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Charles T. Low
 
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Default Queen Mary 2

This is larger than the Titanic by far. Interestingly (to me), many of the
lake freighters which sift by my small city of Brockville on the St.
Lawrence Seaway are longer than the Titanic. Perhaps it was a big ship _for
its time_.

With some difficulty, I found a QM2 specifications page at www.
cunard.co.uk, which said this:

====

Length: 345 meters / 1,132 feet
Beam: 41 meters / 135 feet
Beam at Bridge Wings: 45 meters / 147.5 feet
Draft: 10 meters / 32 feet 10 inches
Height (Keel to Funnel): 72 meters / 236.2 feet
Gross Tonnage:
Approximately 150,000 gross tons
Passengers: 2,620
Crew: 1,253
Top Speed: Approximately 30 knots (34.5 mph)
Power: 157,000 horsepower, environmentally friendly, gas turbine/diesel
electric plant
Propulsion: Four pods of 21.5 MW each; 2 fixed and 2 azimuthing
Strength: Extra thick steel hull for strength and stability for Atlantic
crossings
Stabilizers: Two sets
Cost: Estimated $800 million dollars

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

====

"Alice" wrote in message
...
The newspaper says the Queen Mary 2 is taller than the Statue of Liberty
- can generate enough power to light a small city, is longer and heavier
than an aircraft carrier - and it cost $800 million to build. It was
christened by Queen Elizabeth on Thursday 1/8. It weighs 151,400 tons
and has 1300 cabins, more than 900 of which have huge private balconies.
The average tab on a transatlantic crossing is $27,499. It has a
nigjtclub and a 1,094 seat Royal Court Theatre - a 3-story Brittania
Restaurant that seats more than 10,000 among other restaurants on board
- a Grand Lobby - a Canyon Ranch SpaClub and Illuminations room which
flaunts the first planetarium ever built for star-gazing on the high
seas - a Baltimoral Suite, a library and bookstore, and many other
surpises. I must check to see if the Titanic was larger!



  #2   Report Post  
Ken Heaton
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2


"Charles T. Low" wrote in message
...
This is larger than the Titanic by far. Interestingly (to me), many of the
lake freighters which sift by my small city of Brockville on the St.
Lawrence Seaway are longer than the Titanic. Perhaps it was a big ship

_for
its time_.


It and its two sisterships the Olympic and Britannic were the longest liners
in the world beating the previous best of the Cunard Liner Mauretania by 92
feet 6 inches.
--
Ken Heaton & Anne Tobin
Cape Breton Island, Canada
kenheaton AT ess wye dee DOT eastlink DOT ca

With some difficulty, I found a QM2 specifications page at www.
cunard.co.uk, which said this:

====

Length: 345 meters / 1,132 feet
Beam: 41 meters / 135 feet
Beam at Bridge Wings: 45 meters / 147.5 feet
Draft: 10 meters / 32 feet 10 inches
Height (Keel to Funnel): 72 meters / 236.2 feet
Gross Tonnage:
Approximately 150,000 gross tons
Passengers: 2,620
Crew: 1,253
Top Speed: Approximately 30 knots (34.5 mph)
Power: 157,000 horsepower, environmentally friendly, gas turbine/diesel
electric plant
Propulsion: Four pods of 21.5 MW each; 2 fixed and 2 azimuthing
Strength: Extra thick steel hull for strength and stability for Atlantic
crossings
Stabilizers: Two sets
Cost: Estimated $800 million dollars

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

====

"Alice" wrote in message
...
The newspaper says the Queen Mary 2 is taller than the Statue of Liberty
- can generate enough power to light a small city, is longer and heavier
than an aircraft carrier - and it cost $800 million to build. It was
christened by Queen Elizabeth on Thursday 1/8. It weighs 151,400 tons
and has 1300 cabins, more than 900 of which have huge private balconies.
The average tab on a transatlantic crossing is $27,499. It has a
nigjtclub and a 1,094 seat Royal Court Theatre - a 3-story Brittania
Restaurant that seats more than 10,000 among other restaurants on board
- a Grand Lobby - a Canyon Ranch SpaClub and Illuminations room which
flaunts the first planetarium ever built for star-gazing on the high
seas - a Baltimoral Suite, a library and bookstore, and many other
surpises. I must check to see if the Titanic was larger!





