Ships
Ships
Ships
A Roll-On/Roll-Off [RO/RO] ship is specifically designed to carry wheeled and tracked vehicles as all or most of its cargo. Vehicles are driven or towed on and off the ship by means of either the ship's own ramps or shore-based ramps. Because it is designed to accommodate cargoes which cannot be stacked but which vary in height, belowdeck space and volume utilization is generally less efficient than on a containership. RO/RO ships are thus commercially viable only in certain specialized trades. However, the RO/RO is the preferred ship type for deployment of military unit equipment.
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2. BULK CARRIER
A bulk carrier, bulk freighter, or bulker is a merchant ship specially designed to transport unpackaged bulk cargo, such as grains, coal, ore, and cement in its cargo holds. Since the first specialized bulk carrier was built in 1852, economic forces have fuelled the development of these ships, causing them to grow in size and sophistication. Today's bulkers are specially designed to maximize capacity, safety, efficiency, and to be able to withstand the rigors of their work. Today, bulkers make up 40% of the world's merchant fleets and range in size from single-hold mini-bulkers to mammoth ore ships able to carry 400,000 metric tons of deadweight (DWT). A number of specialized designs exist: some can unload their own cargo, some depend on port facilities for unloading, and some even package the cargo as it is loaded. Over half of all bulkers have Greek, Japanese, or Chinese owners and more than a quarter are registered in Panama. Korea is the largest single builder of bulkers, and 82% of these ships were built in Asia. A bulk carrier's crew participates in the loading and unloading of cargo, navigating the ship, and keeping its machinery and equipment properly maintained. Loading and unloading the cargo is difficult, dangerous, and can take up to 120 hours on larger ships. Crews can range in size from three people on the smallest ships to over 30 on the largest. Bulk cargo can be very dense, corrosive, or abrasive. This can present safety problems: cargo shifting, spontaneous combustion, and cargo saturation can threaten a ship. The use of ships that are old and have corrosion problems has been linked to a spate of bulker sinkings in the 1990s, as have the bulker's large hatchways, important for efficient cargo handling. New international regulations have since been introduced to improve ship design and inspection, and to streamline the process of abandoning ship.
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Definition
There are various ways to define the term bulk carrier. The International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea defines a bulk carrier as "a ship constructed with a single deck, top side tanks and hopper side tanks in cargo spaces and intended to primarily carry dry cargo in bulk; an ore carrier; or a combination carrier." However, most classification societies use a broader definition where a bulker is any ship that carries dry unpackaged goods. Multipurpose cargo ships can carry bulk cargo, but can also carry other cargoes and are not specifically designed for bulk carriage. The term "dry bulk carrier" is used to distinguish bulkers from bulk liquid carriers such as oil, chemical, or liquefied petroleum gas carriers. Very small bulkers are almost indistinguishable from general cargo ships, and they are often classified based more on the ship's use than its design. A number of abbreviations are used to describe bulkers. "OBO" describes a bulker which carries a combination of ore, bulk, and oil, and "O/O" is used for combination oil and ore carriers. The terms "VLOC," "VLBC," "ULOC," and "ULBC" for very large and ultra large ore and bulk carriers were adapted from the supertanker designations very large crude carrier and ultra large crude carrier.
Cross section of a typical bulker 1. Cargo hold 2. Hatch cover 3. Upper hopper tank for water ballast or oil 4. Double bottom 5. Lower hopper tank, for water ballast
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3. PASSENGER SHIPS
A passenger ship is a ship whose primary function is to carry passengers. The category does not include cargo vessels which have accommodations for limited numbers of passengers, such as the ubiquitous twelve-passenger freighters once common on the seas in which the transport of passengers is secondary to the carriage of freight. The type does however include many classes of ships designed to transport substantial numbers of passengers as well as freight. Indeed, until recently virtually all ocean liners were able to transport mail, package freight and express, and other cargo in addition to passenger luggage, and were equipped with cargo holds and derricks, kingposts, or other cargohandling gear for that purpose. Only in more recent ocean liners and in virtually all cruise ships has this cargo capacity been eliminated.
While typically passenger ships are part of the merchant marine, passenger ships have also been used as troopships and often are commissioned as naval ships when used as for that purpose.
