reference documentation on shipping

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definitions

ship (n.)

1.a vessel that carries passengers or freight

ship (v.)

1.put (something) on a structure or conveyance"load the bags onto the trucks"

2.place on board a ship"ship the cargo in the hold of the vessel"

3.travel by ship

4.transport commercially

5.go on board

6.hire for work on a ship

ship (adj.)

1.connected with or belonging to or used in a navy"naval history" "naval commander" "naval vessels"

ship

1.a ship built to carry passengers

shipping (n.)

1.the commercial enterprise of transporting goods and materials

2.conveyance provided by the ships belonging to one country or industry

Ships (descriptor)

1.Large vessels propelled by power or sail used for transportation on rivers, seas, oceans, or other navigable waters. Boats are smaller vessels propelled by oars, paddles, sail, or power; they may or may not have a deck.

 
see also

ship (adj.)

barge, boat, craft, vessel

ship (n.)

naval, ship's

ship (v.)

boarding debark, disembark, set down

shipping (n.)

navigate, sail

 
synonyms

ship (adj.)

naval, ship's

Ships

Boat, Boats, Ship

 
phrases

-Liberty ship • abandoned ship • board ship • cable ship • capital ship • cargo ship • clipper ship • combat ship • container ship • cruise ship • dress ship • factory ship • fire ship • gas-turbine ship • guard ship • hospital ship • member of a ship's crew • merchant ship • mother ship • nuclear-powered ship • oceangoing ship • passenger ship • patrol ship • picket ship • pirate ship • sailing ship • school ship • seagoing ship • ship biscuit • ship broker • ship builder • ship canal • ship chandler • ship money • ship of the line • ship route • ship worm • ship's • ship's bell • ship's boat • ship's boy • ship's cabin • ship's cargo • ship's chandler • ship's company • ship's crew • ship's doctor • ship's galley • ship's kitchen • ship's log • ship's officer • ship's papers • ship-breaker • ship-broker • ship-towed long-range acoustic detection system • sister ship • slave ship • small ship • supply ship • surface ship • tank ship • training ship • transport ship • treasure ship • wear ship • weather ship • whaling ship

-inland shipping • inland waterways shipping • maritime shipping • merchant shipping • ocean shipping • river shipping • shipping agency • shipping agent • shipping articles • shipping clerk • shipping company • shipping costs • shipping disaster • shipping fever • shipping office • shipping pneumonia • shipping room • shipping space

-barge carrier ship • ship canal

-inland waterway shipping • maritime shipping • shipping policy

-Ship (comics) • Ship (disambiguation) • Ship Ahoy • Ship Ahoy! • Ship Alabama • Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch • Ship Bottom, New Jersey • Ship Canal Bridge • Ship Classes of the Star Fleet Universe • Ship Creek • Ship Foot • Ship Island (Mississippi) • Ship Simulator 2006 • Ship Street • Ship Street, Hong Kong • Ship Street, Oxford • Ship breaking • Ship burial • Ship canal • Ship chandler • Ship class • Ship collision • Ship commissioning • Ship construction • Ship cover • Ship cradle • Ship decommissioning • Ship floodability • Ship for World Youth • Ship in a Bottle • Ship in a Bottle (TNG episode) • Ship in the Attic, Birds in the Subway • Ship lifts in China • Ship model • Ship model basin • Ship money • Ship motion test • Ship motions • Ship naming and launching • Ship of Destiny • Ship of Dreams • Ship of Fools • Ship of Fools (Bernice Summerfield) • Ship of Fools (Erasure song) • Ship of Fools (Kappa Mikey episode) • Ship of Fools (Porter novel) • Ship of Fools (Russo novel) • Ship of Fools (film) • Ship of Fools (novel) • Ship of Fools (painting) • Ship of Fools (satire) • Ship of Fools (story) • Ship of Fools (website) • Ship of Lights • Ship of Magic • Ship of Tears • Ship of Theseus • Ship of state • Ship of the line • Ship pollution • Ship prefix • Ship replica • Ship resistance and propulsion • Ship surveyor • Ship terminal • Ship to Shore • Ship tracks • Ship transport • Ship types (The Culture) • Ship's Company Theatre • Ship's Cradle • Ship's Serviceman • Ship's bells • Ship's tender • Ship's wheel • Ship, Captain, and Crew • Ship-Kings of Gondor • Ship-Submarine Recycling Program • Ship-of-the-Line Captain • Ship-of-the-Line Lieutenant • Ship-owner

