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$5-Million Contract To Burrard Yarrows For Vessel Lengthening The Burrard Yarrows Corpo- ration, Vancouver, Canada, was recently awarded a major con- tract—worth nearly five million U.S. dollars—to lengthen the geo- physical exploration vessel Hollis Hedberg by 60 feet. The purpose of the lengthen- ing to 262 feet is to permit the installation of new sophisticated data processing and other special exploration equipment. The ves- sel, built by Burrard Yarrows Vancouver Division in 1974, is owned by Cayman Island Vessels, Ltd., and is on a long-term char- ter to Gulf Research and Devel- opment Company. Preliminary work on the contract has already begun, and the vessel will arrive at Burrard Yarrows's Vancouver Division on January 15 next year. She is scheduled to leave on April 15. The Hollis Hedberg, which is classed ABC Ice Class LIA, can accommodate a crew and techni- cal complement of approximately 55 people. A helicopter landing f deck and additional fire-fighting equipment will also be installed. The naval architects involved in the conversion are William R. Brown and Associates of Van- couver. ITT JABSCO Publishes Equipment Catalog A 66-page indexed catalog de- scribing and illustrating more than 120 items of its marine equipment has been published re- cently bv ITT JABSCO Products, Costa Mesa, Calif. The catalog includes equipment from JABSCO®, PAR™, and Ray- Line®, such as a wide-range of pumps, automatic water systems, seacock and mounting valves, air horns, marine waste systems, blowers, stoves, fenders, search- lights, cabin control lights, and work lights, as well as accessories for all units. Nine new product lines are highlighted. Each item is depicted in a photograph and specifications are listed. A service kit and parts reference guide also is included. For a free copy of the catalog, Write 52 on Reader Service Card The S/S Blue Ridge (shown above) the first of three 37,500- dwt Carlsbad Class product car- riers built by National Steel and Shipbuilding Co., San Diego, Calif., for Union Oil Co. of Cali- fornia, was delivered recently in ceremonies held aboard the new ship. The product carrier was re- ceived by Capt. Glenn O. Burk, president of West Coast Shipping Co., a subsidiary of Union Oil. The Blue Ridge hull was con- structed in the company's fiat- bottomed 1,000-foot-long build- ing dock. Launching was accom- plished by flooding the dock and floating out the vessel. The name Blue Ridge is in hon- or of the mountain range in the Appalachians extending from New England to Georgia. See MR/EN December 15, 1980, page 26, and MR/EN June 15, 1981, pages 26-27. The second of the sister ships, Coast Range, was launched on January 10, 1981, and the third, Sierra Madre, was launched on May 2. Both are scheduled to be delivered before the end of the year. The Blue Ridge will trans- port products from Union Oil's refinery in Beaumont, Texas, to Atlantic and Gulf Coast ports. The ships are a new class de- signed by NASSCO. Each of the refined products carriers has a capacity of 300,000 barrels and is capable of carrying several dif- ferent products simultaneously. The Blue Ridge can transport up to 20 different products in 27 cargo tanks. Each tank is fitted with a deep well cargo pump. The 658-foot-long ship is also fitted with a cylindrical append- age-type bulbous bow to improve speed, and is powered by a GE steam turbine engine. Each of the vessels incorporates state-of- the-art equipment and meets the latest safety and environmental protection standards including double bottoms, a clean segre- gated ballast system, an inert gas system, a sewage treatment plant, collision avoidance radar, and a backup steering system. The ships, ordered by Union Oil in April 1979, were built en- tirely without federal subsidy. NASSCO currently has under contract a total of seven product tankers, two U.S. Navy destroyer tenders, and a Navy cable repair ship. The shipbuilder is a wholly owned subsidiary of Morrison- Knudsen Company, Inc., Boise, Idaho. S/S BLUE RIDGE Major Suppliers General Electric: Turbines and gears, 13,000-shp (2) 1,500-kw ship serv- ice turbogenerators. Transamerica Delaval: Condensers. Worthington: (27) Deepwell cargo pumps. General Regulator: Console. Raytheon: Radar System. ITT Mackay: Navigation Equipment. Sperry Marine: Steering gear. Hewett Marine: Anchor, chain. Lake Shore: Davits and winches. Appleton Marine: Fairleads. Ferguson: Propellers Foster Wheeler: Main boilers. Waukesha: Shaft and stern tube bearings. ON THE COVER JRC Maritime SatelliteCommunicationsMobile Terminal JUE-15A The JRC JUE-15A maritime satellite communications terminal continues a tradition of providing high performance and high reliability marine electronic equipment incorporating the latest technological advances. With the JUE-15A, the shipowner is assured of obtaining the latest equipment available, simple to install and operate, and capable of achieving the full communication capabilities of the maritime satellite communication systems available now, or in the future. The JRC JUE-15A uses the same proven design and quality control production techniques of its predecessors, with improvements in performance and design features for further reliability, easier installation, operation, maintenance, and lower cost. F JRC {japan Radio Co.. Iid\_ Main Office: Mori Building 5th, 17-1. Toranomon 1 chome. Minato-ku. TOKYO 105. JAPAN Phone: Tokyo (03) 591-3451 Telex: 02223068JRCTOKJ Cable: "JAPANRADIO TOKYO" In Europe contact: Japan Radio Co., Ltd., 3rd Fl., Temple Chambers, Temple Avenue, London EC4Y ODT Phone: 01-353-7960 Telex: 885629JAPRAD G In U.S.A. and U.K. contact: 139 Old Solomons Island Rd. Annapolis, Maryland 21401 301-266-5588/261-8888 U.K. London 01-440-2014 Telex: Western Union 87-760 NASSCO Delivers First Of Three New Carlsbad Class Product Carriers To Union Oil 8 Write 259 on Reader Service Card Maritime Reporter/Engineering News