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4. DREDGERS
Dredging is an excavation activity or operation usually carried out at least partly underwater, in shallow seas or fresh water areas with the purpose of gathering up bottom sediments and disposing of them at a different location. This technique is often used to keep waterways navigable. It is also used as a way to replenish sand on some public beaches, where too much sand has been lost because of coastal erosion. Dredging is also used as a technique for fishing for certain species of edible clams and crabs, see fishing dredge. A dredger is a device for scraping or sucking the seabed, used for dredging. It is a ship or boat equipped with a dredge. The terms are sometimes interchanged. The process of dredging creates spoils (excess material), which are carried away from the dredged area. Dredging can produce materials for land reclamation or other purposes (usually construction-related), and has also historically played a significant role in gold mining. Dredging can create disturbance in aquatic ecosystems, often with adverse impacts.
These operate by sucking through a long tube, like some vacuum cleaners but on a big scale. A plain suction dredger has no tool at the end of the suction pipe to disturb the material. This is often the most commonly used form of dredging.
Trailing suction
A trailing suction hopper dredger (TSHD) trails its suction pipe when working, and loads the dredge spoil into one or more hoppers in the vessel. When the hoppers are full, the TSHD sails to a disposal area and either dumps the material through doors in the hull or pumps the material out of the hoppers. Some dredges
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also self-offload using drag buckets and conveyors. The largest trailing suction hopper dredger in the world is currently Jan De Nul's Cristobal Colon.
Cutter suction
A cutter-suction dredger's (CSD) suction tube has a cutter head at the suction inlet, to loosen the earth and transport it to the suction mouth. The cutter can also be used for hard surface materials like gravel or rock. The dredged soil is usually sucked up by a wear-resistant centrifugal pump and discharged through a pipe line or to a barge. In recent years, dredgers with more powerful cutters have been built in order to excavate harder rock without blasting.
Auger suction
This process functions like a cutter suction dredger, but the cutting tool is a rotating Archimedean screw set at right angles to the suction pipe. The first widely used auger dredges were designed by Mud Cat Dredges in the 1980s which was run by National Car Rental, but is now a Division of Ellicott Dredges. In 1996, IMS Dredges introduced a self-propelled version of the auger dredge that allows the system to propel itself without the use of anchors cables. During the 1980s and 1990s auger dredges were primarily used for sludge removal applications from waste water treatment plants. Today, auger dredges are used for a wider variety of applications including river maintenance and sand mining. The most common auger dredge on the global market today is the Versi-Dredge. The turbidity shroud on auger dredge systems creates a strong suction vacuum and creates much less turbity than conical (basket) type cutterheads and that is why they are preferred for environmental type applications. The vacuum created by the shroud and the ability to convey material to the pump faster makes auger dredge systems more productive than similar sized conical (basket) type cutterhead dredges.
Jet-lift
These use the Venturi effect of a concentrated high-speed stream of water to pull the nearby water, together with bed material, into a pipe. Air-lift
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An airlift is a type of small suction dredge. It is sometimes used like other dredges. At other times, an airlift is used, handheld underwater by a diver. It works by blowing air into the pipe, and that air, being lighter than water, rises inside the pipe, dragging water with it.
Bucket A bucket dredger is equipped with a bucket dredge, which is a device that picks up sediment by mechanical means, often with many circulating buckets attached to a wheel or chain. Some bucket dredgers and grab dredgers are powerful enough to rip out coral to make a shipping channel through coral reefs.
Grab Grab dredger picks up seabed material with a clam shell grab, which hangs from an onboard crane or a crane ship, or is carried by a hydraulic arm, or is mounted like on a dragline. This technique is often used in excavation of bay mud. Most of these dredges are crane barges with spuds. Backhoe/dipper
A backhoe/dipper dredge has a backhoe like on some excavators. A crude but usable backhoe dredger can be made by mounting a land-type backhoe excavator on a pontoon. The six largest backhoe dredgers in the world are currently the Vitruvius, the Mimar Sinan, Postnik Jakovlev (Jan De Nul), the Samson (DEME), the Simson and the Goliath (Van Oord). They featured barge-mounted excavators. Small backhoe dredgers can be track-mounted and work from the bank of ditches. A backhoe dredger is equipped with a half-open shell. The shell is filled moving towards the machine. Usually dredges material is loaded in barges. This machine is mainly used in harbors and other shallow water.
