Jeffboat Launches Mammoth Pipe-Laying Barge
To Have Living Quarters For 213-Man Crew
Built for Houston Contracting Company, the new barge measuring 370 feet by 85 feet
by 24 feet was designed to lay oil and natural gas pipelines in any seas of the world.
Jeffboat, Inc., Jeffersonville, Ind.,
launched its biggest yet on Febru-
ary 19. Announcing the 370-foot
by 85-foot by 24-foot ocean-going
pipe-laying barge's launch, Jeff-
boat president R.W. Naye noted,
"The barge, even larger than the
LSTs built here during the war,
represents another step in our con-
tinuing program of producing ves-
sels for ocean as well as inland
waterways commerce." Jeffboat,
part of the Inland Waterways
Services Division of Texas Gas, is
known as the largest shipyard on
the country's vast network of in-
land waterways.
Designed to lay oil and natural
gas pipeline in any of the seas of
the world, the barge will house its
213-man crew in living quarters on
the second deck. As part of its life
support system, it carries its own
water purification and desalination
equipment. It also sports a full gal-
ley and dining area, a small hos-
pital, and two lounges equipped
with color television. The air-con-
ditioning equipment has sufficient
capacity to withstand the rigors of
working in the often 100-degree
weather in the Persian Gulf area.
The heating plant will allow the
barge to work in even the coldest
regions of the globe.
On the barge's 31,000-square-
foot main deck, pipeline will be
aligned and moved through five
welding, treatment and inspection
stations before it moves down the
stern ramp and feeds onto a 300-
foot submerged "stinger" which
will ease the pipe into place on
the ocean bottom.
Supporting the construction op-
erations will be two 100-ton cranes
on the forward deck to remove
pipe from supply barges and feed
it into the line. Across the stern
are the radio and generator shacks
and the control tower. Directly
behind them will be an elevated
heliport, providing the barge with
its only link to land during the
long weeks of construction.
Immediately after the side
launching, the barge was moored
at Jeffboat's fitting-out dock. Two
months' work there will complete
the barge's interior and deck,
readying it for an April delivery
trip to Louisiana. It will travel as
part of an American Commercial
Barge Line Company tow, -easily
clearing the locks and channels of
the Ohio and Mississippi with its
85-foot width and four-foot draft.
In Louisiana, it will be delivered
to the owners, Houston Contract-
ing Company.
"Ht tNl'STS ON froWC t/f>M7H MS "
Six Freedom Vessels
Bring IHI Total To 67
IHI (Ishikawajima - H a r i m a
Heavy Industries Co., Ltd.) of
Japan recently received orders for
six 14,800-dwt Freedom vessels.
One vessel was ordered by Wah
Kwong & Co. (H.K.) Ltd., Hong
Kong, one by the Northern Free-
dom Shipping Co., Liberia, two by
Pegasus Ocean Services Ltd., and
two by A. Halcoussis Shipping
Ltd., both of Greece.
The vessels will be built at IHI's
Tokyo and Nagoya shipyards with
deliveries scheduled for the latter
half of 1971 through mid-1972.
With these orders, the total num-
ber of Freedom vessels ordered
by foreign shipowners from IHI
reaches 67.
Freedom vessels are being mass-
produced at IHI's Tokyo and Na-
goya shipyards. However, the con-
struction work of Freedoms at the
Tokyo shipyard will be shifted to
the Nagoya shipyard in mid-1971
when building of the Fortune ves-
sel, a new standard type multi-pur-
pose cargo ship developed by IHI
in collaboration with G.T.R. Camp-
bell (International) Ltd. of Cana-
da, will be started there.
IHI is also planning to build
Freedom vessels at the Jurong
Shipbuilders Private Ltd., IHI's
new joint company in Singapore.
Principal characteristics of the
six Freedom vessels are: dead-
weight, 14,800 tons; gross ton-
nage, 9,600 tons; length, 440 feet;
breadth, 65 feet; depth, 40 feet;
draft, 30 feet; main engine, IHI-
S.E.M.T. 12PC2V-type Pielstick
diesel engine with an output of
5,130 bhp. The service speed of the
Freedom vessel is 13.6 knots.
Williams Dimond
Appoints Luckenbach
Williams, Dimond & Co., promi-
nent 108-year-old West Coast
steamship agency, representing
vessels trading with six continents,
announced the appointment of
Luckenbach Steamship Company
as its East Coast agent.
Luckenbach, celebrating its 120th
birthday, has operations in 12 East
Coast Atlantic and Gulf ports.
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April 1, 1970 47
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