Dmitriy Furmanov-class motorship
River cruise ship General Lavrinenkov - Project 302 / BiFa129M | |
Class overview | |
---|---|
Builders: |
|
Operators: | Vodohod |
Preceded by: | Vladimir Ilyich class (301) |
Succeeded by: | 303 |
Built: | 1983–1992 |
In service: | 1983 |
Building: | 27 + 1 |
Planned: | 28 |
Completed: | 27 + 1 |
Active: | 28 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | River cruise ship |
Tonnage: | 5,414 – 6,130 GT;[2] 5,475 GT (302MK)[3] |
Displacement: | 3,852 t |
Length: | 129.1 m (424 ft)[4] |
Beam: | 16.7 m (55 ft) |
Draught: | 2.9 m (9.5 ft) |
Decks: | 4 passenger decks |
Installed power: | 3 × 6ЧРН36/45 (ЭГ70-5)2,208 kilowatts (2,961 hp) |
Propulsion: | 3 |
Speed: | 26 km/h (16 mph; 14 kn) |
Capacity: | 332 passengers |
Crew: | 98 |
Dmitriy Furmanov class is a class of Russian river passenger ships, project 302, 302M, 302MK / German name BiFa129M.[5]
The class is named after the first ship in the class Dmitriy Furmanov, which in her turn was named after Dmitry Furmanov.
Four-deck cruise ships manufactured in Boizenburg, Germany, 1983–1992.[6]
River cruise ships of the German project 302, 302M, 302MK / BiFa129M
Dmitriy Furmanov-class motorships | ||
---|---|---|
No. | Original name | English transliteration |
First series of Project 302 | ||
1 | Дмитрий Фурманов | Dmitriy Furmanov |
2 | Академик Виктор Глушков (Академiк Вiктор Глушков, Академик Глушков, Игорь Стравинский) | Akademik Viktor Glushkov (Akademik Viktor Glushkov (ukr.), Akademik Glushkov, Igor Stravinskiy) |
3 | Новиков-Прибой (Сергей Дягилев) | Novikov-Priboy (Sergey Dyagilev) |
4 | Алексей Сурков (Викинг Хельги) | Aleksey Surkov (Viking Helgi) |
5 | Константин Симонов | Konstantin Simonov |
6 | Леонид Соболев | Leonid Sobolev |
7 | Михаил Шолохов | Mikhail Sholokhov |
Second series of Project 302 | ||
8 | Алексей Ватченко (Иван Бунин) | Aleksey Vatchenko (Ivan Bunin) |
9 | Юрий Андропов | Yuriy Andropov |
10 | Зосима Шашков | Zosima Shashkov |
11 | Генерал Ватутин (Генерал Ватутiн, General Vatutin) | General Vatutin (ukr. General Vatutin, General Vatutin) |
12 | Русь | Rus[7] |
13 | Ленин | Lenin |
14 | Сергей Киров (Викинг Трувор) | Sergey Kirov (Viking Truvor) |
15 | Маршал Рыбалко (Зiрка Днiпра) | Marshal Rybalko (Zirka Dnipra) |
16 | Маршал Кошевой (Викинг Акун) | Marshal Koshevoy (Viking Akun) |
17 | Георгий Чичерин | Georgiy Chicherin |
18 | Леонид Красин | Leonid Krasin |
19 | Николай Бауман (Княжна Анастасия) | Nikolay Bauman (Knyazhna Anastasiya) |
20 | Генерал Лавриненков | General Lavrinenkov |
21 | Нарком Пахомов (Викинг Ингвар) | Narkom Pakhomov (Viking Ingvar) |
Third series of Project 302 | ||
22 | Глеб Кржижановский | Gleb Krzhizhanovskiy |
23 | Максим Литвинов | Maksim Litvinov |
Fourth series of Project 302 | ||
24 | Тарас Шевченко (Т. Г. Шевченко) | Taras Shevchenko (T. G. Shevchenko) |
25 | Константин Станюкович (仙妮 or Xiānnī) | Konstantin Stanyukovich (Xian Ni) |
26 | Аркадий Гайдар (仙娜 or Xiānnà) | Arkadiy Gaydar (Xian Na) |
27 | Александр Грин (仙婷 or Xiāntíng) | Aleksandr Grin (Xian Ting) |
28 | planned as Владимир Высоцкий, but was built as Ocean Diva Original | planned as Vladimir Vysotskiy, but was built as Ocean Diva Original |
Overview
Year of build | Yard No | Image | Name | Owner | Operator | Port of Registry | Flag | IMO | Status |
Project 302 - First Series | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 1983 | 378 | Dmitriy Furmanov | Kama Three Shipping Co | Iridiy | Perm → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8218598 | RRR number: 160219[8] | |