-A1 (shipping) • Advanced Shipping Notice • Aker American Shipping • American Bureau of Shipping • Ceres Hellenic Shipping Enterprises • Chartering (shipping) • China Shipping Container Lines • Drop shipping • Dublin Shipping • Empire of Japan (foreign commerce and shipping) • Essar Shipping • European Union shipping law • Explosives shipping classification system • Graham's Shipping and Trading Company • Greek shipping • Hanjin Shipping • I'm Shipping Up to Boston • Imperial Japanese Army Railways and Shipping Section • Inchcape Shipping Services • Indian Register Of Shipping • International Register of Shipping • Iran Shipping Lines • Irish Shipping Limited • Kerala Shipping and Inland Navigation Corporation • Korean Ocean Shipping Agency • List of shipping companies • List of world's busiest ports by shipping tonnage • Lots shipping • Malaysian International Shipping Corporation • Mediterranean Shipping Company S.A. • Merchant Shipping (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1976 • Merchant Shipping (Pollution) Act 2006 • Merchant Shipping (Scottish Fishing Boats) Act 1920 • Merchant Shipping Act 1786 • Merchant Shipping Act 1854 • Merchant Shipping Act 1906 • Merchant shipping • Minister of Shipping • Minister of Trade and Shipping (Norway) • Moorad Shipping News • National Union of Docks, Wharves and Shipping Staffs • National Union of Marine, Aviation and Shipping Transport Officers • Naval co-operation and guidance for shipping • New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v. A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd • Pakistan National Shipping Corporation • School Time Shipping • Serial Shipping Container Code • Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project • Shipping (disambiguation) • Shipping (fandom) • Shipping Association of Barbados • Shipping Corporation of India • Shipping Federation • Shipping Forecast • Shipping News • Shipping authority • Shipping bandage • Shipping container architecture • Shipping line • Shipping route • Short sea shipping • Silver Line (shipping company) • Spent nuclear fuel shipping cask • Squat (shipping term) • Strait Shipping • The Shipping News • The Shipping News (film) • Thomas Wilson (shipping) • Toll Shipping • United Arab Shipping Company • United States Shipping Board • United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation • War Shipping Administration • Zim Integrated Shipping Services

 
MeSH related

Ships

 
MeSH ontology

MeSH

Transportation

Ships

 
analogic tree

ship (adj.)

ship (v.)

ship (v. tr.)

tid

remove;transport[Classe]

wdn

ship

ship (v. tr.)

wdn

ship

ship (v. tr.)

wdn

ship

ship (v. tr.)

ship (v. tr.)

ship (v. tr.)

wdn

ship

shipping (n.)

shipping (n.)

tid

navigation;sailing;shipping[ClasseHyper.]

navigate, sail[Nominalisation]

 
Merriam-Webster (1913)

-ship-ship (?). [OE. -schipe, AS. -scipe; akin to OFries. -skipe, OLG. -skepi, D. -schap, OHG. -scaf, G. -schaft. Cf. Shape, n., and Landscape.] A suffix denoting state, office, dignity, profession, or art; as in lordship, friendship, chancellorship, stewardship, horsemanship.

ShipShip (?), n. [AS. scipe.] Pay; reward. [Obs.]

In withholding or abridging of the ship or the hire or the wages of servants. Chaucer.

ShipShip, n. [OE. ship, schip, AS. scip; akin to OFries. skip, OS. scip, D. schip, G. schiff, OHG. scif, Dan. skib, Sw. skeep, Icel. & Goth. skip; of unknown origin. Cf. Equip, Skiff, Skipper.]
1. Any large seagoing vessel.

Like a stately ship . . .
With all her bravery on, and tackle trim,
Sails filled, and streamers waving.
Milton.

Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State! Longfellow.

2. Specifically, a vessel furnished with a bowsprit and three masts (a mainmast, a foremast, and a mizzenmast), each of which is composed of a lower mast, a topmast, and a topgallant mast, and square-rigged on all masts. See Illustation in Appendix.

l Port or Larboard Side; s Starboard Side; 1 Roundhouse or Deck House; 2 Tiller; 3 Grating; 4 Wheel; 5 Wheel Chains; 6 Binnacle; 7 Mizzenmast; 8 Skylight; 9 Capstan; 10 Mainmast; 11 Pumps; 12 Galley or Caboose; 13 Main Hatchway; 14 Windlass; 15 Foremast; 16 Fore Hatchway; 17 Bitts; 18 Bowsprit; 19 Head Rail; 20 Boomkins; 21 Catheads on Port Bow and Starboard Bow; 22 Fore Chains; 23 Main Chains; 24 Mizzen Chains; 25 Stern.

