Aircraft carriers maintain directional stability in rough seas through a fixed vertical blade called the SKG, located beneath the waterline along the hull's bottom. This passive steel fin acts like a keel on a sailboat, resisting sideways drift from waves and wind without requiring any moving parts, motors, or crew operation. Without this feature, the flat-bottomed hull would slide sideways like a hockey puck on ice, requiring constant engine corrections that would waste fuel and wear out the propulsion system.
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๐ฅ๏ธ The Hidden Blade Underneath Every Aircraft Carrier ๐ฅ๏ธAdded:
Why does an aircraft carrier weighing 100,000 tons stay perfectly on course in rough seas instead of being pushed sideways by waves like any other flat bottomed vessel? Let me explain. Most people assume it's just raw engine power overcoming any sideways drift. But engines only push a ship forward. They do nothing against sideways force. You see, beneath the water line on every aircraft carrier is a massive fin called a SKG, a fixed vertical blade running along the very bottom of the hull. When waves and wind push the carrier sideways, the SKG acts like a keel on a sailboat, biting into the water and resisting the drift. Without it, the flat bottomed hull would slide sideways across the surface like a hockey puck on ice. The carrier would need constant engine corrections just to hold a straight line, burning fuel and wearing out the propulsion system continuously.
But here's the craziest part. The SKG has no moving parts, no motors, no hydraulics, no crew operating it. It is a single fixed blade of steel doing nothing but existing in exactly the right place. And that completely passive piece of metal is what keeps 100,000 tons of warship, 5,000 sailors, and 70 fighter jets pointed in the right direction across thousands of miles of open
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