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My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Fanfiction
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The sub captain turned into Rainbow Dash? Wot?
So far, so good with the sub, overall, but how long does it usually take for floating debris and organisms to start colonising unmoving surfaces on the sea floor, especially when like cooling water intakes, theyre sucking the water towards them?
Theres going to be so many interrelations on the ships, and how many disiplinery actions given various levels of desperation highly suggest some are going to try harder than others while others doent resist as much?
Suprising how much material you need for recovery, To lift that deadweight would need almost 14 thousand builders sandbags, even if they could contain air, and normal ship side air compressors couldnt even get down that deep with the maximum pressure they can generate?
Could the fire fighting high pressure hose run far enough that the hyperbaric chamber air pump could be run down to the sub, or wouldnt that be anything but more hassle due to the multiple stages of hose and interconnects to make the depth, given the inverse pressure differential?
Would an acceptable error map be possible at all for general charts? As in, you can be 500 miles out but youre a thousand miles from anywhere, so get first approximation then refine corrections as you need?
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Nah, just felt like spiking up the OC mix with a lookalike. He is just a pegasus colt with the same color palette, no biggie.
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Biofouling... really depends on depth. Dunno how likely they are to get mussels at this depth, but it's the fastest I know of, and it can be a bitch to remove from fouled pipes, or worse, ballast tanks.
Considering the record set by USS Acadia, I doubt they could do worse even if they decide not to resist the effects of heat cycles. And most of them have some form of control over it in a manner or another. Plus those that don't get to choose when they ovulate, don't do it nearly as often as human females.
Nothing about rampant promiscuity though...
When I said assumed position, I meant in the sense of dead reckoning. The margin of error isn't as big as you seem to think. Global standards in watchkeeping have set that a celestial fix must be taken every watch (four hour cycles, that is). At night of course it's an intercept, but by day you can do meridian passages and culmination fixes on the sun.
In that span of four hours, only the drift due to winds and currents is considered an unknown, and ocean surface currents rarely exceed two knots. That narrows the area within which you put your assumed position to something like... I'd say 12 nautical miles? Point is, it's not the 500-1000 bracket you mentioned.
The St-Hilaire method I explained is simplified to work with such a reduced estimation range. You enlarge the range, you might need a broader (and thus more lengthy and less practiced) method.
a grate chapter. awesome righting team.
never invite Murphy to the party.