GrahamPearce-ib9om 14 дней назад +7

      And when the down burst hits the surface it spreads in all directions and depending on the yacht’s relative position it could hit it with wind from a completely different direction and beam on.

    • @lazygardens
      @lazygardens 14 дней назад +11

      "the question of when the captain was able to acertain the true situation. " I've been in microbursts - you have zero seconds to maybe a minute if you are able to see the winds hitting things at a distance and are far away. It's like a wind explosion!

  • @boatbloke6701
    @boatbloke6701 14 дней назад +8

    It is going to be easy to apportion blame in hindsight. However the crew were doubtless responding to something that they have attended to many times before, i.e. a strong wind at anchor. However, on this occasion the boat, without warning, gets knocked down by a very strong downburst. It was dark, this could not have been expected or anticipated and to say you should of woken the guests and got them into lifejackets and on deck, whilst with hindsight is actually correct, in the real world couldn't happen because you would be getting them up every other night for no reason whatsoever. This is a very rare event and it should be appreciated as such. No one would have been prepared for what happened so quickly. Everyone on deck would have been thrown into the water or left clinging on to something that used to be upright.
    Once the boat goes beyond her maximum point of heel she will lay on her side, is never coming up and the only way is down. If you are thrown in the water you aren't going to be able to get back aboard and even if you could cling to something and get back aboard you would not be able to navigate the inside of the vessel to rescue anyone in the few minutes available. There would be very little chance of anyone trapped below escaping.
    If you think about the Costa Concordia incident, she sat on the bottom at a few degrees of heel and pretty much everyone got off. If she had been in deeper water she would have rolled over and thousands would have been trapped below.
    The question here can only be one of design of this sort of vessel and the rules, and indeed compromises, that RINA allow the boatbuilders to work under. Do not loose sight of the fact that every boat design is a compromise in one way or another.
    Thank you for your unbiased insight into this tragic accident, quite a few of the other reports I have seen spout uninformed conclusions.

    • @wisdomsleuth77777
      @wisdomsleuth77777 14 дней назад +4

      The biggest problem is you need to be able to get to the door that is now your ceiling and if there is 12 ft and it's absolute Pitch Black and that's if something heavy didn't land on you

    • @boatbloke6701
      @boatbloke6701 14 дней назад +3

      @@wisdomsleuth77777 Exactly. Well put.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад

      The sea was 30C and a storm is forecast -it could be brutal- for the guests' be fully prepared. Get them through that narrow staircase and onto the upper deck pronto! And regardless of their VIP status!

    • @LiveFromLondon2
      @LiveFromLondon2 14 дней назад

      Except that your version of events is not what happened. There was no downurst, there was no knockdown. A storm was predicted , the fishermen stayed in harbour.
      As for Concordia, what level of stupid are you? If it was in deeper water it would not have crashed into the rocks. You are one thick bot.

    • @wisdomsleuth77777
      @wisdomsleuth77777 14 дней назад +2

      @@boatbloke6701 yeah just take a look at the door that you're sitting across from in the room and then imagine that being on your ceiling could you reach it and I don't think any of these prosecutors even thought about something like that you just have to conceptualize it

  • @thingsmymacdoes
    @thingsmymacdoes 14 дней назад +9

    I think the plotter gets a positive speed value and draws the ship icon in the direction of its movement. It doesnt know the ship is moving backward. For that you need 2 or more (differential) gps antennes.

    • @johanbuys3299
      @johanbuys3299 13 дней назад

      Not sure what system this vessel had, but on AIS one can often see ship bow and stern indicated, even while tied up in harbor. Some ships are only a dot, most are a triangle when underway and larger ones indicate both size and bow.

    • @helmshardover
      @helmshardover 13 дней назад

      Ah, have a look at the Sir RBP then. It IS dragging it;s anchor, with the bows pointing up to the anchor/wind while moving astern.

