Comments
nobbyv t1_j6jg1wy wrote
I didn't realize Boston could handle these ROROs. All the cars I've bought have been taken off in Davisville and then shipped via carrier to me up in NH. Thought Davisville covered basically all of NE.
BigHmmEnergy t1_j6jqpao wrote
They offload in Charleston. You can see the massive parking lot on google maps [here] https://maps.app.goo.gl/2tjVkNNHAZ2ndWc9A?g_st=i Dropped pin)
dharmaday t1_j6jv53b wrote
Charlestown?
passaloutre t1_j6kivkw wrote
It's funny because they also offload in Charleston
ahecht t1_j6jtlwe wrote
Seems like a bad idea to store new cars next to a giant salt pile, but what do I know.
CapeAnnimal t1_j6kudrw wrote
Salt pile is in Chelsea
BostonUrbEx t1_j6l2lby wrote
The one in Chelsea is there year round, and there is a second one at the Moran Terminal in Charlestown during the winter.
CapeAnnimal t1_j6l75ie wrote
Oh there you go, thanks for straightening me out. I worked at Chelsea high, sometimes the kids would play in the salt piles on the way to school, come in all crusted with salt.
dyslexda t1_j6lcy59 wrote
That area is the size of Kendall Square, and it's a parking lot for storing offloaded cars? Some prime /r/fuckcars material there.
mini4x t1_j6klw6f wrote
The cars came from Japan
Krakatoacoo t1_j6o5sqd wrote
I hope my GR86 is on there.
TheSausageFattener t1_j6kcbvm wrote
Any idea why they would run it from Quonset to Charlestown like that? It seems like a lot of effort to take the ship into the bay, then take it back out and sail it up to Boston. Ive always been under the impression these are usually transatlantic haulers.
Is there no more efficient way to do it? Theyve got rail freight.
RufusTCuthbert t1_j6kez3a wrote
Essentially this is more efficient. But also the rail infrastructure to Moran Terminal in Charlestown, which is aka Boston Autoport, is in poor shape and not been used in many years. It also snakes it’s way through a highly congested area (both streets and rail) and would be a very slow and disruptive way to ship that many cars, using various freight railroads, routes, etc.
BostonUrbEx t1_j6l3az5 wrote
Most of the cargo is loaded on in Japan. In Davisville and Boston they unload. Most of these auto ships that call on Boston seem to only sail east. Japan -> Panama Canal -> Carribbean and East Coast -> Davisville -> Cape Cod Canal -> Boston -> Suez Canal -> Japan. I'm not sure why the ships that call on Boston always seem to go the same direction. There's also a bunch of destinations, but I noticed they always unload in Davisville before unloading in Boston.
ibleedblue t1_j6mjjyf wrote
Google ocean currents and you’ll see that it’s more efficient to travel east along the Gulf Stream to the Mediterranean than it is to travel back south to the Panama Canal.
Rindan t1_j6kqlua wrote
Shipping by water is hilariously cheaper than anything else. Money is always worth "a lot of effort".
PHOTO500 t1_j6kk56a wrote
Somewhere a Russian oligarch is on his yacht reading OP’s headline and laughing his ass off.
mini4x t1_j6kndx7 wrote
This is a Japanese built and owned ship, somehow fagged to Panama, bringing Japanese built cars to the US.
gronkspike25 t1_j6kxdgp wrote
The flag is of convenience. It’s significantly cheaper for the company.
mini4x t1_j6kxoof wrote
Ahh, the Minnesota loop hole of the ocean?
BostonUrbEx t1_j6l3wvb wrote
And almost entirely staffed by Philippinos for some reason, too. And not unique to these ships. Lots of Philippinos on cruise ships working behind the scenes. Never could figure out why.
mini4x t1_j6l49jl wrote
Pretty easy - one of the poorest countries in the world so they will work dirt cheap. I met a bunch of Filipino workers on Wake Island ages ago, they were some of the nicest guys too.
Rindan t1_j6kr0w5 wrote
I don't get it. Why would a Russian oligarch find it funny that a big cargo ship moved cars between two American states via the cheapest means possible?
