Explosives Will Drop Bridge Truss From MV Dali Ship | Baltimore bridge Collapse
jeffostroff jeffostroff
487K subscribers
269,446 views
0

 Published On Premiered May 8, 2024

Jeff Ostoff shows you the latest news from the US Coast Guard's attempts to remove the Francis Scott Key Bridge truss off the bow of the MV Dali ship. There are also more updates on the engineering disaster aftermath of the MV Dali ship striking the Francis Scott Key Bridge causing the bridge collapse in Baltimore, Md. on the Patapsco River. The video also shows some concepts for using precision-cut demolition explosives to break apart the bridge truss and force it to slide off the Dali.. You'll also see the incredible new massive underwater hydraulic claw in operation, dredging up massive sections of bridge debris of the now re-closed channel. They closed this limited access channel on April 29, 2024, after the first ships to pass through the new limited access channel, a deepwater 300 ft wide, and a 35-foot deep access channel for larger ships, the first time since the MV Dali collided with the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, MD on March 26, 2024. You'll see progress so far in this Baltimore bridge collapse.

🎥 Watch Next:
🎥 FIU Bridge Collapse: WORST Engineering Blunders Ever:    • FIU Bridge Collapse: WORST Engineerin...  
🎥See John Z Wetmore's channel for structure demolitions:    / @johnzwetmore  
🎥 How To Install Laminate Flooring For Beginners DIY    • How To Install Laminate Flooring For ...  
🎥 SCARY Crane Collapse Fell Off Tower, Fort Lauderdale, FL    • SCARY Crane Collapse Fell Off Tower, ...  
🎥 Titan Sub NEW Air Force Audio: An SOS For Help?    • NEW Titan Sub Air Force Audio: Trying...  
🎥 LEAKED Titan Sub Transcript Shows Crew In Battle For Lives:    • LEAKED Titan Sub Transcript Shows Cre...  

They barge the bridge collapsed bridge debris to the new 10-acre laydown yard used by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to process wreckage from the Francis Scott Key Bridge site. An estimated 50,000 tons of concrete and steel collapsed; once removed, the wreckage is sorted and transported two miles away by barge to Sparrows Point. Debris and wreckage removal is ongoing in support of a top priority to safely and efficiently open the Fort McHenry channel.

show more

Share/Embed