m (→External links: Remove some templates. interwiki links, delink non military terms, add link to Wikipedia and cleanup) |
|||
Line 40: | Line 40: | ||
*Sail surface: 1800 m² (23 sails) |
*Sail surface: 1800 m² (23 sails) |
||
*Crew: 210 |
*Crew: 210 |
||
− | *Speed: 10 |
+ | *Speed: 10 knots (approximately 19 km/h) |
*Engine: 809 kW (diesel) |
*Engine: 809 kW (diesel) |
||
Revision as of 10:47, 7 January 2014
Mircea | |
Career (Romania) | |
---|---|
Name: | Mircea |
Builder: |
Blohm & Voss Hamburg, Germany |
Launched: | 1938 |
Acquired: | 17 May 1938 |
Status: | in service |
The Mircea is a three masted barque, built in 1938 in Hamburg by the Blohm & Voss shipyard as a training vessel for the Romanian Navy. Her design is based on the successful plans of the Gorch Fock; the last of a series of four sister ships. The ship is named after the Wallachian Prince Mircea the Elder. After World War II she was temporarily taken over by the USSR, but later returned to Romania. In 1966, she was overhauled by Blohm & Voss.
The Romanian Navy had an older ship with the same name which was operational from 1882 to 1944.
Specifications[1]
- Rump length: 73,7 m
- Overall length: 82,1 m
- Width: 12 m
- Height: 42 m
- Depth: 5,2 m
- Sail surface: 1800 m² (23 sails)
- Crew: 210
- Speed: 10 knots (approximately 19 km/h)
- Engine: 809 kW (diesel)
Sister ships
- Gorch Fock I (1933, ex Tovarishch (1951 to 2003))
- USCGC Eagle (1936, ex Horst Wessel)
- NRP Sagres III (1937, ex Albert Leo Schlageter)
- Herbert Norkus (begun 1939, unfinished)
- Gorch Fock II (1958)
Gallery
- Mircea at Toulon, Tall Ships’ Races, 2007
- Mircea at Brest, 2008
References
- ↑ (German)"Großsegler: Mircea, Schwesterschiff der "Gorch Fock"". Europäisches Segel-informations. http://www.esys.org/bigship/mircea.html. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
External links
The original article can be found at Mircea (ship) and the edit history here.