Silvercrest Submarines Newsletter
(Jan 2004).
As always we have a wide range of submarines
(big and small), plus workclass and eyeball Rovs for sale. Priced
to suit all budgets and tasks. Silvercrest Submarines can arrange
submarine maintenance, and Pilot Training courses for purchasers.
Submarine certification and refit programmes can also be provided.
Further information available on request. Contact us at anytime
to discuss the options and to exchange ideas.
Submersibles for sale.
For sale in excellent condition, a four-man
(1000ft depth rated) submersible with diver lockout facility.
Also immediately available a range of multi passenger tourist
submarines (ten to forty passenger). Small two / three man submersibles,
and one-man ADS units. Pilot training and maintenance courses
are arranged to support every submarine sale if required. Please
contact us to discuss your exact requirements.
A state of the art three-man submersible with
a very high-tech image, operational depth: 300ft (100m). Stainless
steel hull, nickel sodium batteries. Domed acrylic viewports for
all crew members. This submersible is ideal for a range of underwater
activities and especially for yacht based recreation. New build
with test dives just completed.
OCEAN-EXPLORER.
This privately manufactured submarine, together
with three support vessels is now for sale. Completed in 1989, with
over 12 years of design, research and development. Depth:
1000ft approximately (unmanned to 3,500 feet, as designed). Weight:
12000 lbs. Surface speed: 10kts with surface range 400 miles on
diesel power and underwater range 25 miles on fully charged batteries.
Viewports: fourteen 9-inch ports 1 1/2" thick, plus one 3" port
(top hatch cover). Life support: two people for up to seven days.
Trailer: custom-built, tandem. Dive missions have been completed
off the east coast of the United States, south Florida, the Keys,
the Gulf and Caribbean. (Currently in warehouse storage). Price
US$195,000. Three surface support vessels included in the sale price
(35ft Long Range Flybridge Live Aboard, 23ft Center Console Transport,
and 11ft Avon Sub Tender Inflatable).
Worlds Most Innovative Non-Nuclear Submarine.
The German Navy will be getting a revolutionary
new submarine the 212A class. Conventional does not really
do justice to it,non-nuclear would be better. The new submarine's
outstanding feature is its atmospheric air independent propulsion
system. This propulsion system is based on a quiet-running hydrogen
fuel cell which not only makes the submarine very difficult to detect
but also allows it to stay submerged for a long period of time.
SC-BUG SUBMERSIBLE.
A small privately constructed submersible designed
for two or three persons. Ideal for underwater filming, research,
and personal recreation. Operating Depth: 500ft (test depth 725ft).
Length 12ft and width 5ft. Numerous viewports. Life support for
three days. Over 500 dives completed todate. Training course available.
Offers over US$50,000.
SM-202.
This is an exciting leisure submarine, which is
ideal for underwater filming and pleasure activities in shallow
water depths. Exceptional 360-degree viewing, through the acrylic
hull. Operating Depth: 150ft(50m) with possible upgrade to 100m.
Weight: 4tons. Crew: One pilot and two passengers. External lights,
underwater communications, and sonar.
Dual Deepworker Submersibles.
This exciting package of dual Deepworker submersibles
is now available for sale. Each Deepworker is a one-man tetherless
submersible capable of working in depths up to 2000ft. Certification:
Lloyd's Register of Shipping.
Submersible pilots in the past have been constrained
to only piloting the vehicle and monitoring his systems, which are
critical tasks. Deepworker operators can be alleviated from a number
of these tasks due to technology, modernization and the inherent
ergonomic design of this particular vehicle. In this design the
pilot is seated upright. The view port is a 25" hemispherical dome.
The pilot can enter desired depth and heading data into the PLC
and Instruct the PLC to maintain that course, depth and heading.
The PLC will continue to perform that function until cancelled by
the pilot. The versatility of the PLC along with the ancillary computer
also allows for other capabilities such as acoustic electronic communication
of critical operational information with the surface vessel. The
submersible is outfitted with a six-function manipulator. Additional
hydraulic tooling is easily integrated such as water jets, suctions,
and guillotines. An additional manipulator can be installed for
specific dexterity requirements. US$1.6 million (Dual Deepworker
package).
UNCOVERING SECRETS OF (ANOTHER) LOST CIVIL
WAR SUBMARINE.
A joint research project is yielding new details
about the U.S. Navy's first submarine, the USS “Alligator.”
