Тёмный

Engines installed on YN 19360 Project Falcon, Heesen’s largest steel yacht to date 

Heesen Yachts
Подписаться 12 тыс.
Просмотров 10 тыс.
50% 1

The entire fit-out of Project Falcon’s engine room, including the installation procedure for this latest model of MTU engines, followed an entirely new procedure for Heesen.
In collaboration with Van Riel, a Dutch company renowned for complex industrial transportations, the two 13.2-ton engines were slid into the hull via the beach club and carefully positioned in the engine room.
The logistics were carefully prepared by Heesen in order to complete the operation smoothly and with the shortest time possible.
Measuring 60 metres overall and with a half-load displacement of approximately 800 tonnes, the yacht’s underwater lines are designed on the principles of Van Oossanen’s Fast Displacement Hull Form, refined by Heesen’s in-house naval architects. But an efficient shape is just one side of a carefully balanced equation. If the yacht is to fulfil its required performance parameters, engine selection is equally important.
MTU’s 4000 series engines, which are popular for being relatively small engines delivering a big power output, need no introduction. The power of these engines exactly fits the naval architects’ requirements, since they have MTU’s 1A ‘continuous’ rating, which makes the combination ideal. At their designated maximum of 1,800rpm, the 57-litre V12 M65Ls produce 1,920kW apiece, a combined total of more than 5,000 horsepower. This allows the yacht to cruise all day at her half-load design speed of 17.5 knots - and all night too, if necessary - giving her unparalleled fast passage-making abilities for a vessel of her waterline length.
Today, of course, the ability to cruise anywhere means little unless the yacht can also satisfy the emissions regulations wherever she happens to be - a point on which the owner made his requirements absolutely clear. Sensitive coastal environments identified by the International Maritime Organisation as Emissions Control Areas are almost invariably in some of the world’s most beautiful cruising grounds. So MTU’s selective catalytic reduction (SCR) system is a game-changer.
Designed for the 4000 series engines for installation as an integral component of the propulsion package, SCR filters out diesel particulates and introduces a reactant into the engine’s exhaust gases to turn harmful nitrogen oxides (NOx) into nitrogen and water.
The SCR set-up used in the new yacht will be the first of its kind - a compact new ‘flat box’ design with space-saving capabilities, which still satisfies all the latest IMO Tier-III regulations. To put that into context, the new regulations demand a 75 per cent reduction in NOx emissions and a 65 per cent drop in particulates compared with their previous iterations.
This is a completely new combination. MTU originally tested the system with the V20 version of the M65 engine. At Heesen, we are currently building a semi-displacement aluminium motor yacht with SCR, which has the V16 M65s. But YN 19360 Project Falcon, a 60-metre steel displacement yacht will be the first in the world with the SCR system alongside the V12s.
A world first for a world-class yacht, built to cruise anywhere in the world - a fitting testament to the collaboration between the owner, Heesen and MTU.
Subscribe to our channel for more videos.
Follow us on
/ heesenyachts
/ heesenyachts
/ heesen_yachts
And check out our website www.heesenyachts.com/
About Heesen:
A Dutch shipyard dedicated to pushing the boundaries in design, engineering and construction, Heesen is a company that continues to evolve. Since the time its founding father Frans Heesen acquired the business in 1978, it has been building superyachts in aluminium and steel that offer speed, style and fuel-efficient cruising. Its award-winning vessels continue to match the owner’s exacting demands, and its unrelenting focus on quality, craftsmanship and innovation has created one of the world’s most impressive shipbuilding legacies.
We look for talented people to join our team. Would you like to work with us? Check out the vacancies at werkenbij.heesenyachts.com/
#Heesen #smartengineering #luxuryyacht #superyacht #boating #shipyard

Авто/Мото

Опубликовано:

 

30 июл 2020

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 10   
@patrickabas1112
@patrickabas1112 4 года назад
Great to be able to see this stage as it is normally never visible. Loved it, more of this please
@theartist124
@theartist124 4 года назад
Everything put into these vessels are just out this world!
@kokomo9764
@kokomo9764 2 года назад
Extremely interesting.
@juvany_theislander3743
@juvany_theislander3743 4 года назад
This is incredible. 👏
@abdulazizalsaie9535
@abdulazizalsaie9535 4 года назад
Very professional job well done 👌👏👏
@chowsindahouse
@chowsindahouse 3 года назад
Some times a half inch takes hours when you work with massive hunks of raw steel and horse power.
@jerrymullen9661
@jerrymullen9661 4 года назад
Next time those engines are pulled out everyone that put them in will be retired. Awesome video!
@edwinnijland8482
@edwinnijland8482 4 года назад
Goed gedaan Luuks moeder 👍🏻
@genemorris2367
@genemorris2367 Месяц назад
This is not B75
Далее
Inside the Engine Room - 240ft SuperYacht
18:42
Просмотров 121 тыс.
Получилось у Миланы?😂
00:13
Просмотров 558 тыс.
Heesen Project Cosmos Joining Operations
8:18
Просмотров 20 тыс.
In-depth Look | Mega Yacht Engine Room
10:32
Просмотров 150 тыс.
Engine Room Tour | SuperYacht BOLD
14:57
Просмотров 126 тыс.
Heesen YN 19550 Project Altea: Welcome Aboard!
6:43
Просмотров 16 тыс.