Atlantic Salvor

Summary

Atlantic Salvor is a US-flagged ocean-going tugboat owned and operated by Donjon Marine of Hillside, New Jersey.[2] Sailing under her original name Mister Darby until 1998, the boat was built by Halter Marine Inc. and launched on 1 February 1977. She was involved in the salvage operation following the wreck of New Carissa.

Atlantic Salvor
Atlantic Salvor (center) stands by as ex-USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) is docked in Philadelphia.
History
Name
  • Mister Darby (1977–1998)
  • Atlantic Salvor (1998–)
BuilderHalter Marine Inc.
Yard number496
Launched1 Feb 1977[2]
Identification
StatusIn service as of 2018
General characteristics
Tonnage852 GT[2] 255 NT[2]
Length42.8762 m (140.670 ft) LOA[2]
Beam12.192 m (40.00 ft) molded breadth[2]
Depth6.7574 m (22.170 ft) molded depth[2]
Installed power2 × 150 kW (200 hp) aux. generators[2]
Propulsion2 × ALCO 16-251F 16 cylinder engines; 2,312.6 kW (3,101.2 hp) maximum continuous each[2]
Capacity896 cu m of fuel capacity[2]
NotesTwo cast steel propellers[2]
Starboard Profile Atlantic Salvor

Construction edit

Then named Mister Darby, the boat's construction was completed and she was delivered to Jackson Marine Corporation on 9 February 1997.[2] Her hull, constructed from ordinary strength steel, has an overall length of 42.9 metres (141 ft), a molded breadth of 6.8 metres (22 ft), and a moulded depth of 6.8 metres (22 ft).[2] The boat has a total of 21 tanks: 12 for fuel oil, 5 for ballast water, 5 for lubricating oil, 7 apiece for fresh- and waste-water, a hydraulic oil tank, a slop tank, and an anchor chain locker. The tug can carry up to 6 cubic meters of fuel, has a gross tonnage of 852 GT and a net tonnage of 205 NT.[2]

The boat's propulsion is powered by two Alco Engine Inc. 16-251F engines with a maximum continuous power rating of 2,312.6 kilowatts (3,101.2 hp) apiece.[2] Each engine has 17 228.6-millimetre (9.00 in) cylinders with a piston stroke of 266.7-millimetre (10.50 in).[2] Each engine powers a single cast steel propeller.[2] Electrical power is generated by two Detroit Diesel 8V71 150-kilowatt (200 hp) auxiliary generators. The bow thruster is powered by a single Detroit Diesel 8V71. It also has one Detroit Diesel 12V71 fire pump engine along with a single Detroit Diesel 8V71 tow winch engine.[2]

In 1998, the tugboat was purchased by Donjon and renamed Atlantic Salvor.[3]

History edit

Salvage of the New Carissa edit

 
New Carissa, after breaking into two sections.

MV New Carissa was a Japanese-owned bulk carrier flying the Panamanian flag of convenience that ran aground on a beach near Coos Bay, Oregon, United States, during a storm in February 1999, and subsequently broke apart. The ship's insurers declared the vessel to be a total loss. As a result, New Carissa was no longer a salvageable vessel; instead, she had effectively become a shipwreck.

Attempts using the "Salvage Chief" and the "Atlantic Salvor" pulling together to refloat and tow the stern section were unsuccessful.[4]

Tow of the ex-USS John F. Kennedy edit

Atlantic Salvor was hired by the United States Navy to tow the decommissioned ex-John F. Kennedy from Norfolk to Philadelphia in March 2008.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Atlantic Salvor (7719624)". Equasis. Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Atlantic Salvor (7701643)". ABS Record. American Bureau of Shipping. Retrieved 2010-12-23.[dead link]
  3. ^ Marine News. Vol. 56. World Ship Society. 2002. p. 292.
  4. ^ "Eugene Register-Guard - Google News Archive Search".

References edit

  • Bacon, Larry (21 October 1999). "Stern resists pull of new tugboat". The Register-Guard. Eugene, OR. p. 5D.

External links edit

  • Atlantic Salvor specifications page at Donjon Marine
  • Tug 44 article on Atlantic Salvor (photos)
  • Numerous photos