I think Russian oligarchs probably have some more serious stuff to worry about - like finding a way to keep ingratiating themselves with Putin so they don't accidentally fall out a window with three gun shots in the back of their head.
-Anarresti- t1_j6j3c1b wrote
Cool.
/r/fuckcars
Simon_Jester88 t1_j6ivcwz wrote
RoRo!
roll on, roll off, they transport cars
meatfrappe t1_j6k1ppd wrote
In Boston we drop our Rs so we just call it an oo here.
DMala t1_j6k776q wrote
If you’re dropping the leading R’s you should probably talk to a speech therapist.
Simon_Jester88 t1_j6kadbz wrote
I actually have a speech impediment and have a problem with Rs and everyone at college thought it was a Boston accent.
whereswilkie t1_j6kzqtx wrote
I had the exact opposite problem.
Edit: spelling
Exciting-Ant4077 t1_j6o7tut wrote
I had that same impediment as a kid. I said "wed" instead of "red." I finally learned to say R correctly when I was 7. The most embarrassing thing is that both my first name and my last name begin with the letter R.
meatfrappe t1_j6k8832 wrote
Any ecommendations fo a theapist?
dbosman t1_j6jhbbr wrote
RoRo ro your boat.
mobert_roses t1_j6llwyp wrote
Roll on, roll over!
BostonUrbEx t1_j6iuscr wrote
10,000 tons of brand new Subarus. Love that new car smell.
Vegetable_Media_3241 t1_j6ixn14 wrote
Time to put a big ass coexist sticker on the stern.
ZeroAgentTV t1_j6ji36x wrote
This is the best comment of the day.
theburnoutcpa t1_j6kkus7 wrote
Those are factory installed now, Premium trims get a complimentary NPR sticker as well.
PilotAdvanced t1_j6izrts wrote
Does the captain love his kids more than other captains?
davdev t1_j6k8xkf wrote
And EBJ gets a cut of every one of them.
hyperside89 t1_j6izfb6 wrote
A shot from my office in the seaport - I think it gives a good sense of the sheer size of it.
It docks at the autoport in Charlestown. You can see it pretty well from the Tobin if you drive over when it's docked.
bobroscopcoltrane t1_j6jjb5o wrote
Between the airport and the boats, I would get nothing done if I worked in your office space.
hyperside89 t1_j6jjfz5 wrote
Trust me, it's a very real problem. ;p
es_price t1_j6krqgl wrote
And the AT-AT Walkers
[deleted] t1_j6jmws0 wrote
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shmeatballs t1_j6j6gfb wrote
Fairly routine. You should see the chaos when LNG tankers come through .
mattgm1995 t1_j6j7egw wrote
When do they come in?
shmeatballs t1_j6j8i48 wrote
Fairly frequently. New England doesn’t have access to some of the major pipelines in the US, so we import a lot via tanker. There’s also the Jones Act but that’s another rabbit hole.
This is a website which tracks the expected arrivals into Boston Harbor if you’re curious.
BigEnd3 t1_j6jjmx0 wrote
I've worked those ships. The grand irony is a handful are US made, but Norwegian flagged, and owned by a boston/French conglomerate. I'm not sure if they are still sailing the Old LNGC Matthew anymore, but she used to go to Everett once every two weeks.
Exciting-Ant4077 t1_j6o81fr wrote
I used to work in Charlestown, and my office building had a view of the Mystic River and I frequently saw tankers going by.
bostonvikinguc t1_j6jacde wrote
You will know when they shut down the harbor, the bridge, and have gun boats on the Charles. Living in Chelsea sucked then.
IphtashuFitz t1_j6jxytj wrote
Back before 9/11 they didn't bother shutting anything down, they'd just warn boaters over VHF that it was inbound, and they'd send a couple USCG patrol boats to escort it and shoo other boats out of its way. I crewed on some USCG Auxiliary escorts back in the 90's and it was crazy how many sailboats thought they had the right of way over that thing and other big cargo ships. I bet the skippers on these things love having the harbor shut down these days.
bostonvikinguc t1_j6jy4qe wrote
That big tub is slow. It’s also terrifying to think how much damage could be done if it was to pop
IphtashuFitz t1_j6k0e6x wrote
I saw an article years ago that indicated that the danger of such an incident is seriously overblown. I forget the specifics, but it said that LNG requires a LOT of oxygen to become explosive, and a leak, etc. in the open is likely to dissipate the gas long before it reaches an explosive mix. The more likely scenario would be a fire that burns the fuel off. While that would severely damage the ship itself, as long as the fire was contained to the ship it could just slowly burn itself out with no significant damage to the surroundings.
