Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Waratah Tug & Salvage Company, Port Jackson [2] Diesel: 1968–1987 Cape Bruny (Wonga (1949) 1949: Cockatoo Docks & Engineering Company, Sydney: Adelaide Steamship Company [3] Tamar River, Launceston: Diesel: 1971–1988 York Syme: 1961: Adelaide Ship Construction, Port Adelaide: Coastal D & C Limited: 28.96 m: 7.57m: 1973- Cape Raoul (Sirius ...
The Lord Nelson Victory Tug is a brand of recreational trawler designed by James Backus [1] and produced by Lord Nelson Yachts, Inc. based in Seattle, Washington in the United States. Delivery of the first 37-foot hull was in 1983. A total of eighty-six Victory Tugs ranging in length from 37 to 49 feet (11 to 15 m) were built.
Justine McAllister, a tug boat in New York Harbor, January 2008 The tugboats Reid McAllister and McAllister Responder push the LPG tanker BW Volans into port at Marcus Hook on the Delaware River. A tugboat or tug is a marine vessel that manoeuvres other vessels by pushing or pulling them, with direct contact or a tow line.
Seaspan ULC evolved into a prominent marine transportation company serving the West Coast of North America with a large tugboat and barge fleet. Seaspan's barges haul forestry materials (logs, wood chips, hog fuel, lumber, pulp, paper and newsprint), minerals (construction aggregate and limestone), railcars, plus machinery, fuel and supplies to coastal communities.
vessel repair, upgrades, yacht and small boat repowering, full service boat marina facility The Jakobson Shipyard, Inc. was a shipyard involved in manufacture of tugs , ferries , submarines , minesweepers , yachts , fireboats and other craft, based in Brooklyn, New York , from 1926 to 1938, and Oyster Bay, New York , from 1938 to 1984.
The Bay-class tugboat is a class of 140-foot (43 m) icebreaking tugboats of the United States Coast Guard, with hull numbers WTGB-101 through to WTGB-109.. They can proceed through fresh water ice up to 20 inches (51 cm) thick, and break ice up to 3 feet (0.91 m) thick, through ramming.
The Natick class is a class of harbor tugboats that have been active since the 1960s. Members of the class are named for Native American peoples and their members, [1] USS Redwing excepted.
The USCG 65' small harbor tug is a class of fifteen tugs used by the United States Coast Guard for search and rescue, law enforcement, aids-to-navigation work and light icebreaking. The tugs are capable of breaking 18 in (0.46 m) of ice with propulsion ahead and 21 in (0.53 m) of ice backing and ramming. [ 2 ]