    • @thingsmymacdoes
      @thingsmymacdoes 13 дней назад

      @@helmshardover could be gps error. When you are stationary you can sometimes notice the icon for your own vessel pointing in different directions. That's gps (lack of) precision being interpreted as an actual heading. Or maybe it's sending gyro compass heading to the AIS system instead of relying on heading calculated from gps.

    • @helmshardover
      @helmshardover 13 дней назад

      @@thingsmymacdoes I feel you're getting confused between Heading & Course...

  • @user-xk6yn3zd8h
    @user-xk6yn3zd8h 14 дней назад +17

    I wonder how much time passed between the sailor waking up the Captain and the crew walking on walls.?

    • @james0xaf
      @james0xaf 14 дней назад +3

      @@user-xk6yn3zd8h About 10-15 mins from the storm onset to capsizing, based on when the ship begins to drift and when the data stops.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +1

      Probably 16 minutes or less? The boat should have been moored in the harbour and the guests in a hotel?

    • @james0xaf
      @james0xaf 14 дней назад +2

      @@dianamincher6479 Did you not watch the video? No reason based on the forecast for any of that.

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 13 дней назад +1

      @@dianamincher6479 Nope - absolutely no reason to do so. Note that there were several other vessels moored outside the harbour, which was almost certainly full iin any case.

    • @fabioprimaio8503
      @fabioprimaio8503 13 дней назад

      about 2 hours

  • @scooby7479
    @scooby7479 13 дней назад

    I have seen a lot of unreliable articles online saying the blackbox of the bayesian was found giving the last 16 mins of what happened on the vessel - but then reading the article it didn't give confirmation or evidence and was just a lot of air without saying anything of sustance - so I am glad you are doing updates with reliable sources - thank you

  • @adrianwright8685
    @adrianwright8685 13 дней назад +3

    It's curious how so many You tubers, many of whom have probably never even seen a sailing yacht let alone been on one, seem to know so much more than the technical and naval experts.

  • @pualanalemelle841
    @pualanalemelle841 14 дней назад +1

    Fascinating. thank you for keeping us up to date.

  • @ScottLarrieu
    @ScottLarrieu 14 дней назад +9

    I see the first three comments are spam botts that I've seen on several other UTube channels. They turn up on all kinds of different platforms. From war to water sports and slots to yachts. Thumbnails of pretty women with nice things that say. Don't know what their game is other than clicks.
    Be kind and do good work.

    • @rtqii
      @rtqii 14 дней назад

      porn bots

  • @peterbennet7145
    @peterbennet7145 13 дней назад

    Thanks for your outstanding work covering the tragic sinking of the Bayesian.
    It's great that you hold off any judgements while the evidence is incomplete and unclear. And don't jump to conclusions about who may - or may not - be at fault.
    It may well turn out that we'll end up seeing this as a yacht crew that saved 15 of the guests rather than lost 7. We should wait for the full picture to emerge.
    Speaking as an engineer, I don't think I'd have wanted to design a boat where things like stability are pushed so close to the margins.

  • @User-wollswoycegawage
    @User-wollswoycegawage 14 дней назад +24

    The crew put them selfs in further danger trying to save others
    Praise to them 👏

    • @tarverr.mcknightjr4439
      @tarverr.mcknightjr4439 14 дней назад +3

      They all got on the lifeboat , saved themselves, NONE of them died,but the chef!!

  • @impuls60
    @impuls60 14 дней назад +15

    In my mind the everybody was doing they're own routines as they do in light wind/weather. Noone expected the boat to capsize so ofcourse someone forgot to lock the huge sliding doors or close the side door. On the other hand I dont think the vents on the side of the hull are big enough to let in enough water mere seconds before the boat would self right. Behinds the inlets there are probably ducts that will restrict the amount of water gushing in. The huge double door would have let in swimming pool amounts of water every second and you would not be able to come out from a cabin and swim towards such a explosive river of water filling the boat. If the huge doors where closed the passengers would have had time to crawl out. Those doors are a death trap and the crew should have been given training to always seal the main door shut at different operating situations. Since the deck hand didnt talk about the doors this was obviously not part of his training.

