Life Inside the World's Largest Container Ships Ever Created - History of Ships Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024
  • Welcome back to the FLUCTUS channel for a discussion about what life is like onboard the world’s biggest container ships and how these massive vessels accomplish their important jobs 24/7.
    Fluctus is a website and RUclips channel dedicated to sea geeks. Whenever you are curious or an incorrigible lover of this mysterious world, our videos are made for you !
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Комментарии • 406

  • @dnickbg
    @dnickbg 7 месяцев назад +114

    "Life inside the world's largest ships", shows like 30 seconds of "life inside"

    • @jeffl3196
      @jeffl3196 5 месяцев назад +3

      I thought this would be about the crew ????

    • @JimBEATTIE-os1jk
      @JimBEATTIE-os1jk 2 месяца назад

      That's a really excellent video add your complaining about it unbelievable

    • @meowsaymeow
      @meowsaymeow Месяц назад

      Thanks I'm moving out

  • @vuho2075
    @vuho2075 Год назад +337

    This is why I switched to a career as a Somali pirate

  • @riccardomoore
    @riccardomoore 8 месяцев назад +69

    Who's here after the Baltimore bridge incident??

    • @gradyhachey6786
      @gradyhachey6786 8 месяцев назад +1

    • @billyboy94-yt
      @billyboy94-yt 7 месяцев назад +1

      Lol hi

    • @Mr.Whiteman-rv2iz
      @Mr.Whiteman-rv2iz 7 месяцев назад +3

      It wasnt an accident, it was done on purpose. The dali was the ship, salvidore dali had a painting called the broken bridge where he DRIFTED TO SLEEP UNDER THE BASE OF THE BROKEN BRIDE.. thats just one of many coincidences that can not be over looked

    • @FeliciaInspire
      @FeliciaInspire 7 месяцев назад

      Meeeeeeeeeee! I just had to do some research 🧐

    • @peterwilkins7013
      @peterwilkins7013 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@Mr.Whiteman-rv2izshut up

  • @DavidMartinez-is7gu
    @DavidMartinez-is7gu Год назад +112

    Honestly blown away. Amazing how seamlessly everything is streamlined. Even at the end when she said that it can take up to 3 days...still...3 days for all of those containers is still incredible.

    • @cobwebtheorem7538
      @cobwebtheorem7538 Год назад +6

      Absolutely!

    • @frydac
      @frydac 10 месяцев назад

      If I do the math for 20k containers (she said the evergreen could load 24k containers), then that is about 13seconds per container:
      24h/day*3days=72h ; 72h*3600sec/hour=259,200seconds ; 259200sec/20000containers=12.96sec/container

    • @thatrandomproject6652
      @thatrandomproject6652 7 месяцев назад +1

      It’s about 8-14 cranes at a time working

    • @albininocencio7897
      @albininocencio7897 Месяц назад

      We usually only last exact 24 hrs in one port. No sleep and rest but still enjoy it sometimes.

  • @Sciguy95
    @Sciguy95 Год назад +42

    Wouldnt it be awesome if we could bring the guy that invented container shipping to our time and show him what our ships look like now?

    • @Pppppppxx
      @Pppppppxx Год назад

      Chinese people started to ship their goods to sell in other countries and those from Greece

    • @Ricky_Spanishh
      @Ricky_Spanishh 10 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@Pppppppxx thanks for that useless information I guess?

    • @captainamerica3814
      @captainamerica3814 4 месяца назад +1

      He saw it before he passed away.

  • @BLWard-ht3qw
    @BLWard-ht3qw Год назад +25

    All the logistics that goes into the varying aspects of this is fascinating to me...don't know why, but it just is.

  • @justsomerandompotato1986
    @justsomerandompotato1986 Год назад +22

    Im a maritime student and I'm always blown away on how beautiful this massive ships when you see one.

    • @badcornflakes6374
      @badcornflakes6374 Год назад +1

      Awesome dude. Maritime do a lot for the world 🌎

    • @BRPJR
      @BRPJR Год назад +1

      As a deck officer i suggest you avoid these VLCS or any massive vessel, for that matter. The amount of work is disproportional to that of smaller vessels given the same number of crew. Go for bulk.