Water injection
A water injection dredger uses a small jet to inject water under low pressure (to prevent the sediment from exploding into the surrounding waters) into the seabed to bring the sediment in suspension, which then becomes a turbidity current, which flows away down slope, is moved by a second burst of water from the WID or is carried away in natural currents. Water injection results in a lot of sediment in the water which makes measurement with most hydrographic equipment (for instance: singlebeam echosounders) difficult.
Pneumatic
These dredgers use a chamber with inlets, out of which the water is pumped with the inlets closed. It is usually suspended from a crane on land or from a small pontoon or barge. Its effectiveness depends on depth pressure. Bed leveller
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This is a bar or blade which is pulled over the seabed behind any suitable ship or boat. It has an effect similar to that of a bulldozer on land. The chain-operated steam dredger Bertha, built in 1844 to a design by Brunel and now the oldest operational steam vessel in Britain, was of this type.
Krabbelaar
This is an early type of dredger which was formerly used in shallow water in the Netherlands. It was a flatbottomed boat with spikes sticking out of its bottom. As tide current pulled the boat, the spikes scraped seabed material loose, and the tide current washed the material away, hopefully to deeper water. Krabbelaar is Dutch for "scratcher".
Snagboat
A snagboat is designed to remove big debris such as dead trees and parts of trees from rivers and canals.
Amphibious Some of these are any of the above types of dredger, which can operate normally, or by extending legs, also known as spuds, so it stands on the seabed with its hull out of the water. Some forms can go on land.
Some of these are land-type backhoe excavators whose wheels are on long hinged legs so it can drive into shallow water and keep its cab out of water. Some of these may not have a floatable hull and, if so, cannot work in deep water.
Submersible
These are usually used to recover useful materials from the seabed. Many of them travel on caterpillar tracks. A unique variant is intended to walk on legs on the seabed. Fishing dredges are used to collect various species of clams scallops, oysters or crabs from the seabed. These dredges have the form of a scoop made of chain mesh, and are towed by a fishing boat. Careless dredging can be destructive to the seabed. Nowadays some scallop dredging is replaced by collecting via scuba diving.
Police drag
In some police departments a small dredge (sometimes called a drag) is used to find and recover objects and bodies from underwater. The bodies may be murder victims, or people who committed suicide by drowning, or victims of accidents. It is sometimes pulled by men walking on the bank.
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5. CHEMICAL TANKER
A chemical tanker is a type of tanker designed to transport chemicals in bulk. Ocean-going chemical tankers generally range from 5,000 metric tons deadweight (DWT) to 40,000 DWT in size, which is considerably smaller than the average size of other tanker types due to the specialised nature of their cargoes and the size restrictions of the port terminals where they call to load and discharge. Chemical tankers normally have a series of separate cargo tanks which are either coated with specialised coatings such as phenolic epoxy or zinc paint, or made from stainless steel. The coating or cargo tank material determines what types of cargo a particular tank can carry: stainless steel tanks are required for aggressive acid cargoes such as sulphuric and phosphoric acid Chemical tankers often have a system for tank heating in order to maintain the viscosity of certain cargoes - typically this system consists of a boiler which pumps pressurized steam through so-called 'heating coils' - stainless steel pipes - in the cargo tanks, thus transferring heat into the cargo which circulates in the tank by convection. Many modern chemical tankers feature double hull construction and have one tank for each pump with separate piping, which means that each tank can load a separate cargo without any mixing. Tank cleaning after discharging cargo is a very important aspect of chemical tanker operations, because tanks which are not properly cleaned of all cargo residue can adversely affect the purity of the next cargo loaded. Before tanks are cleaned, it is very important that they are properly ventilated and checked to be free of potentially explosive gases. Most new chemical tankers are built by shipbuilders in Japan, Korea or China, with other builders in Turkey, Italy, Germany and Poland. While 'easier' cargoes - e.g. vegetable oil - can be carried in epoxy coated tanks.