  #3   Report Post  
Alice
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2

Thanks for your response!




  #4   Report Post  
Ken Heaton
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2


"Charles T. Low" wrote in message
...
This is larger than the Titanic by far. Interestingly (to me), many of the
lake freighters which sift by my small city of Brockville on the St.
Lawrence Seaway are longer than the Titanic. Perhaps it was a big ship

_for
its time_.


It and its two sisterships the Olympic and Britannic were the longest liners
in the world beating the previous best of the Cunard Liner Mauretania by 92
feet 6 inches.
--
Ken Heaton & Anne Tobin
Cape Breton Island, Canada
kenheaton AT ess wye dee DOT eastlink DOT ca

With some difficulty, I found a QM2 specifications page at www.
cunard.co.uk, which said this:

====

Length: 345 meters / 1,132 feet
Beam: 41 meters / 135 feet
Beam at Bridge Wings: 45 meters / 147.5 feet
Draft: 10 meters / 32 feet 10 inches
Height (Keel to Funnel): 72 meters / 236.2 feet
Gross Tonnage:
Approximately 150,000 gross tons
Passengers: 2,620
Crew: 1,253
Top Speed: Approximately 30 knots (34.5 mph)
Power: 157,000 horsepower, environmentally friendly, gas turbine/diesel
electric plant
Propulsion: Four pods of 21.5 MW each; 2 fixed and 2 azimuthing
Strength: Extra thick steel hull for strength and stability for Atlantic
crossings
Stabilizers: Two sets
Cost: Estimated $800 million dollars

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

====

"Alice" wrote in message
...
The newspaper says the Queen Mary 2 is taller than the Statue of Liberty
- can generate enough power to light a small city, is longer and heavier
than an aircraft carrier - and it cost $800 million to build. It was
christened by Queen Elizabeth on Thursday 1/8. It weighs 151,400 tons
and has 1300 cabins, more than 900 of which have huge private balconies.
The average tab on a transatlantic crossing is $27,499. It has a
nigjtclub and a 1,094 seat Royal Court Theatre - a 3-story Brittania
Restaurant that seats more than 10,000 among other restaurants on board
- a Grand Lobby - a Canyon Ranch SpaClub and Illuminations room which
flaunts the first planetarium ever built for star-gazing on the high
seas - a Baltimoral Suite, a library and bookstore, and many other
surpises. I must check to see if the Titanic was larger!





  #5   Report Post  
Alice
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2

Thanks for your response!






  #6   Report Post  
Cynde Durnford-Branecki
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2

Charles,
I'm originally from Brockville & noticed your message about the length
of the Lakers when I was doing a search. My father was a ship's master
on them and they were very long for a reason, to get through the locks
on the St. Lawrence. There are no other ships around the world with
the Laker's narrow configuration.

Cynde




"Charles T. Low" wrote in message ...
This is larger than the Titanic by far. Interestingly (to me), many of the
lake freighters which sift by my small city of Brockville on the St.
Lawrence Seaway are longer than the Titanic. Perhaps it was a big ship _for
its time_.