The U.S. National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration and the
U.S. Navy's Office of Naval Research joined forces to uncover the
secrets of a technological marvel of the Civil War era akin to
the USS “Monitor” ironclad warship and the Confederate submarine
CSS “Hunley” -- the USS Alligator. Launched in 1862,
the Alligator was the U.S. Navy's first submarine. While the
vessel represented a significant leap forward in naval engineering,
complete information about its design and fate has been elusive.
Today, NOAA and ONR released findings that help fill large
gaps in the history of the all-but-forgotten Union submarine, including
details about the Alligator's inventor, innovative features, and
loss in April 1863. “NOAA is excited to partner with the Office
of Naval Research to bring the largely untold story of the Alligator
to the public," said Dr. Richard W. Spinrad, assistant administrator
for NOAA's National Ocean Service. "Through the Alligator
Project, we are learning not only about revolutionary developments
in maritime technology but also the American Civil War experience
and the pioneering spirit that built our great nation."
Chief of Naval Research RAdm. Jay Cohen added, "The Alligator Project
will test our ability to find an object in the sea in a reasonable
amount of time and at a reasonable cost. If we can find the
Alligator, we can find anything." Among the NOAA-ONR
research team's recent discoveries are the only design drawings
of the Alligator found to date. Drafted by French inventor
Brutus de Villeroi, the drawings provide new details about the vessel's
architecture and breakthrough technologies, including the first
diver lockout chamber ever devised for a submarine as a weapons
system. NOAA discovered Villeroi's original, hand-drawn designs
in France in May 2003 after a search for Alligator-related
documents led to the French navy's historical archives, the Service
Historique de la Marine. Along with the design drawings,
NOAA also found a number of original, hand-written letters exchanged
by Villeroi and the French government. The letters document
Villeroi's repeated but unsuccessful attempts to persuade the
government of his native country to purchase his submarine design.
An 1863 letter provides clues about the loss of the Alligator
off the coast of North Carolina while it was being towed by the
USS Sumpter from Washington, D.C., to Charleston, South Carolina. The
information released, including images of the Alligator design drawings,
historical documents, and a map depicting the last reported
position of the submarine, are available on the Alligator Project
website at http://www.sanctuaries.noaa.gov/alligator/
TAURUS.
A multi purpose submersible, designed for one-atmosphere
operations, diver lockout, dry transfer, and submarine rescue (DSRV).
This submersible is in excellent condition and dive ready. Suitable
for underwater tourism, scientific research, search and salvage,
and a range of military tasks. Crew: six (normal), six (diver lockout
operations), twenty-two (DSRV operations). Operational Depth: 1200ft
(400m). Weight: 22 tons. One large front viewport, one large aft
viewport, four tower viewports, one lower viewport. Fitted with
external lighting, sonar system, acoustic tracking, communications,
manipulator arm, and hydraulic cable cutter. US$597,600.
Mapping Uncharted Waters.
An autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) called
Autosub is about to become the first surveyor to breach one of the
last unknown regions of the world. It will plunge into the unexplored
pockets of the sea beneath the ice shelves of Antarctica. Travelling
through the Amundsen Sea under the Pine Island Glacier ice shelf,
Autosub will gather data for four projects sponsored by the Natural
Environment Resource Council. The aim is to understand the interactions
between the glacier and the ocean, which may reveal the effects
of global warming on the Antarctic region.
Adventurer-Sub for sale.
"DEAR ALAN,
I have a Sub for sale (140ft depth, 3 crew) made
by a small company in Florida.The inside of the sub is almost
complete. The a/c gets installed next week. The dash is complete
and looks great.The sub has been tested about 15 times and the biggest
problem was the diesel and electric engines. But that is all fixed
now. The tests where all in shallow water (25 ft.or less). More
tests have to be done to find neutral buoyancy. The sub is
not finished, but all the equipment is 100% paid for, with
all parts and labour under a one year warranty. To finish the
sub it will take testing and very little money. The builder
says he will not build another one like mine for under $250,000.
Iupgraded almost every part over the last two years. I have registered
the boat in Florida and the coast guard have approved it. This submarine
would be a great buy for any enthusiast. Please inform all your
readers."
FREE-DIVING WORLD RECORD SET
Cabo San Lucas, México -- Off the coast here,
Pipin Ferreras set a new no limits free-diving world record of 558
feet (170 meters). Dr. Titanic, used manned submersibles and
above and below water cameras to document the record. The dive
took place at 11:30 a.m. in calm seas and light winds. The
water temperature at the surface was 82°F and 55°F at 558 feet. The
depth was confirmed using a precision instrument carried on Pipin's
back, said McCoy. The cylindrical device, which contains a
microprocessor, is accurate to within 3 inches and has been used
to certify free-diving world records since 1995. For more,
contact sales@oceansensors.com
Medium Tourist Submarine for sale.
