Flipping FLIP ship saved from scrapyard at last minute

(newatlas.com)

162 points | by roenxi 6 days ago

42 comments

  • Animats a day ago

    "FLIP is from a time of bold engineering and optimism for our future and our oceans."

    Indeed. There was a time in the 1960s when the oceans were considered to be as important to explore as space. From the Futurama ride at the 1964 World's Fair:[1]

    [1] https://youtu.be/2-5aK0H05jk?t=152

    • bragr 20 hours ago

      >There was a time in the 1960s when the oceans were considered to be as important to explore as space.

      Arguably a lot of that was just cover for cold war military submarine/anti-submarine research. Seabed hydrophones for tracking soviet subs, undersea mapping for submarine navigation, DSVs for recovering intelligence from wrecks, etc. Famously the discovery of the wreck of the Titanic was just the cover story for exploring submarine wrecks in the Atlantic.

      https://www.cnn.com/2018/12/13/us/titanic-discovery-classifi...

      • ddingus 14 hours ago

        That is just fine with me. I realize our current national politics leave a lot to be desired.

        That sucks.

        But, as long as we are advancing and stuff bleeds out to where mere mortals can access them, game on!

        I am not here to wish it were better.

        And I do want that, hope for that and am, when life permits, an activist to those ends.

        We all get a free ticket to this place. It is amazing!

        And we only get one.

        I plan on loving, living, building, doing, playing and all manner of things we find ourselves willing and able to do

        That is why I am here.

        And ideally, I leave it better than I found it. Well on track for that to be true right now which means I am here to take the risks I can manage.

        It is by no means perfect, but it is somewhat defensible POV.

        • MichaelZuo 6 hours ago

          Well it’s great… except for all the credibility the US lost abroad after claiming for several decades to not be doing many of those things under cover.

          Trading away what took over 200 years to build up, and will need another 200 years to regain to the same extent, isn’t smart.

          • hmmm-i-wonder an hour ago

            Out of curiosity, what has the US claimed it isn't doing, but has been doing, that other countries haven't also done?

            While they certainly have lost trust, have they lost more trust than any other govt in the modern day where govt narratives are routinely exposed?

          • toolz 4 hours ago

            Do you have an objective metric that suggests the US has lost (or is losing) credibility? I don't see any signs of it.

            • ddingus an hour ago

              We will see signs over the next Presidential term. And frankly, some from the current one.

              And we have a couple generations, maybe a few --probably a few, some of age and ready to take the reigns of governance, who feel the US has things to answer for.

              Whether they will act is another discussion.

              A diminished US credence is a logical consequence of our policy choices.

              A big one was actually 9/11. We were a different people before that time. The change has been brutal for those of us able to hold on to enough to see it for what it is.

              We were handed a genuine opportunity to actually lead the free world, and that meant more then to more people, but I digress.

              We, and by that I mean our government we chose to lead, and our inaction about it all, squandered that opportunity to pursue a war of choice for oil while at the same time abusing legitimate shock and awe for the purpose of passing surveillance legislation haunting us to this day. Among other things.

              We lost serious credence then. Most of the world was anxious to see us walk our talk in the face of terror and we just didn't.

              Now, there are many events, governments toppled, resources secured, business moved or changed, and more that all holds similar potential.

              I am not saying we will be held to account on all that today. Of course not!

              But, I am saying what we do, the attitudes we hold dear actually do really matter to a whole lot of people who may or may not be inclined to act on it.

              There is our credence and reputable nature as seen by our own people, other nations and their leaders and people, and finally by elite people, essentially able to accumulate such wealth and power as to be ungovernable, free in the most basic of ways.

              These will all play out in subtle ways. One will need a serious stretch of time to see a meaningful impact.

              • toolz an hour ago

                > We will see signs over the next Presidential term.

                Maybe, maybe not. People who actually know what the future holds stand to make a lot of money simply with market speculation. As it turns out, very few people are capable of beating the market while many claim they know what will happen in the future.

                I'm very skeptical of anyone who makes bold claims about the future. Especially while ignoring the question to whether any objective metrics exist today that show our credibility is in decline.