1 Fore Royal Stay; 2 Flying Jib Stay; 3 Fore Topgallant Stay;4 Jib Stay; 5 Fore Topmast Stays; 6 Fore Tacks; 8 Flying Martingale; 9 Martingale Stay, shackled to Dolphin Striker; 10 Jib Guys; 11 Jumper Guys; 12 Back Ropes; 13 Robstays; 14 Flying Jib Boom; 15 Flying Jib Footropes; 16 Jib Boom; 17 Jib Foottropes; 18 Bowsprit; 19 Fore Truck; 20 Fore Royal Mast; 21 Fore Royal Lift; 22 Fore Royal Yard; 23 Fore Royal Backstays; 24 Fore Royal Braces; 25 Fore Topgallant Mast and Rigging; 26 Fore Topgallant Lift; 27 Fore Topgallant Yard; 28 Fore Topgallant Backstays; 29 Fore Topgallant Braces; 30 Fore Topmast and Rigging; 31 Fore Topsail Lift; 32 Fore Topsail Yard; 33 Fore Topsail Footropes; 34 Fore Topsail Braces; 35 Fore Yard; 36 Fore Brace; 37 Fore Lift; 38 Fore Gaff; 39 Fore Trysail Vangs; 40 Fore Topmast Studding-sail Boom; 41 Foremast and Rigging; 42 Fore Topmast Backstays; 43 Fore Sheets; 44 Main Truck and Pennant; 45 Main Royal Mast and Backstay; 46 Main Royal Stay; 47 Main Royal Lift; 48 Main Royal Yard; 49 Main Royal Braces; 50 Main Topgallant Mast and Rigging; 51 Main Topgallant Lift; 52 Main Topgallant Backstays; 53 Main Topgallant Yard; 54 Main Topgallant Stay; 55 Main Topgallant Braces; 56 Main Topmast and Rigging; 57 Topsail Lift; 58 Topsail Yard; 59 Topsail Footropes; 60 Topsail Braces; 61 Topmast Stays; 62 Main Topgallant Studding-sail Boom; 63 Main Topmast Backstay; 64 Main Yard; 65 Main Footropes; 66 Mainmast and Rigging; 67 Main Lift; 68 Main Braces; 69 Main Tacks; 70 Main Sheets; 71 Main Trysail Gaff; 72 Main Trysail Vangs; 73 Main Stays; 74 Mizzen Truck; 75 Mizzen Royal Mast and Rigging; 76 Mizzen Royal Stay; 77 Mizzen Royal Lift; 78 Mizzen Royal Yard; 79 Mizzen Royal Braces; 80 Mizzen Topgallant Mast and Rigging; 81 Mizzen Topgallant Lift; 82 Mizzen Topgallant Backstays; 83 Mizzen Topgallant Braces; 84 Mizzen Topgallant Yard; 85 Mizzen Topgallant Stay; 86 Mizzen Topmast and Rigging; 87 Mizzen Topmast Stay; 88 Mizzen Topsail Lift; 89 Mizzen Topmast Backstays; 90 Mizzen Topsail Braces; 91 Mizzen Topsail Yard; 92 Mizzen Topsail Footropes; 93 Crossjack Yard; 94 Crossjack Footropes; 95 Crossjack Lift; 96 Crossjack Braces; 97 Mizzenmast and Rigging; 98 Mizzen Stay; 99 Spanker Gaff; 100 Peak Halyards; 101 Spanker Vangs; 102 Spanker Boom; 103 Spanker Boom Topping Lift; 104 Jacob's Ladder, or Stern Ladder; 105 Spanker Sheet; 106 Cutwater; 107 Starboard Bow; 108 Starboard Beam; 109 Water Line; 110 Starboard Quarter; 111 Rudder.