    • @TerryKeever
      @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +2

      If doors would have been locked, most guests wouldn't have know how to get out - back to emergency drills. I would think the main access they used would be their first thought. The door problem should have been corrected as it's been a known problem for some time.

    • @regig.9493
      @regig.9493 14 дней назад +3

      You can't lock the doors like that, then nobody could get in and out and guests and crew would have been stuck inside. Without actually locking them shut they would open by themselves.

  • @RobertoLopez-bn7uz
    @RobertoLopez-bn7uz 14 дней назад +8

    The question of why/how were the guests that died found together in one cabin on the port side...assume they were all escaping from their respective cabins into a for/aft alleyway, the alleyway quickly filled up with seawater compressing the air that was available, the air finally burst open the port cabin door and sucked all the passengers in there with it The air would have been increasingly compressed with the onrush of water into the cabin until the water sea water ingress drownd the passengers. Which possibly meant they were still arrived surviving for a time in the last air pocket. Tragic

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад +2

      Well, it all hinges on how aware the VIPs were of the lethality of their position in the VIP cabins in the hull and the need to get through and up the narrow staircase to the upper deck as soon as possible! They did not follow Angela Bacares up the stair case at about 4.02am and had they done so they would be alive today-probably! They would have had 4mins to jump into the sea!

    • @JacquelineDelaitre
      @JacquelineDelaitre 11 дней назад

      hello

  • @meinolf153
    @meinolf153 14 дней назад +23

    There is testimony from the captain in nbc news: "Cutfield said the boat tilted by 45 degrees and stayed in that position for some time, then it suddenly fell completely to the right, the newspaper reported."
    It first tilted 20 degrees, then 45 degrees and went over the right side. In the press conference it was said: "the Bayesian sank stern-first and then rolled onto its right."
    It was not a 90 degree knock-down over the side like in that video from Australia.

    • @Dennis-vh8tz
      @Dennis-vh8tz 14 дней назад +11

      45 degrees is also the down flooding angle. This sounds like the engine room and lazarette flooded via the engine and HVAC vents on the side of the hull. Even if the lazarette door were open it was on the port side and the 20 - 45 degree starboard list would've kept that opening well above water. Flooding two water tight compartments shouldn't've sunk the boat, but the flooding would pull the stern down and perhaps that allowed the sea to reach the large lounge door and then rapidly flood the passenger areas, or it could be that the yacht took on enough water that the free surface effect fatally capsized her.

    • @Ali-Bea
      @Ali-Bea 14 дней назад +3

      Agreed. There was no knockdown. It tilted 20 then 45. At some point the mast lights went out as per the CCTV as presumably the generator had flooded. Then it went over.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 14 дней назад +4

      44 Degrees heel puts the air conditioning air intakes in the deck underwater. The yacht free floods from that point.

    • @Ali-Bea
      @Ali-Bea 14 дней назад

      @@allangibson8494 It would take a while through the air vents, and you can shut them off. What’s the downflooding rate?

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 14 дней назад +5

      @@Ali-Bea Once power is lost you physically can’t close the vents. One of the problems with automation incorrectly applied. Current testimony indicates that the captain was thrown from the bridge into the water when the yacht was knocked down so couldn’t physically reach the controls and there was apparently no automatic actuation when the ship heeled.
      This smells like a design fault (going cheap on critical systems - all form, no function).

  • @Ali-Bea
    @Ali-Bea 14 дней назад +12

    “Parker Eaton, Bayesian engineer: On Sunday, Il Corriere quoted him as saying that all doors and hatches were closed when the storm hit the boat, except one giving access to the engine room. That door was located on the side opposite to the tilting and so could not be a factor causing the sinking, he said.”
    Source: NBC quoting Italian newspaper: Il Corriere Della Sera.

    • @captbrad6329
      @captbrad6329 14 дней назад +1

      Finally some data on external hatches
      Thank you

    • @minigirl6839
      @minigirl6839 14 дней назад +3

      Yes. And he also confirmed the keel was in the raised position.

