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Ranger Boats is a company that produces bass fishing boats designed primarily for black bass fishing. The company was founded in 1968 by Forrest L. Wood in Flippin, Arkansas . Ranger is generally credited with the introduction of the modern bass boat . [ 1 ]
Ranger: Owner: Luzon Stevedoring Company Ltd. Builder: Hong Kong & Whampoa Dock Company Ltd. Launched: 1940: Acquired: commandeered by the United States Navy, 10 December 1941: Homeport: Manila: Fate: unknown: General characteristics; Class and type: tugboat: Tonnage: 545 long tons (554 t) [1] Length: 130 feet 2 inches (39.67 m) [1] Beam: 32 ...
Reassembly of the Radium King, 1937.. Marine Transportation Services [1] (MTS) formerly Northern Transportation Company Limited (NTCL) is a marine transportation company operating primarily in the Mackenzie River watershed of the Northwest Territories and northern Alberta, and the Arctic Ocean using a fleet of diesel tug boats and shallow-draft barges. [2]
The Lord Nelson Victory Tug is a brand of recreational trawler designed by James Backus [1] and produced by Lord Nelson Yachts, Inc. based in Seattle, Washington in the United States. Delivery of the first 37-foot hull was in 1983.
USCGC Katmai Bay (WTGB-101) is a United States Coast Guard Cutter, and the lead ship of the Bay-class of icebreaking tugboats.At 140 ft (43 m), she is designed to have greater multi-mission capabilities than the 110' Calumet-class Harbor Tug (WYTM).
MMSI number: 368705000; Callsign: ADTJ; Fate: Sold civilian October 2021 to Interlake Maritime Services for service from Ludington, Michigan in long-term lay-up: General characteristics; Class and type: LT (large tug) Type: tugboat: Displacement: 924 tons: Length: 128 feet (39 m) Beam: 36 feet (11 m) Draft: 14.5 ft (4.4 m) (light); 17 ft (5.2 m ...
U.S. Army ST-488 is an 86 ft (26 m) harbor tugboat, design 327-A, of the numerical series 885-490 built by J.K. Welding & Co shipyards in Brooklyn, New York in 1944.The Army's ST small tugs ranged generally from about 55 ft (17 m) to 92 ft (28 m) in length as opposed to the larger seagoing LT tugs. [4]
In 1889 the company took over the Marine Engineering Works at Lilybank Foundry. In 1896 WB Thompson was restructured and the name changed to Caledon Shipbuilding & Engineering Company [1] in honour of the founder's first customer, the Earl of Caledon. [2] In 1932 Caledon closed the Lilybank engine works.