How It Works Like a Waterproof Jacket
Imagine your favorite raincoat, it keeps you dry when it rains. Ships have something similar: a layer of paint or metal that covers the ship’s body, like a raincoat for the whole boat.
This special layer is made to block water from reaching the metal underneath, which would otherwise turn into rust (like how your shoes get wet and muddy if you walk through puddles).
Why It Lasts So Long
These coats are not just any paint, they’re like super strong shields that can even handle saltwater, which is extra sneaky because it loves to make things rust faster.
Every now and then, ships get a new coat, kind of like how you might put on another raincoat if the first one gets torn. This keeps them happy and strong for many years, no more sad, rusty ships!
Examples
- A ship uses a special paint that keeps the metal from reacting to saltwater.
- Workers regularly clean the ship's bottom to prevent rust buildup.
- Some ships are coated with materials that block oxygen and water.
Ask a question
See also
- How do ships float? (3D Animation)?
- How do big ships float?
- How Do Ships Float? | Things Explained: Buoyancy?
- Is this a ship-shipping ship, shipping shipping ships?
- How Seawater Sabotages Ships: Crash Course Engineering #43?