Glen Class tugs: Difference between revisions
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| publisher=[[Canadian Department of National Defence]] | | publisher=[[Canadian Department of National Defence]] | ||
| author= | | author= | ||
| date= | | date=July 16, 2007 | ||
| accessdate=2008-02-13 | | accessdate=2008-02-13 | ||
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The crews of the fireboats are cross trained and able to crew a Glen class vessel in emergencies. | The crews of the fireboats are cross trained and able to crew a Glen class vessel in emergencies. | ||
Canada operated a fleet of tugs built during [[World War | Canada operated a fleet of tugs built during [[World War II]], which were also called the Glen class.<ref name=SfuGlenLargeTugs/> | ||
The vessels of the current Glen class are each named after one of the vessels of the earlier class. | The vessels of the current Glen class are each named after one of the vessels of the earlier class. | ||
The vessels of the earlier class were sold off into civilian service. | The vessels of the earlier class were sold off into civilian service. | ||
The World War | The World War II vintage ''Glenevis'' was still in civilian service as late as 2007. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/>[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 22 August 2024
The Canadian Armed Forces' Maritime Command operates five Glen class tugs.[1][2] The five vessels are the CFAV Glendyne (YTB 640), CFAV Glendale (YTB 641), CFAV Glenevis (YTB 642), CFAV Glenbrook (YTB 643) and CFAV Glenside (YTB 644). Glenevis, Glenbrook and Glenside are based in CFB Halifax, on Canada's East Coast. Glendyne and Glendale are based in CFB Esquimalt.
The Canadian Armed Forces operates six other smaller tugboats, the 140 ton CFAV Tillicum, and five 45 ton Ville class tugs.[3] The smaller tugs are also split between both coasts.
While the Glen class tugs are equipped for firefighting, the Canadian Armed Forces maintains a pair of dedicated Fire class fireboats, the 140 ton CFAV Firebrand (YTR 562) and the CFAV Firebird (YTR 561), one each in each port.[4] The crews of the fireboats are cross trained and able to crew a Glen class vessel in emergencies.
Canada operated a fleet of tugs built during World War II, which were also called the Glen class.[2] The vessels of the current Glen class are each named after one of the vessels of the earlier class. The vessels of the earlier class were sold off into civilian service. The World War II vintage Glenevis was still in civilian service as late as 2007.
displacement | 250 gross tons | ||||
length | 28.95m | ||||
beam | 9.29m | ||||
draught | 4.4m | ||||
powerplant | 2 x Ruston-Paxman diesels (1800hp) | ||||
propulsion | 2x voith-schneider cycloidal propellers | ||||
speed |
| ||||
crew | 6 - 10 | ||||
bollard pull | 19 tons |
References
- ↑ Esquimalt Harbour, Canadian Department of National Defence, July 16, 2007. Retrieved on 2008-02-13. mirror
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Canadian Forces Small Ships — the Glen class YTB Tractor Tug, Canadian American Strategic Review. Retrieved on 2008-02-13. mirror
- ↑ Canadian Forces Small Ships — the Ville class YTL Harbour Tug, Canadian American Strategic Review. Retrieved on 2008-02-13. mirror
- ↑ Canadian Forces Small Ships — the Fire class YTR Rescue Boats, Canadian American Strategic Review. Retrieved on 2008-02-13. mirror