256-bit encryption
$500,000 protection
|
RV KNORR research ship
RV Knorr (AGOR-15)
was a research vessel formerly owned by the U.S.
Navy and operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution for the U.S. research community in
coordination with and as a part of
the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory
System (UNOLS) fleet.
Knorr was best
known as the ship that discovered the wreck of the
RMS Titanic in 1985. As opposed to the traditional
method of sonar, this was accomplished by towing the ROV Argo over the seafloor to search for debris.
The ship has anti-roll tanks and an ice-strengthened
bow enabling her to work in all of the world’s
oceans. She can take a crew of 22 and a scientific
party of 34 for as long as 60 days. Knorr was
designed to accommodate a wide range of
oceanographic tasks, with two instrument hangars,
eight scientific work areas, a fully equipped
machine shop, three oceanographic winches, and two
cranes.
In 2005–2006, the ship was refitted to support a new
“long-coring” system that could extract 150-foot
(46 m) plugs of ancient sediments from the sea
floor. Weighing nearly 25,000 pounds, the new
piston-coring system was the longest in the U.S.
research fleet (twice as long as existing
systems). This long-corer allowed scientists to
sample deep, ancient sediments that are rich with
historical information about the ocean and climate.
On December 4, 2014, the research vessel Knorr was
decommissioned after more than 40 years as the
workhorse of the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution research fleet. She traveled more than a million miles—the rough
equivalent of two round trips to the Moon or forty
trips around the Earth. On March 14,
2016, she was transferred to the Mexican
Navy and renamed Rio Tecolutla.
This Knorr
model reflects the real ship in 2006, during SW06
project (during her 40 years of service, she had several
changes.) It is a demonstration of ModelShipMaster.com's
ability to build highly customized models. The model was
commissioned by an
enthusiast and ship’s crew member
who
provided detailed plans of the ship. Because photos were
very limited, a lot of email communication and hand
drawings happened. If you want an authentic, high
detailed model of a research vessel or just any types of
ship, and if you feel that no other places can be nearly as good as we are,
click on this link to get a
quote.
|