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View Full Version : Largest Passenger Ship EVER Christened....


Karl-Heinz Jaeger
05-15-06, 07:27 AM
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v255/IndyBenson/Ship.jpg
May 12 3:51 PM US/Eastern
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By JANET FRANKSTON
Associated Press Writer

BAYONNE, N.J.

Wielding a scissors, a woman who helped raise more than 400 foster children over 27 years snipped a ribbon to christen the world's largest cruise ship Friday while it docked near the Statue of Liberty.

"I name this ship the 'Freedom of the Sea.' May God bless her, Royal Caribbean and all who sail upon her," 56-year-old Katherine Louise Calder said in the ceremony televised live on NBC's "Today."


She then cut the ribbon to release a giant bottle containing the equivalent of 34 bottles of champagne.

Viewers of "Today" voted to select her as "godmother" of the Freedom of the Seas, and she is staying on the ship with family members.

"I feel very honored and just kind of floating around," said Calder, who cares for hundreds of special needs children and works as an adoption advocate in the Portland, Ore., area. "I don't think my feet have touched the ground since I got onboard."

The ship is so immense that even its captain hadn't finished exploring it earlier this week.

"I'm still discovering things," Bill Wright said Thursday as he walked around the bridge of the newly built ship while it was docked in Bayonne.

Freedom of the Seas, which arrived this week in New York Harbor from Southampton, Britain, is 237 feet tall and 1,112 feet long with 15 passenger decks.

Standing upright on its bow, it would be taller than the Eiffel Tower. The ship comes in at 160,000 gross registered tons, a standard measurement of carrying capacity that is about 100 cubic feet for each ton.

Built by Norwegian shipbuilder Aker Yards ASA, the ship cost $800 million and can carry more than 4,000 passengers. The world's previous largest ship, the Queen Mary 2, can carry about 3,000 people and is 151,400 gross registered tons. The Titanic's gross registered tonnage was 46,329.

If you want to sail on the new ship, it won't be cheap.

Prices for seven-day voyages range from $1,900 per couple for an interior room during the low season to nearly $2,500 for the same-size cabin with a balcony during high season, said Cindy Dangel, an on- board sales manager.

A deluxe room that sleeps 14 and costs $22,000 during peak season is booked until 2008, she said.

A three-level dining room seats 2,140. There are more than 2,000 deck chairs and an ice-skating rink. The fitness center measures 9,700 square feet and includes a boxing ring. The spa provides luxuries from teeth whitening to massages and a 13th-floor deck offers a rock climbing wall and a big wave pool with simulated surfing.

Royal Caribbean's newest liner will be docked in New York Harbor and Cape Liberty in Bayonne over the next few days before it leaves on May 18 for a trip to Boston.

The ship's maiden voyage was last month, from Hamburg, Germany, to Oslo, Norway, but it won't have paying passengers until it leaves from Miami for the western Caribbean next month.

While the ship's New York area arrival is generating a big buzz, its grand scale might not appeal to everyone.

Bigger isn't always better, and a large ship can be overwhelming and impersonal, said Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of cruisecritic.com, a Web site devoted to cruise travel information.

"You're always thinking about what you should be doing next," she said. "Expect lines. Expect congestion."

She said on a ship of this scale, passengers may be tempted to skip some of the ports.

"This ship, more than any other ship out there, represents the on-land resort experience. There's so much to do you really don't have to get off," she said


Are you guys thinkin what I'm thinkin??!!

:yep: :yep: :yep:

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 07:32 AM
Are you guys thinkin what I'm thinkin??!!

Uhm...how many torps would it take to send her to the bottom? :P

Keelbuster
05-15-06, 07:35 AM
:rotfl: Good queston!

Dowly
05-15-06, 07:43 AM
Made in Finland :up:

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 07:53 AM
Should sink regardless :lol: id say after 15 torps

Der Eisen-Wal
05-15-06, 11:15 AM
15? that many?

Keelbuster
05-15-06, 11:23 AM
Go for the fuel bunker - 1 critical torp. Or maybe....BUST HER KEEL with a mag pistol. Har har arg.

Kb

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 11:31 AM
Go for the fuel bunker - 1 critical torp. Or maybe....BUST HER KEEL with a mag pistol. Har har arg.