A new-build medium size multi passenger tourist
submarine, designed for the underwater leisure market. Operating
Depth: 300ft (100m). Crew: Two pilots and twenty-four passengers.
Weight: 35 tons. Large viewports on all sides. External lights,
communications, video and sonar.
DRUGS FROM THE SEA - ELUSIVE CANCER KILLER'S
DEEP-SEA HIDEOUT DISCOVERED.
Ft. Pierce, Florida, USA -- In 1984, Harbor Branch
Oceanographic Institution scientists discovered a small piece of
sponge in the deep waters off the Bahamas that harboured chemical
with a remarkable ability to kill cancer cells in laboratory tests.
Despite almost two decades of subsequent searching, the group was
never able to find enough of the sponge to fully explore its potential.
But now that process can finally be in because, thanks to some creative
detective work, the team has found the animal's secret hiding place
and collected enough of it to support years of intense research.
"It's just amazing," says Dr. Amy Wright, director of HBOIs Biomedical
Marine Research, of the sponge she has been in a career-long quest
to find. "This is our next cure, I know it's our next cure."
A chemical produced within the sponge, which has not yet been given
an official name, has proven in one test of cancer-fighting potential
to be about 400 times more potent than Taxol®, a widely used treatment
for breast and other forms of cancer. As important, preliminary
experiments have also shown the compound to be fairly non-toxic
to normal cells. But the limited amount of the sponge
initially collected was not enough to carry the team through the
long process of developing a potential medical treatment, which
involves careful study of exactly how a chemical kills cancer cells
and of its chemical structure.
On various expeditions over the years, scientists
found only tiny pieces of the sponge, then last year two slightly
larger pieces, but still they did not have enough to do the required
research. So, in preparation for a cruise this year to the
Bahamas that ran from October 9th through the 24th, Wright and her
team used clues from where each piece had been collected to put
together a profile of the habitat where it must live. The
sponge was found in water more than 1,000 feet deep in an area the
researchers often refer to as the "dead zone" because it is
generally characterized by bare rock and very low biodiversity.
The sponge, which can grow to about the size of a softball, had
eluded researchers for so long because they generally avoid this
area in favour of exploring more diverse habitats. Wright
predicts that the quantity of the sponge collected on the expedition
using the submersible should be enough to carry the team through
the full multiyear drug discovery process, possibly
even to the first phase of human trials. "I never thought
I would see that much of the sponge ever," says Wright, "Now we
have enough to move forward." Harbor Branch has already patented
nearly a hundred potential pharmaceuticals from the tens of thousands
of the organisms the Biomedical Marine Research group has collected
since the 1980s at sites around the globe. Several of these
are in various stages of development as potential commercial drugs. Discodermolide,
a compound produced by a deep-water sponge found in the Bahamas,
is currently in the first phase of human trials as a cancer treatment.
For more information about this expedition as well as background
articles on the team's research, visit Harbor Branch's online expedition
site.
Hyball Rov available for sale.
In excellent condition, all latest circuit boards
and modifications. Extensive spare parts package included. Training
course available. Fantastic buy, a bargain.
NORWEGIAN, FINNISH NAVIES USING HUGIN AUV &
MINESNIPER
Horten, Norway -- Following successful operations
with Kongsberg Maritime's Hugin AUV early September in Luce Bay,
Scotland, (in conjunction with the NATO exercise Northern Light*),
the Royal Norwegian Navy mine hunter HNoMS Karmøy transferred east
to Finnish waters for further challenges with the Hugin AUV and
Minesniper mine disposal vehicle, according to company spokeswoman.
In co-operation with the Finnish Navy, a series of survey tests
were carried out over a one-and-a-half-week time period to test
and evaluate the Karmøy`s capability to detect, classify, and neutralize
mine threats using the vessels complete range of mine countermeasure
capability, including the Hugin, the MICOS 2 system, and the Minesniper
mine disposal vehicle. Several missions were conducted in different
areas to demonstrate the Hugin's capability in REA and MCM operations,
including mine detection, localization, and classification.
The vehicle was mostly run in autonomous mode, surfacing at regular
intervals for vehicle navigation system updates by global positioning
system (GPS) and communication with the mother ship via the radio
link. Submerged, the acoustic links were used to communicate
vehicle status and changes to the mission, if found necessary.
