Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Steinbauer also damaged three ships with a combined gross register tonnage of 16,967.
Gross register tonnage was defined by the Moorsom Commission in 1854.
The sisters were planned with a gross register tonnage of approximately 40,000, and maximum passenger capacity of 1246 persons.
Gross tonnage is different from gross register tonnage.
Wherever they go, whatever rocking motion there might be is minimal because of ships' stabilizers, gross registered tonnage (usually about 34,000 and up) and design.
U-14 completed six wartime patrols and sank nine ships totalling 12,344 Gross Register Tonnage.
In fact, after the Titanic's loss, Olympic was re-fitted and her gross registered tonnage was made slightly greater than Titanics had been.
Largest ferry in the world in terms of gross register tonnage, number of passengers carried and number of passenger berths (1977-1981).
A total of one hundred and seventeen merchant ships, with a gross registered tonnage of just under one million tons, plus cargo of another million.'
With a Gross Register Tonnage of 1152 tons she was an ocean-going trawler and was employed in France's deep sea fishery.
All three boats had successes during World War I, between them, sinking five ships with a combined gross register tonnage (GRT) of 22,391.
Gross register tonnage is not a measure of the ship's weight or displacement and should not be confused with terms such as deadweight tonnage or displacement.
The number of vessels to be permitted to fish in Mauretanian waters in future is significantly increased; and the permitted gross register tonnage is much more than doubled.
However, the new vessel was planned to be twice as large in terms of gross register tonnage as Aurella, and she was to have twice as many cabins.
These two measurements replaced gross register tonnage (GRT) and net register tonnage (NRT).
Ships built before that date were given 12 years to migrate from their existing gross register tonnage (GRT) to use of GT and NT.
She had a Gross Register Tonnage of 5,360 tons and, after requisition, was armed with two six inch guns, one twelve pound gun and an anti-aircraft gun.
Today, it is one of the country's top seaports for gross registered tonnage handled [7], also posting the highest cargo and passenger traffic in Region XIII.
Marinesko thus became the most successful Soviet submarine commander in terms of gross register tonnage (GRT) sunk, with 42,000 GRT to his name.
Gross register tonnage was replaced by gross tonnage in 1994 under the Tonnage Measurement convention of 1969, and is no longer a widely used term in the industry.
'. Liberia (which held the third largest gross registered tonnage on the Lloyds Register of Shipping Statistical Tables, 1958) and Panama (eighth largest) were not elected.
It is calculated by reducing non-revenue-earning spaces i.e. spaces not available for carrying cargo, for example engine rooms, fuel tanks and crew quarters, from the ship's gross register tonnage.
During the campaign Decima MAS took part in more than a dozen operations which sank or damaged five warships and 20 merchant ships totalling 130,000 GRT (Gross Register Tonnage) .
Instead, then, of deleting the reference to capacity, which is necessary to scientific analysis, we want to improve the reference by, for example, specifying the classes of vessels, which can be summarised by reference to gross registered tonnage.