3. A dish or utensil (originally fashioned like the hull of a ship) used to hold incense. [Obs.] Tyndale.

Armed ship, a private ship taken into the service of the government in time of war, and armed and equipped like a ship of war. [Eng.] Brande & C. -- General ship. See under General. -- Ship biscuit, hard biscuit prepared for use on shipboard; -- called also ship bread. See Hardtack. -- Ship boy, a boy who serves in a ship. “Seal up the ship boy's eyes.” Shak. -- Ship breaker, one who breaks up vessels when unfit for further use. -- Ship broker, a mercantile agent employed in buying and selling ships, procuring cargoes, etc., and generally in transacting the business of a ship or ships when in port. -- Ship canal, a canal suitable for the passage of seagoing vessels. -- Ship carpenter, a carpenter who works at shipbuilding; a shipwright. -- Ship chandler, one who deals in cordage, canvas, and other, furniture of vessels. -- Ship chandlery, the commodities in which a ship chandler deals; also, the business of a ship chandler. -- Ship fever (Med.), a form of typhus fever; -- called also putrid fever, jail fever, or hospital fever. -- Ship joiner, a joiner who works upon ships. -- Ship letter, a letter conveyed by a ship not a mail packet. -- Ship money (Eng. Hist.), an imposition formerly charged on the ports, towns, cities, boroughs, and counties, of England, for providing and furnishing certain ships for the king's service. The attempt made by Charles I. to revive and enforce this tax was resisted by John Hampden, and was one of the causes which led to the death of Charles. It was finally abolished. -- Ship of the line. See under Line. -- Ship pendulum, a pendulum hung amidships to show the extent of the rolling and pitching of a vessel. -- Ship railway. (a) An inclined railway with a cradelike car, by means of which a ship may be drawn out of water, as for repairs. (b) A railway arranged for the transportation of vessels overland between two water courses or harbors. -- Ship's company, the crew of a ship or other vessel. -- Ship's days, the days allowed a vessel for loading or unloading. -- Ship's husband. See under Husband. -- Ship's papers (Mar. Law), papers with which a vessel is required by law to be provided, and the production of which may be required on certain occasions. Among these papers are the register, passport or sea letter, charter party, bills of lading, invoice, log book, muster roll, bill of health, etc. Bouvier. Kent. -- To make ship, to embark in a ship or other vessel.

ShipShip (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Shipped (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Shipping.]
1. To put on board of a ship, or vessel of any kind, for transportation; to send by water.

The timber was . . . shipped in the bay of Attalia, from whence it was by sea transported to Pelusium. Knolles.

2. By extension, in commercial usage, to commit to any conveyance for transportation to a distance; as, to ship freight by railroad.

3. Hence, to send away; to get rid of. [Colloq.]

4. To engage or secure for service on board of a ship; as, to ship seamen.

5. To receive on board ship; as, to ship a sea.

6. To put in its place; as, to ship the tiller or rudder.

ShipShip, v. i.
1. To engage to serve on board of a vessel; as, to ship on a man-of-war.

2. To embark on a ship. Wyclif (Acts xxviii. 11)

ShippingShip"ping (?), a.
1. Relating to ships, their ownership, transfer, or employment; as, shiping concerns.

2. Relating to, or concerned in, the forwarding of goods; as, a shipping clerk.

ShippingShip"ping, n.
1. The act of one who, or of that which, ships; as, the shipping of flour to Liverpool.

2. The collective body of ships in one place, or belonging to one port, country, etc.; vessels, generally; tonnage.

3. Navigation. “God send 'em good shipping.” Shak.

Shipping articles, articles of agreement between the captain of a vessel and the seamen on board, in respect to the amount of wages, length of time for which they are shipping, etc. Bouvier. -- To take shipping, to embark; to take ship. [Obs.] John vi. 24. Shak.

 
Wikipedia

Ship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Italian Full rigged ship Amerigo Vespucci in New York Harbor, 1976
Italian Full rigged ship Amerigo Vespucci in New York Harbor, 1976

A ship is a large watercraft capable of deep water navigation.

A ship usually has sufficient size to carry its own boats, such as lifeboats, dinghies, or runabouts. A rule of thumb saying (though it does not always apply) goes: "a boat can fit on a ship, but a ship can't fit on a boat". Consequently submarines are referred to as "boats", because early submarines were small enough to be carried aboard a ship in transit to distant waters. Another type of large vessel which is traditionally called a boat is the Great Lakes freighter. Often local law and regulation will define the exact size (or the number of masts) which a boat requires to become a ship (cf. vessel).

During the age of sail, ship signified a ship-rigged vessel, that is, one with three or more masts, usually three, all square-rigged. Such a vessel would normally have one fore and aft sail on her aftermost mast which was usually the mizzen. Almost invariably she would also have a bowsprit but this was not part of the definition.

Nautical means related to sailors, particularly customs and practices at sea. Naval is the adjective pertaining to ships, though in common usage it has come to be more particularly associated with the noun 'navy'.


