NTSB B-Roll - Aerial Imagery of Francis Scott Key Bridge and Cargo Ship Dali

630,450
0
Publicado 2024-03-26
March 26, 2024: NTSB B-Roll of the March 26 Francis Scott Key Bridge that was struck by Cargo Ship Dali in Baltimore, Maryland.

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @jessicam5712
    Now we have to wait patiently for Brick Immortar to make a video about this
  • Well this footage gives a better feeling for the scale of this disaster.
  • @willowsloughdx
    One reason why huge container ships like Dali are so economical to operate is that they are powered by a single, massive engine. Lose that engine and the ship loses the ability to navigate. New bridges are expensive. Perhaps it is time to mandate that similar ships must be escorted by two tugs when passing under vulnerable infrastructure.
  • @WaynoGur
    Thank you for showing this. I live in Southern Arizona and can't grasp the full reality of what this must look like in person.
  • @chrisgardner6677
    This footage shows the Port hook (anchor) was dropped, but at 8 knots, it would be like trying to stop your car with your foot on the freeway. Blessings to the families of the lost.
  • @SD40Fan_Jason
    As a Floridian, this is a stark reminder of the 1980 disaster in Tampa Bay, though the casualties were much more severe. A Greyhound bus and its passengers were among the casualties in that tragic and avoidable incident.
  • @fhowland
    Wow this really shows the scale
  • @tonyrosa7944
    ... Thankfully the authorities had a couple of minutes to alert the right people to stop traffic in both directions before they reached the bridge, or this would have been a lot worse. It's going to make the already notoriously terrible traffic in the Baltimore area, a complete nightmare for a long time. It's a real shame and it goes to show, you just never know when a total catastrophe will strike... R.I.P. to those who lost their lives. 😢
  • @Controllerhead
    bruh that lone safety cone 😂😂😂 Incredible footage honestly. My brain can't really process the scale of this; it looks more like my 3yr old nephew just played with his toys than it does reality. Thanks for capturing and sharing this!
  • @incubrian
    these tragedies are always a stark reminder that even though we think we build tough things that seem like a fortress of invicibility and protection, things that seem like they'll always just "be there" - those things are really quite fragile in the grand scheme of things.
  • @xray606
    A big part of the problem is that these old bridge abutments were never designed with the thought of ships the size of small cities hitting them. That just wasn't a thing back then. And they're only getting bigger.
  • @PartsUnknownn
    I was out fishing on a small boat by port of Miami when one of these bad boys came right by. I felt like a speck of sand looking up at Mount Everest.
  • @happycats5195
    Would not want to be the propulsion system engineers or maintenance people of that company
  • @khoughton411
    Thank you for taking time to post this amazing footage. Good luck and best wishes.
  • @khundok6595
    Excellent footage to give the clear idea about how it happened. Gr8 job.
  • @AccountInactive
    Don't read the comments. Too many piloting experts and people who don't understand physics.
  • @ShainAndrews
    My condolences to the friends, family, and co-workers of those that lost their lives. You are missed.
  • @underseaowl7440
    I thought the Sunshine Skyway would have taught us this lesson. Those transmission lines have more shipping protection than the actual bridge.
  • @Bushpig22
    Heard about it and saw the collision footage all day, but this illustrates it on a completely different level...wow.