Blackout In Rough Weather - What Happened To Viking Sky?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 20. 06. 2024
  • In this video we investigate what caused the blackout on Viking Sky, almost resulting in one of the worst maritime disasters of modern times.
    Read the official accident report from the NSIA: www.nsia.no/Marine/Published-...
    ✩ABOUT CASUAL NAVIGATION✩
    I am a former maritime navigational officer and harbour pilot, with a passion for animation. My hobby is presenting educational stories and interesting nuggets from the maritime industry and sharing them on social media to keep them freely accessible to everyone.
    ✩SUPPORTED BY PLUS MEMBERS✩
    / casualnavigation
    Thank You to all Plus members on Patreon. Your support helps keep these videos freely accessible to everyone across social media.
    ✩WITH THANKS✩
    ➼ Images used under license from shutterstock.com
    OSV - Oceantug / Shutterstock.com
    ➼ Audio used under license from Epidemic Sound
    Ruiqi Zhao / I Am Back / www.epidemicsound.com
    Job Bjork / Learning to Fly / www.epidemicsound.com
    Dream Cave / Mystical Tension / www.epidemicsound.com
    Edgar Hopp / Phoenix Rising / www.epidemicsound.com
    Jon Bjork / To the Last Man / www.epidemicsound.com
    Bonnie Grace / Trails of Legends / www.epidemicsound.com
    Phoenix Tail / Find Him / www.epidemicsound.com
    Helmut Schenker / Among the Clouds / www.epidemicsound.com
    ✩DISCLAIMER✩
    All content on this channel is provided for entertainment purposes only. Although every effort has been made to ensure the content is accurate and up to date, it remains the responsibility of the viewer to determine its accuracy and validity. The content should never be used to substitute professional advice or education.
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 490

  • @Ob1sdarkside
    @Ob1sdarkside Před 6 dny +813

    With so many maritime horror stories, it's great hearing one where the crew acted professionally and diligently.

    • @tylerdavis9826
      @tylerdavis9826 Před 6 dny +69

      There’s a lot more competent crews like this out there than bad ones, but you just hear about the crashes you don’t always hear about the good skilled crews.

    • @gustavgnoettgen
      @gustavgnoettgen Před 6 dny +14

      ​@@tylerdavis9826 I would like to watch videos about regular heavy machinery "situations". There was a marine machinist who shared headcam footage but I don't remember where I've seen that.

    • @lightcycler4806
      @lightcycler4806 Před 6 dny +16

      And somewhere with enough coastguard helicopters to take 400 people!

    • @FireStormOOO_
      @FireStormOOO_ Před 6 dny +14

      Bear in mind we don't get full reports when problems don't become a crisis. You're hearing about them *because* they're horror stories

    • @xugro
      @xugro Před 6 dny +8

      @@lightcycler4806 It took 18 hours. Imagine flying those helicopters...

  • @Vivi-yw1eu
    @Vivi-yw1eu Před 6 dny +634

    It feels nice to hear about such emergency situations where crew do everything they could right and in the end things turn out good. I liked watching Mayday for same reasons, alongside of the technical explanations of what went wrong.

    • @Lcpl_Spartan
      @Lcpl_Spartan Před 6 dny +15

      eeey same, though i was addicted to "Air Crash Investigations" on discovery.
      could never figure out what the difference was between it and Mayday. 🤷‍♂

    • @GuardianComplex
      @GuardianComplex Před 6 dny

      FEEPS

    • @Vivi-yw1eu
      @Vivi-yw1eu Před 6 dny +14

      @@Lcpl_Spartan Different title for same thing. Title changes depending where it was aired.

    • @ickym7788
      @ickym7788 Před 6 dny +7

      Yeah, hearing about how sideways things went and yet how the crew not only managed to save the vessel but also took action to ensure the safety of all onboard and were succesfull in all of that is incredible.

    • @SimonsToaster
      @SimonsToaster Před 6 dny +4

      Well, read the accident report. It raises valuable questions like "Why do a bunch of engineers need 15 minutes to think that after a full day of low oil level warnings an automatic motor shut down caused by low oil pressure could be remedied by replenishing oil" or "Why was the standard course of action for a low oil level alarm to reduce the level which triggered the low oil level alarm instead of replenishing oil" or "Why was for 4 years everyone involved in this ships operation unconcerned that no one knew what the correct oil levels were" or "why did the engineers need 40 minutes to reconnect an engine to the power grid"
      The engineers barely adverted a disaster they helped create by their own negligence.

  • @LtBob38
    @LtBob38 Před 6 dny +365

    Lubrication professional here: you don't know how often people just ignore lube oil alarms, whether they're in system or from the analyst that lube is being sent to to be tested

    • @scottfw7169
      @scottfw7169 Před 6 dny +48

      Although not a ship but an automobile, comment reminds me of a workplace happening from several decades ago; a then grey haired fellow and I, who did not yet have grey hair, were having lunch when a then 20-something came in for their afternoon shift. Person said to us, "Hey would you guys know what that funny Aladdin's oil lamp light on the dashboard means?" I forget which one of us answered with, "Why ask us, just look in the owners manual, it will tell you." Their reply, "I shouldn't have to read a book, it should just say what it means." Old guy and I looked at each other then continued eating without further conversation.

    • @wurfyy
      @wurfyy Před 6 dny +47

      @@scottfw7169 This is an attitude I just don't understand. It would take you minimal effort to just tell him what it is, and that it's a severe problem that he should take very seriously. Instead you pretend you don't know, leading to a possibility of him ruining his car's engine.

    • @scottfw7169
      @scottfw7169 Před 6 dny +31

      @@wurfyy Indeed it was a problem 20 something should have taken seriously enough to read the owners manual. And speaking of reading things, read my comment again looking for where old guy and I pretended we didn't know and see how it goes this time looking for something that does not exist. What's amusing here is that one person outright rejects sound counsel and refuses to read critical instructions to find what really does exist within the writing and another person reads a comment and inserts meaning in to the writing which contradicts historical reality.
      Plus there is the data I decided did not need to be included for comment purposes that the same 20-something had also made it known they had no driver license and no intent to ever go get one, and that it was one of the cars their parents owned. Old guy and I concluded that it was logical for the consequences of 20 something's attitude to eventually catch up with 20 something, we were not the parents and it was not our job to save 20 something from 20 something's attitude problem. Again, note that 20 something outright dismissed and refused to act upon wise counsel to read the car's owners manual.

