Leyhörn (ship)
2017 on the Lower Weser
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The Leyhörn is a multi-purpose ship for the pollution control of the Lower Saxony State Agency for Water Management, Coastal Protection and Nature Conservation (NLWKN), North-Norderney. It is available to the emergency command to fight oil and pollutant accidents .
history
The Leyhörn was built in 2001 under the construction number 9150 at the Fassmer shipyard in Berne / Motzen. The keel of the ship was laid on February 20, the launch on April 25, 2001. The completion took place in October 2001. The ship is named after the peninsula of the same name .
Technical specifications
The ship is powered by two twelve-cylinder - four stroke - diesel engines each with 375 kW power driven, the two fixed-pitch propellers act. It can reach a speed of up to 11 knots . In the bow of the ship there is a cone jet as a cross- flow control system .
The deck superstructures are arranged in the front area of the ship. Behind it is an approximately 144 m² work and cargo deck. At the stern of the ship there is a ramp through which z. B. Implement can be brought on board. The ship is also equipped with an on-board crane that is installed behind the deckhouse.
To combat oil spills, the ship is equipped with a brush system for oil absorption. In addition, it has explosion protection equipment and a gas warning system as well as other special equipment for combating oil and pollutant accidents, which is always on board.
commitment
In everyday life, the Leyhörn mainly performs transport tasks in island and coastal protection. For example, the ship is often used to transport vehicles for dike maintenance on the East Frisian Islands , but also for the disposal of garbage containers. Since the ship can fall dry , the stern ramp can also be used independently of port facilities. The operating radius of the ship is 700 nautical miles .
To combat oil, the boom oil barriers installed on board can be extended with a length of 7.5 meters on each side, so that the width of the ship results in a pick-up width of around 23 meters. Oil on the water is fed to a brush system via the oil barriers. The system, equipped with four rotating brush discs on each side of the ship, picks up the oil from the surface of the water. It is pumped into the cargo tanks available for this purpose. In this way, up to 80 cubic meters of oil per hour and side of the ship can be siphoned off. The system works up to a wave height of 1.5 meters.
Web links
- Ship data , DNV GL
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Multi-purpose ship "Leyhörn" , Lower Saxony State Agency for Water Management, Coastal and Nature Conservation (PDF, 1.1 MB), accessed on September 14, 2012.
- ↑ Mowing column moves with Leyhörn . Langeoog News, October 14, 2011, accessed October 28, 2011.
- ^ The sign for Sunday ( memento from July 23, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ), Baltrum Online, October 15, 2011.
- ↑ MPV 40 , Fassmer (PDF, 233 kB). Retrieved May 7, 2019.