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Messages - em777

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1
Shipping News and information / Re: What does this mean? Will delete after.
« on: September 23, 2020, 07:56:00 AM »
Hi matt,

Looking at it's position I'd say it denotes the separation between "forward ballast tank" (FB) and number 1 tank or space. The line between is showing where the bulkhead runs thwartships.

John

2
Shipping News and information / Re: Online Shipping Courses
« on: August 04, 2020, 10:23:08 PM »
Hi Steam Packet,

Some of it is chicken and egg I.e you need experience afloat before you can take the reigns shore side, but in more recent times uni courses have helped graduates find jobs in the industry. I'd recommend looking at universities with a maritime department. Liverpool and Liverpool JMU for example do courses such as shipboard operations and management and maritime logistics. Whether these courses are full time I do not know but well worth looking at as a starting point.

Hope this helps,
John

3
Shipping News and information / NHS FIFI appreciation display
« on: April 23, 2020, 08:56:23 PM »
Hi all,
The crew aboard the svitzer Ramsey showed their appreciation to the NHS tonight at 20:00 with a water display off Milford Haven.

As a point of interest the drencher system engaging can clearly be seen.

Full credit to Dave Barrett for his footage.

Many thanks

John

https://mobile.twitter.com/Jonathan_York/status/1253407025586999297

4
Shipping News and information / Re: Oil tanker museum.
« on: March 22, 2020, 12:17:25 AM »
That's her Ian! Thank you, it was driving me crazy. Didn't realise she'd been scrapped. What a shame.

Sorry for the false alarm.

Cheers,

John

5
Shipping News and information / Re: Oil tanker museum.
« on: March 21, 2020, 10:02:09 PM »
I'm sure there was/is an ex-odfjell chemical vessel saved as a museum. I've looked for mattyboy but I can't find it anywhere. Instead of the familiar orange colour she is now a sky blue. I'm sure there are pictures on this site. Does it jog anyone's memory?

Cheers,

John

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Shipping News and information / Re: -Recruiting to Global ship-photography-
« on: November 25, 2019, 11:36:32 PM »
Thank you Thomas,

Look forward to your PM

Many thanks,

John

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Shipping News and information / Re: -Recruiting to Global ship-photography-
« on: November 25, 2019, 11:01:26 PM »
Would you be interested in milford Haven?

Biggest energy port in the UK?

Cheers,

John

8
Terrible incident. I think one of the vessels is the ex Greta Kosan. A familiar sight here in Milford Haven.

9
Shipping News and information / Clipper Point aground on the Mersey
« on: December 24, 2018, 04:29:25 PM »
Hi all,

I believe the ferry Clipper Point went aground last night, just by Cammel Lairds. She was refloated with the assistance of kotug Smit vessels and berthed in the basin alongside lairds. Anybody have any information?

10
Shipping News and information / Re: Another Thames tug
« on: December 05, 2018, 07:17:41 AM »
Arrived early hours of the morning into Avonmouth

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Shipping News and information / Re: Another Thames tug
« on: November 08, 2018, 10:24:44 PM »
The Hawk is the sister to the Svitzer Amazonas, already drydocked so I believe so heading straight to Avonmouth to join the fleet.

John

12
I sailed on two of them, fantastic vessels!

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Shipping News and information / Re: Dutch tug INNOVATION
« on: August 02, 2018, 09:56:01 AM »
Hi Robert, I believe kotug have bought it. I think svitzer have been using it for training purposes but that is due to come to an end within coming weeks. Kotug will then take it permanently.

Regards,
John

14
Shipping News and information / Re: Asian vs Western Tug Designs.
« on: April 30, 2018, 12:15:47 PM »
Hi Judgie,

As a skipper of both designs I will give you a few of my thoughts.

Firstly, the contract that the vessels are built for is important.  For example, think of the Svitzer tugs in Milford Haven.  They were built as terminal tugs to escort and work in push pull mode.  Therefore they have very rounded bows.  This was designed this way as calculations of pressure and heat distribution per square inch were calculated when pushing up on the LNG vessels.  The skeg as you rightly noted allows the escort mode of operation which in an oil and gas port they are required to do. 

The Japanese hull form however makes them a much much better sea boat.  There is probably a disadvantage to pushing with such a narrow bow, but the flare makes the tug cut through a sea much more comfortably than a round bow. A tug built to service one port wont need the same coastal steaming qualities as one that may have to travel.

Next point to consider is who is living there.  Take a Damen 2411 for instance. Fantastic tugs but really a "day boat".  Crews go home after a relatively small stay.  Other tugs have accomodation for up to 6 persons 24/7 and this then determines size.  Tugs that work in harbour systems will always be smaller than tugs designed for terminal work as they need to fit around tight corners etc.

Some tugs are a mixture of both.  My current vessel is a Robert Allan design but has Niigata controls, engines, gearboxes, clutches and units.  This makes her a fantastic vessel to handle, but where my company needed a higher bollard pull they had to look at different engine manufacturers for other tugs of the same class.

If you look at what tugs the UK were building in the 1970's and then look at what Japan were building they were miles ahead.  We had twin screw and they had ASD.  That ASD design has evolved into modern day standards but the overall tug is much the same.  A ship owner wont go spending money on a tug which is equipped both structurally and stability wise for escorting if its not needed.  The japanese tug seems favourable but if he can have it built in Europe more cheaply then that will overrule the Japanese design.  If the Japanese tug cant provide the required bollard pull then again the shipowner will look elsewhere.

Cheers,

John

15
Shipping News and information / Strange goings on in the Java Sea
« on: November 16, 2016, 05:25:55 PM »
Hi guys just found this......


Im struggling to find a motive (scrap value maybe but surely cost to do such a thing would override this) and apart from that how could such an operation be done so secretively unless it was naval?

Never mind the disrespect for what these wrecks are.....war graves.

Any thoughts as to how and why???

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-37997640

Cheers,

John

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