FEROX
Combustion Managers
FEROX TREATED FUEL
REDUCES
POLLUTION
MAINTENANCE
FUEL CONSUMPTION
AND ELIMINATES FUEL ALGAE
For more information concerning these
products please call, write or fax....
H#TEK
A Combustion Company
126 South 5* Street . Leesburg, Florida 34748
Tel/Fax (352) 323-0988
ToU Free 1-800-715-8417
Redland
Circle 306 on Reader Service Card
Circle 307 on Reader Service Card Circle 233 on Reader Service Card
Pound For Pound,
Ballast-Crete Is Better.
For All Marine Fixed Ballast Operations
Densities Up To 400 pcf (S.G. 6.4)
Inorganic, removable, and available
in a wide range of densities, Ballast-
Crete is the ballast of choice for naval
architects and engineers around the
world. For more information, call
Redland Genstarat (410) 682-5985.
"State-Of-The-Art"
Non-Slip Safety Flooring
Unusual Sailing
Companions: Felix
the CAT, a 269-ft. (82-m)
vehicle-passenger cata-
maran built by Austal
Ships, sails with the
Endeavor replica sailing
ship. Felix was built for
the partnership of
SweFerry and DS0.
For further information please call toll-free:
1 -888-SLIPNOT
U.S. Patent No.s 4961973, 5077137
S/zpHOT
V SAFETY FLOORING
SlipNot Safety Flooring Division
W.S. Molnar Company
2545 Beaufait Street, Detroit, Ml 48207
(313) 923-0400 Fax (313) 923-4555
SlipNot® Safety
Flooring is available
in plate and grate
form, in steel on
steel, steel on alu-
minum, and stain-
less on stainless. In
a patented process,
hard Martensitic al-
loys are applied to
the product so sharp
faces are continually
exposed as the sur-
face slowly wears.
SlipNot Products are designed
for new installation or retrofit
Depth and coarse-
ness may be varied.
SlipNot Safety
Flooring is used by
many Fortune 500
companies to ensure
safety in the work-
place. It replaces or
covers old technolo-
gy such as diamond
and checkered plate
and grating which
becomes dangerous
when worn or wet.
Harbour Intermodal Seeks Capital For
Fast Harbor Transport Service
Harbour Intermodal believes it has the blue-
prints for a fast harbor transportation service that,
following its successful implementation in the
Greater New York Harbor area, would be applica-
ble and marketable in most any port around the
world. Specifically, the company has devised a
feeder transportation service which incorporates a
new vessel design with electronically controlled
floating slips, designed to speed cargo on its way in
busy ports.
The company has invested time and money in
studying the means needed to meet changing
freight transportation needs. Specifically, it has
developed a plan — around a vessel dubbed the
HILX 404 Intermodal Ferry — calling for a net-
work of waterborne intermodal ferry services link-
ing major railroad and trucking terminals in the
Greater New York Harbor area. Intermodal ferry
service across the New York Harbor would initially
run between a terminal in New Jersey and one in
Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. Other terminals would be
added in New Jersey, Brooklyn, Queens and the
Bronx.
New Vessel Design
The HILX 404 Intermodal Ferry, the backbone of
Harbour Intermodal's proposed shuttle/ferry ser-
vice, offers speed and versatility. The 404-ft. (123-
m) vessel was designed by a Finnish company as a
double-ended, self-propelled, shallow-draft craft.
It will reportedly be able to be loaded and unloaded
in 15 to 30 minutes.
Propelled by Aquamaster 360-degree rotatable
propulsion units at both ends, the HILX 404 is
designed to transport a combination of railway
cars, trailers, containers and special freight, with a
capacity of 25 to 30 railway cars or five articulated
five-section twin-stack railway container cars and
five parallel trucks. It can also carry up to 50 over-
the-road trailers, and 100 to 150 fully loaded con-
tainers. While the company's "testbed" is New
York, it is important to note that the system is
designed for feeder services between major ports
and smaller ports which cannot accommodate
deep-draft oceangoing vessels, or those which do
not have the volume of freight to justify service by
a larger ship. The company plans to build and
prove the system in New York, then market it
around the world.
Finnyards Develops New Series Of High
Speed Vessels
Finnyards has developed a complete series of
both high-speed monohull and multihull vessels to
cover the speed range between 25 to 40 knots, with
a carrying capacity from 600 to 1,500 passengers
and 160 to 350 cars, respectively.
Finnyards has considerable experience in the
high-speed vessel segment, having recently deliv-
ered the innovative GTS Stena Explorer and Stena
Voyager, the world's largest aluminum catama-
rans.
For more information from Finnyards
Circle 83 on Reader Service Card
Maritime Reporter/Engineering News
Digital Wave Publishing