    • @edelweiss2.076
      @edelweiss2.076 13 дней назад +1

      The Italian press doesn't always get technical details correct. Italians tend to be, at best, approximate in all things.

    • @uffa00001
      @uffa00001 13 дней назад

      @@edelweiss2.076 Idiot

  • @marcocarlson1693
    @marcocarlson1693 13 дней назад +2

    Some of these comments seem very uninformed. Italy builds 52% of All mega yachts in the World. This one particular yacht, however, the Bayesian, was designed by Ron Holland Design of New Zealand. The interior design was then done by a French company called Remi Tessier Design. It was deemed very seaworthy by British authorities, and sailed therefore under the British flag. Giovanni Constantino, head of Perini Navi, regardless of his rather quick ascertation, with evidence though, will certainly be proven correct of his analysis. Of course there was crew error involved in the sinking. This is not even debateable, and won't be, once the facts of the investigation are shed. He understands the boat can't sink, like that, unless poor precaution and bad errors are made that 'allow' water into the vessel so quickly and massively. That being said, this weather event was quite sudden apparently, so I certainly truly sympathise, but that's what being a captain of a vessel like this means. You have to be on guard, have foresight, and expect even the unexpected. This is when training and experience needs to be called on. That said, it's all very tragic, obviously.

    • @mmullaley
      @mmullaley 13 дней назад

      Well, the design has to hold up long enough for crew to respond.
      I don't give a rat's ass how many boats they built. The chips were down and the boat went down like a cheap whore. Doesn't matter how much you paid for it.

  • @antebellum45
    @antebellum45 14 дней назад +4

    I haven't heard anyone talk about the amount of actual water that's associated with a down burst / micro burst.... If it is hundreds of thousands(!) of gallons of water coming straight down in the center of the microburst, and the yacht just happened to be right there, the yacht would have literally been forced down underwater in a very short time.

  • @7phyton
    @7phyton 14 дней назад +3

    Finally more details and actual relevant facts, rather than speculation. High compliments to The Yacht Report. Notably, just about the very first completely unfounded speculation came from Mr. Constantino, of the company that owns Perini Navi, who instantly branded himself as an unreliable source for anything at all by pronouncing a vessel that had just sunk as "unsinkable" (or equivalent verbiage) if X or Y were the case - circumstances about which he could not possibly have any knowledge at that point. Just those hasty comments alone make one suspicious of the seaworthiness of the boat design or construction under very rare extreme conditions. Certainly we ought to remain open to evaluate what really happened based on more facts and witness statements, and I have no doubt we'll see those compiled here.

  • @delxinogaming6046
    @delxinogaming6046 14 дней назад +99

    They are trying to scapegoat the crew because it is a design flaw. This is a disgrace

    • @bimmaru9542
      @bimmaru9542 14 дней назад +6

      I agree the scapegoat is cowardly but I’m not so sure it’ll be painted as a flaw, I mean all boats have a point of no return once they’re beyond a certain angle no?

    • @JoeLinux2000
      @JoeLinux2000 14 дней назад +13

      Not necessarily a design flaw. No boat is perfect in all conditions. This boat was designed for luxury and entertainment not severe weather.

    • @valefur72
      @valefur72 14 дней назад +7

      They are simply trying to understand the causes of the accident.

    • @libertyblueskyes2564
      @libertyblueskyes2564 14 дней назад +10

      @@bimmaru9542 No, we've seen boats keeled over 45 degrees and then uprights itself without sinking. The super tall mast not countermanded by the upraised ballast would surely affect stability

    • @glassini
      @glassini 14 дней назад +8

      This is a standard Investigation into A Sinking and Deaths at Sea.

  • @svens.5139
    @svens.5139 14 дней назад +2

    Nature is always capable to create desaster no matter how hard we try avoid and anticipate.