With some difficulty, I found a QM2 specifications page at www.
cunard.co.uk, which said this:

====

Length: 345 meters / 1,132 feet
Beam: 41 meters / 135 feet
Beam at Bridge Wings: 45 meters / 147.5 feet
Draft: 10 meters / 32 feet 10 inches
Height (Keel to Funnel): 72 meters / 236.2 feet
Gross Tonnage:
Approximately 150,000 gross tons
Passengers: 2,620
Crew: 1,253
Top Speed: Approximately 30 knots (34.5 mph)
Power: 157,000 horsepower, environmentally friendly, gas turbine/diesel
electric plant
Propulsion: Four pods of 21.5 MW each; 2 fixed and 2 azimuthing
Strength: Extra thick steel hull for strength and stability for Atlantic
crossings
Stabilizers: Two sets
Cost: Estimated $800 million dollars

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

  #7   Report Post  
Charles T. Low
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2

Thanks, Cynde,

I think that largest that they will let through the locks is 730 feet long
and 75 feet wide. That leaves very little water around the ship in the lock!
And when I'm cruising along beside one in my 26 footer, I feel ve-e-ery
small! There are bigger locks and bigger ships on Lakes Huron and Superior,
but I don't think they can get onto the lower lakes from there. They must do
something like Detroit to Thunder Bay - that sort of thing (which is a
lo-o-ong way, for those of you who wonder why such big ships would be
required on mere "lakes").

Charles

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

====

"Cynde Durnford-Branecki" wrote in message
om...
Charles,
I'm originally from Brockville & noticed your message about the length
of the Lakers when I was doing a search. My father was a ship's master
on them and they were very long for a reason, to get through the locks
on the St. Lawrence. There are no other ships around the world with
the Laker's narrow configuration.

Cynde



  #8   Report Post  
Charles T. Low
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2

Thanks, Cynde,

I think that largest that they will let through the locks is 730 feet long
and 75 feet wide. That leaves very little water around the ship in the lock!
And when I'm cruising along beside one in my 26 footer, I feel ve-e-ery
small! There are bigger locks and bigger ships on Lakes Huron and Superior,
but I don't think they can get onto the lower lakes from there. They must do
something like Detroit to Thunder Bay - that sort of thing (which is a
lo-o-ong way, for those of you who wonder why such big ships would be
required on mere "lakes").

Charles

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

====

"Cynde Durnford-Branecki" wrote in message
om...
Charles,
I'm originally from Brockville & noticed your message about the length
of the Lakers when I was doing a search. My father was a ship's master
on them and they were very long for a reason, to get through the locks
on the St. Lawrence. There are no other ships around the world with
the Laker's narrow configuration.

Cynde



  #9   Report Post  
Cynde Durnford-Branecki
 
Posts: n/a
Default Queen Mary 2

Charles,
I'm originally from Brockville & noticed your message about the length
of the Lakers when I was doing a search. My father was a ship's master
on them and they were very long for a reason, to get through the locks
on the St. Lawrence. There are no other ships around the world with
the Laker's narrow configuration.

Cynde




"Charles T. Low" wrote in message ...
This is larger than the Titanic by far. Interestingly (to me), many of the
lake freighters which sift by my small city of Brockville on the St.
Lawrence Seaway are longer than the Titanic. Perhaps it was a big ship _for
its time_.

With some difficulty, I found a QM2 specifications page at www.
cunard.co.uk, which said this:

====

Length: 345 meters / 1,132 feet
Beam: 41 meters / 135 feet
Beam at Bridge Wings: 45 meters / 147.5 feet
Draft: 10 meters / 32 feet 10 inches
Height (Keel to Funnel): 72 meters / 236.2 feet
Gross Tonnage:
Approximately 150,000 gross tons
Passengers: 2,620
Crew: 1,253
Top Speed: Approximately 30 knots (34.5 mph)
Power: 157,000 horsepower, environmentally friendly, gas turbine/diesel
electric plant
Propulsion: Four pods of 21.5 MW each; 2 fixed and 2 azimuthing
Strength: Extra thick steel hull for strength and stability for Atlantic
crossings
Stabilizers: Two sets
Cost: Estimated $800 million dollars

====

Charles T. Low
- remove "UN"
www.boatdocking.com
www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat

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