For most of the operations, the Hugin was operated autonomously
at very remote distances from the mother ship. For more information,
contact Kongsberg Maritime Sales department on +47 3302 3938, e-mail
subsea@kongsberg.com.
SUBMARINE MUSEUM SEEKING HELP.
Colchester, Essex,
U.K. Robin Webb writes: " I am a Trustee of the Royal Navy Submarine
Museum in Gosport, Hants. The museum is planning to put the
miniature submersible LR3 under permanent cover shortly. If
there are any ex-pilots or crew members of LR3 or similar vessels
who would like to volunteer to assist in the restoration, could
they please contact me or the museum".
U.S. NAVY ANNOUNCES SSGN CONVERSION CONTRACT
AWARD.
General Dynamics Electric Boat Corp. was awarded
a cost-plus-incentive-fee contract worth $222 million for the
conversion of the first Ohio-class guided missile submarine (SSGN),
USS Ohio (SSGN 726), and for long lead time material and conversion
installation planning for the conversion of Ohio-class ballistic
missile submarines (SSBNs), the USS Michigan (SSBN 727) and the
USS Georgia (SSBN 729), to SSGN 727 and SSGN 729, respectively.
Emphasizing the importance of SSGNs, Navy Secretary Gordon R. England
said, "The SSGN is an example of the Navy's innovative transformation
that supports our joint warfighters. With well over 20 years
of life remaining, the SSGN conversion will significantly increase
the strike capability and the flexibility of our special forces." The
December 18 award modifies a contract with Electric Boat originally
awarded on September 26, 2002, for SSGN detail design, long lead
time material, and conversion planning. The contract also
provides priced options totalling $152 million for the fiscal 2004
conversion of SSBN 728 (USS Florida) to SSGN 728 and for the completion
of conversion installation planning for SSGN 729. Upon completion
of their conversions, the SSGNs will be able to carry up to 154
Tomahawk missiles and to function as the host platform for 66 special
operations forces. SSGN 726 began its engineering overhaul
(ERO) at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in November 2002 and began conversion
work in November 2003. SSGN 728 began its ERO at Norfolk Naval
Shipyard in August 2003 with conversion start planned in April 2004.
Both the SSGN 726 and the SSGN 728 will complete conversion in fiscal
2006.
Mergo Submarine for sale.
The Mergo is a tourist submarine, safe and comfortable,
designed for the smaller tourist resort. This submarine is ideal
for start-up operations, and organisations entering the underwater
market for the first time. Operating Depth 300ft (100m). Crew: One
pilot and ten passengers. Weight: 24 tons. Large front viewport,
large tower viewport, ten large individual passenger viewports.
External lights, sonar, acoustic tracking, video and communications.
US$998,000k
OTHER U.S. MILITARY CONTRACT NEWS.
Electric Boat Corp., Groton, Connecticut, was
awarded a $42.1 million contract modification for the execution
of the USS Seawolf (SSN 21) selected restricted availability (SRA).
The U.S. Navy Supervisor of Shipbuilding Conversion & Repair,
Groton Connecticut, is the contracting activity.
Lockheed Martin Corp., Maritime Systems & Sensors (LMMSS), Manassas,
Virginia, was awarded a not-to-exceed $117.2 million letter contract
for level-of-effort supporting the acoustic rapid commercial off-the-shelf
(COTS) Insertion (A-RCI) program. The letter contract was
awarded for engineering and technical services and associated materials
for the design and development of upgrades, systems support, and
production of A-RCI upgrade kits for the A-RCI Program. A-RCI
is a sonar system upgrade installed on SSN 688, SSN 688I, SSN 21,
SSN 774, SSGN, and SSBN 726-class
submarines. A-RCI integrates and improves towed array, hull
array, sphere array, and other ship sensor processing. The
Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting
activity.
WHOI SCIENTISTS TO BUILD HYBRID ROV
Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA -- For the first
time since 1960, U.S. scientists will be able to explore the deepest
parts of the world's oceans, up to 7 miles below the surface,
with a novel underwater vehicle capable of performing multiple tasks
in extreme conditions. Researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution here are developing a battery-powered underwater
robot to enable scientists to explore the ocean's most remote regions
up to 11,000 meters deep. A spokeswoman said the hybrid
HROV will be able to operate in two modes -- as an autonomous or
free-swimming vehicle for wide area surveys, and as a tethered vehicle
for close-up sampling and other tasks. In the latter
mode, it will use a novel fiber-optic micro cable only one thirty-second
of an inch thick, a significant departure from the large, heavy
cables typically used with tethered vehicles. The deep-sea
vehicle will require new technologies such as ceramic housings for
cameras and other electronic equipment to withstand the pressures
at the vehicle's extreme operating depths, she said. Funding
for the four-year, $5-million HROV project is provided by the U.S.
