CCGS CG 118 is one of three training vessels of the Canadian Coast Guard and located at the Canadian Coast Guard College in Westmount, Nova Scotia. The ship is based on the 44-foot motor lifeboat, a converted self-righting lifeboat similar to the Waveney-class lifeboat.
History | |
---|---|
Canada | |
Name | 118 |
Operator | Canadian Coast Guard |
Builder | Eastern Equipment Ltd., Montreal |
Yard number | CCGC - 2 |
Launched | 1975 |
Completed | 1975 |
Commissioned | 1975 |
In service | 1975–2011 |
Out of service | 2011 |
Stricken | 2011 |
Homeport | CCG Base Sydney |
Status | sold |
General characteristics | |
Type | Specialty Vessel – Training Vessel |
Displacement | 20 grt |
Length | 13.45 m (44 ft 2 in) |
Beam | 3.65 m (12 ft 0 in) |
Draft | 0.98 m (3 ft 3 in) |
Propulsion | 2 Detroit Series 53 diesel engines |
Speed | 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph) |
Range | 150 nmi (280 km; 170 mi) |
Endurance | 1 day |
Complement | 3 |
The Canadian Coast Guard is the coast guard of Canada. Formed in 1962, the coast guard is tasked with marine search and rescue (SAR), communication, navigation, and transportation issues in Canadian waters, such as navigation aids and icebreaking, marine pollution response, and support for other Canadian government initiatives. The coast guard operates 119 vessels of varying sizes and 23 helicopters, along with a variety of smaller craft. The CCG is headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario, and is a special operating agency within Fisheries and Oceans Canada.
CCGS Westport is a Canadian Coast Guard search and rescue vessel homeported in Westport, Nova Scotia.
CCGS Sambro is a Canadian Coast Guard motor lifeboat homeported in Sambro, Nova Scotia.
CCGS Cape Sutil is a Canadian Coast Guard Cape-class motor lifeboat stationed at Port Hardy, British Columbia. She was commissioned by Herb Dhaliwal, the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, on 1 August 2000 at CCG Station Port Hardy at the northern tip of Vancouver Island.
The Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) maintains a fleet of 14.6 m Cape-class motor lifeboats based on a motor lifeboat design used by the United States Coast Guard. In September 2009 the CCG announced plans to add five new lifeboats, bringing the total number of Cape-class lifeboats to 36.
The Canadian Coast Guard has had two motor lifeboats named CCGS Clarks Harbour. The first was a 13-metre (43 ft) vessel, which entered service in 1996.
CCGS Cape Discovery is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboats.` She is stationed at Goderich, Ontario. At the vessel's official christening, on June 10, 2006, the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Loyola Hearn, said: "Having this state-of-the-art vessel for our personnel provides them with greater safety, as they aid those in distress -- very often in conditions that put their own lives at risk. With the cutter Cape Discovery, we are well positioned to respond to emergency calls, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week."
CCGS Cape Norman is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboats. She and a sister vessel, CCGS Cape Fox, serve the northern coast of Newfoundland. Her home port is Port aux Choix. She and Cape Fox were built in 2002 at Victoria Shipyards, Victoria, British Columbia. The two vessels were shipped from Vancouver to New York City aboard another vessel, where they proceeded under their own power.
CCGS Cape Fox is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboats. She and a sister vessel, CCGS Cape Norman, serve the northern coast of Newfoundland. Her home port is Lark Harbour.
CCGS Thunder Cape is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboats. She was built in Kingston, Ontario, in 2000, by MetalCraft Marine and MIL Systems and was moved to Goderich, Ontario, in October 2005. Assigned to the Central and Arctic Region, the lifeboat serves the Lake Erie area. The boat is backed up by search and rescue operations from 424 Transport and Rescue Squadron. The Thunder Cape was damaged in a collision with the breakwater at the outlet of the Mission River in Thunder Bay.
CCGS Cape Storm is a Cape-class motor lifeboat of the Canadian Coast Guard.Normally assigned at terminus of the Welland Canal at Port Weller, Ontario, she is currently undergoing a Vessel Life Extension and has been temporarily replaced by the CCGS Cape Lambton.
The 44-foot motor lifeboat was the standard workhorse of the United States Coast Guard (USCG) rescue boat fleet. The 44′ MLB has been replaced by the 47′ MLB. The boats are powered by twin diesel engines, each powering a separate propeller. The propellers are protected by the hull to help prevent them being damaged if the boat runs aground. The boats have air-tight compartments forward and aft of the steering station. The aft compartment is designed to hold litters to strap in injured people, while the forward compartment holds uninjured rescued.
CCGS CG 117 was one of three training vessels of the Canadian Coast Guard and located at the Canadian Coast Guard College in Westmount, Nova Scotia. The ship is based on the 44-foot Motor Lifeboat, a converted self-righting lifeboat and variant of the Waveney class lifeboat. It was sold in 2011.
CCGS Goéland is a training vessel of the Canadian Coast Guard and located at the Canadian Coast Guard College in Westmount, Nova Scotia. The ship is based on the 44-foot motor lifeboat, a converted self-righting lifeboat and similar to the Waveney-class lifeboat.
CCGS CG 119 is a patrol vessel of the Canadian Coast Guard. The ship is a converted self-righting lifeboat similar to the Waveney-class lifeboat.
CCGS Cape Naden is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboat. Cape Naden was built at the Victoria Shipyards, in Victoria, British Columbia. Keith Ashfield Canada's Minister of Fisheries and Oceans and Minister for the Atlantic Gateway officiated at the vessel's dedication at Pat Bay.
CCGS Cape Palmerston is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboat. Cape Palmerston was built at the Victoria Shipyards, in Vancouver, British Columbia. She was officially named and dedicated at her home port, Campbell River, in June 2011.
CCGS Cape Dauphin is one of the Canadian Coast Guard's 36 Cape-class motor lifeboats. Cape Dauphin was built at the Victoria Shipyards, in Vancouver, British Columbia. She was officially named and dedicated at her home port, Prince Rupert, in July 2011.
CCGS Cape Spry is a Cape-class lifeboat in the Canadian Coast Guard Service, stationed at Souris, Prince Edward Island.