Page 10: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (May 1994)

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BOATS AND BARGES

Damen Delivers Series Of Tugs

The Stan Tug Hajah, which Damen Shipyards delivered to its owner in Yemen.

Damen Shipyards of Gorinchem,

The Netherlands, recently delivered several new vessels to a variety of owners.

Damen delivered four mooring boats to Kuwait Oil Company — the

Haqel Dhareef, Haqel Lulu, Haqel

Dura and the Haqel Murjan — all of

Damen's Stan Tug type 1605. These vessels were specially constructed for operation in the Arabian Gulf area, and are powered by twin Deutz

MWM TBD 234 V8 diesels, each developing 325 kW at 2,100 rpm and providing a 10.5-knot speed and 12.7-ton bollard pull. The vessels are 55.9 ft. (17 m) long, with a beam of 18.4 ft. (5.6 m) and a draft of 5.9 ft. (1.8 m) at aft.

For Eastern Construction Co. Ltd. of Taiwan, Damen delivered two vessels recently: the Eastern 101, and the Eastern 501. The first is a

Stan Tug type 1605 with twin Cat- erpillar 3408B TA/B diesel engines which give the vessel a 9.9-knot speed and a 12.2-ton bollard pull.

The Eastern 101 is 55.4 ft. (16.9 m) long, 17.4 ft. (5.3 m) wide, and 8.2 ft. (2.5 m) deep. The vessel is a modern twin-screw workboat.

The second, the Eastern 501, is a multifunctional Multi Cat type 1908.

The vessel is 61 ft. (18.6 m) long, with a molded breadth of 25.8 ft. (8.06 m) and molded draft of 5.6 ft. (1.7 m) at the vessel's aft. Twin

Caterpillar 3408 TA diesels drive the vessel to a speed of 9.5 knots; the vessel's bollard pull ahead is 11.6 tons. The Multi Cat series of vessels are designed for crane handling, transport of deck cargo, pushing, towing, anchor handling, supply of liquids or general cargo, hose han- dling, pollution control, salvage and diving support.

Damen also delivered the Hajah, a Stan Tug 2207 model, to its owner in Yemen after the vessel completed a successful trial program. Because the vessel type uses a stock hull, it can easily be constructed in five months. The tug will be employed in Hodeidah Ports, Republic of

Yemen, for harbor and docking work, berthing/unberthing of tankers and other large vessels, push-pull op- erations and escorting from or to clear water. The tug can also be used for firefighting, salvage or pol- lution control duties. Twin Cater- pillar 3512B-DI-TA engines each develop 955 kW at 1,600 rpm, driv- ing the vessel to a free sailing speed of 12.5 knots and a bollard pull of 34.8 tons.

For more information on Damen

Shipyards,

Circle 11 on Reader Service Card

HAQEL TUGS EQUIPMENT UST

Main engines Deutz MWM

Auxiliary engines Deutz MWM

Generators Stamford

Gearboxes ZF

Propellers Lips

Nozzles Van der Giessen

AC System Marine Air

EASTERN SOt EQUIPMENT UST

Main engines Caterpillar

Auxiliary engine Lister Petter

Propellers Lips

Nozzles Van der Giessen

Navigation/communication equip. ... Radio Holland

Steering gear Sperry

Exhaust silencers Mercurex

Life rafts Viking Life Saving Equipment

HAJAH EQUIPMENT LIST

Main engines Caterpillar

Radar Furuno

Echosounder Furun

VHF Radio S.P. Radio

SSB Furun

NAVTEX receiver Furuno

EPIRB Jotron

Propellers Lips

Nozzles Van der Giessen

Reverse/reduction gears Reintjes

Steering gear Sperry

Liferafts Viking Life Saving Equipment

McDermott Enters Russian Shipbuilding Venture

McDermott International Inc. and JSR Amur Shipbuilding Plant of Russia have formed joint ven- tures for shipbuilding, marine con- struction and ship component fab- rication to take place at the Amur shipyard in the Khabarovsk region of Russia's Far East. Both compa- nies will reportedly own equal shares of the two ventures.

