Latest News – Page 1011

  • News

    GL introduces shipboard routing assistance system

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Germanischer Lloyd (GL) has introduced its Shipboard Routing Assistance System (SRA) to help ship officers react promptly to heavy weather and, when necessary, sail round it.With SRA, the seaway data measured onboard are combined with the present loading information to permit the continuous recalculation of ship reactions in the waves. ...

  • News

    Hyundai wins massive LNG order

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Hyundai Heavy Industries (HHI) has won an order to build eight LNG carriers for BP Shipping of the United Kingdom. The gas carriers will be in the 155,000 cubic meter class and will cost a total of $1.5 billion. Hyundai Samho Heavy Industries, formerly Halla Heavy Industries and now a ...

  • News

    Meeting today?s need

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    To meet the future legislative emission limits with today?s medium and high-speed diesel engines, all engine manufacturers have to consider electronic controlled injection systems, which allow optimised combustion and engine control close to the limits with best possible efficiency.In Germany there are two independent specialists developing standard and advanced injection ...

  • News

    Maintenance goes digital

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Regulatory responses to marine casualties, which have dictated age limits for ships, have provoked vigorous debate about the issues of age and ship maintenance. While it has been argued that a well maintained ship of age, will often be superior to a poorly maintained younger ship, there has been little ...

  • News

    Better by design

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    A DOR (Design, Operation, and Regulation) for Safety ? or in short SAFEDOR ? is the name of an ambitious initiative towards an integrated project within the 6th Framework Program (FP6) of the European Commission. The aim is to enhance safety through innovation and to strengthen the competitiveness of the ...

  • News

    From science fiction to science fact

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    As one of five strategic programmes in DNV Research, nanotechnology is a new area of high interest and relevance for the classification society. "We?ve been aware of this for at least two or three years but we started looking at it in earnest this year due to some internal reorganisation," ...

  • News

    Getting the best from companies

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Best4 is a new quality, environment, safety and social accountability integrated certification scheme being offered by RINA. "It is a measure of the business excellence of a company and its capacity to carry out sustainable tasks in terms of management of the company for safety at sea, safety of life ...

  • News

    Rules that need tweaking

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    While most participants in the single-hull versus double-hull debate accept that a second hull is not a panacea, it is acknowledged that it is an acceptable and cost effective way of preventing oil spills in certain types of tanker incidents, such as low energy groundings or collisions. Lloyd?s Register says, ...

  • News

    A question of rules

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    By now, most are aware of what exactly the new generation of classification rules for oil tankers are. The new Common Rules for Tankers are aimed at establishing a global standard, increased structural durability, longer asset life and the elimination of competition on minimum structural scantlings. The intention is also ...

  • News

    Jones act 2

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Following on from the delivery of the 2,6000TEU boxship MV Manukai from Kvaerner Philadelphia Shipyard (KPSI) to the San Francisco-based Matson Navigation Company, as reported in The Motor Ship in October 2003, a second vessel has now been delivered. The MV Maunawili ? a CV2600 Philadelphia Class containership is the ...

  • News

    Taking action against poor copies

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    In recent years there have been a growing number of reports emerging from all sections of the maritime community about damage or accidents caused by the inadvertent use of imitation ship machinery parts.Because imitation parts are manufactured illegally without due respect for patent rights and other intellectual property laws, they ...

  • News

    Optimum and innovative propulsion

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Expert knowledge is said to be responsible for the increasing popularity of Bakker Sliedrecht?s diesel-electric propulsion systems. The company is acutely aware of the sharp increase in the application of electric drive systems for main and auxiliary propulsion systems, and for bow- and sternthrusters, particularly with the advance of low ...

  • News

    The shaft alignment problem

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Proper operation of marine propulsion machinery requires the shafting to be correctly aligned in all ship operating conditions. Modern propulsion technology has raised the demands made on analysis of the ship?s shaft alignment. The various bearings are displaced by carefully controlled amounts (offsets) to achieve a favourable balancing of bearing ...

  • News

    River cruise innovation

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The first of six innovative river cruise vessels is currently under construction at Neptun Stahlbau GmbH in Rostock-Warnemuende, a subsidiary of Meyer Werft Papenburg, and scheduled for delivery end of May 2005. The shipowner is Premicon AG, Munich, founded in 1998 and focused on operation of river cruise vessels and ...

  • News

    Smooth Swath ferries

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Two SWATH (Small Waterplane Area Twin Hull) vessels, designed by BMT Nigel Gee and Associates, a subsidiary of British Maritime Technology (BMT), and built in Holland at the Vlissingen yard of the Damen Shipyards Group for the Province of Zeeland, entered service in April this year. Designed to offer a ...

  • News

    Innovation and invention

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    On 12 September 2004, ESAB celebrated its centenary. "The world is now a vastly different place than the one Oscar Kjellberg, ESAB?s founder, knew at the start of the last century," says Jon Templeman, the company?s CEO.He explains that at that time heavy steel manufacturing was centred on Europe and ...

  • News

    Safer high-speed craft on the horizon

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Although maligned for its excessive and unnecessary bureaucratic interference, the EU does support worthwhile projects such as the development of safer ?high speed craft? (HSC), i.e. ships with design speeds of well over 30 knots. The need for this project was derived from EU?s attempts to alleviate congestion on the ...

  • News

    Norwegian stealth taps the deep

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Norway's maritime research and construction sectors are successfully exploiting a paradox ? they are selling silence to niche market on a global scale at healthy profit margins.The vessel design is being pushed forward by Skipteknisk AS, consulting naval architects and marine engineers in Ålesund Norway and the latest research vessel ...

  • News

    Germany builds ?Blue Angel? standard research vessel

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The Baltic Sea Research Institute Warnemünde, a non-university research institute dedicated to interdisciplinary marine research in coastal and marginal seas, is expanding its capabilities with a new, state-of-the-art, ice-breaking research vessel. The newbuilding, is to be named Maria S Merian, and will operate in the Baltic Sea, the North Sea ...

  • News

    Relume expands Arabian Gulf services

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    In July this year when MENAS showed off its new multipurpose light tender vessel Relume in a naming ceremony at Damen Shipyards? Scheldepoort facility in Vlissingen, The Netherlands, it was apparent that this was no ordinary vessel. "The new Relume marks a major transformation in the character of our organisation," ...