Russian Multi-Purpose Salvage Vessels
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Russian Multi-Purpose Salvage Vessels
Russian Multi-Purpose Salvage Vessels are group of three classes of ships – MPSV06, MPSV07 and MPSV12. The class of MPSV06 ships are the biggest ones but all the classes are relatively large rescue and salvage vessels. MPSV06 MPSV06 class vessels are a series of three icebreaking salvage vessels, one of which is being built in Russia and two that have been ordered from the German shipbuilder Nordic Yards Wismar (Ship design company JSC "Nordic Engineering" took part in the development of this project, in 2019 JSC "Nordic Engineering"  modernized  it contract project  and approved by the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping). The first vessel of the class, tentatively named ''Spasatel Petr Gruzinskiy'', was reportedly laid down at Amur Shipbuilding Plant in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, Russia, already in 2010, but the construction was later suspended. In December 2018, it was reported that the United Shipbuilding Corporation would complete the unfinished third vessel which reportedl ...
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Amur Shipbuilding Plant
OJSC Amur Shipbuilding Plant (russian: Амурский судостроительный завод, ''Amurskiy Sudostroitelnyy Zavod'', and also called the "Leninskiy Komsomol Shipyard") is an important shipyard in eastern Russia, based in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, and founded in 1932. It employs 15,000 people, and produces both civilian and military ships, including nuclear submarines. Around 97 submarines (56 nuclear-powered and 41 conventional) as well as 36 warships were built at the yard. The shipyard started building nuclear submarines in 1957, with the first one completed in 1960. Submarines built at the Amur Shipbuilding plant include Delta I class ballistic missile submarines, Echo I and II class cruise missile submarines and ''Akula''-class attack submarines. In 1992, then-president Boris Yeltsin announced that the Sevmash shipyard in Severodvinsk would remain the only nuclear submarine construction site. In 2008, the first nuclear submarine built at the shipyard in 13 ...
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ISO Container
An intermodal container, often called a shipping container, is a large standardized shipping container, designed and built for intermodal freight transport, meaning these containers can be used across different modes of transport – from ship to rail to truck – without unloading and reloading their cargo. Intermodal containers are primarily used to store and transport materials and products efficiently and securely in the global containerized intermodal freight transport system, but smaller numbers are in regional use as well. These containers are known under a number of names. Based on size alone, up to 95% of intermodal containers comply with ISO standards, and can officially be called ISO containers. Many other names are simply: container, cargo or freight container, shipping, sea or ocean container, container van or sea van, sea can or C can, or MILVAN, SEAVAN, or RO/RO. The also used term CONEX (Box) is technically incorrect carry-over usage of the name of an important ...
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Spasatel Demidov In Sochi Black Sea Krasnodar Krai 29 December 2016
Spasatel (russian: Спасатель "Rescuer", "Lifesaver", Project 9038) is a ground-effect vehicle, originally planned by the Soviet Ministry of Defense. The vehicle was intended to serve as the missile carrier of the project ''Lun''-class ekranoplan, but was then converted into an ambulance craft. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, construction was halted and the vehicle was never completed. By 2018, Russia had revived the project, with plans to use it for search and rescue operations in the Arctic and Pacific, as well as cargo and troop delivery (up to 550 troops) to remote military bases. Goals A military advantage of ground-effect vehicles over ships and submarines was that they did not have draft during operation, and therefore could not be detected by sonar and could not be hit by torpedoes. Advantages over aircraft include operation at low altitude, which makes radar acquisition difficult, and a larger payload. This was particularly interest ...
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Spasatel Karev
Spasatel (russian: Спасатель "Rescuer", "Lifesaver", Project 9038) is a ground-effect vehicle, originally planned by the Soviet Ministry of Defense. The vehicle was intended to serve as the missile carrier of the project ''Lun''-class ekranoplan, but was then converted into an ambulance craft. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, construction was halted and the vehicle was never completed. By 2018, Russia had revived the project, with plans to use it for search and rescue operations in the Arctic and Pacific, as well as cargo and troop delivery (up to 550 troops) to remote military bases. Goals A military advantage of ground-effect vehicles over ships and submarines was that they did not have draft during operation, and therefore could not be detected by sonar and could not be hit by torpedoes. Advantages over aircraft include operation at low altitude, which makes radar acquisition difficult, and a larger payload. This was particularly interest ...