(1 )A Chemical Tanker (2) The deck of a chemical tanker has a complicated piping system. This is the Saudi chemical tanker of 43,851 metric tons deadweight (DWT) 1986 Built Al Farabi, carrying molasses, in Brest.
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6. CARGO SHIPS
A cargo ship or freighter is any sort of ship or vessel that carries cargo, goods, and materials from one port to another. Thousands of cargo carriers ply the world's seas and oceans each year; they handle the bulk of international trade. Cargo ships are usually specially designed for the task, often being equipped with cranes and other mechanisms to load and unload, and come in all sizes. Today, they are almost always built of welded steel, and with some exceptions generally have a life expectancy of 25 to 30 years before being scrapped.
Cargo ships/freighters can be divided into four groups, according to the type of cargo they carry. These groups are: 1. General Cargo Vessels 2. Tankers 3. Dry-bulk Carriers 4. Multipurpose Vessels General Cargo Vessels carry packaged items like chemicals, foods, furniture, machinery, motor vehicles, footwear, garments, etc. Tankers carry petroleum products or other liquid cargo. Dry Bulk Carriers carry coal, grain, ore and other similar products in loose form. Multi-purpose Vessels, as the name suggests, carry different classes of cargo e.g. liquid and general cargo at the same time. Specialized types of cargo vessels include container ships and bulk carriers (technically tankers of all sizes are cargo ships, although they are routinely thought of as a separate category). Cargo ships fall into two further categories that reflect the services they offer to industry: liner and tramp services. Those on a fixed published schedule and fixed tariff rates are cargo liners. Tramp ships do not have fixed schedules. Users charter them to haul loads. Generally, the smaller shipping companies and private individuals operate tramp ships. Cargo liners run on fixed schedules published by the shipping companies. Each trip a liner takes is called a voyage. Liners mostly carry general cargo. However, some cargo liners may carry passengers also. A cargo liner that carries 12 or more passengers is called a combination or passenger-cum-cargo line.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cargo_ship
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7. CONTAINER SHIPS
The hull, similar to bulk carriers and general cargo ships, is built around a strong keel. Into this frame is set one or more below-deck cargo holds, numerous tanks, and the engine room. The holds are topped by hatch covers, onto which more containers can be stacked. Many container ships have cargo cranes installed on them, and some have specialized systems for securing containers on board. The hull of a modern cargo ship is a complex arrangement of steel plates and strengthening beams. The hull is built around the keel. Resembling ribs, and fastened at right-angles to the keel are the ship's frames.The ship's main deck, the metal platework that covers the top of the hull framework, is supported by beams that are attached to the tops of the frames and run the full breadth of the ship.The beams not only support the deck, but along with the deck, frames, and transverse bulkheads, strengthen and reinforce the shell. Another feature of recent hulls is a set of double-bottom tanks, which provide a second watertight shell that runs most of the length of a ship. The double-bottoms generally hold liquids such as fuel oil, ballast water or fresh water. A ship's engine room houses its main engines and auxiliary machinery such as the fresh water and sewage systems, electrical generators, fire pumps, and air conditioners. In most new ships, the engine room is located in the after portion of the ship. A major characteristic of a container ship is whether it has cranes installed for handling its cargo. Those that have cargo cranes are called geared and those that don't are called ungeared or gearless. The earliest purpose-built container ships in the 1970s were all gearless. Since then, the percentage of geared newbuilds has fluctuated widely, but has been decreasing overall, with only 7.5% of the container ship capacity in 2009 being equipped with cranes. While geared container ships are more flexible in that they can visit ports that are not equipped with pierside cranes, they suffer from several drawbacks. To begin with, geared ships will cost more to purchase than a gearless ship. Geared ships also incur greater recurring expenses, such as maintenance and fuel costs.