August 1983 | 379 | Igor Stravinskiy | Rechflotinvest | Doninturflot | Kherson → Rostov-on-Don | → → | 8326008 | originally, the Akademik Viktor Glushkov,formerly , Akademik Glushkov RRR number: 160220[9] | |
October 1983 | 380 | Sergey Dyagilev | Doninturflot | Doninturflot | Rostov-on-Don | → | 8326010 | originally, the Novikov-Priboy (until 2011)RRR number: 160221[10] | |
June 1984 | 381 | Viking Helgi | Passazhirskiy Flot | Passazhirskiy Flot | Leningrad → Saint Petersburg | → | 8422606 | originally, the Aleksey Surkov MMSI number: 273367610RRR number: 160222[11] | |
September 1984 | 382 | Konstantin Simonov | Vodohod | Vodohod | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8422618 | MMSI number: 277333444RRR number: 160223[12] | |
April 1985 | 383 | Leonid Sobolev | Vodohod | Vodohod | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8501000 | RRR number: 160224[13] | |
June 1985 | 384 | Mikhail Sholokhov | Doninturflot | Doninturflot | Rostov-on-Don | → | 8521919 | RRR number: 160225[14] | |
Project 302 - Second Series | |||||||||
July 1985 | 385 | Ivan Bunin | Doninturflot | Doninturflot | Kiev → Kherson → Moscow → Rostov-on-Don | → → | 8521921 | originally, the Aleksey Vatchenko (until 2006)RRR number 219748[15] | |
February 1986 | 386 | Yuriy Andropov | Volga Shipping | Volga Shipping | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8620105 | RRR number: 219749[16] | |
July 1986 | 387 | Zosima Shashkov | V. F. Passazhirskiye Perevozki | Vodohod | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8620090 | MMSI number: 273368010 RRR number: 219750[17] | |
September 1986 | 388 | General Vatutin | Chervona Ruta | Chervona Ruta | Kherson → Belize | → → | 8620088 | originally, the General Vatutin as Russian Генерал Ватутин (until 1993) MMSI number: 312353000RSU number: 2-010193 | |
May 1987 | 389 | Rus | Vodohod | Vodohod | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8707666 | MMSI number: 273358150 RRR number: 219752[18] | |
June 1987 | 390 | Lenin | Vodohod | Vodohod | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8707678 | RRR number: 222701[19] | |
September 1987 | 391 | Viking Truvor | Passazhirskiy Flot | Passazhirskiy Flot | Leningrad → Saint Petersburg | → | 8707680 | originally, the Sergey Kirov MMSI number: 273360710RRR number: 222702[20] | |
March 1988 | 392 | Zirka Dnipra | Chervona Ruta | Chervona Ruta | Kiev → Kherson | → | 8707692 | originally, the Marshal Rybalko (until 2005) MMSI number: 272020700RSU number: 2-000191 | |
July 1988 | 393 | Viking Akun | Passazhirskiy Flot | Passazhirskiy Flot | Kherson → Rostov-on-Don → Saint Petersburg | → → | 8707707 | originally, the Marshal Koshevoy MMSI number: 273332470RRR number: 222704[21] | |
September 1988 | 394 | Georgiy Chicherin | Vodohod | Vodohod | Gorky → Nizhny Novgorod | → | 8822507 | MMSI number: 273999993RRR number: 222705[22] | |
March 1989 | 395 | Leonid Krasin | Mosturflot | Mosturflot | Moscow | → | 8922448 | MMSI number: 273364310 RRR number: 222706[23] | |
June 1989 | 396 | Knyazhna Anastasiya | Mosturflot | Mosturflot | Moscow | → | 8922450 | originally, the Nikolay Bauman, USSR Flag and factory acceptance protocol on 27 June 1989RRR number: 222707[24] | |
March 1990 | 397 | General Lavrinenkov | Doninturflot | Doninturflot | Kherson → Rostov-on-Don | → → | 8963595 | MMSI number: -8963595 RRR number: 222708[25] | |
June 1990 | 398 | Viking Ingvar | Passazhirskiy Flot | Passazhirskiy Flot | Leningrad → Saint Petersburg | → | originally, the Narkom PakhomovRRR number: 222709[26] | ||
