As I watch the trials and tribulations associated with those long shafts and compare that with the simplicity of the bow-thruster service and re-installation it has me wondering, yet again, about, the decision to go with conventional shaft drive on the AOPS rather than the AziPods used on the MCDVs and the Svalbard.
I see the Norwegians stuck with the AziPods on their new icebreaker.
182,668,941.42 Canadian Dollar at today's exchange rate
Ordered 29 December 2013
[
Laid Down 3 September 2015
Launched 3 March 2017
Completed 2018
In Service Aug 2018
Norway’s most advanced polar-research vessel will end its summer expedition to the Arctic early after thick ice prevented the Kronprins Haakon from reaching the North Pole. Built at a cost of 1.5 billion kroner ($175 million), the Kronprins Haakon entered into service last August. This January...
www.arctictoday.com
General characteristics [2] | |
---|
Name | Kronprins Haakon |
Namesake | Haakon, Crown Prince of Norway |
Owner | Norwegian Polar Institute [4] |
Operator | Norwegian Institute of Marine Research |
Port of registry | Tromsø, Norway[2] |
Ordered | 29 December 2013[2] |
Builder | Fincantieri (La Spezia, Italy) |
Cost | NOK 1.4 billion |
Yard number | 6255[2] |
Laid down | 2 September 2015 |
Launched | 3 March 2017[2] |
Completed | April 2018[3] |
Identification | |
Status | In service |
Type | Research vessel |
Tonnage | 9,145 GT |
Length | 100.382 m (329 ft) |
Beam | 21 m (69 ft) |
Draught | 8.666 m (28 ft) |
Depth | 10.408 m (34 ft) |
Ice class | Polar Class 3 Icebreaker |
Installed power |
- 2 × Bergen B32:40L6 (2 × 3,500 kW)
- 2 × Bergen B32:40L9 (2 × 5,000 kW)
|
Propulsion | |
Range | 15,000 nautical miles (28,000 km; 17,000 mi) |
Endurance | 65 days at cruising speed |
Capacity |
- Accommodation for 55 in 38 cabins
- 1,180 m3 cargo hold
- 20 TEU containers
|
Crew | 15–17 |
Aviation facilities | Helipad and hangar |
en.wikipedia.org
Also working on 3 new, 136 m 10,000 tonne Ice Strengthened OPVs, the Jan Mayens. (7.2 BNOK or 939,036,306.24 Canadian Dollar for 3)
Jan Mayen was designed by LMG Marin and built by Vard at its Vard Tulcea facilities in Romania.
The Norwegian Coast Guard christened the first Jan Mayen-class vessel at the Vard Langsten shipyard in Tomrefjord on October 16, 2022.
www.navalnews.com
The Norwegian Coast Guard has taken delivery of a new offshore patrol vessel (OPV). The future NoCGV Jan Mayen is the lead ship of a new class of three OPVs tha
www.bairdmaritime.com
Vanishing sea ice gives Norway more waters to patrol. The hull for the first of three new Coast Guard ships to operate in the Arctic zone is now being towed from the shipyard in Romania. The hulls are built at Vard Tulcea shipyard in Romania, while it will be the Vard Langsten shipyard in Norway
www.rcinet.ca
The Jan Mayen-class (P6615 Project) vessels are being built by VARD Langsten shipyard in Norway for the Norwegian Coast Guard (Kystvakten).
www.naval-technology.com
The Norwegian Coast Guard christened the first Jan Mayen-class vessel at the Vard Langsten shipyard in Tomrefjord on October 16, 2022.
www.navalnews.com
These seem to have gone the "belts and braces" route with both a conventional shaft and a pair of AziPods. Nifty looking central prop though!
and what appears to be a pair of thrusters forwards.
Photos of the nearly complete basic structure of the Norwegian ice capable OPV Jan Mayen, brought to us by frequent contributor, Tups, as a comment on a previous post about these massive almost 10,…
chuckhillscgblog.net