    • @howiseait2213
      @howiseait2213 Год назад

      ​​@@BRPJRunfortunately, bulk on the other hand doesn't sound that much better for the most part. Albeit port stays are relatively a lot more chilled in comparison with such massive container ships. But the needed cargo care (depending on the type of loaded cargo) during sea passage for bulk is also worth consideration.
      That being said, what kind of ship do you work on? It'd be interesting to know ;)

    • @BRPJR
      @BRPJR Год назад

      @@howiseait2213 been o/b container vessels of various sizes for 15yrs now and last few were Neopanamax. True, it's relative quiet during sea passage for containers but i'd choose long voyages and port stays than the very fast pace of CV, especially the large ones. And you, if you don't mind me asking?

    • @howiseait2213
      @howiseait2213 Год назад

      @@BRPJR 15 years and counting, now that's impressive! You are absolutely right. Long voyages and port stays make all the difference.
      I'm a young deck officer and have worked onboard big chemical tankers and container vessels for a few years already, but somehow still have a soft spot for containers, although tramp shipping seems relatively more convenient.
      Trust you are having a pleasant weekend wherever in the world you are.
      Fair Winds and Following Seas.... Greetings from Germany!

  • @georgevcelar
    @georgevcelar Год назад +39

    Seeing how these behemoths are built, it's amazing what we as a species can achieve, if only we put our BS aside and work together!

  • @OJBLAQTV
    @OJBLAQTV Год назад +15

    20000 containers on one ship? Gadamn it!! That's very great. Shout's to the engineers ❤

    • @umsshakeelsiddiqui
      @umsshakeelsiddiqui Год назад +6

      Its 20,000 TEUs. Means twenty feet equivalent unit. If we say a 40 feet container then it means 10,000 containers. In both cases, it's really great ship. Salute to the designer.

    • @ramesh_manga
      @ramesh_manga Год назад +2

      At the end, she did say the largest ships can contain as many as 20,000 containers and can take 3 days to load..

    • @petehoskins1267
      @petehoskins1267 Год назад +3

      As a previous post the math Re the TEU is: if Only 20’ loaded then she can hold just over 24,000 or if solely 40’ units then it will hold a bit over 12,000 containers.

    • @Sciguy95
      @Sciguy95 Год назад +3

      ​@@petehoskins1267 either one is still incredible when considering that the 1st container could only hold 58.

  • @grade12purity41
    @grade12purity41 Год назад +13

    in the Philippines.... especially in our province, if our neighbour is having a big and nice house, 90% they have a "seaman" (seafarer) in their family.... in our high school, almost 10% of the males would take maritime course in college for better opportunities and rewarding life.... and it amazes me to watch this knowing that for sure, some of them may have been working to the companies being mentioned here......

  • @bobmcgehee1749
    @bobmcgehee1749 Год назад +18

    Not much around life on board. More of a history lesson.

  • @beeman2075
    @beeman2075 Год назад +13

    The narrator's mention that the largest ships can carry more than 20,000 containers is absolutely mind boggling, from the sheer tonnage amounts involved.

  • @yemarican
    @yemarican Год назад +31

    I am impressed. over 20 thousand containers?? one ship !! that's insane man.. I have (one) container in my back yard and I feel like I have a huge monster there :(

  • @John-vh3ig
    @John-vh3ig Год назад +4

    FYI, majority of the crews are Filipinos! Hardworking and dependable people.

  • @trimley
    @trimley Год назад +10

    Living in Felixstowe England we see the biggest ships on a regular basis - never taken for granted

  • @persimonsen8792
    @persimonsen8792 Год назад +30

    It's crazy, how big these ships are. And how fast they are.

    • @gorillachilla
      @gorillachilla Год назад

      With breeding of China and India it needs to be

    • @jaepcam
      @jaepcam Год назад +1

      @@shrimp8004 English, please.