  • @thomo74
    @thomo74 14 дней назад +3

    The size of the mast has to be the contributing/ culminating factor!
    Possible Scenario….
    - Crew kept up late by guests, don’t have time to pack away the cushions etc. as they have early start; all go to bed except deck hand who stays on watch.
    - Winds increase quickly in the early hours.
    - The downburst/waterspout hits the vessel violently , causing it to drag anchor, simultaneously causing her to suddenly (but easily) broach, with the aid of the oversized mast and the keel being in a raised position.
    - A regular yacht would pop back up after the surge or gust had passed.
    - But due to the height and weight of the mast as well as the reduced ballast, mean she tips 90+ degrees, which means she’s taking on water so quickly, it wouldn’t matter if any doors were opened or closed.
    Tragic accident
    - there is nothing anyone could do from there except abandon ship.

    • @vernicethompson4825
      @vernicethompson4825 14 дней назад +1

      I agree with most of your scenario!

    • @msromike123
      @msromike123 14 дней назад +5

      yeah that about sums it up, its avs was less than almost any vessel i could research including a carrier, a 45 ft sail boat, a frigate, a cruise ship, you name it, it was the only ship i could find that didnt have an avs for between 110 and 140 degrees, excluding container ships

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +1

      @@msromike123 I've said in previous threads that the real sailors of the Age of Sail had better equipment than Bayesian. Or...was that "frigate" a guided missile frigate? Either way, going to sea in a tippy, over canvassed mega-sailboat with a tiny crew outnumbered by leisure guests is just nuts.

    • @RayThackeray
      @RayThackeray 14 дней назад +1

      If the keel were lowered and the wind blowing the ship from abeam causing dragging to the lee, the listing could have been even worse.

  • @SCBiscuit13
    @SCBiscuit13 14 дней назад +4

    It seems that the captin knew what he was doing and kept to the procedures. I still belive that the the short keel vs the mast was the main issue, but this calls for the procedures to be revised.

    • @dianamincher6479
      @dianamincher6479 14 дней назад

      It really depends on the awareness and preparedness of the Captain and crew and the awareness of the VIP guests and their position in the hull whereas if there is an ingress of water they were most likely to die?

  • @Gilan4983
    @Gilan4983 14 дней назад +20

    You are missing 2 vital questions
    1. When the rig design was changed from ketch to sloop what effect did that have on the stability and ballast of the vessel. Was weight added to keel to offset the mast height and therefore leave the yacht lower in the water. There’s no doubt the stability info look dodgy
    2. Why is no one connecting this to MY Ethos another ISG boat that sank last month. There is a pattern here which includes Italian shipyards and RINA

    • @libertyblueskyes2564
      @libertyblueskyes2564 14 дней назад +7

      #2 point is spot on

    • @bimfred
      @bimfred 14 дней назад +12

      there was ballast added. 30-50 tons. from a previous video

    • @bimfred
      @bimfred 14 дней назад

      so a freak storm was engineered by whom? the chinese?? What are you conspiracy theorists on, seriously.

    • @returner323617
      @returner323617 14 дней назад +7

      Just checking, but are you saying that Bayesian (new Salute) was commissioned as ketch, and subsequently changed to a sloop..?

    • @johngibson3837
      @johngibson3837 14 дней назад +7

      Hey Gilan good points mate and I'd take a ketch anyday if I was traveling the ocean

  • @joeordinary209
    @joeordinary209 14 дней назад +5

    Based on what have heard so far(considering the crew had no way to know the extreme conditions that actually then occurred), not much they could have done to prevent this. Closing water tight doors to hastily might also trap people inside(not sure about the design in this case)... More than fault of the crew, probably a slightly flawed vessel design, or to relaxed operating manual to cover such extreme conditions. Should this type of vessel be capable to withstand such conditions is something class will probably now reconsider.

  • @michaelflaxcombsr9095
    @michaelflaxcombsr9095 14 дней назад +12

    I DEFINITELY APPRECIATE YOUR REPORTS ON THIS ACCIDENT. I MOST DEFINITELY DO NOT WATCH ANY NEWS REPORTS, FOR OBVIOUS REASONS. I APPRECIATE, FACTS AND THE TRUTH. AND THATS WHY I COUNT ON YOUR CHANNEL FOR BOTH . SO THANK YOU!