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Canadian American Strategic Review
The Canadian American Strategic Review was an influential Canadian think-tank that comments on Canadian Defence and sovereignty issues. The think-tank operated, for many years, from the campus of Simon Fraser University. History In 2007 the '' Canwest News Services'' cited one of the think-tank's papers on the option of employing Canadian Forces smaller CH-146 Griffon helicopters to Afghanistan. In 2008 the US Naval War College's '' International Law Studies'' cited one of the think-tank's papers on Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's 2005 change in Defence policy. In 2009 Peter Worthington cited one of the review's papers that statistically analyzed the safety of the vehicles the Canadian Forces used in Afghanistan. In 2016, Steven Chase repeatedly quoted the Review's Stephen Priestley when ''The Globe and Mail'' reported on how Saudi Arabia used Canadian made light armored vehicles in ways that violated their export license. The reporting raised questions about a new Sau ...
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Ice Class
Ice class refers to a notation assigned by a classification society or a national authority to denote the additional level of strengthening as well as other arrangements that enable a ship to navigate through sea ice. Some ice classes also have requirements for the ice-going performance of the vessel. Significance of ice class Not all ships are built to an ice class. Building a ship to an ice class means that the hull must be thicker, and more scantlings must be in place. Sea chests may need to be arranged differently depending on the class. Sea bays may also be required to ensure that the sea chest does not become blocked with ice. Most of the stronger classes require several forms of rudder and propeller protection. Two rudder pintles are usually required, and strengthened propeller tips are often required in the stronger ice classes. More watertight bulkheads, in addition to those required by a ship's normal class, are usually required. In addition, heating arrangemen ...
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Murman (ship, 2015) In Rostock
Murman may refer to: Places * Murman Coast, a coastal area in Murmansk Oblast, Russia * Murman, the same as the Kola Peninsula, Russia * Murman Sea, former name of the Barents Sea Ships * ''Saint Andrew'' (ship), renamed ''Murman'' in 1910 * Icebreaker ''Murman'', see Drifting ice station * ''Murman,'' original name of Rautu-class minesweeper ''Rautu'' Other * Murman Murmansk, a bandy club in Murmansk, Russia * Murman Scientific Fisheries Expedition, earlier name of the Nikolai M. Knipovich Polar Research Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography People with the given name *Murman Dumbadze (born 1960), Georgian politician *Murman Omanidze (born 1938), Georgian politician See also * Moorman (other) * Moerman (other) Moerman is a Dutch surname. ''Moer'' was the name for a bog where peat was harvested. A ''moerman'' could have referred to a peat harvester or trader, or a person living near such a region.
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Murman (icebreaker)
Murman may refer to: Places * Murman Coast, a coastal area in Murmansk Oblast, Russia * Murman, the same as the Kola Peninsula, Russia * Murman Sea, former name of the Barents Sea Ships * ''Saint Andrew'' (ship), renamed ''Murman'' in 1910 * Icebreaker ''Murman'', see Drifting ice station * ''Murman,'' original name of Rautu-class minesweeper ''Rautu'' Other * Murman Murmansk, a bandy club in Murmansk, Russia * Murman Scientific Fisheries Expedition, earlier name of the Nikolai M. Knipovich Polar Research Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography People with the given name *Murman Dumbadze (born 1960), Georgian politician *Murman Omanidze (born 1938), Georgian politician See also * Moorman (other) * Moerman (other) Moerman is a Dutch surname. ''Moer'' was the name for a bog where peat was harvested. A ''moerman'' could have referred to a peat harvester or trader, or a person living near such a region.
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United Shipbuilding Corporation
, romanized_name = , former_name = , type = State owned enterprise , traded_as = , industry = Shipbuilding, Defense industry , genre = , fate = , predecessor = , successor = , founded = , founder = , defunct = , hq_location_city = Moscow and Saint Petersburg , hq_location_country = Russia , coordinates = , locations = , area_served = Worldwide , key_people = Alexei L. Rakhmanov (President) , products = Merchant ships, naval ships, submarines, missiles , services = , revenue = , revenue_year = , operating_income = , income_year = , net_income = , net_income_year = , assets = , assets_year = , equity = , equity_year = , owner = Federal Agency for State Property Management (100%) , members = , num_employees = >80,000 , num_employees_year = 2016 , parent = Government of Russia , divisions = , footnotes = , intl = , website www.aoosk.ru JSC Unite ...
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