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Users can submit photographs of the vessels which other users can rate. The basic MarineTraffic service can be used without cost; more advanced functions such as satellite-based tracking are available subject to payment. [3] The site has six million unique visitors on a monthly basis. In April 2015, the service had 600,000 registered users. [4] [5]
6 Passenger/cargo liners. 7 References. ... Ship Built DWT TEU Flag IMO Notes Chuan He: 1997: 69,285: ... "Global Ship Tracking". Marine Traffic
Refrigerated cargo ship 1999 Ancona: 13.346 GT 6028 9164768 Cala Pula: Refrigerated cargo ship 1999 Ancona: 13.346 GT 6029 9164770 Cala Palma: Refrigerated cargo ship 2000 Ancona: 13.346 DWT Costa Container Lines 6030 Cala Pedra: Refrigerated cargo ship 2000 Ancona: 13.346 DWT 6035 9156515 MS Volendam: Rotterdam-class cruise ship 1999 1999 Marghera
Name: 20 characters to represent the name of the vessel; Type of ship/cargo; Dimensions of ship, to nearest meter; Location of positioning system's (e.g., GPS) antenna on board the vessel: in meters aft of bow and meters port or starboard; Type of positioning system: such as GPS, DGPS or LORAN-C. Draught of ship: 0.1–25.5 meters
The average vessel size for U.S. port calls as of 2015 is less than 6000 TEU. However recently in 2016, container ships sizing from 12,000-14,000 TEU have been calling to U.S. ports in California. Notably, the CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin is the largest vessel to ever call to a U.S port. The Federal Maritime Commission has recognized the trend in ...
Ship Owners Dry Dock Company 1890 1,540 Sank on May 4, 1905 H Lee. White United States Grand River Navigation 1974 14,449 In operation Hydrus United States Interlake Steamship Company: 1903 4,713 Formerly R.E. Schuck Sank in the Great Lakes Storm of 1913: Indiana Harbor United States American Steamship Company 1979 35,923 In operation Isaac M ...
The G4 class is the largest ConRO design in the world, slightly larger than the preceding 1980s-built G3 class but with significantly more cargo capacity. [2] They are 296 metres (971 ft) long, with a beam of 37.6 metres (123 ft) and a draft of 11.6 metres (38 ft), and have a gross tonnage of 100,430 GT, with a deadweight tonnage of 55, 649 DWT. [1]
Coastal trading vessels, also known as coasters or skoots, [1] are shallow-hulled [citation needed] merchant ships used for transporting cargo along a coastline. Their shallow hulls mean that they can get through reefs where deeper-hulled seagoing ships usually cannot (26-28 feet), but as a result they are not optimized for the large waves ...