July 1990 | 301 | Gleb Krzhizhanovskiy | Moskva River Shipping | Mosturflot | Moscow | → | RRR number: 222710[27] | ||
April 1991 | 302 | Maksim Litvinov | Doninturflot | Doninturflot | Rostov-on-Don | → | RRR number: 225814 [28] autumn 2011 hotelship in the Kurmangazy oil field (Курмангазы) | ||
September 1991 | 303 | T. G. Shevchenko | Kaspii Ak Zhelken | Kaspii Ak Zhelken | Kherson → Aqtau → Novorossiysk | → → | 8925036 | MMSI number: 273341690 RRR number: 225815[29] since autumn 2011 hotelship in the Kurmangazy oil field (Курмангазы) | |
October 1991 | 304 | Xian Ni | Regal China Cruises | Regal China Cruises | Nantong | originally, the Konstantin Stanyukovich[30] | |||
November 1991 | 305 | Image | Xian Na | Regal China Cruises | Regal China Cruises | Nantong | originally, the Arkadiy Gaidar (ru. Аркадий Гайдар); 3 Princesses on the picture [31] | ||
December 1991 | 306 | Xian Ting | Regal China Cruises | Regal China Cruises | Nantong | originally, the Aleksandr Grin (ru. Александр Грин); Three Princesses in the picture[32] | |||
1996 (hull); 2003 | 307 | Ocean Diva Original | Oceandiva | Oceandiva | Amsterdam | *planned as Vladimir Vysotskiy [33][34] | |||
See also
- List of river cruise ships
- Valerian Kuybyshev-class motorship
- Rossiya-class motorship (1952)
- Rossiya-class motorship (1973)
- Anton Chekhov-class motorship
- Vladimir Ilyich-class motorship
- Rodina-class motorship
- Baykal-class motorship
- Sergey Yesenin-class motorship
- Oktyabrskaya Revolyutsiya-class motorship
- Yerofey Khabarov-class motorship
- Dunay-class motorship
- Volga-class motorship
References
- ↑ Web-Archiv Projekt 302
- ↑ Теплоход Дмитрий Фурманов (in Russian)
- ↑ T. G. Shevchenko Vessel's Details
- ↑ Projekt 302 (in Russian)
- ↑ Long voyage passenger ships (in Russian)
- ↑ Specifications Archived February 24, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Sample for Русь from RS (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160219 Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160220 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160221 Archived January 13, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160222 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160223 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160224 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 160225 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 219748 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 219749 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 219750 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 219752 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222701 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222702 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222704 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222705 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222706 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222707 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222708 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222709 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222710 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 225814 (in Russian)
- ↑ Vessel 222815 (in Russian)
- ↑ Xian Ni (Princess Jeannie) (in Russian)
- ↑ 3 Princesses on the picture
- ↑ Three Princesses in the picture
- ↑ The Vladimir Vysotskiy in the Elbewerft Boizenburg GmbH shipyard, 1992
- ↑ Ocean Diva on De Binnenvaart
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.