Contents

  • 1 Measuring ships
  • 2 Propulsion
    • 2.1 Pre-mechanization
    • 2.2 Reciprocating steam engines
    • 2.3 Steam turbines
      • 2.3.1 LNG carriers
      • 2.3.2 Nuclear-powered steam turbines
    • 2.4 Reciprocating diesel engines
    • 2.5 Gas turbines
  • 3 Group terminology
  • 4 Some types of ships and boats
  • 5 Some historical types of ships and boats
  • 6 See also
  • 7 External links

Measuring ships

One can measure ships in terms of overall length, length of the waterline, beam (breadth), depth (distance between the crown of the weather deck and the top of the keelson), draft (distance between the highest waterline and the bottom of the ship) and tonnage. A number of different tonnage definitions exist and are used when disturbing merchant ships for the purpose of tolls, taxation, etc.

In Britain until the Samuel Plimsoll Merchant Shipping Act of 1876, ship-owners could load their vessels until their decks were almost awash, resulting in a dangerously unstable condition. Additionally, anyone who signed onto such a ship for a voyage and, upon realizing the danger, chose to leave the ship, could end up in gaol.

Samuel Plimsoll, a member of Parliament, realised the problem and engaged some engineers to derive a fairly simple formula to determine the position of a line on the side of any specific ship's hull which, when it reached the surface of the water during loading of cargo, meant the ship had reached its maximum safe loading level. To this day, that mark, called the "Plimsoll Mark", exists on ships' sides, and consists of a circle with a horizontal line through the centre. Because different types of water, (summer, fresh, tropical fresh, winter north Atlantic) have different densities, subsequent regulations required painting a group of lines forward of the Plimsoll mark to indicate the safe depth (or freeboard above the surface) to which a specific ship could load in water of various densities. Hence the "ladder" of lines seen forward of the Plimsoll mark to this day. Or what we call for "freeboard mark" or "load line mark"in the marine industry.

Propulsion

Pre-mechanization

Until the application of the steam engine to ships in the early 19th century, oars propelled galleys or the wind propelled sailing ships. Before mechanisation, merchant ships always used sail, but as long as naval warfare depended on ships closing to ram or to fight hand-to-hand, galleys dominated in marine conflicts because of their maneuverability and speed. The Greek navies that fought in the Peloponnesian War used triremes, as did the Romans contesting the Battle of Actium. The use of large numbers of cannon from the 16th century meant that maneuverability took second place to broadside weight; this led to the dominance of the sail-powered warship.

Reciprocating steam engines

The development of piston-engined steamships was a complex process. Early ones were fueled by wood, later ones by coal or diesel. Early ones used stern or side paddle wheels, later ones used screw propellers.

The first commercial success accrued to Robert Fulton's North River Steamboat (often called Clermont) in the US in 1807, followed in Europe by the 45-foot Comet of 1812. Steam propulsion progressed considerably over the rest of the 19th century. Notable developments included the condenser, which reduced the need for fresh water, and the multiple expansion engine, which improved efficiency. As the means of transmitting the engine's power, paddle wheels gave way to more efficient screw propellers.

Steam turbines

Steam turbines were fueled by coal or later, diesel or nuclear power.

The marine steam turbine developed by Sir Charles Algernon Parsons, raised the power to weight ratio. He achieved publicity by demonstrating it unofficially in the 100-foot Turbinia at the Spithead naval review in 1897. This facilitated a generation of high-speed liners in the first half of the 20th century and rendered the reciprocating steam engine obsolete, first in warships, and later in merchant vessels.

In the early 20th century, heavy fuel oil came into more general use and began to replace coal as the fuel of choice in steamships. Its great advantages were convenience, reduced manning due to removing the need for trimmers and stokers, and reduced space needed for fuel bunkers.

In the second half of the 20th century, rising fuel costs almost led to the demise of the steam turbine. Most new ships since around 1960 have been built with diesel engines. The last major passenger ship built with steam turbines was the Fairsky, launched in 1984. Similarly, many steam ships were re-engined to improve fuel efficiency. One high profile example was the 1968 built Queen Elizabeth 2 which had her steam turbines replaced with a diesel-electric propulsion plant in 1986.

Most new-build ships with steam turbines are specialist vessels such as nuclear-powered vessels, and certain merchant vessels (notably Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) and coal carriers) where the cargo can be used as bunker fuel.

