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Ship - Measuring ships |  | Ship - Measuring ships: Encyclopedia II - Ship - 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; most measure volume rather than weight, and are used when describing merchant ships for the purpose of tolls, taxation, etc.
In Britain until the Merchant Shipping Act of 1876, ship-owners could load their vessels until their deck ...
See also:Ship, Ship - Measuring ships, Ship - Propulsion, Ship - General terminology, Ship - Shipboard terminology, Ship - Some types of ships and boats, Ship - Some historical types of ships and boats, Ship - Quotations |  | | Ship, Ship - General terminology, Ship - Measuring ships, Ship - Propulsion, Ship - Quotations, Ship - Shipboard terminology, Ship - Some historical types of ships and boats, Ship - Some types of ships and boats, concrete ship, hospital ship, naval ship, steamboat, List of famous ships, List of civilian nuclear ships, List of fictional ships, ghost ship, Ship replica |  | |
|  |  | Ship: Encyclopedia II - Ship - Measuring ships
Ship - 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; most measure volume rather than weight, and are used when describing merchant ships for the purpose of tolls, taxation, etc.
In Britain until the 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 jail.
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 center. 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.
Other related archives16th century, 1807, 1812, 1897, 1912, 1960, 1968, 19th century, 20th century, Aft, Aircraft carrier, Amidships, Anatomy of the Ship series, Auto carrier, Barque, Barquentine, Battle cruiser, Battle of Actium, Battleship, Bilander, Bireme, Birlinn, Blockade runner, Bow, Bridge, Brig, Brigantine, Bulk carrier, Bulkheads, Cabin, Cable Layer, Capital ship, Capstan, Caravel, Cargo ship, Carrack, Catamaran, Charles Algernon Parsons, Clipper, Coaming, Coaster, Cog, Collier, Commerce raider, Container ship, Convoys, Corvette, Cruise ship, Cruiser, Cutter, Decks, Destroyer, Diving support vessel, Draft, Dreadnought, Dromons, East Indiaman, Europe, Ferry, Figurehead, Fire ship, Forecastle, Frigate, Galleass, Galleon, Galley, Galliot, German, Glossary of nautical terms, Greek, Guided missile cruiser, Gunwale, Hold, Hull, Icebreaker, Icing (shipping), International Maritime Organization, Ironclad, John Masefield, Junk, Keel, Kelson, Knarr, Laker, Liberty ship, List of civilian nuclear ships, List of famous ships, List of fictional ships, Longship, Lugger, Man of war, Mast, Merchant Shipping Act of 1876, Minehunter, Minesweeper, Monitor, Nautical, Ocean liner, PS Comet, Paddle steamer, Panamax, Pantserschip, Peloponnesian War, Penteconter, Plimsoll Mark, Port, Pram, Q-ship, Queen Elizabeth 2, Quinquereme, RMS Titanic, RO-RO ship, Reefer, Research vessel, Robert Fulton, Romans, Sailing ship, Samuel Plimsoll, Schooner, Second World War, Selandia, Ship of the line, Ship replica, Shipyard, Sloop, Small Waterplane Area Twin Hull, Spithead, Starboard, Steamship, Stern, Submarine, Supertanker, Tanker, Tender, Torpedo boat, Train ferry, Tramp steamer, Trireme, Tugboat, Turbinia, U-boats, USA, Victory ship, Windlass, Xebec, Yacht, age of sail, aircraft carriers, airship, barques, boats, bottoms, bowsprit, cannon, captain, chartering, circle, closed circuit television, coal, concrete ship, condenser, deck, diesel, dinghies, dock, draft, dynamic positioning, eighteenth century, engineers, fire, fleets, flotillas, formula, fuel oil, galleys, ghost ship, hospital ship, hull, international law, jail, law, length, lifeboats, lock, maritime law, masts, member of Parliament, motors, naval ship, naval warfare, navies, navy, nuclear reactors, packs, paddle wheel, prestige, propeller, ram, rule of thumb, runabouts, sail, sailing, sailing ships, sails, sea, seamanship, ship model, ship model basin, ship prefix, ship transport, ship-building, ship-rigged, sixteenth century, spaceship, squadrons, square-rigged, steam engine, steam turbine, steamboat, steamship, submarines, task force, tonnage, transport, triremes, twentieth century, vessel, vessels, volume, watercraft
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Measuring ships", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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