    • @wurfyy
      @wurfyy Před 6 dny +15

      @@scottfw7169 The implication of telling the other person to find it in the owner's manual instead of just telling him is that you don't know, so unless you'd made it abundantly clear in prior interactions that you did not want to ever help that person with anything, yes you oh so absolutely did pretend that you didn't know. Also, the exact interpretation of this isn't really relevant anyway. The point is you knew, you could have easily told him, and you chose not to.
      It takes a whole lot less effort to ask someone who knows than to look it up in a manual, so why would he not just ask ? Especially if he didn't drive to work early just in case there was a problem he needed to look up in a manual. If I have a problem with my car whilst driving to work, I'm gonna ask around during the shift, and then only after the shift am I gonna start going looking things up.
      As for the guy not having and refusing to ever get a driver's license, I don't see how that's relevant. If he knows how to drive, he's not a danger to people around him, and it's his choice to get screwed any time he gets pulled over by the police.

    • @scottfw7169
      @scottfw7169 Před 6 dny +21

      @@wurfyy Interesting to hold that it is their choice to get screwed any time they get pulled over, since they refuse to get a driver license, while concurrently seeming to insist it is not equally their choice to get screwed via refusing to read the owners manual for the potentially deadly machinery they are operating and thereby learn critical details of its operation and servicing. The word dichotomy comes to mind.

  • @JohnFallot
    @JohnFallot Před 6 dny +188

    10:27 Truly, the most dreadful alarm of all 😱

  • @hatsjer
    @hatsjer Před 6 dny +207

    I haven't been able to confirm this, and I've only heard my mother say it, but allegedly: The people on board this ship "enjoyed" (for a lack of a better word) this emergency situation because of how organized and structured it was. There was no confusion amongst them, and everyone did their job effectively. The people were surprised by the hospitality of the emergency responders. Acted almost like this wasn't an emergency at all. Just another day at work.

    • @el_quba
      @el_quba Před 5 dny +39

      Because that's the kind of emergency rescue services would prefer to have. If you're starting evacuation when people are dying or at direct risk then you've probably started it too late

    • @EULAL1A
      @EULAL1A Před 5 dny +14

      You know, if your job is emergency helicopter pilot, it probably would have been just another day at work.

    • @dragon_nammi
      @dragon_nammi Před 4 dny +3

      Honestly it's like perfect ideal rescue conditions. Perfect rescue practice too.

    • @therasco400
      @therasco400 Před 3 dny +4

      @@el_quba 18 HOURS latter and the air lift of passengers was still going on.
      That is insane to me and it shows how if it had turned bad alot of people would have died.

    • @Wayofswords
      @Wayofswords Před 3 dny +4

      It was done earlier rather than later preventing a loss of life and having them on standby if they did lose power or something happened it would save time and resources for rescues

  • @FerroequinologistofColorado

    That “subscribe to casual navigation” alarm at 10:28 on the IAS made me crack up pretty hard.

    • @thereissomecoolstuff
      @thereissomecoolstuff Před 6 dny +8

      That was very good. Glad you commented as I would have missed it.

    • @Chiberia
      @Chiberia Před 5 dny +2

      And it came back multiple times. lol

    • @JonathanKayne
      @JonathanKayne Před 5 dny +8

      I always like it when CZcamsrs can sneakily put that in. ThisOldTony (Machining/Welding/Comedy) does it a lot.

    • @samuelfellows6923
      @samuelfellows6923 Před 5 dny

      😠 ~ Google induced ego

    • @lewiskelly14
      @lewiskelly14 Před 3 dny +1

      The button should have been subscribe

  • @MajesticDemonLord
    @MajesticDemonLord Před 6 dny +63

    As an IT engineer who has done on-call, your description of how transient alerts are handled rings many alarms...

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om Před 5 dny +12

      I'm an ROV supervisor/pilot, and on one job I arrived at there were many spurious alarms. They were for a 'network error', and the current crew were doing exactly this, dismissing them without actually reading them. I told them they had to read EVERY alarm message, because buried in there, there might be a real one that would be alerting us to a potentially dangerous situation.
      The first opportunity we had with a bit of a layup, I dived into the network and found the problem.

    • @rob_lightbody
      @rob_lightbody Před 3 dny +6

      It's worth reading the actual report. The alarm system takes much of the blame, with irrelevant alarms mixed up with crucial ones and the crew becoming overwhelmed.

    • @clovernacknime6984
      @clovernacknime6984 Před 11 hodinami

      @@rob_lightbody Every engineer adds alarms "just in case", none dares remove any least they get blame for any incident. As a result, every alarm system has a tendency to become nothing more than background noise. I know one case IRL where it actually caused an accident (which luckily resulted in nothing but property damage) by distracting people from their work with constant irrelevant alarm spam to the point where a valve was left in an incorrect position.

  • @michaelimbesi2314
    @michaelimbesi2314 Před 5 dny +35

    Having too many alarms go off when something goes wrong is definitely a major issue. I sailed as an engine cadet on board a steam-powered LNGC. We could burn boil-off gas, fuel oil, or a combination of the two. Our plant was steam turbine propulsion and two steam-powered SSTGs, and one diesel SSDG for times that the boilers were offline, as well as the diesel emergency generator. Once, while coming into an anchorage after loading cargo, we had a fuel oil return valve fail on one of our two boilers. That failure triggered a cascade of failures that took the entire plant offline except for the SSDG. We got so many alarms that it took us 2 hours to figure out what happened and get one boiler back online. All this time, the cargo was still boiling off and the pressure in the tanks was increasing. We needed a boiler so we could burn that boil-off gas. I estimate we were half an hour to an hour from venting a bunch of natural gas to the atmosphere when we finally got one boiler working again.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 3 dny +4

      Are there cryocoolers on ships like that, or are they just expected to burn or vent boil-off after being filled at the export terminal.

