RV Endeavor

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Career
Name: R/V Endeavor
Owner: National Science Foundation
Operator: University of Rhode Island's Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO)
Port of registry: U.S.
Builder: Peterson Builders, Inc., Sturgeon Bay, WI.
Laid down: 1975
Acquired: November 1976
Notes: Designed by John Gilbert Associates; Replaced R/V Trident; mid-life refit at Peterson Builders, Inc. in 1993
General characteristics
Tonnage: 298 GRT
Length: 185 feet OA, 165 feet WL[1]
Beam: 33 feet
Draught: 18 feet 6 inches (aft), 12 feet 6 inches (forward)
Propulsion: 1 GM/EMD diesel engine; 3,050 shaft HP @ 900 RPM (maximum), Single screw with controllable pitch, Kort steering nozzle; J. Samual White Waterjet, 320 HP, DC variable speed and direction bow thruster
Speed: 10 knots cruising, 14 knots full
Capacity: Maximum Scientific Load: 89,600 pounds (of which the 01 deck is limited to 22,400 pounds)
Notes: Sister ship of the RV Oceanus at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the RV Wecoma at Oregon State University


R/V Endeavor is a research vessel owned by the National Science Foundation and operated by the University of Rhode Island (URI) under a Charter Party Agreement as part of the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System (UNOLS) fleet. The vessel is homeported at the Narragansett, Rhode Island at the URI Bay Campus.[2]

The 185 foot Endeavor, built by Peterson Builders, Inc., Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin[3], replaced the R/V Trident in 1976.[4]

It was likely named for Captain James Cook's ship HMS Endeavour, for which the Space Shuttle Endeavour is also named.

References

  1. http://www.gso.uri.edu/rv-endeavor/specifications | URI Graduate School of Oceanography: Endeavor Specifications
  2. http://techserv.gso.uri.edu/ | ENDEAVOR Marine Operations
  3. http://techserv.gso.uri.edu/ship_specifications.asp | ENDEAVOR Specifications
  4. http://www.uri.edu/home/about/history_timeline.html | URI History and Timeline

External links