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  2. List of boat lifts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_boat_lifts

    The dam was completed in 1994, but technical difficulties delayed the opening of the ship lift for four more years. Longtan dam boat lift, capacity to lift vessels of 250 tons, in a basin 40×10.8×1.8 meters, and a vertical lift of 68.5 meters. [2] Yantan Ship Lift; Three Gorges Dam, boat lift (possibly complete July 2016) [3] and staircase ...

  3. Butterworth cover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterworth_Cover

    Butterworth hatches are not the main access hatches, but are the servicing hatches, and are generally closed with a metal cover plate with a gasket that is fastened to the deck by a number of bolts which stick up from the deck. Holes on the edges of the plate fit over these bolts and the cover is fastened down with nuts or dogs.

  4. Hold (compartment) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hold_(compartment)

    Six large cargo hatch covers on a capesize bulk carrier ship as she approaches the Egyptian-Japanese Friendship Bridge. A cargo hatch or deck hatch or hatchway is type of door used on ships and boats to cover the opening to the cargo hold or other lower part of the ship. To make the cargo hold waterproof, most cargo holds have cargo hatch.

  5. Marinette Yacht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marinette_Yacht

    In 1954 George Garcia, owner of Falls City Flying Service, introduced the ‘Marinette’ which was an aluminum houseboat initially built as a twin-hulled cruiser. Choosing to use an aluminum-magnesium alloy, whereas previous attempts at an aluminum watercraft had mainly involved small row boats made of a copper-aluminum alloy , the same ...

  6. Robert MacGregor (engineer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_MacGregor_(engineer)

    MacGregor steel hatch cover Robert MacGregor was a British engineer , who, during the 1920s, concerned over unnecessary losses of North Sea colliers , developed the first steel hatch cover. The design was simple and consisted of five articulated leaves that stowed neatly at the end of each hatch.

  7. Coaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coaming

    Hatch coaming (bottom right) on a bugeye. Coaming is any vertical surface on a ship designed to deflect or prevent entry of water. It usually consists of a raised section of deck plating around an opening, such as a cargo hatch. Coamings also provide a frame onto which to fit a hatch cover.

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