I can't believe this is actually real.
7/21/2011 12:31:35 PM
Q: How can you eclipse and eclipse?A: With a ballin' ass boat
7/21/2011 12:34:23 PM
He's a JOB CREATOR!
7/21/2011 12:35:49 PM
ibtIMONABOAT
7/21/2011 12:36:06 PM
i would LOVE to see this in person
7/21/2011 12:37:31 PM
7/21/2011 12:43:05 PM
What. The. Hell.How anyone can be rich enough to afford 4.5 billion for a damn yacht is lost on me. I also hope they plan on sailing with a full-on armada of protection, or they're going to lose that thing (and their lives) in a hurry. The idea of something like this probably has every pirate in the world salivating. Hell, one diver with a saw and chisel could probably make off with quite a haul of gold.Though, it can also be said that he's really investing the money in gold, just in an odd way.
7/21/2011 12:46:28 PM
7/21/2011 12:47:22 PM
It can't be real.100,000kg of gold at roughly $50/gram would cost $5billion on its own.
7/21/2011 12:48:50 PM
Maybe its for corporate use.[Edited on July 21, 2011 at 12:50 PM. Reason : ]
7/21/2011 12:49:45 PM
^^maybe you get a break buying in bulk [Edited on July 21, 2011 at 12:50 PM. Reason : ^]
7/21/2011 12:49:58 PM
7/21/2011 12:50:43 PM
7/21/2011 12:52:24 PM
I don't think I will ever understand people.
7/21/2011 12:52:29 PM
http://stuarthughes.com/newdawn/product_info.php?products_id=107
7/21/2011 12:52:34 PM
FYI this is what Abramovich's 170m long yacht looks like: (at over 500 ft how can you call that a yacht?!)
7/21/2011 12:54:20 PM
come on board, ya broke mothafuckas[Edited on July 21, 2011 at 1:02 PM. Reason : puck_it said it first ^^^^^^^^]
7/21/2011 12:56:02 PM
I also don't think it's real. I mean, maybe it's real...but the person who paid for this thing would have to be mentally compromised.And I normally don't like to judge people's financial decisions or whine about how the money could have been better spent, but we're moving into some really screwed up territory here....4.5 billion dollars could have done a tremendous amount of good.[Edited on July 21, 2011 at 12:59 PM. Reason : ]
7/21/2011 12:57:47 PM
7/21/2011 1:08:44 PM
^i don't follow you
7/21/2011 1:11:17 PM
They could have bought the gold when it was cheaper.
7/21/2011 1:12:53 PM
110 tons of goldyeah i doubt that
7/21/2011 1:13:15 PM
7/21/2011 1:13:29 PM
If I'm spending that kind of scratch, I'm ponying up an extra $1.6bn and gettin' myself one of these:
7/21/2011 1:13:40 PM
7/21/2011 1:13:51 PM
7/21/2011 1:30:01 PM
Bill gates can afford this.
7/21/2011 1:34:14 PM
how well would gold hold up in salt water??
7/21/2011 1:35:28 PM
Very well
7/21/2011 1:36:16 PM
7/21/2011 1:37:11 PM
^The Dave Chapelle skit is the first thing that came to mind when I saw this article.Damn, that boat has 1% of the world's gold supply (of what has been mined since the dawn of civilization)
7/21/2011 1:38:02 PM
well i guess i was thinking more the ocean than salt water, i mean if he takes it across the Atlantic then would he have to worry about some pretty harsh waves beating against it
7/21/2011 1:44:44 PM
I just got this exclusive photo of the captain of the vesseland you people think the illuminati don't exist
7/21/2011 1:45:03 PM
I don't believe this really exists, as is being described:
7/21/2011 1:45:43 PM
7/21/2011 1:49:51 PM
Wonder who this "anonymous businessman" is[Edited on July 21, 2011 at 2:02 PM. Reason : Probably an internet media mogul like **** ****]
7/21/2011 1:56:04 PM
well the gold won't corrode...so if its plating and not too soft and not structural, I'd think it would be ok in general.5.18 m^3 of gold is a lot...a sphere with a 7ft diameter...I highly doubt this is real, and if it is the photoshopper still did a bad job
7/21/2011 1:59:44 PM
bunch of people who don't know anything about boating or naval architecture ITTstategrad100 takes a stab at this:the sacrificial cathodic protection usually reserved for vessels of a metallic hull wouldn't apply to a gold plated vessel, and the durability of a fiberglass hull typically seen in vessels of this magnitude would be forsaken in the name of conspicuous consumption. Use of the gold in itself as a plated keel would be very susceptible to disruption by sea life such as buildup of barnacles, algae, so forth. The plating would have to be at a certain thickness as a function of draft mark, and the architects may have determined a line where the plating should remain exposed at the expected mean water draft mark. While the chemical composition of the sea water itself wouldn't affect the gold, external influences such as sea life, bilge, etc. would quickly tarnish the appearance of the hull, which is why white fiberglass is usually the perferred material.It would have to be drydocked in a secure facility at all times and not used often, as a result of the raw material value and as the vulnerability of the veneer.This is also impractical as most megayachts maintain a 24 hr crew to maintain the vessel, at least a skeleton crew or full time maintainer to keep the vessel running.Safely crossing the Atlantic is more of a function of the draft than of the composition of the hull, assuming the material meets minimum tinsel-strength requirements.
7/21/2011 2:01:00 PM
I want to torpedo this thing to the bottom of the ocean.
7/21/2011 2:02:11 PM
7/21/2011 2:02:30 PM
1) Its a little tough to move a 30m boat that weighs 110+tons2) Don't fuck up scraping barnacles off that hull
7/21/2011 2:13:02 PM
i sent it to snopesthey'll get to the bottom of this
7/21/2011 2:22:26 PM
7/21/2011 2:24:38 PM
7/21/2011 2:29:03 PM
somehow, 0.1% is "nearly 1%" i guess they meant to say/should have said "nearly 0.1%". (even though 0.06% is NOT "nearly 0.1%"). [Edited on July 21, 2011 at 2:31 PM. Reason : ]
7/21/2011 2:30:34 PM
^ TrueI highly recommend this book It opened up the whole world to me about the commodities market and how the supply/demand markets of precious minerals/metals are truly artificial, and it provides an answer to the water/diamond paradox.My favorite mind-blower is that gold is more valuable than silver because silver is more abundant in the marketplace than gold. Yet in nature, it is determined that more gold exists on earth than silver. However, the price amounts are a result of the fact that man has extracted more silver than gold from the crust, so the market responds by setting prices at comparative scarcity, although when all mineral deposits are completely extracted in a theoretical world, it is expected that silver is much more scarce on this planet, and would be presumably priced as such. Similarly, the book describes how DeBeers controls the diamond market and threatens potential competitors with dumping a glut on the market to slam down diamond prices and crush competition before they can establish a foothold on the marketshare. They can depress prices at a net loss for a long enough time to squash any competing company.Really makes you think.
7/21/2011 2:34:27 PM
7/21/2011 2:45:29 PM
so basically buying diamonds makes you an asshole and a terroristSORRY BABE
7/21/2011 2:47:09 PM
7/21/2011 2:49:08 PM