    • @zhurongonmars6256
      @zhurongonmars6256 Год назад

      @@gorillachilla all the products on ship is made in China

  • @LUVUTV
    @LUVUTV Год назад +7

    it's the brave people who live under this ship. it's amazing. the documentary is very useful

  • @lhasaroadrat9374
    @lhasaroadrat9374 Год назад +50

    Just awesome how high tech shipping has become. These fabulous giants of the sea never fail to impress.

    • @Sam.G79
      @Sam.G79 Год назад +1

      I'm curious to know how that giant chain was made. That thing is gargantuan

  • @mattorama
    @mattorama Год назад +36

    I've done work at the Port of Newark, and it's truly amazing how they move these containers around.

  • @Jan96106
    @Jan96106 Год назад +23

    I'm glad other people are awed by these ships and containers and the shipping industry. I was in traffic management when I was younger and was filled with awe back then. I thought I was the only person who felt that way. I'm heartened to see others agree. I do know from the song and the musical that Sting also feels that way about ships, just not specifically cargo ships: "Oh the roar of the chains and the cracking of timbers, /The noise at the end of the world in your ears, /As a mountain of steel makes its way to the sea, And the last ship sails.

  • @garymiller5937
    @garymiller5937 Год назад +5

    Words escape me. I am simply in awe of the entire process. I don't know what to say. 😊😮😊

  • @theeuropeanb7637
    @theeuropeanb7637 Год назад +13

    As a shipping students in my first year this was so fascinating learnt a lot appreciated

    • @idreeschohan9977
      @idreeschohan9977 Год назад

      In which university are you studying, I am also a student a shipping student.

    • @theeuropeanb7637
      @theeuropeanb7637 Год назад

      @@idreeschohan9977 i am not studying in university but doing an online version of it , its called institute of chartered shipbrokers .

  • @rubiks6
    @rubiks6 4 месяца назад

    They have to keep track of every single container - its contents and its destination. Wow. I know their computer system administrators are kept busy.
    The port in Japan is just beautiful. I'm in awe.

  • @lidarman2
    @lidarman2 Год назад +18

    WOW. I get amazed when I see this large scale ship production and then go see what is takes to make a semiconductor fab. It's mind blowing that is takes so much to make it; whether it is a massive ship or a microchip.

  • @marduenoyarte6559
    @marduenoyarte6559 Год назад +4

    At least my son is on board one of this large ship a container ship

  • @gurpriitchd
    @gurpriitchd 7 месяцев назад +1

    One of my friends who works on a ship shared that his ship can carry 24000 containers. It consumes 2.15 lakh litres of oil daily. Truly gigantic.

  • @GigiSoon299
    @GigiSoon299 Месяц назад

    I have always been fascinated by shipping, this is a great video

  • @nancyoffenhiser4916
    @nancyoffenhiser4916 Год назад +5

    Those O. N. E. ships are so pretty!! 🤣🤣❤️❤️

    • @persimonsen8792
      @persimonsen8792 Год назад

      I prefer the design of MAERSK. Atleast they have more than one colour.

  • @davidmg1925
    @davidmg1925 Год назад +2

    The art of speaking without saying any thing.

  • @MrGruffteddybear
    @MrGruffteddybear Год назад +4

    I’ve always wanted to travel on a cargo ship. To me it would be a more pleasurable way to travel than a cruise ship.

    • @Supernamek-rh2xv
      @Supernamek-rh2xv Год назад +1

      Why????

    • @MrGruffteddybear
      @MrGruffteddybear Год назад

      @@Supernamek-rh2xv I don't like crowds, accommodations are comfortable, and I just like being on the water vs port visits. And it is possible to book passage on a container ship as a passenger so why not?

    • @Supernamek-rh2xv
      @Supernamek-rh2xv Год назад +3

      @@MrGruffteddybear yeah i am also an introvert who avoid Huge Crowds

    • @Simon-nw9bf
      @Simon-nw9bf 11 месяцев назад

      If you get a job as a prostitute this is a manageable objective.

    • @MrGruffteddybear
      @MrGruffteddybear 11 месяцев назад

      @@Simon-nw9bf Idiot.

