A vessel when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being not under command or unable to maneuver as required by the rules... A Manual of Elementary Seamanship - Página 122por David Wilson-Barker - 1909 - 243 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1911 - 342 páginas
...blasts in succession, viz : short, long, short, with intervals of about 1 second between them. (h) A vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable shall, on hearing the fog-signal of an approaching vessel, sound in answer 3 prolonged blasts in succession.... | |
| United States - 1911 - 560 páginas
...minute, ring the bell rapidly for about five seconds. VESSELS TOWING OR TOWED. (e) A vessel when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way, which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
| United States. President - 1911 - 822 páginas
...not more than one minute ring the bell rapidly for about five seconds. , " (f) A vessel when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
| John H. Malcolm - 1911 - 412 páginas
...of not more than one minute, ring the bell rapidly for about five seconds. (e) A vessel when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way, which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
| International Correspondence Schools - 1911 - 450 páginas
...min., ring a bell rapidly for about 5 sec. Vessels Towing or Being Towed. — (e) A vessel when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way, which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
| U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey - 1912 - 178 páginas
...feet apart, where they can best be seen, two black balls or shapes, each two feet in diameter. (b) A vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph...cable shall carry in the same position as the white liglit mentioned in article two (a), and if a steam vessel in lieu of that light three lights in a... | |
| Richard Marriotte Pugsley - 1915 - 304 páginas
...rapidly for about five seconds. Fog Signals for Vessels Towing and Being Towed. {e) A vessel when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1912 - 850 páginas
...of not more than one minute, ring the bell rapidly for above five seconds, (e) A vessel when towing a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way, which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
| 1917 - 1082 páginas
...balls or shapes each two feet in diameter. Signals for a Vessel Laying or Picking Up a Telegraph Cable A vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable shall carry in the same position as a steam vessel's masthead light, and if a steam vessel in lieu of that light, three lights in a vertical... | |
| Sanford Darley Cole - 1913 - 254 páginas
...not more than one minute, ring the bell rapidly for about five seconds. («) A vessel, when towing, a vessel employed in laying or in picking up a telegraph cable, and a vessel under way, which is unable to get out of the way of an approaching vessel through being... | |
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