    • @urban1201
      @urban1201 Před 6 hodinami

      @@gregorymalchuk272 There are no coolers on an LNG ship. LNG it pre-cooled at the loading port and left like that. Boil-off is used as cheap fuel for the ship itself.

  • @alexlowe2054
    @alexlowe2054 Před 5 dny +35

    3:52 This is like, literally my nightmare. As someone who deals with production systems, suddenly having a thousand different alarms when I'm trying to diagnose the problem is the stuff of nightmares. All while dealing with a problem that can't be fixed, as passengers are taking emergency evacuations. That situation went on for 18 hours. Truly, a nightmarish situation.
    It's insane that the engine oil tank had such a huge design flaw, especially considering that everyone knew about the risks.

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 Před 2 dny +1

      I’ve read about how those types of alarm situations, and the hundreds of repeat alarms like in the video, are a factor in disasters. Either from crews shutting off sensors or just plain overwhelming the responders. 😓

    • @CarburetorThompson
      @CarburetorThompson Před 2 dny

      Reminds me of Qantas Flight 32 accident. Where an engine exploded and destroyed a bunch of electrical systems. Causing the pilots to get hundreds of contradicting error and warning messages. One of those accidents where it’s astonishing how everything ended safely.

  • @foxarocka
    @foxarocka Před 6 dny +75

    I cant even imagine how stressful it must had been to go through that, good grief, I'm glad it didn't end in a disaster

    • @Traaseth92
      @Traaseth92 Před 5 dny +1

      If they grounded it would have become the worst known maritime disaster for the decade equal to Costa Concordia just worse

  • @indeedgrasshopper
    @indeedgrasshopper Před 6 dny +169

    Many military systems (generators, vehicles) have something called a battleshort that essentially overrides some things that would ordinarily shut down an engine. In normal operation, you'd want to shut down an engine to protect from overheating or loss of oil pressure but in a life-or-death situation, motor life becomes far less important than human life. It's interesting that the ship doesn't seem to have a last-effort "override everything just make the engines run" switch.

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Před 6 dny +19

      6:33 and 7:17 That is the manual mode they used.

    • @sdfxcvblank5756
      @sdfxcvblank5756 Před 6 dny +39

      ​@@christopherg2347 That's definitely not the same thing, manual does give you more control however, as it said they had to ignore overspeed and all that kind of stuff, engines still could have shut down because of something, battle short is like na bro send it to hell

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Před 6 dny +11

      @@sdfxcvblank5756 The thing was that this was the only operational engine half the time. They probably preferred to not turn it into scrap metal.
      So they left some shutdowns on.

    • @thomasdalton1508
      @thomasdalton1508 Před 6 dny +7

      ​@@sdfxcvblank5756It sounds like it was basically the same thing. It was only once they had other generators running that DG2 shut down again due to low oil pressure. Maybe that was a lucky coincidence, but I think it is likely they were just overriding the shutdowns that would have happened before they had the other generators running and that shut down occurred because they stopped overriding it.

    • @FerdinandFake
      @FerdinandFake Před 6 dny +9

      My first thought as well, no way I save the engine a rebuild over the risk of running ashore.

  • @matthewmillar3804
    @matthewmillar3804 Před 6 dny +14

    This is the kind of disaster I like: no loss of life, and then no loss of material (rip starboard anchor).
    I guess the roll period would be too long for baffles to make much sense, huh? Maybe complicated ones that allowed oil to move to the sump, but not away from it as easily?

  • @theisraelilocomotive70414

    railroad enthusiast here, ehm, running out of oil is a well known occurrence for us, it used to be such a common occurrence we coined the phrase "hotbox" for whenever an axlebox would run out of oil and run hot. evidently, the most we get is a stalled train and a small fire, and im sure we haven't been so thankful to hear that as opposed to the ship based alternative

    • @TheStefanskoglund1
      @TheStefanskoglund1 Před 11 hodinami

      nja moderna bearing can be very unforgiving (instant bind and then the axle snaps off...)

  • @arttops2563
    @arttops2563 Před 6 dny +132

    Why aren't stories like this turned into short or even feature length films? This would be a great watch from the pov of the captain, crew, passenger and rescue workers!

    • @Grandmaster-G
      @Grandmaster-G Před 6 dny +17

      Exactly, i thought the same thing. THIS would make a nice thriller for every Engineer/Machinist/technically interested person !

    • @GuardianComplex
      @GuardianComplex Před 6 dny +7

      They made one for Deepwater Horizon. If you can tolerate it being a Mark Wahlberg movie, everything else is pretty great, especially the sound design.

    • @jumi9342
      @jumi9342 Před 6 dny +10

      Better not because they somehow have to cram a love story in there these days and ruin it

    • @samueldorrington8990
      @samueldorrington8990 Před 6 dny +1

      Getting the rights and permissions would probably cost so much that the studio wouldn't want to risk it.

    • @loopernoodling
      @loopernoodling Před 6 dny +4

      Back in the 1970s, I watched a gripping documentary called The Poseidon Adventure. Absolutely terrifying for all concerned - the whole thing was upside down!

  • @HATECELL
    @HATECELL Před 6 dny +18

    A function to warn engineers when an alarm persists for a certain time would also be a useful feature, to tell sloshing and actual low levels apart

    • @dirtyblueshirt
      @dirtyblueshirt Před 6 dny +4

      The problem is that even sloshing can cause an engine shutdown if it's bad enough. If the suction of the pump is uncovered due to sloshing then the pump will suck air rather than oil, causing the oil pressure in the engine to drop which will shut down the engine.

    • @euantelford
      @euantelford Před 6 dny +4

      Most of these type of alarms have a delay on them to prevent low level alarms during rolling

    • @SimonsToaster
      @SimonsToaster Před 6 dny +1

      If you read the report the usual course of action for persistent low oil level alarms was to lower the level which triggered the alarm. No one knew what the required levels were.