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8. OBO CARRIERS
OBO is an abbreviated name for Oil- Bulk- Ore cargo vessel. These are specially designed vessels which carry cargo in bulk in both liquid and dry form. The OBO vessels are some of the most highly sophisticated cargo vessels sailing today. OBO Carrier OBO vessel are expensive to build but because of their capability of carrying wet and dry cargo together ,they provide a more economical option as this feature reduces the number of empty voyages or ballast voyages. A bulk carrier can carry only dry cargo and a tanker can carry only liquid cargo. These make these two types of vessels to ply only on fix voyages with least flexibility. On the other hand, OBO vessels have multipurpose capability which allows them to ply on different voyages as per the demand and supply of the market to make the maximum profit. OBO vessels were very popular in the year 1955-1980 and a sudden rise was seen during this period. One of the biggest OBO carriers of this period MV Derbyshire was of approximately 180000 DWT. Unfortunately, it sank in the Pacific Ocean after fighting a terrific storm while it was carrying ore as cargo. OBO Construction and Features OBO is normally constructed with a single deck to impart structural strength to the vessel in addition to several divisions of transverse bulkheads which divides the cargo holds. Hatches for cargo hold are generally made in two pieces as larger and single hatches will reduce the structural strength of the ship. Also unlike bulk carriers, OBO vessel has pipe lines and equipments on deck which are used in operation while carrying liquid cargo. Moreover, a single large cover can hinder the operation of loading and unloading of oil cargo. However, OBO vessels are losing their popularity because of the following reasons: 1) They are expensive to construct. 2) Loading of bulk cargo requires conveyors and grabs. Due to small hatch opening, the access for bigger grab and belts become difficult and take more time to load / unload the cargo. 3) Additional trimming of ship is required as the equipment above the deck can hinder the crane movement. 4) Equipments located above the hatches have to be removed temporarily by means of crane, which increases the port stay and overall cost of operation. 5) The equipments above deck can be damaged by the cranes and equipment used for loading and unloading operation of bulk cargo. 6) The load distribution of OBO ship is not even and the overall structure is not stiff which may result in deformation of bulkhead at rough weather. 7) Another major problem of OBO ship is the movement of cargo in the hold which results in list and instability of the ship due to the shift in the center of gravity of the ship.
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ammunition; the ability to carry amphibious lighter age and the capability to preload the barges before ship arrival and to discharge cargo from the barges at relatively austere port facilities, after the ship has sailed. Their military disadvantages include a complete dependence on a single, very complicated mechanical system for barge discharge; the barge's dependence, once afloat, upon the availability of towage and the overall unsuitability of the barges for towing outside harbors or other protected waters.
CONDOCK
CONDOCK - the synonym for CON tainer-, DOCK-, and Ro/Ro-vessel features the combined versatility for the marine-transportation of Container, large and heavy loads in the Ro/Ro mode and the wide range of General cargoes. The special design of these vessels is their capability of the safe loading and transportation of floating units by semi-submersible dock-operation or utilization as a mobile Dry Dock. The vessels may trade worldwide with open or removed hatchcovers, resulting in nearly unlimited cargo heights. Cargo transport ships utilising a so-called float-on cargo-loading principle have been built. In 1978 the CONDOCK-Type vessel was designed in close co-operation with a German Shipyard. The Condock I of 3,603 dwat featured 2 cranes on the starboard side, each 63 tons at 14,00 m combinable 126 tons, decreasing gradually to 2 x 30 tons at 24,00 m . The barge capacity was 3 baco / lash. Until 1984, a successive series of
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almost identical sistervessels were delivered and operated together with further company-owned conventional tonnage in the world-wide freight market. The Condock III is a 4,400 DWT Ro-Ro, Flo-Flo vessel with dual 63 metric ton cranes combinable for 126-ton lifts and an unobstructed hold that is 87.5 meters long. The ship is ideal for yachts, tugboats, and modules and can successfully load at facilities primarily designed for barge operations. The international track record includes the preparation and transport of sensitive prefabricated highdimensioned modules and pressure vessels for refineries and offshore plants in the Ro-Ro mode. Further contracts include the transport of former USSR Foxtrot class submarine from Australia to Long Beach and the Dutch sailing- replica BATAVIA from Amsterdam to Sydney and back in the float in/out mode. These ships have a self-lowering capability whereby a cargo space can be flooded through the stern to allow direct access of floating cargo. By enabling cargo to be floated into the ship, the need for expensive lifting gear is eliminated. After loading the barges onto the transport ship it is debalasted to cause it to rise in the water and the cargo space is drained. The barges then lie in the transport ship as in a dry dock. The number of barges of a given size which can be docked in a transport ship in this way is dependent on the length and width of the cargo space. In designing the transport ship the extent to which these dimensions can be increased is limited by numerous factors including of course the maximum permissible length and beam of the ship.
