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Top World Largest Ships




Hi Everyone Welcome.Robotic bar staff, drones doing dance routines  and augmented reality artwork in the corridors. Royal Caribbean’s Symphony of the Seas is  not only the biggest cruiseship ever floated,  but also the most high-tech. And wait till  you learn what goes on behind the scenes.Join us for an unforgettable sail aboard  the biggest cruiseship in the world.Symphony of the Sea’s vital statistics make  for impressive reading. At 228,081 gross tons  she’s five times bigger than the Titanic,  and took the record for biggest cruiseship  off sister ship Harmony of the Seas. Her  planned successor, Wonder of the Seas,  should be the next biggest again  when she launches next year.18 decks high, with a maximum beam –  that’s ship talk for width – of 215 feet,  Symphony of the seas holds 2759 cabins, 24  pools, 23 restaurants and 42 bars and lounges.  She can entertain up to 6,680 passengers,  looked after by a 2,200 person crew.The Oasis-class vessel isn’t just  big, it’s also pretty lively,  cruising at a brisk 22 knots over open  water. That’s roughly 25 miles an hour.  Not the fastest boat in the world perhaps,  but not bad for a gigantic luxury resort.How does it achieve such speed?Three 16-cylinder Wärtsilä 16V46D common rail  engines producing 25,290 horsepower each and  three additional 12-cylinder Wärtsilä 12V46  engines, each producing 18,590 horsepower.  They’re thirsty too, each guzzling up to  1,3777 gallons of fuel, per engine, per hour.The engines are oriented azipod-style. That means  each 20-foot wide propeller is mounted on a pod  that can swivel to assist steering. Which  is more efficient than old school rudders.Symphony’s propulsion engines work in concert  with four additional bow thrusters up front,  which are electric-powered and  each generate 7,380 horsepower.  For comparison, a Tesla Model 3 generates  a combined power of about 480 horsepower.Marine engineers are always seeking clever  efficiencies to make their energy-hungry  fleets more sustainable. Symphony of the Seas  incorporates a clever ‘air lubrication system’  which injects air into the turbulent  layer of water underneath the ship’s keel.  This reduces friction by up to a tenth, which  in turn can cut fuel use by up to a quarter.  That’s a pretty huge deal, and as a  bonus air lubrication also reduces  noise and vibration levels in  the aft portion of the ship.Enough about engines. What are the cabins like?Roughly half of the Symphony of the Seas is made  of cabins, or state rooms to use their fancy name.For the last word in holiday indulgence, check  out the Ultimate Family Suite. Sprawled over  1,346 square feet, with a balcony hot tub and  a mesh-enclosed outdoor climbing apparatus,  the suite features an air hockey table,  mini-golf, chalkboard wall and a fun  slide to move swiftly between levels.  There’s a floor-to-ceiling Lego wall,  and a vast 85-inch theatre-style TV with 3D  movies on demand. Not to mention a private,  multi-platform video game library  – all for a mere $50,000 per week.Most staterooms are somewhat more compact.  As senior project architect Harold Law says,  on board a ship ‘the millimeters matter’. So even  something as trivial as the thickness of a veneer  on the cabin walls could be pared back, over the  entire length of the ship, in order to squeeze in  an extra cabin per deck. Rooms are acoustically  insulated to shield engine noise – and dance  music from the on-board nightclubs. All toilets  are guaranteed to not spill their contents into  the cabin. As long as, even in choppy waters,  the ship never inclines more than 10 degrees.Historically, sleeping in an internal windowless  cabin was bleak. Not with Symphony of the Seas’  virtual balconies, which project a real-time  view of the twinkling oceanic world outside.  Engineers on this ship use four separate  camera angles to recreate the view as  faithfully as possible, after discovering  from previous vessels that guests became  seasick if the view didn’t match the  movement they felt from the ship itself.Clever design tricks like  uplighting and well-placed mirrors,  and well-chosen carpet patterns, also help the  smaller staterooms feel less claustrophobic.Similarly, the corridors – which are  absurdly long on such a big ship – can  freak people out. Architects overcame this by  installing fake arches and other obstacles to  make the corridors appear shorter. Some  walls are covered with lenticular art,  which changes appearance depending  on your direction of travel.Art is a huge deal on Symphony of the Seas.  There’s over 13,000 individual artworks  aboard – more pieces, the company says,  than the Louvre in Paris has paintings.  