    • @neilkurzman4907
      @neilkurzman4907 Před 4 dny +1

      But we’re looking at here is a design defect. That the sloshing can uncover the inlets. And even if they can’t, it means a safety system wasn’t designed to handle the sloshing

  • @chanute4041
    @chanute4041 Před 5 dny +10

    Shout-out to the helicopter pilots hoisting passengers in 60 knot winds. I'm a private pilot with ~125 flight hours flying small two-seat and four-seat planes, and landing those planes in even a 15 knot cross wind can quite challenging. I can scarcely imagine the skill required to fly in a north Atlantic storm with winds at 60 knots only a couple hundred feet above the water, next to a ship that would create a ton of unpredictable turbulence, and doing all that while keeping the helicopter stable enough to hoist passengers by rope from a ship that's also rolling and pitching. Not only that, but the pilots were able to do that again and again, for hours on end, in the middle of the night. The sheer skill required to do a rescue like that is astonishing, and as a relatively inexperienced pilot I am truly inspired by the work that they and other rescue pilots do.

    • @FrankDyke
      @FrankDyke Před 3 dny +1

      No doubt coast guard pilots and rescue swimmers all clank when they walk.

  • @nitt3rz
    @nitt3rz Před 5 dny +15

    I can't understand why the lube tanks didn't have baffles to stop the extreme sloshing; even fuel tanks in cars have baffles, & racing cars have sort-of buffer tanks to stop this sort of thing happening.

    • @BType13X2
      @BType13X2 Před 5 dny +7

      Fuel tankers going down the highway have it too, so that the fuel sloshing doesn't cause an accident.

    • @nicholasvinen
      @nicholasvinen Před 4 dny +7

      High performance cars have baffled oil pans so they don't suck air when cornering. It's pretty basic engineering.

  • @Cursivealpha
    @Cursivealpha Před 6 dny +56

    Incredible thumbnail

  • @user-iq2yp1dn1q
    @user-iq2yp1dn1q Před 6 dny +9

    I always marveled that the ability of these huge engines to operate in rough conditions.

  • @FerdinandFake
    @FerdinandFake Před 6 dny +12

    When the shoreline is visible, those low oil pressure cutout switches will be bridged faster than you can say mayday.

  • @tomsparks3259
    @tomsparks3259 Před 5 dny +5

    Some piston aviation engines , some road cars, and many high end racing cars and racing boats, often undergo high G-forces from all different directions that make the oil slosh away from the oil pickups similar to the uncontrolled sloshing that caused the near-disaster experienced by the Viking Sky. To combat this type of oil starvation, they use an oiling system called a "dry sump" system. A dry sump uses a pump or pumps to scavenge oil from the sump, treat it to filtration and cooling, then send it to a storage tank. Oil is continuously drawn from this tank and pumped into the engine while it runs thus ensuring the engine an uninterrupted supply of oil regardless of how much the aircraft, vehicle or vessel moves about. The size and shape of the sumps under the engine are designed to efficiently REMOVE oil from the sump for transfer to the storage tank. The storage tank can be made any size that will fit the machine to make sure the engine never goes dry.
    This technology is anything but new. Aircraft have been using systems like this since at least the 1930s and maybe before. That's why it's surprising that oceangoing vessels like the Viking Sky still use the wet sump method for these large, expensive, and difficult to repair ship engines. Does anybody here know if indeed there are large ships like this one that use the dry sump method? Is the Viking Sky unusual in this respect?

    • @davidbesant
      @davidbesant Před 2 dny

      Most marine engines are effectively "dry sump". The oil sump is a double bottom tank under the engine but not part of the engine itself. Oil drains from the engine through valves which can be used to isolate the sump tank in the event of grounding. Double bottom tanks though still have the issue that they are wide and low in height so still suffer from oil surge.

  • @0mn0mable
    @0mn0mable Před 4 dny +3

    what a wild story. Weather v ship & crew. Engineering crew v automated control systems. Glad it all turned out okay!

  • @maxart3392
    @maxart3392 Před 6 dny +8

    ALL the cruise ships of these days share the same crucial flaw: no (or not enough) backup for emergency situations. Remember one minor fire in the switchboard room that caused the loss of all power on a carnival ship in the Caribbean for days. I'm not sure if any of the modern ships has physically separated engine rooms (or sections of them) which would help in the case of flooding or fire. Considering the number of passengers they are carrying (up to 6000), they are very vulnerable.

    • @SimonsToaster
      @SimonsToaster Před 6 dny +3

      The safe return to port regulations require that a ship must have enough redundancy to be able to return to a port safely. Since one of Viking Skys engines was out of operation the ship wasn't even allowed to leave a port, since if it lost the other engine room (separated by a fire/waterproof bulkhead) it would not have been able to return to port. They sailed anyway, lol.

  • @pokrec
    @pokrec Před 5 dny +4

    The deepened oil inlet should have been in the center of the tank, not on it's side. It would make the system much more resilient to rolling. Even 90 degrees of roll would not make the inlet dry when the tank is at least 50% full.

  • @PaweljongProductions
    @PaweljongProductions Před 6 dny +32

    so in my understanding there was no way for the engineers to press "ignore" on the lubrication alarms or to prevent engine shutdown? I can see why these systems are so strict about lubrication, but it's just crazy that you cannot simply override in case of an emergency. It's great that engines today can prevent self harm but there should be priorities to it

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Před 6 dny +12

      At time, they only had one DG responding at all. They last thing they wanted to do is destroy that one!
      In the end, the error was a simple design mistake. Tanks that just weren't deep enough for the roll the ship experienced. Nothing they could have done, without making it worse.

    • @dougaltolan3017
      @dougaltolan3017 Před 3 dny +2

      No oil is not possible damage, it's guaranteed never work again damage.
      There is zero benefit from "risking it"

    • @artforz
      @artforz Před 6 hodinami

      ​@@dougaltolan3017 Sorry, but that's just blatantly false.
      Occasional momentary low oil pressure != complete continued zero oil pressure.
      Those shutdowns react on the former.

