Amur-class motorship
![]() River cruise ship Dunaj in Krems in 2002 | |
| Class overview | |
|---|---|
| Builders: | Österreichische Schiffswerften AG, Korneuburg, Austria |
| Built: | 1960 |
| Building: | 2 |
| Planned: | 2 |
| Completed: | 2 |
| Active: | 1 |
| General characteristics | |
| Tonnage: | GT |
| Displacement: | 850 t [1] |
| Length: | 85.8 m (281 ft)[2] |
| Beam: | 14.06 m (46.1 ft) |
| Draught: | 1.55 m (5.1 ft) |
| Decks: | 2 passenger decks |
| Installed power: | 2 × Deutz RBV8M 545 1,766 kilowatts (2,368 hp) |
| Propulsion: | 2[3] |
| Speed: | 29 km/h (18 mph; 16 kn) |
| Capacity: | 212 passengers |
| Crew: | 56 |
Amur class is a class of Russian river passenger ships.[4] It is named after the first ship in the class Amur, which in her turn was named after Amur River.
Two-deck cruise ships manufactured by Österreichische Schiffswerften AG at their shipyard in Korneuburg, Austria in 1960.
River cruise ships of the Austrian project Q-003
| Amur class motorships | ||
|---|---|---|
| No. | Original name | English transliteration |
| 1 | Амур | Amur |
| 2 | Дунай | Dunay |
Overview
| Amur class | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month and year of build | Hull No | Image | Name | Operator | Port of Registry | Flag | Status |
| 1960 | Image | Amur | Izmail → Budapest | | out of service June 2012, scrapped in Komárno [5] | ||
| 1960 | | Dunay | Ukr-Dunayskoye-Parohodstvo | Izmail | | No. 2-600852 (RSU) | |
See also
- List of river cruise ships
- Valerian Kuybyshev-class motorship
- Rossiya-class motorship (1952)
- Rossiya-class motorship (1973)
- Anton Chekhov-class motorship
- Vladimir Ilyich-class motorship
- Rodina-class motorship
- Baykal-class motorship
- Sergey Yesenin-class motorship
- Oktyabrskaya Revolyutsiya-class motorship
- Yerofey Khabarov-class motorship
- Dunay-class motorship
- Volga-class motorship
- Dmitriy Furmanov-class motorship
References
- ↑ Projekt 386, Displacement and draught
- ↑ Projekt 386, Technical data
- ↑ Projekt Q-003 (386): Ship drawings, technical data, list and photos (PDF, Naval architect Yevgeniy Leonidovich Smirnov' Library) (Russian)
- ↑ Projekt 386 (Q-003) (English)
- ↑ Амур (Russian)
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