Lifeboat. Atlantic 21 rigid inflatable went on station at Port Erin in 1993
I.O.M. Sg835
D.J. Hogan
Herbert and Edith
Re: Herbert and Edith
Herbert and Edith (Lifeboat) 1992
Belongs to R.N.L.I. (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) Ramsey (London); Her lenght 6.9m (22ft 9in); 2x70Hp Evinrude Outboard Motors, top speed 32knots, range 45 miles (2.75hr) at max speed; capacity: crew three/four, max. Up to 22 people.
Known as inshore lifeboats, the Herbert and Edith (Atlantic 21-class), replaced the Rother class lifeboat, Osman Gabriel.
See Topic: “Osman Gabriel (Lifeboat) 1973”
She has been involved in numerous service calls and is launched regularly on exercise, usually Sunday mornings.
The construction of the hull of the lifeboat is glass reinforced plastic with a hypalon-coated nylon inflatable tube. The hull is separated into seven different compartments, so should the hull get holed in anyway, the lifeboat will stay afloat. The inflatable tube is also made of numerous compartments for the same reason.
The Atlantic 21 is part of the B-class of lifeboats that served the shores of the United Kingdom and Ireland as part of the RNLI inshore fleet. The Atlantic 21 was the first generation Rigid Inflatable Boat (RIB), first developed at Atlantic College in South Wales.
Nearly all of the Atlantic 21s have been retired from service by 2006, one of the notable exceptions to this being the boat allocated to Walmer in Kent. RNLB James Burgess (B-589) was retired to the relief fleet in December 2006, it was replaced by a B-class (Atlantic 85).
The Atlantic 21 can be launched from either a davit, trolley or from a floating boathouse depending on the location of the station and the available facilities.
The boat carries a variety of equipment which includes two VHF radios, First Aid Kit & oxygen, GPS navigation system, night vision equipment, self-righting system, anchor and various warps, toolkit, towing system, illuminating and distress pyrotechnics, spotlight, torches.
The rollbar assembly installed above the engines contains a self-righting bag which is operated by a member of the crew activating a gas bottle.
Isle of Man 1999, S.G.: 835, Scott: 818.
Source: Wikipedia.
Belongs to R.N.L.I. (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) Ramsey (London); Her lenght 6.9m (22ft 9in); 2x70Hp Evinrude Outboard Motors, top speed 32knots, range 45 miles (2.75hr) at max speed; capacity: crew three/four, max. Up to 22 people.
Known as inshore lifeboats, the Herbert and Edith (Atlantic 21-class), replaced the Rother class lifeboat, Osman Gabriel.
See Topic: “Osman Gabriel (Lifeboat) 1973”
She has been involved in numerous service calls and is launched regularly on exercise, usually Sunday mornings.
The construction of the hull of the lifeboat is glass reinforced plastic with a hypalon-coated nylon inflatable tube. The hull is separated into seven different compartments, so should the hull get holed in anyway, the lifeboat will stay afloat. The inflatable tube is also made of numerous compartments for the same reason.
The Atlantic 21 is part of the B-class of lifeboats that served the shores of the United Kingdom and Ireland as part of the RNLI inshore fleet. The Atlantic 21 was the first generation Rigid Inflatable Boat (RIB), first developed at Atlantic College in South Wales.
Nearly all of the Atlantic 21s have been retired from service by 2006, one of the notable exceptions to this being the boat allocated to Walmer in Kent. RNLB James Burgess (B-589) was retired to the relief fleet in December 2006, it was replaced by a B-class (Atlantic 85).
The Atlantic 21 can be launched from either a davit, trolley or from a floating boathouse depending on the location of the station and the available facilities.
The boat carries a variety of equipment which includes two VHF radios, First Aid Kit & oxygen, GPS navigation system, night vision equipment, self-righting system, anchor and various warps, toolkit, towing system, illuminating and distress pyrotechnics, spotlight, torches.
The rollbar assembly installed above the engines contains a self-righting bag which is operated by a member of the crew activating a gas bottle.
Isle of Man 1999, S.G.: 835, Scott: 818.
Source: Wikipedia.