    • @dougaltolan3017
      @dougaltolan3017 Před 6 hodinami

      @@artforz please quantify "momentary" and "low". Otherwise you are gambling without knowing the odds.
      Not so "blatant" after all.

  • @gangleweed
    @gangleweed Před 5 dny +3

    I worked as a junior engineer on a WW2 iberty ship for the Safmarine corporation in Cape Town South Africa in 1965.........we were docked outside the harbor due to an ammunition ship being offloaded and in the morning we raised stem to enter the harbor. All of a sudden the steam pressure started falling due to the boiler feed pump not getting a water supply from the feed water tank and it was later found that the feed water pipe to the pump was corroded at the water level and allowed air to be sucked into the pump that then failed to deliver water, The result was that the vacuum failed and the boiler shut down to lack of water.....luckily we were towed into harbor by the harbor tugs but if this had happened at sea we would have been dead in the water.
    The whole steam cycle relies on the turbines exhausting to a vacuum and if the vacuum fails the boiler shuts down and the turbines (high and low pressure) stop running which also affects the turbo generators and forced draught fans to the boiler.........a simple hole in the feed water pipe would have sunk the ship as there was no back up plan.

    • @the_retag
      @the_retag Před 5 dny +1

      Thats because Liberty ships were designed as an almost single use vessel

  • @Bacon17855
    @Bacon17855 Před 6 dny +45

    I got a viking cruises ad when I clicked this video lol

    • @Steven-dt5nu
      @Steven-dt5nu Před 6 dny +2

      😂 algorithm perhaps.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Před 6 dny

      @@Steven-dt5nu Oh, definitely.

    • @Hybris51129
      @Hybris51129 Před 5 dny +8

      Viking Cruises: "Now with deeper oil pans than ever before!"

    • @TriflingToad
      @TriflingToad Před 5 dny +2

      ublock origin browser extension

  • @rolanddunk5054
    @rolanddunk5054 Před 5 dny +4

    I was a marine engineer(retired)for over 40 years i have worked with engines with basic minimum alarm systems that could be manually overridden in an emergency and operations continued under supervision,I have also sailed in tugs where the main engines were controlled by computers…i know which i prefer…just call me old fashioned.
    It seems that someone got their calculations wrong regarding the oil sump tanks,no wonder it was such a confusing time for the ship’s engineers.

  • @Caroleonus
    @Caroleonus Před 5 dny +3

    Having just been on a Norweigan fjords cruise, I'm glad this video didn't come out beforehand 😬

  • @zJoriz
    @zJoriz Před 5 dny +11

    That one screen with all the errors on it? Yeah, that's why I'm a fan of having separate old-fashioned gauges for all critical systems. The screen works fine for normal operation, but when something seems amiss, engineers should be able to just get up from their chair, walk to a wall with gauges and meters and check the current and average oil levels for each engine. Preferably with some extra redundant measurements as well.

    • @SBT300
      @SBT300 Před 3 dny +1

      However that wouldn't have helped since the oil pressure dropped even at full oil level.

    • @zJoriz
      @zJoriz Před 3 dny

      @@SBT300 Of course it needs more gauges than the ones I could come up with in the time it took to write a CZcams comment ;p

  • @MmntechCa
    @MmntechCa Před 6 dny +6

    I've seen the videos taken inside the ship. Have also been on a cruise where someone had to be airlifted. Most of the passengers were elderly, many with limited mobility, so that would have made evacuation more challenging than it already was for the conditions.

  • @kimreinikainen
    @kimreinikainen Před 6 dny +16

    Nice to see a new video after a while. Nice secret advertisement of your channel

  • @Milxfanta
    @Milxfanta Před 6 dny +46

    Simple, sky and water don’t mix

  • @Soordhin
    @Soordhin Před 6 dny +16

    Would be nice if professional shipping could reach the same safety standards and redundancy requirement of professional aviation. But i guess they simply cannot match the few times around the world standard of testing as well as all the other requirements because of the associated cost.

    • @eaglescout1984
      @eaglescout1984 Před 6 dny +4

      The difference is if a ship loses all engines, there's a good chance it can be repaired or passengers and crew evacuated with no loss of life, depending on weather and proximity shore, obviously. If a plane loses all engines, options are limited and in the likely case power can't be restored, there is no chance for survival depending on the initial altitude of the plane. There's a reason it's called the *Miracle* on the Hudson.

    • @wurfyy
      @wurfyy Před 6 dny +3

      @@eaglescout1984 There is plenty of chance of survival, usually. A plane that loses its engines becomes a glider, it still has control, and it can land in the nearest reasonably flat area. Even helicopters have options, they can autorotate. The "miracle" on the Hudson was no miracle, that's just politician speak. It absolutely was good piloting, no doubt about that, but odds are the vast majority of pilots could have done it. Simulations showed that they probably could have even put it back on a runway, although ditching in the river was the safer bet.
      The issue with aircraft is that if the engines are gonna die, then it's likely to happen shortly after the takeoff, in which case the plane doesn't have a lot of altitude or speed to work with, which means they have to land on whatever is in front of them. If it's really unsuitable for landing, then yeah, that's bad, but if you have for instance a lake there, then it'll take some effort to mess it up.

    • @ChakatBlackstar
      @ChakatBlackstar Před 5 dny +2

      @@wurfyy Oh please. Putting it on a runway was only possible when the sim pilots had prior knowledge of the accident rather than take the time to assess the problem before making a decision. And you're seriously overestimating the amount of "reasonably flat area" that they might be able to reach.