  • @meanqueensuperscrimper8908
    @meanqueensuperscrimper8908 Год назад +3

    I love to watch any transported related videos. I am an ex lorry driver and did quite a lot of container work. ilona

  • @jay-iw9hb
    @jay-iw9hb Год назад +4

    Great!
    Would have been a bit more interesting, if you could add reefer container transit and terminal storage at dock..

  • @chrisrussellca
    @chrisrussellca Год назад +3

    I had no idea that containers were embedded under the deck line

  • @ThomasMann85643
    @ThomasMann85643 3 месяца назад

    Malcolm McLean and his brother Bill were from Eastern North Carolina. Tobacco country. Bill was my grandfathers friend. He gave the land for the Baptist church that my grandfather built and went to services there. My grandfather also built a sport fishing boat for Bill. I helped him build it, although as a lazy teenager fresh from the university I mainly polished things. 54 feet fiberglass. Built it at Casper’s Marina in Swansboro.

  • @ProfessorChomsky
    @ProfessorChomsky 7 месяцев назад +2

    If only all the similar tech and logistics that go into the war machines on the planet could ALL be directed towards good things this world would be in a far healthier place.

  • @veunxaybanfai
    @veunxaybanfai Год назад +3

    Thanks to share , enjoyed watching

  • @TheDisabledGamersChannel
    @TheDisabledGamersChannel Год назад +15

    3:24 That means that OOCL ship at 1,311ft long is only 19ft shy of being 1/4 of a mile long, that's nuts.

  • @otwjuraganchannel1908
    @otwjuraganchannel1908 Год назад +2

    Yutub amrik, titel pke bahasa Indonesia, tpi narasi pke Inggris, gak ada subtitle lagi... Emg paten!

  • @coolmxx
    @coolmxx Год назад +2

    Bu Sektörlerde Büyük Zorluklarla Dünya Ticaretimizi Geliştiren Değerli Personellere Kolaylıklar, Başarılar, Sağlıklar 🙋‍♂️❣️

  • @wisconsinrebelhomes7587
    @wisconsinrebelhomes7587 Год назад +2

    Bring me my Wal-Mart products!

  • @tomm1109
    @tomm1109 Год назад +2

    I think its funny how the crew quarters and smoke stacks look like lego buildings.

  • @manuelaffonso2191
    @manuelaffonso2191 Год назад +5

    For a better life as a seaman overall, keep away from container ships. Better on bulk/fruit carriers. Much less stress. On these monster container ships , all you see are airport and container terminals. Trust me,, I sailed 42 years on different types and containers were the worst overall. Now retired 20 years.

    • @respectdawildo_danjones508
      @respectdawildo_danjones508 Год назад +1

      Any advice you can offer?? Of how to get in?

    • @BRPJR
      @BRPJR Год назад

      I would have to agree with you. It's my 15th year on container vessels of various sizes now and the big ones are just horrible. Same number of crew (as opposed to smaller vessels) and more workload.

  • @ryanbarker5217
    @ryanbarker5217 Год назад +3

    cool doc, but not much about what life is like onboard these ships.

  • @Rammstein56
    @Rammstein56 Год назад +11

    The loneliest life on the planet, these ships come into container terminals that are miles and miles away from the city centre, here in Rotterdam they are 40 miles or 60 kilometers away from the city and apart from officials, customs, the agent , suppliers or repair men you hardly see anyone.
    All work is done in the most cost effective way leaving the human factor as a margin.
    All my life I spent visiting ships as a service engineer and I can only say we have to have the deepest respect for crews who are far away from home for months and months in a row.
    Romance has gone, as a young man some RoRo's (Roll on Rol off ships) came into port after an African voyage they did as liners and cargo operations would take 3 to 5 days; 20 years later these ships were still in service under DELMAS a French company and they'd do the same carge operations within 36 to 48 hours.

  • @FDNRunningandMotivation-ws1hd
    @FDNRunningandMotivation-ws1hd 5 месяцев назад +1

    Still waiting for any "inside " shot of that container ship 😂

  • @Travelerspence
    @Travelerspence 7 месяцев назад +1

    When I was in Savannah Georgia, I spotted the OOCL going through town, and that thing is huge

  • @pork_friedrice
    @pork_friedrice Год назад +10

    The engines are not installed after the super structure is complete, they are built into the sections and then assembled, in fact all of the engine room machinery is built into the modules. If they weren’t it would be like building a ship in a bottle through the opening.

