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The Design PROBLEM That Almost Ruined Queen Mary 2

Chris Frame the Maritime Historian
Chris Frame the Maritime Historian
🥈Expert
👁️ 11K views📅 4 months ago⏱️ 5:17
What This Creator Said
Creator Had Mixed FeelingsCabin / Ship Tour🥈Expert Creator
Transatlantic

Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.

Creator's Key Takeaways

I recall thinking how close it looked to the ship in 2019 when I sailed into New York Harbor for my first time on board QM2

So designers shortened the funnel to allow QM2 a clearance of 3 m or 9.8 ft at high water in the midpoint of the arch of the bridge

the scoop was enlarged, making it extremely effective at pushing air up and over the shorter funnel

Questions This Creator Answers

QWhy is QM2's funnel such a strange shape?
QWhy is it so short when the ship is so big?

Topics Covered

Ship Condition1 Happy Bacon

Port Highlights

Hong Kong1 Happy Bacon
New York1 Happy Bacon
San Francisco1 Happy Bacon
How to read the Trip Bacon Score
Happy Bacon — creators loved this aspect
Sad Bacon — creators took issue with this
Meh — no strong opinion either way

Scale: 0–5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = “meh”, 5 = “bacon bliss”. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.

About our Bacon Score methodology
YouTube Video Description

Queen Mary 2 was designed to be the ultimate ocean liner, but a major design problem almost made her primary mission impossible. When she was first announced, her iconic Cunard funnel looked very different. Why was it changed? In this video, we investigate the bridge that forced designers to shrink QM2’s most recognizable feature. We’ll look at the original 1998 renderings, the legacy of the QE2 funnel, and the incredible engineering required to squeeze the world’s largest liner under the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge with only 3 metres to spare. 🛳️ Join to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgk7SzYDkiXWWBfMqXYH0cA/join 🚢 My Cunard History Website: https://www.chriscunard.com/ 📚 Buy my books: https://www.chrisframe.com.au/books 👕 Buy cruise merch: https://themaritimehistorian.Teemill.com/ 📚 SubStack: https://themaritimehistorian.substack.com/ 🛳️ Learn more about cruising at my Blog: https://www.chrisframe.com.au/ About the QM2 Funnel Design: The QM2’s predecessor, QE2, introduced a funnel that was the first among the Cunard fleet to incorporate the distinctive design we know today; with the black smoke stack, the red cowling and the white scoop. In 1987, the design was supersized on QE2 to accommodate an array of exhaust and heat exchangers for nine brand-new diesel engines. When Carnival announced plans to build the first true ocean liner in a generation, a tall, thick QE2-style funnel was the original plan. However, as QM2’s designer Stephen Payne noted in our 2020 interview (watch here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2uinSNslXo), passenger expectations and engineering requirements—specifically the addition of gas turbines atop the vessel—changed everything. To reach her primary port of New York, QM2 has to pass under the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. With an air draft limit of 62m (203ft), the original design simply wouldn't fit. This video explores how the funnel was shortened and the wind scoop enlarged to ensure the ship remained both functional and beautiful. Image thanks: Peter Knego: @midshipcinema Gavin Harper Epic Aug 2023 Luke Morrison: @Boeing_Luke Henry Farnam and Perry Poussard @luxevagabonds Image References: QE2 Funnel in Bremerhaven: Dashers, CC BY SA 3.0 - https://tinyurl.com/qm2-01 Verrezzano Bridge: Gian Castillo, CC BY SA 2.0 - https://tinyurl.com/qm2-0023 QM2 Renderings: Cunard Line (2003) - https://www.cunardline.com/ QM2 and QE2 in Southampton (Cunard). Tags: #QM2 #queenmary2 #cunard #cruisenews #oceanliner #maritimehistory #shipdesign Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgk7SzYDkiXWWBfMqXYH0cA/join