    • @somebod8703
      @somebod8703 Před 5 dny +1

      Just hire some folks from McDonnell and you can now have Boeing quality ships. :)

    • @wurfyy
      @wurfyy Před 5 dny

      @@ChakatBlackstar First, I'm not sure that's true. Bear in mind that those simulations were done professionally, for the purpose of investigation. The time it took to assess the situation is something they can account for, perhaps by only giving the pilots control past a certain point.
      Secondly, I don't even think trying to put it on a runway would have been a good idea, since it would have left much less margin for error for not much benefit other than monetary. Rather, my point was that even with less than a kilometer of altitude, they already had multiple good options.
      Third, the pilots in that situation had loads of options for where they could land their plane. LaGuardia, Teterboro, Hudson, East River, hell, Hackensack in a pinch. And that's just what I can clearly identify as options on the map. Unlikely that the city provided any more particularly attractive options, but I won't rule it out, either. Some of the roads probably could have worked.
      And fourth, my point was more broad than just the Hudson case. If the engines cut at altitude, like in the Gimli Glider case, then the aircraft has at least a solid 100km in each direction, which is almost always going to be plenty for finding a reasonably flat place to land. Whilst usually these things happen right after takeoff and the options are far more limited than even in the Hudson case, the statement I was disputing is that if a plane loses all power, then there is no chance of survival. That's patently false, there is plenty of chance of survival - in fact, you're probably going to be fine.

  • @CH-pr2ub
    @CH-pr2ub Před 6 dny +4

    Because I googled it:
    1 shackle = 15 fathoms = 90ft = 27.4m
    10 shackles = 270m = 2.5 football fields (american football)

  • @norm4966
    @norm4966 Před 5 dny +3

    I just can't imagine the pressure put on the chef engineer that day. It remember me the sinking of the Explorer were one engineer Macgyver a hand control fuel pump to restart the generator.

  • @Nemesis29120
    @Nemesis29120 Před 6 dny +5

    Thank you for this really detailed video.
    I work with them in Bergen and I was looking the incident happening in direct when it happened and worried for my colleagues on board

  • @xavroy07
    @xavroy07 Před 6 dny +3

    the "LUBE OIL" in giant text on the thumbnail is funny

  • @yodaddy4944
    @yodaddy4944 Před 5 dny +5

    I think for critical components like main propulsion and steering there could be a master override and or redundant auxiliaries to supply minimum necessary function, like for lube oil have a auxiliary oil pump with a deeper pickup location or in its own reserve sump baffle in the tank that keeps a “no matter what” amount of oil in it. Even if the pump can’t supply nominal flow it could at least keep the engines lubricated enough to run for a day. I mean if it’s a choice between running aground because a sensor not seeing the correct pressure/level or rebuilding a couple engines the answer seems clear.
    Sensors fail ALL the time in every industry, so for emergency’s everything should have a manual override.
    Make using the override trigger a “deadline” at next port until a concern, cause, correction, confirm can happen. So using it doesn’t get abused.

  • @calebcrossley8254
    @calebcrossley8254 Před 5 dny +3

    I find it interesting that these engines do not have a complete override mode for such emergencies. I work in the on-highway heavy diesel industry and emergency equipment such as fire engines by pass all emergency shutdowns when they are in emergency mode. Such as fighting a fire. In that mode the control panel will indicate there is a problem such as oil pressure or over temp. However in that mode, no matter the alarm, it will run until it self destructs if you let it.

  • @cloudy_xDD
    @cloudy_xDD Před 4 dny +1

    I’d just like to say I don’t think I’ve found interest in a channel faster than here, your explanation of things is amazing and the graphics I feel are what make it the best. Top tier content.

  • @joseph6270
    @joseph6270 Před 5 dny +1

    well done by the crew to keep the ship out of harms way. They say safety rules are often written in blood, but I'm glad the regs for oil tank depth can be revised without any

  • @adamsulis99
    @adamsulis99 Před 3 dny

    Laughed out loud when that unique alarm was logged - nicely done!

  • @JMW80
    @JMW80 Před 4 dny

    That was quite fascinating! Thanks for sharing this with us.

  • @tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419

    Thank you CN for making the videos and thank you patrons for paying them!

  • @bigutubefan2738
    @bigutubefan2738 Před 6 dny +1

    Brilliant video dude! Great job. Lube-oil tanks are such an important part of an engine, yet seem so simple to the uninformed, they're often rushed over and taken for granted.

  • @Glenn.Cooper
    @Glenn.Cooper Před 6 dny +1

    This was such a great video. I've always wanted to know a lot more about what happened on that trip.

  • @TruckFan542
    @TruckFan542 Před 6 dny +3

    I remember reading about this mess on the news!

  • @agav9836
    @agav9836 Před 6 dny +8

    Love your content mate. You are amazing.

  • @curtisroberts9137
    @curtisroberts9137 Před 6 dny +2

    It's sort of crazy that a ship with that size and number of people aboard could have such a glaring safety issue built into it's design. I mean even land based machines have baffles built in to ensure that oil, fuel, etc are still available when cornering. Hopefully something was retrofitted to this and other ships with the same design to ensure this would not happen again. Next time might not be so lucky.

  • @andre-jm8jn
    @andre-jm8jn Před 5 dny +1

    Fantastic video thank you!

  • @sage5296
    @sage5296 Před 2 dny +1

    If you have 1000 alarms going off at once, you alarm system needs a redesign. Task saturation is absolutely a thing, and if the alarms are going off that often, they WILL be ignored

  • @Aviation129
    @Aviation129 Před 6 dny

    Great Video!!

  • @MegaEmmanuel09
    @MegaEmmanuel09 Před 3 dny

    3:55 I like the little attention to detail with the scroll bar shrinking to show the list is expanding off screen

  • @Glenni91N
    @Glenni91N Před 4 dny +1

    One thing that was omitted here: Many other passenger ships, such as a few by Hurtigruten, which is a Norwegian coastal ferry/cruise ship operator (they've been at it since the 1850s, I think they know what they're doing), stayed in port during the storm. Why on earth did they continue going out in this weather with Viking Sky?

  • @rachelcarre9468
    @rachelcarre9468 Před dnem

    Superb analysis and graphics

  • @gilveneli247
    @gilveneli247 Před 5 dny +2

    Already stressed out when multiple alarms go off on the simulator imagine happening IRL

  • @GeekBabbling
    @GeekBabbling Před 6 dny +1

    Damn the overspeed warnings and full speed ahead! Crew put the work in that day.

  • @SilverWingsChannel
    @SilverWingsChannel Před 5 dny +2

    The decision-making process, from cancelling port stops to managing the blackout crisis, shows the complexities and pressures faced by ship captains during adverse weather. 🤔🤔🤔

  • @ElenarMT
    @ElenarMT Před 6 dny

    GREAT VIDEO!!!

