Advertisement

HEAVYLIFT: Crouched down cranes

The semi-submersible heavylift ship Tai An Kou and its cargo of two 65-long-ton lift capacity container cranes presented an odd profile as they seemed to ‘crouch down’ on the Mississippi River recently to clear bridges on their way to the Port of New Orleans’ Napoleon Avenue Container Terminal.

Purchased for $26.5 million from Doosan Heavy Industries & Construction Co Ltd, based in Seoul, South Korea, the cranes will have a 110ft lift height and a 167ft outreach when fully installed at the terminal. However, they were loaded aboard the 156m by 32.2m Tai An Kou at Masan, South Korea in a deeply lowered position for the 53-day, 15,700-mile journey to the USA.

The ship itself, which incorporates a highly sophisticated ballast system, can submerge to the extent that it can take 9m of water over the cargo deck. Designed by Vuyk Engineering, and completed in 2003, the COSCO vessel is powered by twin Siemens Schottel azimuthing pods of 5,000kW output each while two Schottel type STT 500 bow thrusters are used.

Ships Montly - January 2024

Medway Queen Centenary celebrations 2024

The Medway Queen Centenary events kicked off on Sunday 21 April 2024 with a memorial service in Rochester Cathedral, for people with family connections...
Advertisement

Related articles

Medway Queen Centenary celebrations 2024

The Medway Queen Centenary events kicked off on Sunday 21 April 2024 with a memorial service in Rochester...

Wärtsilä secures China’s largest-ever methanol newbuild order

Technology group Wärtsilä will supply the methanol-fuelled auxiliary engines for five new container vessels for COSCO Shipping Lines...

US Navy lays keel for first Constellation class frigate

The US Navy has held a keel-laying ceremony for the first Constellation-class frigate, USS Constellation (FFG 62) in...

Tillberg Design of Sweden celebrates end of the seven-year Sun Princess Project

Tillberg Design of Sweden (TDoS) – part of the Viken Group – has just completed its involvement on...