    • @J4ME5_
      @J4ME5_ 14 дней назад +4

      @@michaelflaxcombsr9095 you don't need to shout

    • @annmcdonald6180
      @annmcdonald6180 14 дней назад +5

      ​@@J4ME5_ perhaps person has vision problems

  • @pacoxxi3302
    @pacoxxi3302 14 дней назад +7

    another video of that night is about to come out from another position is of a shipyard nearby that has the cam on that part of the sea.
    the video is already in the hands of the authorities

    • @TerryKeever
      @TerryKeever 14 дней назад +1

      Hope this is true.

    • @pacoxxi3302
      @pacoxxi3302 14 дней назад +1

      @@TerryKeever several Italian streamers are waiting for that video.
      there has been a lot of talk these days about this other video.
      about a lady who wakes up at 3 in the morning because she has this shipyard that looks right at that point of the sea.

    • @pacoxxi3302
      @pacoxxi3302 14 дней назад

      @@TerryKeever what wasn't true?
      I reported all the things I read, saw and followed here in Italy
      from the news to some talk shows.

  • @grondhero
    @grondhero 14 дней назад +7

    Another question is about the glass shattering. Mike Lynch's wife stated that they heard glass shattering. Was this glass from a decoration inside the yacht or was it the glass that made up a window/porthole? If it were the latter, that definitely could explain why the yacht sank so quickly.

    • @rebeccastebbins5275
      @rebeccastebbins5275 14 дней назад +1

      I'm guessing it was one of those glass display cases with the statuettes. Seems unlikely a porthole would shatter.

    • @grondhero
      @grondhero 14 дней назад

      @@rebeccastebbins5275 Depends on the wind speed and pressure. When I lived in Guam, we had cement houses and when Typhoon Pamela hit, the force was so strong it pushed water through the walls.
      It could be a glass case, of course, although the photos I've seen of the interior (available on charter page) doesn't show anything like that. It could have been a mirror falling as well.

    • @rebeccastebbins5275
      @rebeccastebbins5275 14 дней назад +1

      @@grondhero That sounds terrifying! It looks like there's a glass case just outside the master suite; also plenty of mirrors that could have shattered if furniture crashed into them.

    • @juliettedonohue7069
      @juliettedonohue7069 13 дней назад

      @@rebeccastebbins5275 or larges bay windows of the saloon, which would explain why it sank so fast, as it would have allowed in huge amounts of water once tilted. But the divers and pictures should ne able to say if theses bay windows are still in place. They are designed sur suffer a certain pressure, but can explode at some point.

    • @SteamCrane
      @SteamCrane 13 дней назад

      ​@@rebeccastebbins5275 The bridge has wraparound plain windows. It was reported that the bridge windows all blew out simultaneously. It appears the entire deck house has plain windows, TBD.

  • @raa729
    @raa729 14 дней назад +10

    Just last week we were on a charter boat I was skippering myself, we were at buoy and had 25 knots at night, slept safely as a baby. Had 40 knots before, never felt dangerous. And that 35 ft sailboat, this is 200+ feet, unbelievable how shitty these mega yachts are

    • @RayThackeray
      @RayThackeray 14 дней назад

      I very much doubt that Bayesian would ever have had trouble with 40kt winds at anchor, in fact the passengers probably would not hear or feel a thing. My 100-ton old gaffer barely moves in those conditions unless there is a broadside swell, but in a cabin we would barely hear it.

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 13 дней назад

      So what ? You are clearly unware of all the conditions that did or might have prevailed. Have you ever been hit by a microburst ?

  • @nigelwalsh804
    @nigelwalsh804 14 дней назад +2

    Excellent and informative presentation. This investigation has a long way to go yet but I guess an underwater survey will help. For the sea state to build significantly depends on the wind-speed, the fetch of the wind and the length of time it blows.

    • @angelikaopland7880
      @angelikaopland7880 14 дней назад +1

      Sea state wasn't a factor. Bayesian was simply swatted down by a heavy burst of wind, laid on her side & filled with water. Something you could duplicate with a toy boat in a bathtub...but a "pond yacht" with adequate ballast would settle to the bottom upright. Bayesian went down without righting & is still on her side.

