Page 27: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (July 15, 1984)

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of July 15, 1984 Maritime Reporter Magazine

View of Wartsila Helsinki Shipyard with the construction. cruise liner Royal Princess currently under

Circle 93 Kockums shipyard in Malmo, Sweden Circle 89 specific vessel types—icebreakers and passenger ships—to the ex- tent it is widely considered the world's leading builder of these craft. Last year it delivered 13 ice- breakers. Prominent on the cur- rent order book is P&O's Royal

Princess, destined to become one of the most prestigious cruise ships afloat, and two "super ferries" building for Silja Line, and two smaller "yacht cruisers" for Norske

Cruise A/S.

Wartsila sees a market for less conventional cruise ships in the future and already has well ad- vanced designs for both a four- masted "Windcruiser" and a 2,000- passenger SWATH ship.

Sweden

Shipbuilding in Sweden contin- ues to make headway, thanks in no small part to the government's apparent willingness to write off large amounts of capital, and to the slimming down operation which has been underway since nation- alization in 1977.

Last year the country's only two surviving large ship builders,

Kockums and Uddevallavarvet, both reduced their workforces by around 30 percent. Shipbuilding capacity in Sweden has been cut more than in any other European nation. The current workforce of 9,450 employed on newbuildings is about only 20 percent of the figure for the early 1970s.

In 1983 Swedish yards delivered 17 vessels, totalling 501, 156 dwt.

Of these, the two major yards ac- counted for 8 ships and 464,500 dwt, leaving the balance for the smaller operations.

Under the scheme instituted fol- lowing the state take-over, Kock- ums was dedicated to building RO/

ROs and other medium-sized ton- nage, although it is geared up for the construction of large ships.

The yard's 1983 deliveries were a series of three RO/ROs for the Na- tional Shipping Corporation of

Saudi Arabia.

At the moment, the yard is ap- proaching completion of the last of three RO/RO containerships for the Swedish partners in ACL.

It appeared, temporarily, Kock- ums would experience a gap be- tween delivery of the last ACL vessel and the commencement of work on the two Carnival Cruise

Lines ships which are due for de- livery in 1986 and 1987. However, this time slot was neatly filled (continued on page 30)

July 15,1984

The Abrasive Blast

Performance System

By Clemco

Couplings/Holders

Precision molded from tough nylon, brass or aluminum, safe no-leak fit, static con- ducting, 1/j"-1Vi" quality blast hose.

PVR Remotes

New Pinch Valve designed for production, safety, ser- vice. Blast machine does not depressurize when blasting stops. Straight through 45° abrasive feed is unique to Clemco.

Blast Machines 39 models, 50-800 lb. sand capacity, new pop-up valve, quieter air bleed noise. The heart of Clemco perform- ance systems...Continues to be the best!

Vacuum Systems 50 h.p. electric or diesel models, cyclone separator/ collector, storage hopper; moves 12 ton/hr. @ 50'; extensive tool selection.

Operator Safety Systems

New Apollo Supplied Air

Respirator System with CPF/

Air filtration, more vision, more protection, more air distribution. CO detectors and alarms.

Big Clem Bulk Blasters 9 models: 60,120,160 cu. ft. abrasive capacity, stationary and portable. New remark- able features include Pinch

Valve Remote Controls and

Pop-up Valve.

Clemlite™ Nozzles

Lighter, lasts longer, more durable, costs less! On top of all that, Clemlite nozzles do more!

They're all part of Clemco's performance System, an inte- gral part of the balanced equipment that has kept

Clemco in the forefront of the industry.

Hexoloy™ SA Silicon

Carbide Alloy liners, a major innovation in blast nozzles, are available in a selection of thirty Clemlite nozzles to allow the precise choice that does the job best. ...and the best is Clemlite with a price that's right!

Clemco successfully manufactures, distributes, sells and services a complete line of abrasive blast equipment on six continents, in sixty-five countries.

Because it is the best!

CLEMCO Post Office Box 7680 San Francisco, CA 94120 15,1984 Circle 296 on Reader Service Card

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.