One particular highlight, in the adults-only  Solarium section, is called Big Wonder. The  installation features over 3,800 iridescent  acrylic tiles, shimmering in the sunshine  and thanks to cunningly integrated LEDs. It  weighs seven tons and covers 241 square metres.Other cool pieces include this spherical  classic car on the main concourse,  assorted works of augmented reality art that come  to life via Royal Caribbean’s smartphone app,  and a musical staircase to the Windjammer  cafe that lights up and plays musical  notes. Keep an eye out for a stowaway pianist,  who crops up randomly playing tunes in elevators.There’s also a surprising amount of  nature aboard, including 52 trees and  30,000 individual plants in the  sprawling Central Park region,  one of 7 so-called ‘neighbourhoods’  aboard Symphony of the Seas.At an earlier phase of the design it was  suggested engineers install a grassy lawn,  but the prospect of salty air and heavy  footfall meant that idea was wisely shelved.So how do the guests keep busy?Ultimate Abyss is a 10 storey helter skelter  with pulsing LED lights and sound effects.  You climb into an angler fish's mouth  130 metres above sea level – that’s  higher than Mount Rushmore – and plummet  down the longest slide anywhere at sea.You can zipline across the ship’s distinctive  internal cavernous open space – 9 storeys above  the deck. There’s a full-sized basketball court  and dodgeball arena. And a casino, a comedy club,  two 12 metre climbing walls. A science lab just  for kids. And a library. They even host regular  parades with fully costumed actors, acrobats and  giant balloon drops. And DJ-led pool parties.The Perfect Storm is a triple-speed water slide  with a swirly champagne bowl at the bottom.  And there’s a full-on waterpark festooned  with tasteful deckchairs at Splashaway Bay.If that all sounds a bit naff and resort-y,  why not try a round of glow in the dark laser  tag. Or try your hand at surfing on not one  but two 12-metre FlowRider surf simulators.The aft deck is dominated by an innovative  aqua theatre, where olympic-standard divers  plunge 9 metres through the air into  the deepest pool on any ship anywhere,  performing daredevil acrobatics with dazzling  light shows and other choreographed theatrics.Not keen on the water? There’s a  normal theatre towards the bow end,  where highlights include the musical Hairspray,  and a show celebrating the history of aviation  with a moon landing and a proper working  re-enactment of the Wright Brothers’ plane.  Oh, and a separate ice-rink theatre. In  there, award-winning skaters join no fewer  than 48 light-up drones performing a futuristic  rock opera over 5k laser projections, on ice.Still bored? There’s an escape room, a gym, a  spa, and a running track. Plus a teens-only lounge  and adult education classes in everything from  Latin dance to napkin folding to sushi making.Hungry? You’re in good hands, with  280 chefs working across 36 kitchens,  preparing 100 different menus each week. 11  million meals a year are served. Every week  that works out as 700 pounds of ice cream, and  2,100 pounds of lobster tails. In the bakery  they bake 40 different types of bread from  all over the world, as the onboard butcher  slices and dices 15,000 pounds of beef and  9,700 pounds of chicken. That’s every week.As you’d expect, that all entails quite a feat of  logistics. On turnaround day at the port of Miami,  Symphony of the Seas typically  takes onboard 30 trucks worth of  food. Crew will order based on the passenger  manifest – if there’s more children aboard,  they’ll order a pallet of extra chicken fingers.Each of the onboard restaurants  is designed to minimise distance  from the storerooms below deck. When you’re  shucking 2,000 oysters, freshness matters.The future of getting lit is onboard in  the shape of these robotic bartenders at  the Bionic Bar. Choose a cocktail, or design  your own, and watch these metal mixologists  shake you up a treat, as electronic  display boards highlight each ingredient. What happens to all the waste? Years ago,  on less enlightened boats, so-called black  water – basically raw sewage – was crudely  dumped overboard. Today, it’s treated until  it's near-drinking-water purity, then returned  to the sea. Trash is stored in vast onboard  storage containers, and frozen in order to  slow the bacterial on the way back to port. Although inherently not a  very sustainable business, Royal Caribbean engineers do their best to  save energy where possible. For instance,   a 2MW steam turbine aboard uses recovered  waste heat from the engines to provide power   for the staterooms. This alongside subtle  developments in everything from propeller   shape to air conditioning control systems make  a difference, Symphony of the Sea’s epic scale. What do you think? Do these vast machines  get the credit they deserve as tremendous feats of engineering? Let us know in the comments,   and don’t forget to subscribe  for more shipshape tech content. Thank You All.

 


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