  • @Fomites
    @Fomites Před 4 dny

    Air pilot here. Great video! Thanks.

  • @samthemultimediaman
    @samthemultimediaman Před 3 dny +1

    I guess the engineers that designed it never heard of trap door baffles in oil pans before, something that's very common in automotive racing. they keep the oil from flowing away from the suction section of the pan in high angles.

  • @user-vo8ss2bm3p
    @user-vo8ss2bm3p Před 6 dny +2

    The system need to somehow prioritize alarms if there so many.

  • @bigoldgrizzly
    @bigoldgrizzly Před 3 dny

    Very well presented, allowing the landlubber laymen to understand the issues.

  • @Ob1sdarkside
    @Ob1sdarkside Před 6 dny +5

    Would baffles in the tank have helped stop the oil sloshing around?

    • @wurfyy
      @wurfyy Před 6 dny +3

      I was wondering about something similar. I can think of many different tank configurations which would be completely immune to any sloshing short of capsizing. The tank could be vertical, or spherical, or an upside-down pyramid, also different setups with multiple tanks, there are loads of options and they went for a setup that's likely to cause problems related to sloshing.

  • @hybrid9mm
    @hybrid9mm Před 2 dny

    I have a picture of Viking Sky docked at Alta on the 23 march 2019 @ 16:57.
    I was on the Aurora which left before them. We did have some bad weather but nothing worth worrying about.

  • @DrangeDragRacingTeam1967

    And to top it all Off, a log carrier Got a blackout too just a few hundred meters from viking sky, giving the rescue team Even more pressure.
    As a Norwegian, I remember this like it was yesterday

  • @awesomefan86
    @awesomefan86 Před 5 dny +4

    I see many parallels to modern airplanes and trains. Computers are now everywhere and monitor the systems independently. But such surveillance systems have their own complexity on the one hand, but on the other hand they are just as stupid. It's not the first time that crews have been flooded with 100 or even 1000 error messages, all of which are legitimate but still not helpful for the crew. At this point you need experienced and well-trained crews who can deal with something like this. Things become difficult when such computer systems are designed not only to assist the crew but also to lock people out because the manufacturer assumes that the computer knows everything better, which is perhaps ok under normal circumstances but could even be fatal in certain circumstances

    • @ThunderClawShocktrix
      @ThunderClawShocktrix Před 5 dny

      that is the main reasonb why (737 max issues aside) boeing planes are better than airbus
      the boeing approache to computers was "pilot should always be able to override easily"

    • @nicholasvinen
      @nicholasvinen Před 4 dny

      There needs to be an error message priority system. The most serious errors should be at the top.

  • @whoeveriam0iam14222
    @whoeveriam0iam14222 Před 6 dny +1

    Great animations

  • @rickhorsley9383
    @rickhorsley9383 Před 6 dny

    A very competent master!

  • @TimRobertsen
    @TimRobertsen Před 5 dny +1

    It's not always I get to hear my hometown mentioned in video, but when I do it's because of bad weather and potential maritime disasters :p

  • @mvaris5127
    @mvaris5127 Před 4 dny

    Thank you , good animation film.

  • @diegovd7215
    @diegovd7215 Před 6 dny

    Thank you so much for this interesting video. You must have spent weeks on the animations, they are superb!

  • @maxhugen
    @maxhugen Před 3 dny

    Wow - that was a close call! Well done engineers. Respect. 👍🇦🇺

  • @MrLemonbaby
    @MrLemonbaby Před 3 dny

    i don't know for sure but I'm told all the passengers had to pay extra for the value-added excitement!
    More to the point you explanation of a complex set of circumstances was superb. I have sub'd.

  • @lookoutleo
    @lookoutleo Před 2 dny

    What a great visual explanation as to what happened , very interesting . Hope they increased the depth of the oil tanks

  • @JoeJaJoeJoe
    @JoeJaJoeJoe Před 4 dny

    0:50 hearing a list of Norwegian ports read in a British accent is fantastic

  • @TonboIV
    @TonboIV Před 6 dny +2

    I've done a little recreational piloting and the design of marine propulsion systems confuses and astounds me. It seems as if the designers have prioritized protecting the engines over protecting the _ship._ I noticed this with the Scott Kay bridge collision too.
    An aircraft engine is specifically _designed_ to melt explode and catch fire before it will shutdown. The throttle spring _opens_ the butterfly so that any failure will default the engine to full power. You can keep flying and land safely like this. It's not easy, but it's a lot better than being reduced to gliding with an idling engine. The ignition switch doesn't connect the ignition, because it's _always_ connected. The ignition switch shorts out the ignition so if that fails, the engine will be stuck running until you disconnect the fuel supply. The whole design principle is to force the engine to run no matter what until it physically can't run anymore.
    I just don't understand why marine propulsion plants aren't designed based on the same principles, since loss of propulsion on a ship is often very dangerous.

  • @screetchycello
    @screetchycello Před 4 dny

    I see the double entendre titles are still going and I am here for it 😂

  • @crezychameau
    @crezychameau Před 2 dny

    I'm an automation worker who designs and programs these kind of alarm/supervision systems, and i've worked on three different boats along my career
    This video made so anxious, i was continuously trying to find if something like that could happen on one of my programs :|

  • @JackDecker63
    @JackDecker63 Před 6 dny

    Very interesting!

  • @stephanieparker1250
    @stephanieparker1250 Před 2 dny

    Way to go crews! Good training, there. 👍

  • @rtbinc2273
    @rtbinc2273 Před 6 dny +1

    The El Faro had similar issues when it sank. The primary problem was that the Captain said straight into a hurricane.

  • @hazeldavis3176
    @hazeldavis3176 Před 4 dny

    6:34 I can picture the Chief yelling out 'Who here plays Starcraft?!" Looking for someone with the highest keystrokes per second for that job!

  • @davidmattice3752
    @davidmattice3752 Před 6 dny

    Thank God that the engineers were able to save the day, and hopefully fix the problems so they never happen again. Hats off to the hard working crew!