  • @LondonarabS
    @LondonarabS 14 дней назад +12

    Question: if all the guests and owners managed to get off the boat safely but 7 of the crew were trapped and died. Will there be such panacea, interest and legal investigations and most important CHARGES because the owner and guest did not go back and attempt to save the trapped crew ? Just saying

    • @regig.9493
      @regig.9493 14 дней назад +1

      Of course not. However maybe this is for the good because it might expose design flaws and those can endanger guests and crew members of future voyages.

    • @RayThackeray
      @RayThackeray 14 дней назад +1

      You are the same TROLL as @LiveFromLondon2 aren't you?

    • @LondonarabS
      @LondonarabS 14 дней назад +3

      @@RayThackeray sincerely and honestly I am not a troll. I am just asking a reasonable question. I
      Have no vested interest in this matter at all. And if you really want to know I am a retired solicitor

  • @alfaena
    @alfaena 13 дней назад

    Hi Captain, Congratulations on your accurate and professional reports.
    I am a merchant marine electronics engineer from Greece, about the direction of the ship, I have to add the below information.
    The class A AIS is connected to the GYROCOMPASS of the ship and the GPS of the ship.
    From these instruments the AIS takes the information for the HEADING (the direction of the bow) and the SPEED (speed over ground SOG) of the ship and transmits this information.
    In case the GYROCOMPASS communication to AIS fails, the AIS transmits, the COURSE over ground from the GPS (COG) and the (SOG).
    If you check the classic Gyrocompasses specs, you see that the Gyrocompass can withstand heel angles of 45 degrees for a short time (the specs write periodically).
    If the gyrocompass stays on 45 degrees for a long time (a few minutes), the processor of the Gyrocompass stops transmitting data and tries to stabilize the Gyrosphere.
    I am referring to classic Gyrocompasses meaning the compasses that have moving parts, Because there is a new generation of Compasses that is called acoustic, with no moving parts and
    withstands the angle of the heel 60 degrees with maximum accuracy and no data transmission interruption.
    Thank you for your time.

    • @geovinny
      @geovinny 13 дней назад

      1) He's not a captain.
      2) We don't know where the heading data came from in this case. Obviously you don't either.

  • @Cheers_Warren
    @Cheers_Warren 14 дней назад +4

    ITS ALL ABOUT THE 45 DEG DOWN FLOODING ANGLE .
    if the freak wind knocked it over to 45 degrees and held it there the boat would flood and sink.
    Very sad but thats it. No amount of lifeboat drill would have saved these poor victims .

  • @colmdunne1690
    @colmdunne1690 14 дней назад +1

    Your channel is the best source of objective reporting on this sad event. Keep up the good work. All those who watch your channel will watch with great interest as the investigation unfolds. You guys are fantastic.

  • @Radicalmama13
    @Radicalmama13 14 дней назад +3

    Has anyone talked to Dick Beaumont - Founder Of Kraken Yachts? I remember him talking about safety safety safety! And about the keel and about how things can go wrong and about instability in the keel (a few had it snap off and it kills instantly trapping sailors inside) anyway - I would LOVE to know his take on this - he said he would never put his family on a boat that wasn’t safe and about things being safe above all else - Garcia yachts also have water tight doors going down the hatch - one man spoke about the boat doing a full 360 in the boat and saying he had never been happier to have those doors - any feedback from builders like this?

  • @tomriley5790
    @tomriley5790 11 дней назад +2

    Walking inside a yacht on its side whilst it was flooding and sinking must have been a horrendously frightening, brave and dangerous experience.