Think of it being similar to lighting a bucket of gasoline on fire versus what happens when it's the vapors from gasoline that ignite.
RufusTCuthbert t1_j6kfdx6 wrote
The LNG tankers are more dangerous empty (fumes) than full (when it’s full of what is essentially gas jelly).
IIRC (and not sure if it’s still the case) they used to have to time the LNG ships so that the tide was just right; if it was too high it would not clear the Tobin, and if it was too low there was a possibility of the ships crashing the harbor tunnels.
es_price t1_j6krvgb wrote
More dangerous than molasses?
bostonvikinguc t1_j6k3j5z wrote
More concerned about a car going over the top off the bridge.
Hribunos t1_j6meiqo wrote
Sure, the LNG probably wouldn't detonate (not enough O2 like you said- it would burn but it would burn relatively "slowly") but if the hull on one of those ships ever failed you would get a wave of cryogenic liquid washing ashore. It would do a lot of damage from freezing. And then catching on fire.
No boom, still a big problem.
dyqik t1_j6p34o3 wrote
It wouldn't stay frozen or have much ability to freeze anything for long - the ocean is big [citation needed] and cryogenic liquids really don't have a lot of heat capacity compared to water.
Freezing stuff also usually doesn't damage much, unless there's water to expand inside it.
Hribunos t1_j6pfqs9 wrote
Have you ever seen LN2 skittering across a floor? It's like that. There wouldn't actually be that much heat transfer from the ocean- the LNG would skate across the surface on a thin layer of vapor.
I used to work in the seaport, and we ran the numbers - it's not enough to destroy building or whatever but anyone standing on the pier is gonna be a popsicle.
dyqik t1_j6pgjcm wrote
I build cryostats and operate superconducting detectors - I've been handling liquid cryogens for over twenty years.
I've stuck my hand in liquid nitrogen hundreds of times.
The main danger from liquid cryogens is the displacement of oxygen from the area when it flash boils.
While small amounts of liquid will skate around on a vapor barrier (leidenfrost effect on solid surfaces), in volume, the boiling at the interface between water and the liquid will produce some amount of turbulence and mixing that increases heat transfer.
mattgm1995 t1_j6jg345 wrote
I want to witness it how often is this?
BigHmmEnergy t1_j6jr5lw wrote
They shut down the Tobin bridge whenever they come in so that some terrorist can’t blow up the bridge with the ship underneath it
fenwayb t1_j6jjuc3 wrote
Looks like there's one on the 9th
jonnielaw t1_j6m59lf wrote
Mostly later at night. We used to have a restaurant right on the harbor and every so often you’d see a bunch of police boats and copters followed by this ginormous ship.
Wumaduce t1_j6jnn5m wrote
We were doing the sprinks over in rhe Navy Yard parking garage for MGH, we'd always go over and watch the tanker ships come in, and all of the police and coast guard escorts. It was crazy.
mini4x t1_j6knpp0 wrote
Isn't there some offshore do-hickey for those now?
TakenOverByBots t1_j6jeul9 wrote
I used to live in East Boston near Jeffreys Point and I would still be excited every time a massive ship came through. My wish for us all is never lose that childlike wonder.
frenetix t1_j6iwm06 wrote
Academic_Guava_4190 t1_j6j1xwj wrote
Damn it! I just bought a new car now they are bringing in more options /s
mini4x t1_j6ktbja wrote
Did you get a Subaru?
Academic_Guava_4190 t1_j6nb1tx wrote
No I was joking. Does this one only bring Subarus?
mini4x t1_j6ncul8 wrote
Someone else said it was off loading 10,000 tons of Subarus.
