RV Denar 2
The RV Denar 2 is a Turkish research and survey vessel owned by TOMA Maritime S.A. Istanbul, Turkey and operated 2E Maritime in Istanbul, Turkey.[1] She was built by Sønderborg Skibsværft A/S in Sønderborg, Denmark. Christened Leila Bech, she was launched on January 12, 1974, and was commissioned under the Danish flag on May 1, 1974. After sailing under the Panamas and Ilaian flags, she was finally purchased by the Turkish private maritime company in October 2013 as the first and so far the only non-governmental vessel of her kind.[1][2] She was renamed "Denar", short for "Deniz Araştırmaları" (literally: sea surveys). She made her first operation in the Mediterranean Sea for the Northern Cyprus Water Supply Project, an international water diversion project designed to supply water for drinking and irrigation from southern Turkey to Northern Cyprus via undersea pipeline. With the help of her two remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROV), she was put into service at the construction projects of Marmaray, İzmit Bay Bridge and Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge in addition to deep sea surveys.[2] CharacteristicsVesselDenar 2 is 78.80 m (258 ft 6 in) long, with a beam of 13.25 m (43 ft 6 in) and a max. draft of 4.16 m (13 ft 8 in). Assessed at 2,033 GT, 2,997 DWT and 610 NT, the ship is propelled by a 1,589 kW (2,131 hp) diesel engine of type Alpha Burmeister & Wain 16V23HU - 4S 16cyl-Vee 225 x 300 Trp 750 rpm. She has a top speed of 11 knots (20 km/h) with 10 knots (19 km/h) in service.[3][4] She has capabilities for bathymetric surveys, oceanographic surveys, geological surveys, geophysical surveys and geotechnical engineering. Furthermore, she can be used in coastal management and ocean engineering applications such as submarine pipeline applications and for dredging services.[3] She has three cranes capable of lifting loads between 3.5–10 tonnes, and an A-frame for 20 tonnes. She is equipped with following instrumentation:[3] She carries two ROVs:[5] Work-class ROV (TRV-HD) capable of diving up to 1,000 m (3,300 ft) and carrying payloads up to 136 kg (300 lb):
Image-class ROV (Saab Seaeye Falcon) with diving capability of up to 300 m (980 ft):
She features the following equipment:[3] Multibeam echosounder (Kongsberg EM 1002)
InstrumentsShe has following capabilities:[3] Positioning system:[3] (Kongsberg-Simrad SDP 11),
Hydrographic survey systems:[3]
Oceanographic/meteorological survey systems:[3]
Geophysical survey systems:[3]
Geological survey and geotechnical systems:[3]
Software:[3]
Ship's register
See alsoReferences
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