LNG carriers

New LNG carriers (a high growth area of shipping) continue to be built with steam turbines. The natural gas is stored in a liquid state in cryogenic vessels aboard these ships, and a small amount of 'boil off' gas is needed to maintain the pressure and temperature inside the vessels, to within operating limits. The 'boil off' gas provides the fuel for the ship's boilers, which provide steam for the turbines, the simplest way to deal with the gas. Technology to operate internal combustion engines (modified marine two stroke diesel engines) on this gas has improved however, so such engines are starting to appear in LNG carriers; with their greater thermal efficiency, less gas is burnt. Also, developments have been made in the process of re-liquefying 'boil off' gas, letting it be returned to the cryogenic tanks. The financial returns on LNG are potentially greater than the cost of the marine grade fuel oil burnt in conventional diesel engines, so the re-liquefaction process is starting to be used on diesel engine propelled LNG carriers. Another factor driving the change from turbines to diesel engines for LNG carriers is the shortage of steam turbine qualified sea going engineers. With the lack of turbine powered ships in other shipping sectors, and the rapid rise in size of the worldwide LNG fleet, not enough have been trained to meet the demand. It may be that the days are numbered for the last stronghold for steam turbine propulsion systems, despite all but sixteen of the orders for new LNG carriers at the end of 2004 being for steam turbine propelled ships. [1]

Nuclear-powered steam turbines

In these vessels, the reactor heats steam to drive the turbines.

Partly due to concerns about safety and waste disposal, nuclear propulsion has become usual only in specialist vessels. In large aircraft carriers, the space formerly used for ship's bunkerage could be used instead to bunker aviation fuel. In submarines, the ability to run submerged at high speed and in relative quiet for long periods holds obvious advantage. A few cruisers have also employed nuclear power; as of 2006, the only ones remaining in service are the Russian Kirov class. An example of a non-military ship with Nuclear marine propulsion is the Arktika class icebreaker with 75,000 shaft horsepower.

Reciprocating diesel engines

About 99% of modern ships use diesel reciprocating engines. The rotating crankshaft can power the propeller directly (with slow speed engines), via a gearbox (with medium and high speed engines) or via an alternator and electric motor (in diesel-electric vessels).

The reciprocating marine diesel engine first came into use in 1903 when the diesel electric rivertanker Vandal was put in service by Branobel. Diesel engines soon offered greater efficiency than the steam turbine, but for many years had an inferior power-to-space ratio.

Diesel engines today are broadly classified according to

  • Their operating cycle: two-stroke or four-stroke.
  • Their construction: Crosshead, trunk, or opposed piston.
  • Their speed.
    • Slow speed: any engine with a maximum operating speed up to 300 revs/minute, although most large 2-stroke slow speed diesel engines operate below 120 revs/minute. Some very long stroke engines have a maximum speed of around 80 revs/minute. The largest, most powerful engines in the world are slow speed, two stroke, crosshead diesels.
    • Medium speed: any engine with a maximum operating speed in the range 300-900 revs/minute. Many modern 4-stroke medium speed diesel engines have a maximum operating speed of around 500 rpm.
    • High speed: any engine with a maximum operating speed above 900 revs/minute.

Most modern larger merchant ships use either slow speed, two stroke, crosshead engines, or medium speed, four stroke, trunk engines. Some smaller vessels may use high speed diesel engines.

The size of the different types of engines is an important factor in selecting what will be installed in a new ship. Slow speed two-stroke engines are much taller, but the area needed, length and width, is smaller than that needed for four-stroke medium speed diesel engines. As space higher up in passenger ships and ferries is at a premium, these ships tend to use multiple medium speed engines resulting in a longer, lower engine room than that needed for two-stroke diesel engines. Multiple engine installations also give more redundancy in the event of mechanical failure of one or more engines and greater efficiency over a wider range of operating conditions.

As modern ships' propellers are at their most efficient at the operating speed of most slow speed diesel engines, ships with these engines do not generally need gearboxes. Usually such propulsion systems consist of either one or two propeller shafts each with its own direct drive engine. Ships propelled by medium or high speed diesel engines may have one or two (sometimes more) propellers, commonly with one or more engines driving each propeller shaft through a gearbox. Where more than one engine is geared to a single shaft, each engine will most likely drive through a clutch, allowing engines not being used to be disconnected from the gearbox while others keep running. This arrangement lets maintenance be carried out while under way, even far from port.


Gas turbines

Many warships built since the 1960s have used gas turbines for propulsion, as have a few passenger ships, like the jetfoil.

Gas turbines are commonly used in combination with other types of engine. Most recently, the Queen Mary 2 has had gas turbines installed in addition to diesel engines. Due to their poor thermal efficiency, it is common for ships using them to have diesel engines for cruising, with gas turbines reserved for when higher speeds are needed. Some warships and a few modern cruise ships have also use steam turbines to improve the efficiency of gas turbines in a combined cycle, where waste heat from a gas turbine is used to create steam for driving a steam turbine. In such combined cycles, thermal efficiency can be the same or slightly greater than that of diesel engines alone. However, the grade of fuel needed for gas turbines is far more costly than that needed for diesel engines, so running costs are higher.