  • @geow6100
    @geow6100 Год назад +1

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @ziauddin7948
    @ziauddin7948 Год назад

    excellent extremely heavy & large ships # 👍👍

  • @CLark-yk7oz
    @CLark-yk7oz Год назад

    Fun fact, vessels with amazing captains can communicate their value over a lunch, with a tour, between crane ops and hospitality 👏🙏✌️

  • @renatoigmed
    @renatoigmed 5 месяцев назад

    It is not a "life inside a cargo ship" but rather a very shallow summary of how part of the logistics of loading and unloading containers is carried out and a few seconds on how a ship of this class is manufactured.

  • @chemicle
    @chemicle Год назад +2

    Did anyone else see the lively crew quarters? LOL

  • @huibertlandzaat1889
    @huibertlandzaat1889 Год назад

    You made a very interesting video. Thank you for uploading.

  • @jacoblahr
    @jacoblahr Год назад +6

    I wonder how high you can stack them containers before the bottom one starts collapsing in??

    • @Sciguy95
      @Sciguy95 Год назад +1

      That would be hard to answer since it would be heavily influenced by what is inside the containers.

    • @jimtitt3571
      @jimtitt3571 Год назад +1

      Inland containers are three high fully loaded, shipping containers minimum six high but there are higher stacking containers commonly used today, there is a label on them specifying the stackability. Up to twelve are possible at the moment.

    • @jacoblahr
      @jacoblahr Год назад

      @@jimtitt3571 thanks for the info jimtitt lol. Ya i didnt think about the fact that it depends on if theyre laoded or not and with what... duhh. A fully loaded 40 ft container of..say lumber 2×4 or 4×4s stacked 5 ft high or so has gotta weigh at least 50,000 lbs. And a empty 40 weighs about 10,000 lbs ish? So ya big difference. But 12 high is crazy. Amazingly strong and yet fairly simple design. What a genuis the guy or guys who designed and or invented those things.

    • @jacoblahr
      @jacoblahr Год назад

      @@shrimp8004 english sir...

    • @Sea-Land-Oldtimer
      @Sea-Land-Oldtimer Год назад

      Don't know if ISO standards have changed, but when I worked in the business starting in the late 1960's the corner posts were designed to accommodate 50, 000lbs per square inch. regards

  • @rosselliot8971
    @rosselliot8971 Год назад +3

    It's called capitalism. Never forget it.

  • @fritzmeynejr2983
    @fritzmeynejr2983 Год назад +1

    Very information, thank you!

  • @debbieatkinson6711
    @debbieatkinson6711 8 месяцев назад

    This is just WOW!!!❤️❤️❤️

  • @hughsmith7281
    @hughsmith7281 Год назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @ticnatz
    @ticnatz Год назад +1

    That was fascinating......

  • @MattDavis_BeechingsGhosts
    @MattDavis_BeechingsGhosts Год назад +3

    So you measure ships in feet but docks in hectares and metres? How about some consistency? Incidentally, railway stations are cheaper to build than docks, so they're not built near them, rather than railways will be extended to meet them or docks are built near railway *tracks* rather than stations.

  • @fshjdkfhasdkfhsd
    @fshjdkfhasdkfhsd Год назад +1

    These are still a lot lighter and smaller too than the five biggest oil tankers from the 70s.

  • @shorifmiah2680
    @shorifmiah2680 6 месяцев назад

    Out Strding Ship 🚢 ✨️ 💖 💕 💓 ❤️

  • @SOUFIENSAINTPRIEST
    @SOUFIENSAINTPRIEST 5 месяцев назад +1

    thanks😀amazing

  • @komafibre
    @komafibre 11 месяцев назад +1

    Also, did you know
    Human trafficking is heavily intermixed with container ships

  • @wisdom1819
    @wisdom1819 Год назад +3

    Shipbuilding by CSSC and the Main Diesel Engine manufactured by Doosan Engine under Lincensed design by Win-GD.

