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ADVERTISE IN THESE SPECIAL EMPHASIS ISSUES MARITIME REPORTER TWICE EACH MONTH BEST READ BECAUSE EVERY ISSUE IS CURRENT ^ BONUS DISTRIBUTION AT MEETINGS & SHOWS — SPECIAL NAVY COVERAGE FOR MORE MARINE SALES JULY 1 Advertising^ • DIESEL POWER REVIEW . Update on recent developments in fuel efficient en- e gines for marine propulsion and auxiliary power. • PLUS — A wealth of current marine business and technical information first — weeks before the slower monthlies. JULY 15 Advertising • SCANDINAVIAN SHIPBUILDING Closing Date Overview of the latest developments, improvements, June 22 ship repair and new construction services offered by major shipbuilding firms in Scandinavia * • NOR-FISHING '84 Trondheim, Norway — August 6-12 * • OFFSHORE NORTHERN SEAS Stavanger, Norway — August 21 - 24 • PLUS — A wealth of current marine business and technics nformation first — weeks before the slower monthlies AUGUST 1 Advertising * . ANNUAL INLAND WATERWAYS Ctang Date SHQW |SSUE • SPECIAL AWO LEGISLATIVE REPORT • PLUS — A wealth of current marine business and technical information first — weeks before the slower monthlies. AUGUST 15 Advertising . DISTINCTIVE WARSHIPS Closing Date j uly 25 A portfolio of the worlds most advanced warships. •PRIVATE U.S. SHIPYARDS Builders of the600-ship Navy. Astudyof thevitalrole played by private commercial shipbuilding/boat- building yards in the construction and maintenance of the world's most powerful Navy. • PLUS — A wealth of current marine business and technical information first — weeks before the slower monthlies. SEPTEMBER 1 Advertising * . HAMBURG SHOW Closing Date International Ship Machinery, Marine August IU Technology (SMM) Exhibition and Congress Hamburg, Germany • GERMAN SHIPBUILDING Special feature on the West German shipbuilding industry. • PLUS — A wealth of current marine business and technical information first — weeks before the slower monthlies. SEPTEMBER 15 Advertising . NORTH AMERICAN OFFSHORE Closing Date OUTLOOK August 24 ,, T . oT United States and Canada * • CORE '84 (Canadian Offshore Resources Exposition) NORTH AMERICAN Halifax, Nova Scotia — October 16-18 OFFSHORE ISSUE • PLUS — A wealth of current marine business and technica information first — weeks before the slower monthlies. TWICE EACH MONTH - FIRST WITH THE NEWS - FIRST IN READER INTEREST Published TWICE each month 24 times a year MARITIME REPORTER delivers the latest and most important industry information FIRST weeks and sometimes months before the same information, often with the same photos, appears in the slower monthly magazines Here is unequalled editorial performance providing the industry's only source for complete, current and fresh reports on all important marine developments . . FIRST As a result, MARITIME REPORTER is the industry's most wanted magazine 100% requested, in writing, by the world's largest audience of marine management readers thousands more than any other marine magazine Every one of the 1984 special emphasis issues listed in this calendar will also contain a full measure of regular current industry news .the key to the consistently unequalled reader interest enjoyed by all 24 issues of M R Your advertising is bound to work harder for you produce better results and more sales in the high-intensity reader interest atmosphere created only by MARITIME REPORTER MARITIME REPORTER is the best read marine magazine thousands more marine management readers have acknowledged and confirmed it by requesting MARITIME REPORTER year after year. Total circulation 100% REQUESTED in writing MARITIME REPORTER AND ENGINEERING NEWS 107 EAST 31st STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10016 (212) 689 3266 Danmar (continued from page 25) 100-Hz steps. The receiver covers from 100 KHz to 30 MHz, tuning in 10-Hz steps. Switch time from transmit to re- ceive mode is 0.9 seconds (1 second maximum). Frequency selection and antenna tuning can be con- trolled automatically. The RT-210 is prepared for automatic radiote- lex systems. The set consists of the RT-210 control unit and the T210 compact transceiver unit with fully auto- matic all-band antenna tuner. The system is controlled by micropro- cessor. The control unit has a built-in loudspeaker, and connec- tion possibilities for micro-tele- phone, ARQ radiotelex system, and others. Operation is by a keyboard and dial controls. The operator can select transmit and receive fre- quencies directly by the numerical keyboard. Exclusive distributor for DAN- MAR in the U.S. and Canada is Dantronics/MEMAC Company of Boca Raton, Fla. ELECTRO-NAV Circle 37 on Reader Service Card Electro-Nav, Inc. of Elizabeth, N.J., has introduced the Comm- center, a total shipboard commu- nications system with satellite, simplex/duplex telex, all-mode HF transmitter, continuous tuning re- ceiver, VHF, keyboard terminal with full data-processing capabil- ity, and an integrated failsafe power supply, all in one standard 19-inch console rack, with space remaining for additional equip- ment as required or desired. "Commcenter was designed in recognition of current and pending changes by national and interna- tional regulatory agencies in ac- cordance with proposed new radio officer manning procedures and consequence changes in marine electronic communications stand- ards," said Electro-Nav executive vice president John M. Saez, "so it has everything a ship needs for complete, ship-to-shore, ship-to- ship, and internal ship communications." The center's HF and VHF trans- mitters have been approved by the Federal Communications Commis- sion, and the Saturn 3 comsat has Inmarsat approval. Connections are designed to make installation simple and inexpensive. Electro- Nav considers the Commcenter so rugged and reliable that its offers a very reasonable service/mainte- nance arrangement. Commcenter is equipped with Elektrisk Bureau's miniaturized Saturn 3 satcom, with its antenna autosearch, lock remote call initi- ation, and thorough self-diagnos- tics; the T204, 1,000-watt, solid state all-band SSB/AM/CW/SITOR 26 Circle 313 on Reader Service Card Maritime Reporter/Engineering News