National Science Foundation, with additional support from the U.S.
Navy and the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration.
Principal investigators are Andrew Bowen and Dana Yoerger of WHOI's
Deep Submergence Laboratory in the Applied Ocean Physics &
Engineering Department and Louis Whitcomb, an associate professor
in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at The Johns Hopkins
University (Baltimore, Maryland). Whitcomb is also a
visiting investigator in DSL. The new vehicle will undergo
initial trails in three years.
Humans have been to the bottom of the Mariana Trench only once,
in 1960, when the U.S. Navy bathyscaph Trieste descended with then
Lt. Don Walsh and Swiss scientist Jacques Piccard. The
Japanese ROV Kaiko dove to the bottom of the trench in 1995.
It was lost earlier this year and no operational vehicles
currently exist that are capable of reaching this depth. "The
HROV will enable, for the first time, routine scientific research
in the deepest parts of the ocean, from 6,500 meters to 11,000 meters,
a depth we currently cannot reach," says RAdm. Richard Pittenger,
USN, Ret., and WHOI vice president for marine operations.
"It will also afford access to other very hard-to-reach regions
such as under the arctic ice cap. The HROV's real-time,
wide-band link to the surface will put the researcher in the loop
to view, assess, and command the vehicle throughout the duration
of dive missions. It is the first capable and cost-effective
technology that will enable scientists to pursue research projects
on a routine basis in areas they have long wanted to study
but have been unable to reach. HROV technology will help answer
many questions about the deep sea." More at http://www.whoi.edu/home/.
KES DELIVERY OF BLUEFIN21 FOR SCIENTIFIC EXPLORATION.
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA -- The Alfred Wegener
Institute for Polar & Marine Research (AWI) in Bremerhaven,
Germany, recently took delivery of a 3,000-meter-depth-rated
Bluefin21 AUV, which is the newest generation of Bluefin's AUV technology.
Among other things, the vehicle will be used for scientific research
near and under the polar ice caps where obstacle avoidance and highly
accurate dead-reckoning navigation are crucial for vehicle ope>ration.
Bluefin is a spin-off from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's
AUV Lab and has been manufacturing autonomous underwater vehicles
and sub-sea batteries since 1997. Bluefin's current
product line includes the Bluefin21, the Bluefin12, and the
Bluefin9, as well as pressure-tolerant batteries in 1 kilowatt-hour,
2 kilowatt-hour, and 3 kilowatt-hour sizes. The Alfred
Wegener Institute for Polar & Marine Research was established
as a public foundation in 1980. It is a member of the
Hermann von Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
and conducts research in the arctic, the Antarctic, and at temperate
latitudes. It coordinates polar research in Germany and
provides both the necessary equipment and the essential logistic
>back up for polar expeditions. More about the AUVs at
http://www.bluefinrobotics.com/.
NRC REPORT CALLS FOR MORE DEEP-DIVING U.S. SUBMERSIBLES
Washington, D.C., USA -- Deep-diving manned submersibles, such as
Alvin, which gained worldwide fame when researchers used it to reach
the wreck of the HMS Titanic, have helped advance deep-ocean
science. But many scholars in this field have noted that the
number and capabilities of today's underwater vehicles no longer
meet current scientific demands while others say the relative
value of manned and unmanned vehicles is often disputed. A
new report from the U.S. National Academies' National Research
Council says new submersibles - both manned and unmanned --
that are more capable than those in the current fleet are needed
and would be of great value to the advancement of ocean research.
The U.S. National Science Foundation's Division of Ocean Science,
a major funder of U.S. ocean research, asked the council to study
the issue because of NSF's concerns
about the current fleet's usefulness.
The report, Future Needs in Deep Submergence Science:
Occupied and Unoccupied Vehicles in Basic Ocean Research, notes
that Alvin has been modified over the years to allow
it to take a pilot and two scientists to depths of 4,500 meters.
