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How can you tell the difference between Ocean Liners & Cruise Ships?

Chris Frame the Maritime Historian
Chris Frame the Maritime Historian
🥈Expert
👁️ 18K views📅 4 years ago⏱️ 3:00
What This Creator Said
Creator Had Mixed FeelingsTips & Advice🥈Expert Creator
Veteran Cruiser

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

Creator's Key Takeaways

ocean liners are built for direct point-to-point crossings cruise ships are designed for pleasure voyages

number one ocean liners have a long bow this helps them cut through the high waves and heavy seas of deep ocean voyages

number three ocean liners are much faster than cruise ships liners must maintain a schedule of point-to-point crossings

number five liners are much stronger than cruise ships the hull is reinforced to handle the heavy seas

Creator's Tips & Advice

Look for a longer bow on ocean liners to cut through heavy seas
Check the bridge position—higher on ocean liners for better storm protection
Note that ocean liners are faster and must maintain schedules
Observe lifeboat deck height—higher on ocean liners for safety
Consider hull strength—ocean liners have reinforced steel

Questions This Creator Answers

QHow can you tell the difference between ocean liners and cruise ships?

Topics Covered

Ship Condition1 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.

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YouTube Video Description

Here are 5 simple ways to tell the difference between an Ocean Liner and a Cruise Ship. 1: Ocean liners have a long bow to help them cut through the high seas of deep ocean voyages. The bow protects the superstructure from the force of the waves. Cruise ships are not expected to be exposed to these heavy waves as regularly - so they have a shorter bow. 2: The bridge is where the captain and officers drive the ship. Ocean Liners usually have the bridge up high, often on the top deck, protecting it from the rough weather often encountered. This also gives a better view during storms. Cruise ships are built for calmer weather, they generally have the bridge a bit lower down and often have lounges and cabins above the bridge. 3: Ocean liners are MUCH faster than cruise ships. Liners must maintain a schedule of point to point crossings. If they’re delayed mid-ocean they need the extra speed to make up lost time. Cruise ships lcan skip ports if there are delays, or reschedule voyages altogether. This isn’t possible for a liner mid-Atlantic. Some of the famous liners could even go backwards faster than cruise ships can go forward! 4: Liners have their lifeboats higher up than cruise ships. The reason - you guessed it - the weather. A lower boat deck allows for better interior spaces but increases the risk that the boats will be damaged during storms. Because liners often encounter storms, their boats are up high. 5: Liners are much stronger than cruise ships. The hull is reinforced to handle the heavy seas encountered. On QM2 for example, the steel is 15mm thick and 28mm at the bow - more than double that of many cruise ships. — ~ LEARN MORE ABOUT OCEAN LINERS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVo08nSQ2CM ~ CHECK OUT OUR MERCH: https://www.chrisframeofficial.teemill.com/ ~ CHECK OUT OUR BOOKS: https://www.chriscunard.com/chrisframe/ocean-liner-books/ — Image Support: RMS Queen Mary Colin Hargreaves Line Icon: Made by Made / CC Attribution - The Noun Project Dot Icon: Karine Shahnazaryan CC Attibution - The Noun Project Arrow Icon on Thumbnail: Jesse Pinkman / CC By Attribution - The Noun Project Thumbnail Photo of QM2 and Britannia: Andrew Sassoli-Walker https://www.silent photographer.com Arrow: Jesse Pinkman CC. By Attribute via Adobe. #cruisenews #cruiseship #oceanliner #QM2 #Titanic #CarnivalCruise