                • ddingus 22 minutes ago

                  Objective metrics are very hard. I expanded my comment above to explain why.

                  And to your point, these things are glacial. As they should be.

                  Finally, I will point out this dynamic is "signed" in the sense of say benefit of the doubt as opposed to a direct punitive action. Call the latter a negative and the former a positive.

                  Opportunity costs are another way to think about all this.

                  We do not have a perfect history to draw from. There goes your objective metric right there.

                  We do have assessments and expectations that may or may not align, or be met, and those are how I generally evaluate these things.

                  Be secure in your skepticism! I am of my own.

                  The major impact may well be a shift in basic trust, changes in expectations.

                  Things like the petrodollar seeing change and or there being alternatives really matter! A

                  • toolz 12 minutes ago

                    > Objective metrics are very hard.

                    I agree, but without them we all fall victims to our own blinding bias. Is there much of a point in making predictions or holding opinions when you don't have objective metrics to draw from? Sure, someone has to do it, but not the people in the comment sections of a social media site where we're all trying to learn more.

            • MichaelZuo 3 hours ago

              UN voting patterns. e.g. In the 1990s General Assembly it was far from certain that the US would lose most of the contenious ones involving the US, every year, except maybe the annual Cuba vote.

              Whereas in 2023-2024, well you can check yourself. A lot of the time even countries like Norway or Ireland or Mexico vote against the US.

              • toolz an hour ago

                Do you have a link to anything that shows the data analysis on our voting patterns having less international backing in recent times? I see the data and can plot out a trend myself, but if someone has already done better analysis I'm curious to read more about what you're talking about.

                edit: I did a simple chart over all the UN votes sorted by date and the amount of votes that match USA votes seems to increase over time, but the real issue is that the vote data only went through 2021. At a quick glance the only data I can find does not match what you're suggesting.

      • rf15 13 hours ago

        The moon landing was also a highly politically motivated project - spreading the dream of space exploration was just a means to an end. But it's a great dream, even with that context.

        • PittleyDunkin 8 hours ago

          I would have preferred a healthcare financing system, personally. But I guess we got technology instead.

          • User23 4 hours ago

            We spend far far more on healthcare than space or sea exploration already.

            • PittleyDunkin an hour ago

              Yea, because we have a completely ass-backwards way of funding it.

              Anyway what I'm referring to is the spending of political capital in the context of the 60s. The rest of the world got socialized healthcare; we got a space program.

              I don't really see this as a problem, frankly. Space and sea exploration has little value compared to health care.

          • karmonhardan 6 hours ago

            Indeed, the moon landing wasn't the universally-lauded come-together moment people like to portray it as. MLK had been assassinated the previous year and the Vietnam War was in full swing; there were a lot of things on people's minds (and greatly varying opinions on what the government ought to be spending money on). The common memory of the event can mostly be chalked up to a combination of propaganda and the people who tend to be able to get their writing about it published (white Baby Boomers).

      • euroderf 9 hours ago

        Similarly, a lot of radio astronomy funding was Cold War cover for stuff like surveilling Soviet radar reflected from the moon.

      • gregschlom 13 hours ago

        Maybe, but the 60s are also the start of recreational scuba diving and that probably played a big part in it as well. All of a sudden there was this big unknown world that became accessible.

      • adastra22 16 hours ago

        Maybe, but at least we dared to dream.

    • geon 5 hours ago

      Arthur C Clarke was a huge oceanography fan. Several of his novels are set in the sea.

  • sans_souse 21 hours ago

    "Our mission is perhaps equally bold: to make humans aquatic by enabling our species to live, work and thrive underwater. FLIP will play a key role in the DEEP fleet, providing a one-of-a-kind platform for ocean research and being capable of supporting DEEP's Sentinel habitat deployments as part of our extended research network."

    Well, damn..

    • adastra22 16 hours ago

      If you can’t say this about your own startup, what are you even doing?