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10. FERRYS
A ferry (or ferryboat) is a form of transportation, usually a boat, but sometimes a ship, used to carry primarily passengers, and sometimes vehicles and cargo as well, across a body of water. Most ferries operate on regular, frequent, return services. A passenger ferry with many stops, such as in Venice, is sometimes called a water bus or water taxi. Ferries form a part of the public transport systems of many waterside cities and islands, allowing direct transit between points at a capital cost much lower than bridges or tunnels. However, ship connections of much larger distances (such as over long distances in water bodies like the Mediterranean Sea) may also be called ferry services, especially if they carry vehicles.
Double-ended
Double-ended ferries have interchangeable bows and sterns, allowing them to shuttle back and forth between two terminals without having to turn around. Well-known double-ended ferry systems include the Staten Island Ferry, Washington State Ferries, Star Ferry, several boats on the North Carolina Ferry System, and the Lake Champlain Transportation Company. Most Norwegian fjord and coastal ferries are doubleended vessels. Some ferries in Sydney, Australia and British Columbia are also double-ended.. Hydrofoil Hydrofoils have the advantage of higher cruising speeds, succeeding hovercraft on some English Channel routes where the ferries now compete against the Eurotunnel and Eurostar trains that use the Channe Tunnel. Passenger-only hydrofoils also proved a practical, fast and relatively economical solution in the Canary Islands but were recently replaced by faster catamaran "high speed" ferries that can carry cars. Their replacement by the larger craft is seen by critics as a retrograde step given that the new vessels use much more fuel and foster the inappropriate use of carsin islands already suffering from the impact of mass tourism.
Hovercraft
Hovercraft were developed in the 1960s and 1970s to carry cars. The largest was the massive SR.N4 which carried cars in its centre section with ramps at the bow and stern between England and France. The hovercraft was superseded by catamarans which are nearly as fast and are less affected by sea and weather conditions. Only one service now remains, a foot passenger service between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight run by Hovertravel.
Catamaran
Catamarans are normally associated with high-speed ferry services. Stena Line operates the largest catamarans in the world, the Stena HSS class, between the United Kingdom and Ireland. These waterjetpowered vessels, displacing 19,638 tonnes, are larger than most catamarans and can accommodate 375 passenger cars and 1,500 passengers. Other examples of these super-sizer catamarans are found in the Brittany Ferries fleet with the Normandie Express and the Normandie Vitesse.
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Turntable ferry
This type of ferry allows vehicles to load from the "side". The vehicle platform can be turned. When loading, the platform is turned sideways to allow sideways loading of vehicles. Then the platform is turned back, in line with the vessel, and the journey across water is made.
Pontoon ferry
Pontoon ferries carry vehicles across rivers and lakes and are widely used in less-developed countries with large rivers where the cost of bridge construction is prohibitive. One or more vehicles are carried on a pontoon with ramps at either end for vehicles to drive on and off. Cable ferries (next section) are usually pontoon ferries, but pontoon ferries on larger rivers are motorised and able to be steered independently like a boat.
Foot ferry
Foot ferries are small craft used to ferry foot passengers, and often also cyclists, over rivers. These are either self-propelled craft or cable ferries. Such ferries are for example to be found on the lower River Schelde in Belgium and in particular the Netherlands. Regular foot ferry service also exists in the capital of the Czech Republic, Prague. Restored, expanded ferry service in the Port of New York and New Jersey uses boats for pedestrians only.
Cable ferry
Very short distances may be crossed by a cable or chain ferry, which is usually a pontoon ferry (see above), where the ferry is propelled along and steered by cables connected to each shore. Sometimes the cable ferry is human powered by someone on the boat. Reaction ferries are cable ferries that use the perpendicular force of the current as a source of power.
Air ferries
In the 1950s and 1960s, travel on an "air ferry" was possibleaeroplanes, often ex-military, specially equipped to take a small number of cars in addition to "foot" passengers. These operated various routes including between the United Kingdom and Continental Europe. Companies operating such services included Corsair.