Academic_Guava_4190 t1_j6nk5uq wrote
Dammmmmmnnnnnn
Main-Ad-4912 t1_j6k94dj wrote
Back in the 70s Ernie Boch sr. (The llama commercials) was the only person to buy into Japanese cars. He bought the rights to Subaru New England and as an AWD car it became a staple up here. Every Subaru dealer in New England has to pay EBJ for each one of those cars. He owns the port in RI and here in Boston. Also fuck EBJ
randomlurker82 t1_j6knkiu wrote
Yup I remember being in total shock when I heard that. Subaru is practically ubiquitous around here. I'm on my second one!
Capt_5187 t1_j6ky8zy wrote
I’m driving the small white red and black ferry(Samuel Whittemore)off the port bow.
NAFAL44 OP t1_j6l0w2l wrote
No way! I take the Crispus Attucks to work every day!
Capt_5187 t1_j6l5bld wrote
I usually do the North Station run during the winter and Provincetown during the summer but I do that one every once and awhile. Say good morning to my guy Vance who is working crew tomorrow!
a_swarm_of_nuns t1_j6iu788 wrote
Car freighter. They are there on monthly cycles. Surprised you haven’t seen it before
Alternative_Nail1632 t1_j6jb17j wrote
Cah carria
aaypan t1_j6iz8z5 wrote
Saw it on my morning walk by Revere Beach. I guess this was it!
mcaddu t1_j6jtv6i wrote
Cool video of the ship unloading in Melbourne (Australia, I presume!) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0G1yuOOynFg
thejosharms t1_j6ofg56 wrote
Watching these things navigate into and out of the port from Admiral Hill in Chelsea is a sight to behold. The size of scope of the car carriers makers me so uncomfortable but I also can't look away.
One time I was eating lunch over near Piers Park and one of these was leaving port and blasted it's horn (I think the layman's explanation is it's a "hey I'm coming around a blind corner and by the time you see me it's too late for me to stop to gtfo of my way"
I felt it my fucking soul. Talk about brown sound.
IAmRyan2049 t1_j6j90uo wrote
I have a reoccurring dream that I die on one of these. Never even been on one, somehow my brain knows about them. So this image is frightening
You have stupid dreams all the time but this dream is vivid
botulizard t1_j6k5dvh wrote
I have one about swimming next to one. It's horrible.
Ill-Poet-3298 t1_j6jryux wrote
I see a ship in the harbor
EarlGrey57 t1_j6l9rup wrote
I can and shall obey.
botulizard t1_j6k452o wrote
I used to work in one of those converted warehouses next to the Autoport. Up close, these things are so big that it's unnerving.
[deleted] t1_j6jwab0 wrote
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biggybakes t1_j6keyvg wrote
More color for it's size, flag, etc...
What kind of ship is this?
ORCA ACE (IMO: 9777814) is a Vehicles Carrier that was built in 2018 (5 years ago) and is sailing under the flag of Panama.
Her carrying capacity is 15495 t DWT and her current draught is reported to be 8.4 meters. Her length overall (LOA) is 199.95 meters and her width is 32 meters.
spoonweezy t1_j6kiafa wrote
Just hope the front doesn’t fall off.
thewal68 t1_j6kjswu wrote
They typically show up in the port by Charlestown! When I lived there I loved seeing the vehicle carriers show up. Absolutely enormous. They look huge even up on the Tobin
smedlap t1_j6kntps wrote
I saw this go by my house this morning. I have never seen it before. It is huge!
fondledbydolphins t1_j6jpw9a wrote
iheartconcentrates t1_j6kwb98 wrote
It's really not that big?
NAFAL44 OP t1_j6l0puk wrote
Dunno where you're from, but anything that's bigger than my office and moves counts as big in my opinion.
bigtigerbigtiger t1_j6jn1kg wrote
This boat literally pahks the cahs near hahvahd yahd
[deleted] t1_j6iust2 wrote
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Yala-enki4320 t1_j6j2q41 wrote
Full of mdma apparently
Dontleave t1_j6iugdr wrote
It’s a vehicle carrier (new cars) coming from Davisville RI