  • @wilsonowen1731
    @wilsonowen1731 14 дней назад +3

    Despicable behaviour by the Perinin Navi Boss to blame the crew within hours of the sinking, when little was known about what happened. That act will be etched in yacht owners and sailor brains for decades. Such a fast response attributing blame on the crew suggests an attempt to divert attention from the yacht design. Declaring this boat was unsinkable was laughable, if the results weren't so tragic. These boats are built as Med gin palaces to pamper the wealthy -so are awash ( excuse the pun) with design compromises. Among them - big heavy glass doors from the lounge to the deck that slide open when heeled 20 degrees, the world's tallest aluminium mast which would have decreased stability when at anchor and acted like a lever in a blast, nothing much in the way of coming to stop water ingress, but allow easy guest access....

  • @edwardwojtecki1534
    @edwardwojtecki1534 12 дней назад

    I once fancied working aboard a mega yacht but was counselled against it by two Captains that were past yacht Captains that said to continue my career ambitions toward commercial shipping with the forward that my journey would be less stressful. That was in 1986. After watching this yacht Captains nightmare unfold I thank the advice I was given. I retire this year as a ships pilot after a long journey starting in 1976 from cadet to Captain and finally ship pilot in the Welland canal. May the facts present themselves and the blame be determined then. Capt Ed Wojtecki

  • @nicholasroberts6954
    @nicholasroberts6954 14 дней назад +4

    The Captain must have been aware of the storm that struck the Balearic Islands a fortnight earlier. A number of big yachts and motor cruisers were blown on-shore and some were beached/damaged and on-shore the beach resorts were given a pasting.
    Armed with that information, surely the precautionary principle should have been observed i.e. the yacht moored in a leeward location closer in shore, on-watch contingent of sailors doubled, keel plate deployed, water-tight doors shut, windows shut and deck furniture stowed before everyone retired for the night.
    I take it that yachts of this size have weather radar on which warning thresholds can be pre-set to alert the crew to adverse conditions, including wind and sea-states and downbursts. Wouldn't there also be a repeater screen in the Captain's cabin. ?
    These storms are unusual as they are occuring earlier than Autumnal storms in the Mediteranean.

    • @Ali-Bea
      @Ali-Bea 14 дней назад

      This is not a particularly unusual storm for Italy. A microburst is not common, sure. But Italy experiences sudden very dramatic violent storms out of nowhere both on land and at sea. Anyone who has spent any time in Italy knows that. You simply cannot tell from a general storm forecast what the storm will do.

    • @RayThackeray
      @RayThackeray 14 дней назад

      Being leeward of shore (nice) could turn into a lee shore in seconds (not nice).

  • @maryholder3795
    @maryholder3795 13 дней назад

    Excellent list of questions, hopefully the answer come soon. Interesting account from the deckhand, that adds to the sinking information. The captain rescued a mother and child which is good news. The story that is coming slowly to us is at least factual and doesn't discriminate against the crew. Excellent research by you and the team, thank uou.

  • @ssylar
    @ssylar 14 дней назад +12

    That is wearied? the testimony of Charlotte Golunski "the mother" told Italian newspaper La Repubblica her family survived only because they were on deck when the yacht sank after encountering a heavy storm. She said they were woken by “thunder, lightning and waves that made our boat dance”, and it felt like "the end of the world" before they were thrown into the water. and you told us the same thing in previous episodes, now the captain save her somehow?

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 14 дней назад +5

      There is a lot of 'travel time' between being on the deck, water, being sucked in by a sinking vessel, and swimming for your life. At any one time the captain may have stepped in. Too many things going on to say when and where exactly.

    • @russ254
      @russ254 14 дней назад +4

      unlikely mother and child would go outside in that unless escorted by a crew

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 14 дней назад +4

      She and her baby may have been on the deck and scared beyond what we can imagine. The captain _may_ have directed them to jump? And/or hold her baby in the air. We have no idea. But I do believe in moments of terror, the captain gave directions that she believes saved her life and the life of her baby.

    • @RW-bi2rp
      @RW-bi2rp 14 дней назад +7

      so the lies have already started!! sounds like they are now trying to make the captain out to be a hero, as they know he will be going to prison.

    • @ssylar
      @ssylar 14 дней назад +2

      ​@@ac1646 she said, it happened in seconds and were thrown into the water. What you don't understand she said that not me.