The report calls for a new and more capable manned vehicle that
should provide the scientists onboard with improved visibility
and achieve neutral buoyancy at various depths -- which Alvin
has difficulty doing -- so that researchers can pause to study life
forms that exist between the surface and the seafloor. A detailed
engineering study also is needed to assess the costs and technical
risks of extending the diving range of an upgraded manned
vehicle to 6,500 meters.
A new manned submersible could be built by 2006,
the report says, but given the high demand for deep-diving research
vehicles and for submersibles that can go deeper than 1500
meters, a new, more capable unmanned submersible should be built
by 2004 or 2005. NSF's Division of Ocean Science has a budget
of $25 million to upgrade the nation's fleet of deep-diving
research submersibles. The report follows on the heels of an
NRC report issued earlier this month that called for the construction
of a number of new manned and unmanned deep-sea submersibles as
part of a proposal for a large-scale ocean exploration program.
The newest report will be available early next year from the National
Academies Press. Contact the office on +1 (202) 334-3313
or on the Internet at http://www.nap.edu/
SONARDYNE JOINS HUNT FOR GERMAN U-BOAT
Yateley, Hampshire, U.K. -- A major operation
to study the wreckage of a World War II German U-boat in the U.S.
Gulf of Mexico has been supported with deep-water acoustic
positioning equipment from Sonardyne International Ltd. here.
The wreck was found by C&C Technologies Inc. surveyors during
a pipeline route survey for Shell Exploration and BP Exploration
in 2001. The company had been using an AUV when it came
across wreckage in 5,000 feet of water that marine archaeologists
suspected was the remains of U-166. This U-boat was responsible
for torpedoing and sinking the passenger freighter SS Robert E Lee
near New Orleans in July 1942 with many lives lost. In a joint
venture with C&C, the Office of Ocean Exploration (U.S. National
Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration), the PAST Foundation,
and the U.S. Minerals Management Service, the NOAA research
vessel Ronald Brown was mobilized in October 2003 to carry out a
comprehensive ROV survey of the U-166 site. A television crew
also joined the expedition to film a documentary for the History
Channel's Deep Sea Detectives which is expected to be broadcast
in April 2004. For the project, a Sonsub Inc. (Houston, Texas) Innovator
ROV was equipped with high-resolution camera equipment, scanning
sonar, and a Sonardyne RovNav acoustic transceiver.
Because of the water depth, a Sonardyne long baseline acoustic positioning
system was chosen as the primary positioning solution. The
ROV?s first task was to deploy five Sonardyne Compatt transponders
around the wreck site to create a navigation network in which the
ROV an wreck could be positioned. A Sonardyne ultra-short
baseline system was used to track the ROV on its descent to the
bottom and to provide the ROV crew with the relative position of
the vehicle?s tether management system.
During the five-day survey of the U-166,
the team from C&C also successfully investigated the site of
the Robert E. Lee, which lies within a mile of the submarine.
The project now stands as the deepest archaeological study
project ever undertaken in the Gulf of Mexico. The data and
spectacular images that were collected will enable archaeologists
to piece together a detailed record of these historic sites.
The recent successful use of an LBL system on the important site
of the Mary Rose warship in the U.K. is further confirmation
that acoustic positioning systems can make a significant difference
to the amount of archaeology that can be accomplished in a short
time,
whether in deep or shallow water. For more, see http://www.sonardyne.co.uk/.
SPEARHEAD EXHIBITIONS MEETINGS
March 16-19, 2004, Oceanology International 2004,
Exhibition Centre London(ExCeL),
London. Information and Registration at http://www.oceanologyinternational.com/.
September 23-24, 2004, UUVS 2004: Sixth Unmanned
Underwater Vehicle Showcase,
Southampton Oceanography Centre, Southampton, U.K. Information
at http://www.uuvs.net/.
September 6-9, 2005, Offshore Europe 2005, Aberdeen
Exhibition & Conference Centre, Aberdeen,
Scotland. Information at http://www.offshore-europe.co.uk/.
Underwater Camera for sale.
Photosea 100O Underwater Stills Camera System
complete with strobe lights. Advertised as being the finest professional
underwater photographic equipment available, and takes 35mm film
for prints or slides. The system has been pressure tested to operate
at depths of 3000 metres. Purchased in 2001 it has not been in the
water, as the programme that the system was intended has not proceeded.
Please contact us at anytime to discuss your underwater
vehicle requirements. We are always happy to exchange ideas and
offer advice.
Alan
Silvercrest Submarines
Tel/Fax: England (44) 1285.760620
Please visit our websites www.SilvercrestSubmarines.co.uk
and www.Submarines-Rovs.com
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