BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   Cruising (https://www.boatbanter.com/cruising/)
-   -   Shipping routes research (https://www.boatbanter.com/cruising/86321-shipping-routes-research.html)

[email protected] September 18th 07 03:08 PM

Shipping routes research
 
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?

With best wishes
Paul


Paul Cassel September 18th 07 03:21 PM

Shipping routes research
 
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?

Search engines your friend. A quick search revealed this:

http://sntg.com/solutions/routes/map/routes_v3.swf

A good start.

[email protected] September 18th 07 03:49 PM

Shipping routes research
 
On 18 Sep, 15:21, Paul Cassel
wrote:
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?


Search engines your friend. A quick search revealed this:

http://sntg.com/solutions/routes/map/routes_v3.swf

A good start.


Thanks!
It does present a bit of a mystery- how can such a ship, eastbound,
wind up in the vicinity of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland?


otnmbrd September 18th 07 04:18 PM

Shipping routes research
 
" wrote in
ups.com:

On 18 Sep, 15:21, Paul Cassel
wrote:
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?


Search engines your friend. A quick search revealed this:

http://sntg.com/solutions/routes/map/routes_v3.swf

A good start.


Thanks!
It does present a bit of a mystery- how can such a ship, eastbound,
wind up in the vicinity of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland?


Once answer.....weather routing

Don White September 18th 07 04:54 PM

Shipping routes research
 

"otnmbrd" wrote in message
.70...
" wrote in
ups.com:

On 18 Sep, 15:21, Paul Cassel
wrote:
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?

Search engines your friend. A quick search revealed this:

http://sntg.com/solutions/routes/map/routes_v3.swf

A good start.


Thanks!
It does present a bit of a mystery- how can such a ship, eastbound,
wind up in the vicinity of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland?


Once answer.....weather routing


or..how about 'great circle' routing? If you have a globe at home...streach
a string between the two points and you might be surprised where the path
covers.



[email protected] September 18th 07 05:20 PM

Shipping routes research
 
On 18 Sep, 16:18, otnmbrd wrote:
" wrote roups.com:



On 18 Sep, 15:21, Paul Cassel
wrote:
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?


Search engines your friend. A quick search revealed this:


http://sntg.com/solutions/routes/map/routes_v3.swf


A good start.


Thanks!
It does present a bit of a mystery- how can such a ship, eastbound,
wind up in the vicinity of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland?


Once answer.....weather routing


I think they would be aiming to head south owing to heavy ice warnings
at the time off Newfoundland.


Vic Smith September 18th 07 07:11 PM

Shipping routes research
 
On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 12:54:19 -0300, "Don White"
wrote:


"otnmbrd" wrote in message
. 3.70...
" wrote in
ups.com:

On 18 Sep, 15:21, Paul Cassel
wrote:
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?

Search engines your friend. A quick search revealed this:

http://sntg.com/solutions/routes/map/routes_v3.swf

A good start.

Thanks!
It does present a bit of a mystery- how can such a ship, eastbound,
wind up in the vicinity of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland?


Once answer.....weather routing


or..how about 'great circle' routing? If you have a globe at home...streach
a string between the two points and you might be surprised where the path
covers.

It surprises some to find if travel east from Chicago on the latitude
line the first foreign city you hit is Buffalo, NY. The second is
Rome, IT. But some people are surprised that you go east.

--Vic

Don White September 18th 07 07:34 PM

Shipping routes research
 

"Vic Smith" wrote in message
...

It surprises some to find if travel east from Chicago on the latitude
line the first foreign city you hit is Buffalo, NY. The second is
Rome, IT. But some people are surprised that you go east.

--Vic



Careful...O.J. may not like you refering to Buffalo NY as a 'foreign city'.



Evan Gatehouse[_2_] September 19th 07 05:57 AM

Shipping routes research
 
wrote:
Hi, I'm performing some research on shipping routes, and was wondering
if anyone could help? I was wondering what kind of routes, with
examples of lat,long coordinates a ship would follow it is was
following a "normal" route from Mobile, Al. to Liverpool?

With best wishes
Paul


There is no such thing as "Shipping Routes". Modern weather routing
for big ships mean that you'll find them all over the ocean as ships
avoid weather systems, or hitch on to ones with following winds.
Ships leaving from the same port 2 days apart will follow quite
different routes due to this reason.

Generally a great circle route is a good starting point.

Evan Gatehouse

Wayne.B September 19th 07 07:48 PM

Shipping routes research
 
On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 04:57:26 GMT, Evan Gatehouse
wrote:

There is no such thing as "Shipping Routes". Modern weather routing
for big ships mean that you'll find them all over the ocean as ships
avoid weather systems, or hitch on to ones with following winds.
Ships leaving from the same port 2 days apart will follow quite
different routes due to this reason.


Interesting, definitely makes sense when you think about it.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:57 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com