Group terminology

Ships may occur collectively as fleets, squadrons, flotillas, or Convoys.

A collection of ships for military purposes may compose a navy, task force, or an armada.

In the past, people counting or grouping disparate types of ship may refer to the individual vessels as bottoms, but this generally refers only to merchant vessels. Groups of sailing ships could constitute, say, a fleet of 40 sail. Groups of submarines (particularly German U-boats in the 1940s) hunt in wolf packs.

Some types of ships and boats

Semi-submersible MV Blue Marlin carrying USS Cole
Semi-submersible MV Blue Marlin carrying USS Cole
Semi-submersible The Zhen Hua 1 in Astoria, Oregon
Semi-submersible The Zhen Hua 1 in Astoria, Oregon
  • Aircraft carrier
  • Barge
  • Bulk carrier
  • Cable Layer
  • Capital ship
  • Cargo ship
  • Catamaran
  • Coaster
  • Container ship
  • Corvette
  • Crane vessel
  • Cruise ship
  • Cruiser
  • Cutter
  • Destroyer
  • Diving support vessel
  • Drillship
  • Dredger
  • Ferry
  • Fishing vessel
  • Floating restaurant
  • Frigate
  • FPSO (Floating_Production_Storage_and_Offloading)
  • Guided missile cruiser
  • Hopper barge, Split hopper barge
  • Hovercraft
  • Hydrofoil
  • Icebreaker
  • Jetfoil
  • Junk
  • Landing craft
  • Lake freighter
  • Livestock carrier
  • LNG carrier
  • Lugger
  • Minesweeper
  • Minehunter
  • Ocean liner
  • Packet ship
  • Panamax
  • Passenger ship
  • Reefer (refrigerated ship)
  • Research vessel
  • RO-RO ship (roll on, roll off, Auto carrier)
  • Sailing ship
  • Selfdischargers
  • Semi-submersible
  • Sloop
  • Steamboat
  • Submarine
  • Supertanker
  • Supply boat, Supply ship
  • Survey Vessels
  • Tanker
  • Tender
  • Train ferry
  • Trawler
  • Trireme
  • Tugboat
  • ULCC (Ultra Large Crude Carrier)
  • VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier)
  • Yacht

Some historical types of ships and boats

A two-masted schooner
A two-masted schooner
  • Barque A sailing vessel with three or more masts, fore-and-aft rigged on only the aftermost.
  • Barquentine A sailing vessel with three or more masts, square-rigged only on the foremast.
  • Battle cruiser A lightly-armoured battleship.
  • Battleship A large, heavily-armoured and heavily-gunned warship. A term which generally post-dates sailing warships.
  • Bilander
  • Bireme An ancient vessel, propelled by two banks of oars.
  • Birlinn
  • Blockade runner A ship whose current business is to slip past a blockade.
  • Brig A two-masted, square-rigged vessel.
  • Brigantine A two-masted vessel, square-rigged on the foremast and fore-and-aft rigged on the main.
  • Caravel A much smaller, two, sometimes three-masted ship.
  • Carrack
  • Clipper A fast multiple-masted sailing ship, generally used by merchants because of their speed capablities.
  • Cog
  • Collier A vessel designed for the coal trade.
  • Dreadnought An early twentieth century class of battleship.
  • Dromons are the precursors to galleys.
  • East Indiaman An armed merchantman belonging to one of the East India companies (Dutch, British etc.)
  • Fire ship A vessel of any sort, set on fire and sent into an anchorage with the aim of causing consternation and destruction. The idea is generally that of forcing an enemy fleet to put to sea in a confused, therefore vulnerable state.
  • Fleut A Dutch-made vessel from the Golden Age of Sail. It had multiple decks and usually three square-rigged masts. It was usually used for merchant purposes.
  • Galleass A sailing and rowing warship, equally well suited to sailing and rowing.
  • Galleon A sixteenth century sailing warship.
  • Galley A warship propelled by oars with a sail for use in a favourable wind.
  • Galliot
  • Ironclad A wooden warship with external iron plating.
  • Knarr A type of Viking trade ship
  • Liberty ship An American merchant ship of the late Second World War period, designed for rapid building in large numbers. (The earliest class of welded ships.)
  • Longship A Viking raiding ship
  • Man of war A sailing warship.
  • Monitor A small, very heavily gunned warship with shallow draft. Designed for land bombardment.
  • Paddle steamer A steam-propelled, paddle-driven vessel, a name commonly applied to nineteenth century excursion steamers.
  • Pantserschip A Dutch ironclad. By the end of the nineteenth century, the name was applied to a heavy gunboat designed for colonial service.
  • Penteconter An ancient warship propelled by 50 oars, 25 on each side.
  • Pram A small dinghy, originally of a clinker construction and called in English, as in Danish, a praam. The Danish orthography has changed so that it would now be a pråm in its original language. It has a transom at both ends, the forward one usually small and steeply raked in the traditional design.
  • Q-ship A commerce raider camouflaged as a merchant vessel.
  • Quinquereme An ancient warship propelled by three banks of oars. On the upper row three rowers hold one oar, on the middle row - two rowers, and on the lower row - one man to an oar.
  • Schooner A fore and aft-rigged vessel with two or more masts of which the foremast is shorter than the main.
  • Shallop A large, heavily built, sixteenth century boat. Fore and aft rigged. More recently it has been a poetically frail open boat.
  • Slave ship A cargo boat specially converted to transport slaves.
  • Small Waterplane Area Twin Hull (SWATH) A modern ship design used for Research Vessels and other purposes needing a steady ship in rough seas.
  • Steamship A ship propelled by a steam engine.
  • Ship of the line A sailing warship of first, second or third rate. That is, with 64 or more guns. Before the late eighteenth century, fourth rates (50-60 guns) also served in the line of battle.
  • Torpedo boat A small, fast surface vessel designed for launching torpedoes.
  • Tramp steamer A steamer which takes on cargo when and where it can find it.
  • Trireme An ancient warship propelled by three banks of oars.
  • Xebec
  • Victory ship