  • @Rotnoc473
    @Rotnoc473 Před 6 dny +2

    Watching on a cruise ship now…
    I’m glad I’m in the Mediterranean lmao

  • @robertsolomielke5134
    @robertsolomielke5134 Před 4 dny

    TY, Great work on this, the perfect amount of simple, yet adult blends of imfo. I like it. In Canada we likely made , and sold that lube oil that was lacking in volume in the sump. Canola oil also goes to the US Navy, a big customer since 1912.. The industrial version of Canola (rapeseed) , not the version you eat, and cook with. Great story, Viking sky was lucky.
    * The wisdom missed is that if the bilge was sloshing, so too the lube oil in the sump. This will likely be taught in the right circles.

  • @GlassesLeadTheWay
    @GlassesLeadTheWay Před 4 dny

    As an engine crew of a cruise ship.. this is one of our nightmares.

  • @hummel6364
    @hummel6364 Před 6 dny +1

    Shoutout to Norway though. That was a well executed rescue effort.

  • @Plorxium
    @Plorxium Před 5 dny

    Something similar happened to a ferry in the Cook Strait of New Zealand not too long ago where the ship lost propulsion and began drifting towards the rocky coast during bad weather. Luckily, propulsions resumed at the last minute and they avoided a disaster. And now just as I am writing this I see in the news an Interislander has RUN AGROUND but luckily there was no passengers onboard.

  • @leeoldershaw956
    @leeoldershaw956 Před 5 dny +2

    It is inevitable that there will be a catastrophic cruise ship disaster due to a design defect like this. They are designed as hotels first and ships second. The worldwide airline and cruise ship industry is also a perfectly designed system to spread the next disease.

    • @springford9511
      @springford9511 Před 4 dny

      Yes. The oil tanks did not meet the safety reg roll and heave requirements. Super basic. Can check on drawing with ruler and protractor. Tanks should probably be physically tested on simulator or even a simple rig but with actual oil flow nowadays. Computer simulation could be made to work too.

  • @HhddGufif
    @HhddGufif Před 4 dny +1

    Ships engines will break from waves. Nice design guys, gg

  • @vebjsand
    @vebjsand Před 3 dny

    I was watching the whole thing from land. I live 10 minutes away from where it happened. I was quite surprised to see how well the rescue services worked, how quickly other vessels in the area responded and shifted course to help, and after the fact how professional and competent the crew behaved. There was very little time to think or try things, and had the ship drifted to land it would’ve been a literal massacre.
    Lots of ships throughout the ages have had major issues in the same place. The waves and force of the ocean is especially bad for a good stretch, and it will test your vessel if crossing in bad weather. I thought modern, big vessels like Viking Sky would’ve had all its critical components tested in some sort of computer simulation so that the probability of basic systems ever failing would be slim to none. I kinda saw that as a given. The whole incident made me re-think my trust in even big budget engineering projects.

  • @LenKusov
    @LenKusov Před 5 dny

    You'd think someone in the design process would've thought to include either a dry-sump accumulator system or a baffled anti-slosh oil pan, similar to what aircraft and performance cars have, cause heavy seas causing oil sloshing is a VERY predictable issue that's caused a LOT of blackouts and propulsion failures on MANY vessels. The baffled oil sump solution seems like it'd be a simple retrofit, drop the oil pan and weld in some anti-slosh baffles, that's something simple enough that a lotta people modifying cars do it themselves.

  • @dennisyoung4631
    @dennisyoung4631 Před 4 dny

    With this particular route and its routine bad weather, you’d think they’d run *dry sumps* - if they don’t already do so. This is where you you have multiple suction sections to get oil *out* of the engine and into a separate oil tank, and one or more pressure pumps to put pressurized oil *into* the engine.
    You want a tall tank, then - three times taller than its diameter, at the least - and a full length *sight glass* to visually check oil levels.

  • @conors4430
    @conors4430 Před 2 dny

    Smart recovery

  • @RalfJosefFries
    @RalfJosefFries Před 6 dny +22

    The most important issue of this incident is not discussed in this video: How to evacuate nearly 1000 passengers from a ship? Remember: This was an ideal situation: Good and well trained and very reliable crew handling the situation, nearly perfect radio connections, not far from the next big harbour, well organised well equiped and well trained norwegian rescue organisations - but if the engines hadnt restarted... it is simply not possible to evacuate more then 900 passengers plus crew via helicopter, it lasts too long - even when like here the flight time from the ship to the rescue station was only less then 20 minutes... even with multiple helicopters and such short distances like here the rescue organisations were only capable to transport less than 50% of the passengers off board... Simply too many passengers ant too less place in an rescue helicopter... If this accident had taken place in any other place, with no, or only one helicopter available, with longer flight distances from the shore to the ship and back, with no tugs nearly in time available in the region - this would have been a much more dangerous, perhaps deadly incident. The cruise industry has to anser the question how they plan to solve the question of evacuating ships with 1000, 2000 or even more passengers in case of emergencies during bad weather conditions.

    • @benoithudson7235
      @benoithudson7235 Před 6 dny +14

      What's to answer? They would use the lifeboats. It's not that they *couldn't* use the lifeboats, it's that a safer option was available. There's always risk; helicopters in bad weather winching passengers up is itself pretty risky.

  • @stephenbritton9297
    @stephenbritton9297 Před 6 dny +1

    Cruise ship not designed to roll? Good thing the oil tankers I worked on were, in ballast, that kind of rolling was common, and we didn't have any fancy stabilizers.

  • @foobar9220
    @foobar9220 Před 6 dny +2

    I wonder about this design of a vast box where everything is just sloshing around. After all, we have invented those anti-sloshing walls for tanks a long time ago and for me it seems like a no-brainer to add some to the oil tanks. On the other hand, it looks like the whole tank design did never really see QA...

  • @ryankenyon5010
    @ryankenyon5010 Před 4 dny

    My dad and stepmom were on board. It was terrifying. They called and gave me final instructions and then his phone died as I'm watching it on CNN. SCARY.