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I'm in favor of preserving history and historical artifacts (in whichever form they take) as much as possible. And I hope they're able to save this ship. The question is in how they'll define "restored" if that's feasible, because you just know the temptation will be to "upgrade" the ship as much as they possibly can; for some components, it would likely be mandatory in order to meet current nautical standards. And therein lies the conundrum.
Example: You buy a car. You love the car, and want to keep it as long as you possibly can. Eventually it will need repairs of some kind, so you have it repaired. If you keep it long enough, eventually you would have to replace every single part on the car. Old car, all new parts--is it the same car you bought if none of the original parts remain?
Admittedly, that's taking the situation to an extreme. But if they're restoring the S.S. United States in order to preserve it's history and make it seaworthy at the same time, but are forced to make upgrades that didn't exist when the ship was still in service, what's the point? Again, I'm in favor of saving the ship if it's possible; I just hope they're able and/or allowed to preserve as much of it as possible.
No, you aren't; they do look top-heavy. But, having sailed on three of them since 2004, I can say they're surprisingly stable unless the seas are really rough.P.S. am I the only one that immediately thinks of capsizing when I look at these new ships?
A 1965 Mustang Restomod, with all new modern components, with only the original shell, is still registered as a 1965 Mustang!It's akin to the fellow who has his grandpa's axe, which has had two new heads and four new handles.
Certain "vintage" cars can be built entirely from new parts. British Motor Heritage at one time offered an entirely new MGB body. Perhaps they still do. Model T Fords can be assembled from all-new parts. I believe that's true of Model A Fords as well. And I think I recall some talk of doing the same with early Mustang bodies.
So, is that '63 MGB made entirely of components of much more recent manufacture really a '63 MGB? I say no, even if it is indistinguishable from a "real" one via anything other than laboratory analyses. Hell, it is probably a better car, seeing how the unibody structure had yet to suffer fatigue.
Well, we can all agree that the SS United States is the more graceful of ships. The modern cruise liner, not so much!
A 1965 Mustang Restomod, with all new modern components, with only the original shell, is still registered as a 1965 Mustang!
My point of view is, that we absolutely need a new regular-lines-ocean-traffic.
Until the end of my life, I will not accept, that these paranoid humanity believes, it could play birdy and flying all over the globe. That's just brain-sick, to me. Humanity has to stay on the ground. And no one would ever have to deal with aviotophobia. I would allow airplane-voyages just to world-important businessmen and politicians. And other people on emergency, if todays modern worldwide communication-systems would be crashed. That would be a "natural balance", I think.