See also

  • Cargo ship
  • Concrete ship
  • Hospital ship
  • Naval ship
  • Steamboat
  • List of famous ships
  • List of civilian nuclear ships
  • List of fictional ships
  • Ghost ship
  • Ship replica
  • Captain
  • Chartering
  • Dynamic positioning
  • History of ship transport
  • Icing (shipping)
  • International Maritime Organization
  • International law
  • Maritime law
  • Naval architecture
  • Sailing
  • Seamanship
  • Ship-building
  • Ship transport
  • Transport
  • Ship model
  • Ship model basin
  • Ships by country List of ships in various country
  • Warship
  • Airship
  • Spaceship
  • Anatomy of the Ship series, a series of books on individual ships
  • For a list of the prefixes used with ship names (HMS, USS, &c.) see ship prefix.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Ship
  • 20th Century Ships: Information on the largest ships ever built.
  • vesseltracker.com: Trackingsystem for container vessel and ship archive.
  • shipsystems.net.tf: A large link farm, but with lots of popups.
  • ShipSpotting.com: Shipping image archive. Free login required.
  • ship-photos.de: Categorized ship photos.
  • Passenger ships: history, speed, capacity, and safety.
  • Ship Technology: The latest ship products, industry news and press releases.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org../../../s/h/i/Ship.html"

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Licence : Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.

Shipping

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The Panama canal.  A cargo ship transiting the Gatún locks northbound is guided carefully between lock chambers by "mules" on the lock walls to either side.
The Panama canal. A cargo ship transiting the Gatún locks northbound is guided carefully between lock chambers by "mules" on the lock walls to either side.

Shipping is basic process of transporting goods and cargo. Virtually every product ever made, bought, or sold has been affected by shipping. Despite the many variables in shipped products and locations, there are only three basic types of shipments: land, air, and sea.

Land or "ground" shipping is easily the most popular form of shipping. Even in Air and Sea shipments, ground transportation is still required to take the product from its origin to the airport or seaport and then to its destination. Ground transportation is typically more affordable than air or sea shipments, so whenever possible shippers attempt to keep their freight in trucks.

Many trucks will take freight directly from the shipper to its destination in what is known as a door to door shipment. Vans and trucks of all sizes make deliveries to sea ports and air ports where freight is moved in bulk also.

Much shipping is done aboard actual ships. An individual nation's fleet and the people that crew it are referred to its "merchant navy" or "merchant marine." Merchant shipping is essential to the world economy, carrying the bulk of international trade. The ships are also extremely expensive constructions themselves, being some of the largest man-made vehicles ever. The term originates with the shipping trade of wind power ships, and has come to refer to the delivery of cargo and parcels of any size above the common mail of letters and postcards.

Ground shipping can be cheaper and less restrictive to size, quantity, weight, and type of freight than by air transport. Air transport is usually reserved for products which mus