The joint ventures were an- nounced during the Presidential De- velopment Mission to Russia, led by

U.S. Secretary of Commerce Ron

Brown. Robert E.Howson, chair- man of the board and CEO of

McDermott, was among 29 chief executives and presidents on the trip.

One of the ventures to be formed is McAmur Construction Services

Co., which will provide fabrication services for marine construction projects offshore Far East Russia, and another venture is McAmur

Shipbuilding Co., which will market shipbuilding and ship component fabrication services worldwide.

The Amur yard is in the city of

Komsomolsk on the Amur River and is reportedly the largest shipyard in

Russia's Far East. The plant has been constructing military vessels since the 1940s, including diesel and nuclear powered submarines.

McDermott International Inc. is a worldwide energy services com- pany which, among other things, provides engineering and construc- tion services for industrial and util- ity facilities onshore and to the oil and gas industries offshore.

McDermott also builds vessels for a variety of other services.

For more information on

McDermott,

Circle 69 on Reader Service Card

Carnival Newbuilding

Program Tops $3 Billion

Carnival Corporation, which al- ready claims to be the biggest cruise company in the world, is scheduled to introduce six more ships over the next three years.

Carnival Corporation's most re- cent wave of new ship introductions commenced early in 1993 when sub- sidiary Holland America's $250 mil- lion Statendam inaugurated ser- vice last January. In November,

Carnival Cruise Lines added the $300 million SuperLiner Sensation to its fleet, and Holland America finished up the year when

Statendam's 1,266-passenger sistership, the Maasdam, began service in December. This summer

Carnival will introduce the $315 million Fascination, followed by

Holland America's Ryndam in the fall of 1994. Imagination, another vessel in Carnival's 2,600-passen- ger series, is slated for completion in 1995. A trio of new contracts signed in 1993 will add still more to the list: Carnival signed a contract for one of the world's largest cruise ships, a 95,000-ton, 3,300-passen- ger vessel slated for delivery in 1996.

Then Carnival ordered the Inspira- tion, a SuperLiner like the Sensa- tion, for delivery in 1996, and Hol- land America ordered another,

Maasdam-type ship, the Veendam.

Deutz MWM And GE Sign

Cooperative Agreement

Deutz MWM, Germany, a unit of

Klocker-Humboldt-Deutz AG (KHD), has signed a cooperative agreement with General Electric

Transportation Systems (GETS) of

Erie, Pa., for the research, develop- ment and production of a new series of diesel engines, the 632-series.

Both companies will cooperate in overall design. The agreement in- volves GETS assembling all the V- engines, including those for Deutz

MWM, at a new plant in Grove

City, Pa. The new engine series will comprise six-, eight- and nine-cylin- der in-line versions as well as 12-, 16- and 18-cylinder V versions, and the diesel version will cover the 1,440 to 6,300 kW range. Noise and ex- haust emissions will reportedly be well below all known future U.S. and European statutory levels.

Deutz MWM will be making this new 632-series available in diesel and gas versions for marine applica- tions as well as for power generating sets.

Deutz offers a line of engines span- ning a power range from 300 to 7,250 kW. In 1993, Deutz MWM achieved total sales of $437.9 mil- lion. For more information on Deutz

MWM,

Circle 12 on Reader Service Card

Schichau Seebeckwerft

Launches Containership

Schichau Seebeckwerft AG of

Bremerhaven, Germany, recently launched a modified type BV 1600 containership. The naming cer- emony will be performed at the end of June 1994 when the ship is com- pleted. The 536-ft. (163.4 m) ship will be named Contship Singapore and delivered on the same day. It has a molded breadth of 90.2 ft. (27.4 m) and a design draft of 31.8 ft. (9.7 m).

Unlike the original BV 1600 type containership, the Contship

Singapore will have a container ca- pacity of 1,684 TEUs, versus 1,599

TEUs in the original design, and 152

FEU plugs will be installed, as op- posed to the original design's 70 plugs.

The main engine has been in- creased by one cylinder, so the BV/

MAN B&W 7 L 60 MC engine will develop a maximum continuous out- put of 13,125 kW, and its speed is increased from 18.3 to 19.1 knots.

For more information on Schichau

Seebeckwerft,

Circle 66 on Reader Service Card 12 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

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