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Standard Oil (Indiana) Orders Seven New Tankers For Fleet As a result of orders it has placed on its own account and arranged through charter- and-lbuild arrangements, the tanker fleet of Standard Oil Co. (Indiana) will be increased by seven new ships. The new ships, all to be operational by 1975, account for about one million deadweight tons and will bring the company's tanker ca- pacity to approximately 3.6 million deadweight tons. Two of the vessels, in the 128,000-ton class, will be built in Spain by Astilleros Espanoles, S.A., and two similar ships by Mitsui Ship- building and Engineering Co. in Japan. The four ships, to be owned by the company ,are to be delivered in 1976. Three 153,000-ton vessels are being con- structed by another Japanese shipyard for de- livery in 1974-75 and will be operated by the oil company for 20 years at a IfulLterm cost of more than $100 million. The construction orders and charter arrangements have been made through the company's wholly owned subsidiary, Amoco Ocean Tanker Co. The oil company's tanker fleet currently numbers 41 vessels, including its own ships and those operated under charter and units on order or under construction. The total includes two 230,000-ton ships recently launched in Spain and two similar ships which have been ordered from a Span- ish yard. The seven new ships the company has or- dered will be capable of delivering crude oil in volumes equal to a delivery rate of about 100,000 barrels per day from the Middle East to free world ports, according to R.S. Haddow, president of the company. Mr. Haddow also pointed out that U.S. East and Gulf Coast ports are not now capable of docking tankers larger than the 70,000-dead- weight-ton class. By placing the company's new large tankers in service to deeper-water foreign ports, he noted smaller vessels in its fleet will be free to move crude oil imports into UjS. ports. Odense Steel Shipyard Ltd. Delivers 285,000-Dwt Tanker The T/T Rania Chandris, equipped with the most modern navigation instruments, achieved a speed of 15.25 knots during her sea trials. The tenth in a series of 285,000 tonners and the third this year from the Lindo Shipyard, Lindo, was commissioned following successful trials in Danish waters and was delivered to her owners, Chandris Tankers Limited, London. The approximate main dimensions of the Rania Chandris are as follows: length overall, 1,139 feet; breadth, 170 feet, and depth, 93 feet. The vessel has a speed of 15.25 knots. The main engine is a Stal-Laval turbine plant with an output of 32,440 shp at 85 rpm, a Com- bustion Engineering main boiler type V2M9, de- veloping at normal output 95 tons steam per hour at 513 degrees, and a Combustion Engineering auxiliary boiler type V2M8, developing 32 tons steam per hour at 350 degrees. The vessel is built to the rules of Lloyd's Regis- ter of Shipping class +100 A.l "Oil Tanker" pt. H.T., +LMC. The next 285,000 tonner for the A.P. Moller Shipping Companies, Copenhagen, is scheduled for delivery this month. She will be followed by another sister ship for the A.P. Moller Shipping Companies, and two for the Livanos Group. With these vessels, the series of 285,000 tonners will be completed, and the yard will thereafter go ahead with the construction of five 330,000-dwt tankers for the A.P. Moller Shipping Companies. mister cap MISTER CAP JOINS F & S FLEET: Service Machine & Shipbuilding Corp. of Morgan City, La., recently delivered the M/V Mister Cap, a 1,200-hp tug, to F & S Boat Corporation, a division of Elpac, Inc. The vessel, named after F.L. Capert, chairman of Elpac's board, measures 75 feet by 24 feet and is equipped with two 16V71N engines by General Motors, MG527 clutches by Twin Disc, two 30-kw generators by Delco with G.M. 371 power, anchor handling winch (100,000# line pull), fire fighting system, and a complete package of modern elec- tronic equipment. F & S Boat Corporation is under the management of Andy Wedaman and Albert (Sam) Smith Jr., and operates 14 tugs from offices in Morgan City and New Orleans, La., Houston, Texas, and London, England. 34 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News SERVICE*^* GILLEN BACKS EVEBY JOB ...with over 100 years of __ the best in service ewty WEST END AVENUE, OYSTER BAY, NEW YORK, N.Y. 11771 • 212-895-8110