  • @Franklincnwosu
    @Franklincnwosu 19 дней назад

    Very clever ideas

  • @barryjulianwaldron3656
    @barryjulianwaldron3656 Год назад

    Mankind’s Mega Madness continues!
    🇦🇺💯%

    • @Officialmichferit504uc
      @Officialmichferit504uc Год назад

      sending love, Be honest and frank anyway,did you get to meet this gem in concert?

  • @stellarmella9557
    @stellarmella9557 Год назад +4

    most people dont realize that most if not all of these gigantic pieces of maritime engineering is produced by 1 country i.e China. This demonstrates China's influence and prowess in the maritime shipping industry

  • @josephlewis6987
    @josephlewis6987 Год назад

    damm! They're huge,incredible.

  • @nurulhidayahnurul1925
    @nurulhidayahnurul1925 Год назад

    I like it...me very happy look news it

  • @swedishpsychopath8795
    @swedishpsychopath8795 Год назад +8

    It is incredible to think it all started in Norway. The origin of vikingry was in Lofoten in Norway. From there the vikings spread their konwledge on seamanship and fish preservation (that enabled long sea expeditions). Later the Norwegian Vikings made camps in denmark and sweden.

    • @johnathandaviddunster38
      @johnathandaviddunster38 Год назад

      I don't find it incredible, norwegians are famous for their superiority complexes !!!!......

    • @tomwaitsmencse
      @tomwaitsmencse Год назад +2

      “Spread their knowledge of seamanship” Freud is that you?

    • @CuriousEarthMan
      @CuriousEarthMan Год назад +2

      All hail Norway, inventors of buoyancy which they subsequently licensed around the globe.

    • @swedishpsychopath8795
      @swedishpsychopath8795 Год назад +1

      @@CuriousEarthMan No need to be rude and ironic 😥

    • @CuriousEarthMan
      @CuriousEarthMan Год назад

      @@swedishpsychopath8795 so sorry, it struck me as incredibly egotistical to ignore civilizations prior. Vikings were latecomers to seamanship, depending what area of the world you look at. You soundrd too highly Eurocentric to be left alone. Claiming mankind's accomplishments for your tiny spec of the globe. "it all started in Norway" it's laughable. Maybe dried cod got a boost there....

  • @Mounhas
    @Mounhas 7 месяцев назад +2

    Containers full when leaving China.
    Empty when returned to China.
    No-one can afford to mail nasty products back.

  • @sachinrv1
    @sachinrv1 Год назад

    Excellent informative doc. Thank for sharing.

  • @allanstrobridge2176
    @allanstrobridge2176 Год назад +4

    The part about his mum not leaving her room has put things in to place for about me thank you Jelly & thank you Joe for getting him on your podcast love from the UK

  • @ianbrooke6342
    @ianbrooke6342 Год назад +5

    Very little of this has to do with "Life inside"

  • @WardenWolf
    @WardenWolf Год назад +4

    The spacious crew accommodations make perfect sense. For maintenance reasons they're already going to need corridors that run the length of the ship. And with 1000 feet to work with, minus the relatively small engine room, for a crew of only around 20 people, that's a LOT of room under the cargo deck over that length and width. Everyone can have their own good-sized bedrooms and other amenities.

    • @ElPescado1997
      @ElPescado1997 Год назад

      I'd prefer a slightly smaller room and have a few extra crewmembers onboard.

  • @larryl212
    @larryl212 Год назад +1

    WOW!!!

  • @黃宇娟
    @黃宇娟 Год назад

    謝謝您,長榮海運😘👍❤️

  • @stevet9649
    @stevet9649 Год назад

    Thanks Don. Unfortunatly the people you needed to affect will have the same attitude for your video.

  • @VelaGodide-ls1ln
    @VelaGodide-ls1ln 7 месяцев назад +1

    Shipping & harbor ⚓ industry seems heavy as an angineer am thinking to take my chances there

  • @alika9323
    @alika9323 Год назад

    Amazing

  • @ginog5037
    @ginog5037 Год назад +1

    How cool and advance shipping has become. Are those massive cranes run on electricity or diesel?