Referrances-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roll-on/roll-off http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OBO_carrier
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cargo_ship Ship design and construction by Taggart 19 | P a g e
SPECIFIC GRAVITIES OF LIQUIDS Liquid 1,1,2-Trichlorotrifluoroethane 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene 1,4-Dioxane 2-Methoxyethanol Acetic Acid Acetone Acetonitrile Alcohol, ethyl Alcohol, methyl Alcohol, propyl Ammonia (aqua) Analine Automobile oils Beer (varies) Benzene Benzil Brine Bromine Butyric Acid Butane n-Butyl Acetate n-Butyl Alcohol n-Butyl Chloride Caproic acid Carbolic acid Temp 25 C 20 C 20 C 20 C 25 C 25 C 20 C 25 C 25 C 25 C 25 C 25 C 15 C 10 C 25 C 25 C 15 C 25 C 20 C 25 C 20 C 20 C 20 C 25 C 15 C kg/cu.m 1564.00 1454.00 1033.60 964.60 1049.10 784.58 782.20 785.06 786.51 799.96 823.35 1018.93 880 - 940 1010 873.81 1079.64 1230 3120.40 959 599.09 879.60 809.70 886.20 921.06 956.30
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Carbon disulfide Carbon tetrachloride Carene Castor oil Chloride Chlorobenzene Chloroform Chloroform Citric acid Coconut oil Cotton seed oil Cresol Creosote Crude oil, 48 API Crude oil, 40 API Crude oil, 35.6 API Crude oil, 32.6 API Crude oil, California Crude oil, Mexican Crude oil, Texas Cumene Cyclohexane Cyclopentane Decane Diesel fuel oil 20 to 60 Diethyl ether o-Dichlorobenzene Dichloromethane Diethylene glycol
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25 C 25 C 25 C 25 C 25 C 20 C 20 C 25 C 25 C 15 C 15 C 25 C 15 C 60 F 60 F 60 F 60 F 60 F 60 F 60 F 25 C 20 C 20 C 25 C 15 C 20 C 20 C 20 C 15 C
1260.97 1584.39 856.99 956.14 1559.88 1105.80 1489.20 1464.73 1659.51 924.27 925.87 1023.58 1066.83 790 825 847 862 915 973 873 860.19 778.50 745.40 726.28 820 - 950 714 1305.80 1326.00 1120
20 C 20 C 20 C 20 C 25 C -89 C 25 C
DIFFERENT DRAUGHTS
air draught
the vertical distance measured from the ship'swaterline to the highest point on the ship; usually comes into consideration when the ship has to sail under overhead bridges in the river compare draught
bar draught
maximum draught which a ship can take to pass over a bar or sand bank
design draught
draught as used for design calculation before actual construction, which has a tendency to distort the final reading
draught marks
figures welded on the bow, midship and sternof each side of a ship's shell plating to indicatedraught; the distance is read from the lower edge of each number; draught measured at the bow is called forward draught and at the stern is called aft draught
draught survey
survey carried out to determine the cargo weight on board by measuring the ship'sdraught
extreme draught
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forced draught
combustion air for boiler furnace supplied under pressure from a forced draught fan
lightship draught
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Ores/concentrates - these are high-density cargoes and are usually loaded in large quantities on a ship. The main danger from these cargoes is that they could give rise to toxic vapours that could make the atmosphere of the tank depleted in oxygen. Hence care should be taken while entering such cargo spaces and these cargoes should be kept separate from other moist cargoes lest they develop a flow state. Leather Hides -leather can be a very unpleasant cargo to carry on board a ship and it gives out a very strong smell which is literally unbearable especially in enclosed spaces. When the hides are soaked with salt they give out a large amount of brine, so this type of cargo has to be kept in isolation from other cargoes. Foodgrains - ships are used to transport large amounts of food grain from one place to another and these include grains such as rice, wheat, seeds and so forth. Needless to say such a cargo needs to be stored in very sanitized conditions and there is no question of a there been any contact between such cargoes and other cargoes mentioned previously such as leather. Apart from foodgrains ships can also carry other types of eatables and these may well require refrigeration to keep them fresh throughout the voyage.
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