  • toomuchtodo a day ago

    Related:

    RP FLIP escapes wrecker's claws - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41964882 - Oct 2024 (50 comments)

    Scripps Institution of Oceanography’s FLIP vessel decommissioned after 60 years - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37072588 - Aug 2023 (51 comments)

    A ship that flips 90 degrees for precise scientific measurements - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15078094 - Aug 2017 (75 comments)

    "Flip", the vertical ship, marks 50 years at sea - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4193185 - July 2012 (34 comments)

    Wikipedia:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RP_FLIP

  • mark_l_watson 21 hours ago

    I am happy it is not being junked. For many years I saw it sailing past the Marine Physics Laboratory (part of Scripts Institute of Oceanography). Later my Dad became director of that lab, until he retired. Such a cool idea for an experiment platform to rotate ninety degrees for stability.

    • tomcam 16 hours ago

      Holy crap your family is a bunch of serious overachievers

      My kids will never have to worry about that problem

    • relwin 11 hours ago

      I remember seeing a tug pulling a gigantic floating softball bat up and down the coast a few times -- definitely unusual!

  • roygbiv2 21 hours ago

    I first read about this in a book as a child and was fascinated by it. The same book detailed a channel tunnel that was being planned between England and France, that definitely dates me.

  • neom a day ago

    Pretty decent 2 minute video detailing the ship more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dftaWQLtPQ

  • _def 7 hours ago

    I'll still be hoping Christopher Nolan will use it in a movie

  • psunavy03 21 hours ago

    Interesting. I had no idea it was originally designed for testing SUBROC.

  • walrus01 21 hours ago

    The lifespan of any vessel, barge, ship, ferry, whatever that's built from steel and lives its entire life in saltwater is limited. I don't think anyone should be surprised that something built in 1962 has become uneconomical to maintain and needs to be scrapped.

    In this case it's probably unique enough that someone did the math on it and determined that for however many millions of euros are being spent to rehabilitate it in a shipyard, keeping it viable for another 10-15 years, it's less expensive than building an entirely new one to a custom design.

    • Stevvo 4 hours ago

      Not true. A steel boat can last indefinitely if regularly maintained. Properly painted steel does not rust. There are many surviving examples from the 1830s, not restored but maintained continuously.

      • hmmm-i-wonder an hour ago

        Properly painted steel wont. But steel wont stay "properly painted" during operation, leading to rust forming between maintenance. Maintenance is also typically rushed leading to painting over rust in many cases resulting in more rust sooner.

        We used to joke about the local ferries being mostly rust and paint, but it wasn't much of a joke to be honest.

    • potato3732842 20 hours ago

      It's not that it's uneconomical to maintain the core ship. It's that ships periodically need to be refitted the same way houses get renovated and without a future use to justify that there's no reason to do so.

      • walrus01 20 hours ago

        I've seen detailed photo galleries of former WA state ferries when they go for auction, after they've reached the end of their service life as judged by the state government. Usually at the 40+ year mark. Throughout their service lives they get refitted and fixed up on an almost continual basis, many millions of dollars are spent on maintaining each one, but at a certain point, it starts looking like a money pit to pour funds into continuing to fix up a 35, 40 year old vessel in salt water.

        There's some ships on the great lakes which are 70, 75, 80 years old and don't have nearly the same ongoing corrosion issues as similar ones that live in salt water.

  • didntcheck a day ago

    Nice. I have fond memories of being chased by a Flesher in one of those

    • Orbital_Armada 19 hours ago

      I was looking for a Soma reference... Only fitting for it to be at the bottom! :P

  • lupusreal a day ago

    It doesn't have propulsion of its own and needs to be towed everywhere; is it technically a ship? Seems more like a fancy barge or platform.

    Very cool in any case, I'm glad it's been saved.

    • diggan a day ago

      Wikipedia calls it "open ocean research platform" which seems more appropriate, agree. But it doesn't rhyme as nicely as "Flipping FLIP ship" so I understand the author took a bit of liberty in the title, at least they explain what FLIP stands for ("FLoating Instrument Platform") which makes it pretty clear if it's a ship or platform :)

    • ethbr1 a day ago

      It moves. Just only rotationally. :)