  • @ExtremeTransport
    @ExtremeTransport Месяц назад

    good video

  • @normanharris1092
    @normanharris1092 Год назад +2

    Life inside ... um ... okay 1st a documentary on shipping and how ships work and why and then a teeny snippet here and there about life inside.

  • @laskey2175
    @laskey2175 7 месяцев назад +1

    10:24 When empty, their props stick out of the water. 😮

  • @dwaynekoblitz6032
    @dwaynekoblitz6032 Год назад

    Pretty dang impressive.

  • @JiveDadson
    @JiveDadson 5 месяцев назад

    The ship is positioned _in_ the dock, not _at_ the dock. Yes, Otis Reading got it wrong, too. Great song; good video, nonetheless.

  • @MrRhar75
    @MrRhar75 10 месяцев назад

    pool on a ship, amazing

  • @mqblowe
    @mqblowe Год назад +77

    A typical container that everyone is familiar with is 40' long which is the equivalent of 2 TEU(twenty-foot equivalent unit). The largest container ship in the world has a capacity of 24,346 TEU. i.e 12,173 x 40' containers. So when the video refers to ships carrying 10's of thousands of containers that is wrong. Unless of course a container ship was to carry 20' containers only. Seems silly to exaggerate the size of these ships when they are already MASSIVE!

    • @IcetipsVideos
      @IcetipsVideos Год назад +5

      True, but they said "can carry" tens of thousands, which is also true as you say if they only loaded TEU's on board. That would definitely push it into plural! But if you look at those ships they carry mostly 40' containers, so like you say that's just over 12K. Either way, it's certainly impressive!

    • @sherlockgnomes8971
      @sherlockgnomes8971 Год назад +9

      You need to get out more Phil!

    • @reececarr2784
      @reececarr2784 Год назад +4

      Thanks dad

    • @manuelaffonso2191
      @manuelaffonso2191 Год назад +2

      @@sherlockgnomes8971 - No he doesn't. It's true what he said.

    • @Trashman702
      @Trashman702 Год назад +1

      @@IcetipsVideos still an embellishment to say the least

  • @kevinvanrensburg2468
    @kevinvanrensburg2468 Год назад

    Very impressive.

  • @emadeldinhessain3272
    @emadeldinhessain3272 Год назад

    Great. Well done.

  • @mkngani4718
    @mkngani4718 Год назад

    1924 .q 1946 ஒரு நாள். 1986 ஒரு நாள் சர்வதேச அளவில் பல இடங்களில் தேடியும் கண்டு அதிர்ச்சி அடைந்தார் ஒரு நாள். இந்நாளில் தான் இந்த மாதிரி நல்ல செய்தி வெளியிட்டுள்ளது kn.katal....

  • @andhikawjjaya486
    @andhikawjjaya486 Год назад

    TOP👍👍
    be smart and strong aktv💪💪
    🔥🔥

  • @tomarmstrong1281
    @tomarmstrong1281 5 месяцев назад

    I was expecting to learn about life in large container ship.

  • @PistaKralovic
    @PistaKralovic Год назад

    would be nice showing metric conversion of imperial technical data on screen. thanks for the videos!

  • @lek-j5m
    @lek-j5m 11 месяцев назад

    😮24 004 containers
    floating city 😂😂
    unbelievable !

  • @os2383x
    @os2383x 6 месяцев назад

    Oh man, those recreational rooms look like hostage situations. I’d rather go overboard.

  • @mohamedlui865
    @mohamedlui865 Год назад +1

    Good 👍🙂😊

  • @PopeClemensIIX
    @PopeClemensIIX 10 месяцев назад

    Wow, the life as a crewmember must be heaven...
    would be nice to show how it really is..., most are underpaid and life in poor conditions. What is shown in the video is NOT the norm

  • @grandrapids57
    @grandrapids57 11 месяцев назад

    containers also stopped the longshoreman from stealing like bandits.