Kb

In vanilla ..maybe. With NYGM..NO WAY! :|\

Fab
05-15-06, 11:59 AM
I was thinking, "Wow, just think, a Ritterkreuz after only one ship."

SeeStark
05-15-06, 01:00 PM
Pah who'd waste precious fish on that, it looks like deck gun fodder to me, especially with those bright orange life boats lined up perfectly like that
:hmm:

Salvadoreno
05-15-06, 03:24 PM
with NYGM you'd need a V2 Rocket.. even then! :doh:

deadactionman
05-15-06, 03:27 PM
If only the game reported the approximate number of people killed instead of just tonnage. Maybe someone could make a mod?

Dowly
05-15-06, 04:02 PM
If only the game reported the approximate number of people killed instead of just tonnage. Maybe someone could make a mod?

IMO, that would make the Uboat crews look like a murderers to anyone who plays the game.

I´m pretty sure when I say that even the uboat crews wouldn´t want to know how many they have killed. :roll:

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 04:07 PM
Oh man...remember the burning tanker scene from Das Boot? :cry:

On a less serious note, I say, get rid of the torps and stuff dem tubes with flowers... :P

Ducimus
05-15-06, 04:17 PM
That ship looks like it would be entirely too topheavy in a rough sea.

I think they should rename it Poseidon.

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 04:41 PM
That ship looks like it would be entirely too topheavy in a rough sea.

I think they should rename it Poseidon.

No its not. Youre not taking into consideration the lower decks beneath the water line.

Nippelspanner
05-15-06, 04:57 PM
first i thought "well, its not THAT big"... but as i saw it from my train´s window in hamburg...

"damn that beast IS big!" :o

but ugly...all the modern liners are ugly as hell if you ask me... swimming hotels...

i like the real oldstyle liners... titanic etc... you have to love those ships, they have something magic...

TangoShadow
05-15-06, 05:08 PM
Hi,

I couldn't agree more! The news ships don't grab my attention at all - they all look the same!!!!

Anyone know if nuclear torpedos have been considered before?

--TangoShadow

Ducimus
05-15-06, 05:18 PM
That ship looks like it would be entirely too topheavy in a rough sea.

I think they should rename it Poseidon.

No its not. Youre not taking into consideration the lower decks beneath the water line.

It must have a ridiculously deep draft.

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 05:23 PM
That ship looks like it would be entirely too topheavy in a rough sea.

I think they should rename it Poseidon.

No its not. Youre not taking into consideration the lower decks beneath the water line.

It must have a ridiculously deep draft.

Amaziglly, NO :hmm: just 8.5 meters

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_the_Seas

mapuc
05-15-06, 05:34 PM
Should sink regardless :lol: id say after 15 torps

Are you thinking about the old type of torpedoes or the modernt torpedo type?

Markus

GreyOctober
05-15-06, 05:45 PM
I was kidding ofcourse :-j ...though the nuclear torp proposal issued earlier seems quite reasonable :hmm: :rotfl: :rotfl:

andy_311
05-15-06, 06:35 PM
proberbly twin hulled so fireing all your fish at her (WW2 torps) she still stay afloat.

Yahoshua
05-15-06, 09:25 PM
The average passenger liner in WW2 clocked between 18,000 and 32,000 tons.

This gem clocks at 152,000 tons. Now how many torps does it usually take you to sink a liner with the NYGM mod in SHIII? (Took me 3 out of 4 torps on a blind spread that hit the liner and took her down, with standard 1.4 patch).

What do you think Teddy Bar?

BettingUrlife
05-16-06, 09:29 AM
How much renown for that sucker?

Woof1701
05-18-06, 11:10 AM
first i thought "well, its not THAT big"... but as i saw it from my train´s window in hamburg...

"damn that beast IS big!" :o

but ugly...all the modern liners are ugly as hell if you ask me... swimming hotels...

i like the real oldstyle liners... titanic etc... you have to love those ships, they have something magic...

Right on the money.
Here's my favourite. It's the 1972 cruise liner "Royal Viking Star". The old lady's still in service under a drifferent name.
http://www.simplonpc.co.uk/FredOlsen/BlackWatch01.jpg

Ultraboy
05-19-06, 12:10 AM
Somebody asked about nuclear torpedoes...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_45_torpedo

My guess is the Mk 45 would do the job, although it and the nuclear depth charges were all designed for ASW if I've got my facts straight.