Volga Hydrofoil bought from Batumi
Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 3:04 am
Hi,
I have posted a couple of months ago a bunch of photos to info@volga-hydrofoil.net regarding a boat I Volga from Batumi, Georgia, hoping they were going to be published in the gallery. Lacking time, there was no proper story behind to be attached ... So it is coming now:
Our company is ZF Marine Distributor for Turkey and we contracted 2 years ago with a turkish boat builder 10 propulsion packages consisting of gearboxes, surface drives and electronic controls for 10 Coastal Patrol Boats. We were then invited in March 2008 to make the commissioning of the ready boats and to do a seatrial in Batumi. The turkish patrol boats were brought to Batumi Shipyard and had to be made ready for operation. It was an old postwar shipyard with concrete walls, probably to withstand world war 3 or so. During the breaks in the commissioning process of the boats, we were allowed to take a glance on at the boats being stored and repaired there. Being in marine and naval business for many years and knowing all kind of systems i was somehow highly impressed. The boats and vessels we saw overthere were probably 10 – 60 years old but were equipped with everything the Warshow Pact had to offer against the Nato! There were fast patrol boats, torpedo boats, but also civil and commercial crafts, among them hydrofoils and even russian boats with waterjets ... But what was probably most surprising was them to be 30 or 60 years old ...! Wandering thru the yard seeing these 'ancient' boats seemed to be like visiting a Jurassic Park!
Among those I stumbled over a small craft that looked to me rather like somekind of LunaPark spacecraft of my childhood. There was infront of me somekind of bizzar stepped ChrisCraftlike boat with extreme stainless steel wings under it. No, Sir! I had never seen anything like this before! I was quickly informed, that this was a special russian design which was driven only by Party Sekretaries or other HiRankings, among them even Nixon himself and somekind of craft, which was gathering experience of all available russian technology of the 50ties and the 60ties. Besides this, it was built in this particular shipyard (Batumi Shipyard). Me who never wanted to buy a boat, soon convinced myself, that if I should ever own one, this should be the only thing I would deserve. (to be continued ...)
I have posted a couple of months ago a bunch of photos to info@volga-hydrofoil.net regarding a boat I Volga from Batumi, Georgia, hoping they were going to be published in the gallery. Lacking time, there was no proper story behind to be attached ... So it is coming now:
Our company is ZF Marine Distributor for Turkey and we contracted 2 years ago with a turkish boat builder 10 propulsion packages consisting of gearboxes, surface drives and electronic controls for 10 Coastal Patrol Boats. We were then invited in March 2008 to make the commissioning of the ready boats and to do a seatrial in Batumi. The turkish patrol boats were brought to Batumi Shipyard and had to be made ready for operation. It was an old postwar shipyard with concrete walls, probably to withstand world war 3 or so. During the breaks in the commissioning process of the boats, we were allowed to take a glance on at the boats being stored and repaired there. Being in marine and naval business for many years and knowing all kind of systems i was somehow highly impressed. The boats and vessels we saw overthere were probably 10 – 60 years old but were equipped with everything the Warshow Pact had to offer against the Nato! There were fast patrol boats, torpedo boats, but also civil and commercial crafts, among them hydrofoils and even russian boats with waterjets ... But what was probably most surprising was them to be 30 or 60 years old ...! Wandering thru the yard seeing these 'ancient' boats seemed to be like visiting a Jurassic Park!
Among those I stumbled over a small craft that looked to me rather like somekind of LunaPark spacecraft of my childhood. There was infront of me somekind of bizzar stepped ChrisCraftlike boat with extreme stainless steel wings under it. No, Sir! I had never seen anything like this before! I was quickly informed, that this was a special russian design which was driven only by Party Sekretaries or other HiRankings, among them even Nixon himself and somekind of craft, which was gathering experience of all available russian technology of the 50ties and the 60ties. Besides this, it was built in this particular shipyard (Batumi Shipyard). Me who never wanted to buy a boat, soon convinced myself, that if I should ever own one, this should be the only thing I would deserve. (to be continued ...)