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Ship; 400 metres long and 53 metres wide

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    Ship; 400 metres long and 53 metres wide

    Benjamin Franklin's L.A. arrival makes it the biggest ship to come to North America
    CBC
    18 hours ago

    The biggest ship to ever call at a North American port has arrived in the port of Los Angeles, in an event that trade experts say signals a new era in transocean shipping.
    Over the weekend, the CMA-CGM Benjamin Franklin arrived in the busiest deepwater port on the West Coast.
    Recently delivered to the French shipping line CMA-CGM, the ship is nearly 400 metres long and 53 metres wide and has the capacity of nearly 18,000 containers.
    The Benjamin Franklin is about a third larger than the biggest container ships that currently call at the twin ports of Los Angeles and adjacent Long Beach. Together, the ports process about 40 per cent of all the container ships that arrive in the United States, moving more than $290 billion US worth of goods last year.
    Ports in Asia and some in Europe are optimized for the latest class of giant ships, but those vessels are not yet prominent in North American waters.
    The Port of Los Angeles and numerous other West Coast ports were plagued by congestion and shutdowns earlier this year, caused in part by a dispute with various workers' unions. But L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti says the arrival of the Benjamin Franklin heralds a new era for trade.
    "The arrival of the CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin sends a powerful message that our port stands among the world's greatest, and that we are prepared to continue growing and adapting to the demands of our global economy," the mayor said.
    Correction : A previous version of this story incorrectly reported that the Benjamin Franklin is almost five times as long as the Titanic was. It is larger — 400 metres to 269 for the Titanic — but not five times as large.(Dec 28, 2015 2:17 PM)

    #2
    General characteristics [1]
    Type: Container ship
    Tonnage: 178,228 GT
    116,356 NT
    185,000 DWT
    Length: 399.2 m (1,310 ft)
    Beam: 54 m (177 ft)
    Draft: 16 m (52 ft)
    Depth: 30.2 m (99 ft)
    Installed power: MAN B&W diesel engine, (63,910 kW)
    Propulsion: Single shaft; screw propeller Solid
    Speed: 22.9 knots (42.4 km/h; 26.4 mph)
    Capacity: 18,000 TEU
    Crew: 27[2]

    History
    Name: CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin
    Namesake: Benjamin Franklin
    Owner: CHC Second Shipping SA
    Operator: CMA CGM
    Port of registry: London, United Kingdom[1]
    Builder: Shanghai Jiangnan Changxing Heavy Industry, China[1]
    Yard number: H6003
    Completed: 04 December 2015[1]
    In service: 2015
    Identification: Call sign: 2IZK8
    IMO number: 9706891
    Status: In service

    Last Friday, we learned a bit about life on board and mostly focused on the deck. As you remember, we mentioned that the crew was divided in two parts : deck and engine. Today, time to get technical and learn a bit about the biggest engine you ever saw.

    Imagine your average 100 horsepower city car : perfectly fit for a family of four and carrying the weekly groceries. But what if you had to ship hundreds of thousands of tons of merchandise across the oceans? Now you’d need something a little more powerful.

    Well, 900 times more powerful to be accurate. The CMA CGM Bougainville engine is so big that a normal person would feel like an ant while standing next to it. It is as massive as a five floors building. Such an engine provides a 21 knots thrust equivalent to that of 10 A380 airbus reactors (3.000 KNewton): a necessary power to help the ship carry up to 18,000 containers of merchandise between Europe and East Asia during its 77 days rotation.

    CMA CGM vessels’ engine came a long way before becoming this massive. Back in 1978, when Jacques Saadé started the company, the one and only ship of the company could only carry up to 200 containers.

    Technical Details

    Main Engine

    MAN B&W Licensee made :11S90ME-C9.2
    MCR :63,910 kW / 84 RPM [About 90,000hp]
    HFO spec (ME/Aux. Eng./Boiler) : 700/700/700cSt SG1.01
    Fixed-pitch propeller : 6 Blades (TBC)
    Bow thruster :2 x 1,900 kW
    Power supply

    Diesel Generators: 2* 2800 2 x 3800 kW
    Emergency Generator 1 x 350 kW
    Pictures

    Discover the exclusive pictures of a 18,000 class engine. Credits to the talented Jan Sieg for these impressive pictures.

    http://www.cma-cgm-blog.com/cma-cgm-bougainville-the-engine-of-a-18000-teu-class-vessel/

    Comment


      #3
      I wonder if that is a tier 4 final motor lol? I will bet that doesn't apply on the ocean.

      Comment


        #4
        Good point. That engine would burn more in 10 minutes than the farm uses yearly.

        Maybe an exaggeration but you get the point..

        Comment


          #5
          We should get young Trudodo to push for canola bio diesel on all ocean going ships . He wants to save the world from evil c02 - start with bio fuels .

          Comment


            #6
            How about all farm trucks and equipment also. Use up that heated canola.

            Comment


              #7
              Several published studies have proven that bio diesel from canola/ bean oil will reduce green house emissions up to 52% .... Just need a politition will balls or hard core green guts lol

              Comment


                #8
                This may be off topic.

                But I always wondered why ...when the triffid thing hit flax the flax crush industry didn't come to canada?

                Same with biodiesel and canola crush.

                You have T.Boone Pickens trying to champion natural gas vehicles in the states ....why not biodiesel here?

                Cold yes but there should be a solution for that.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Bucket,

                  Both the US and China had no problem with Triffid, so they crushed and used up the seed.

                  Oil is too cheap... or the alternatives would be better used!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Furrowtickler-Good ideas on pushing biodiesel.

                    With followers of Reverend Gore and Saint Suzuki running the federal government we should push all green initiatives that work in our favour.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Hamlioc my neighbour's son is an engineer in Finland and he is working on marine engines.

                      They are using DEF to reach emission standards.

                      Comment

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