Because they spent the budget on the boat and they need to carry the bucket anyway.I hesitate to bring this subject up again, but, if they are spending $5-10 million on a boat, why they have to shit in a bucket.
Because they spent the budget on the boat and they need to carry the bucket anyway.I hesitate to bring this subject up again, but, if they are spending $5-10 million on a boat, why they have to shit in a bucket.
I thought it...And it doen´t need to shit in a bucket
I think it depends on context. Pilots customized to a boat's behavior and supplemented with machine learning and fiber optic sensors and all the bells and whistles, sure likely.From a lot of what I'm reading it's becoming accepted that the auto-pilot steers better than a human can: it never gets distracted and it doesn't need to sleep or eat. I would think the boat senses in six degrees of freedom and the question for the helmsman is probably "How hard are you willing to ride and how much risk are you willing to take?"
I just scrolled down Malizia's grafana to find out that CO2 ppm went totally off the range they pre-determined for the graph , since a few days.
These next few days look like an absolute head fuck for naviguessors.
Boris sais yesterday they were heading west to avoid the strong winds (potentially up to 50 knots) of the low pressure. He expected Holcim to do the same.Indeed. When backtesting the wx routing for yesterday 2045Z, you can clearly see that Team Malizia drafted their own plan and more or less went straight north. And skipped the suggested more easterly routing by both GFS and ECMWF.
View attachment 582570
There's a fairly decent article from The Guardian about the buoy deployment and also onboard sensors being used during this leg and how interesting it is for ocean and climate scientistsAnother small drift from the race, but still leg 3 related :
I just scrolled down Malizia's grafana to find out that CO2 ppm went totally off the range they pre-determined for the graph , since a few days.
View attachment 582562
I wonder if it's a finding that may be surprising the scientists receiving this, or a sensor defect.
According to socat.info the latest available data was in the 350-420 ppm range in this region.
View attachment 582566
The very scarce number of dots on socat.info in the southern ocean also shows that the sensors embarked on the 4 IMOCAs are not only for communication purposes...
(take my comments with caution, i'm absolutely no ocean scientist, these are just 5-minutes-google observations).
Not my brother but a mate and some of his mates made it all happen. I had my feet up somewhere warmerI recall during the last Ocean Race, you helped out 11th Hour with their dismasting and detour to the Falklands where you put them in touch with your brother and they jury-rigged a mast to get them to Itajai.