The point is that it is a big job. The ship seems to be in an area devoid of container cranes which will not help but 20,000 containers at one a minute 24 hours a day is over 13 days continuous work.
If it takes 5 minutes each or they stop working when it becomes dark you can start multiplying that up. Five minutes each is a couple of months altogether.
So are you saying it takes months to load and unload a shipping container that size? Seems pretty inefficient for an industry that relies heavily upon efficiency.
The point is that it is a big job. The ship seems to be in an area devoid of container cranes which will not help but 20,000 containers at one a minute 24 hours a day is over 13 days continuous work.
If it takes 5 minutes each or they stop working when it becomes dark you can start multiplying that up. Five minutes each is a couple of months altogether.
I’ve worked at a port it takes 2-3 days to unload about 20k containers docked, out on the water with a crane might take a extra day two at most
Who's to say the containers haven't already been opened/looked at on the ever given. A handful were flagged to be inspected?
So are you saying it takes months to load and unload a shipping container that size? Seems pretty inefficient for an industry that relies heavily upon efficiency.
It dosent relay on that kind of efficiency. Its months to move most of those boxes.
I am saying if they do one a minute it will take 13 days. Is my math(s) not correct?
So what? Is it only the last container that contains whatever would be damning?
At over 1200 feet long, that ship could accommodate 4 or 5 helps at a time. Still, ibthink they know what they are looking for.
I also think they want that ship isolated right where it is and time is now on their side.