11 Common Ship Types and Their Unique Purposes

Types of Ships

If you plan to work in the shipping industry or enjoy sailing the seas, you should be aware of the various types of ships available.

When you’re out at sea, you may encounter various vessels, and it’s helpful to know how to recognize them.

It’s also worth noting that safety requirements differ significantly depending on the sort of ship you’re running.

Furthermore, each vessel has its own rigid rules that must be followed. In addition, working on each type of ship can also be very different, so doing your research before applying for a position is essential.

For example, working aboard a fishing vessel is a very different experience from working on a commercial ship.

However, experts in the marine sector and experienced sailors will have a strong understanding of the various kinds of ships.

If you’re new to the industry, here are some of the most common types of international ships you’ll encounter on your journey.

1. Service Vessel

Service Vessels
by sludgegulper is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

Service Vessels are various types of vessels. Most service ships are tugs or towing vessels whose primary purpose is to supply propulsion to other ships.  

However, they are primarily used in harbors and inland waters. They are tiny since the only substantial weight they must carry is a propulsion plant and a small amount of gasoline.  

Furthermore, towing massive drilling rigs for the petroleum industry and the occasional ocean salvage operation (e.g., towing a disabled ship) necessitate larger and more seaworthy craft than the common coastal service vessels.

Still, oceangoing tugs and towboats are few in number and small in size compared to cargo ships. 

2. Passenger Ship

Passenger Ships
by express000 is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Passenger ships, as the name implies, are primarily employed to transport passengers in transit. However, they are mainly divided into the following categories.

Ferries and Cruise Liners. Ferries transport passengers (and sometimes cars) over short distances.

Cruise ships mainly utilized for leisure are similar to elegant floating hotels with cutting-edge amenities. 

3. Oil Tanker

Oil Tankers
by greatshippics is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Oil tankers are some of the various types of ships. They are specially designed tank ships that transport crude oil.  

However, certain technological qualities distinguish tankers from cargo ships, such as oil leak-tightness, structural resistance, and the fuel loading and unloading pumping system.

Because these ships are so enormous, they must berth on the open seas. They can hold two million barrels of oil. 

4. Gas Carrier

Gas Carriers
by Derek Keats is licensed under CC BY 2.0

They are sometimes lumped in with oil tankers. However, they have more advanced technology for storing liquefied gas, which is becoming increasingly common.

In broad strokes, they can be divided into LNG, which is used to store liquid natural gas, and LPG, which is used to store liquid petroleum gas.  

Furthermore, the fundamental distinction is technical: LNG transports gas at temperatures up to -170 °C, while LPG transports gas at -50 °C and a pressure of 18 kg/cm2. LNG ships stand out with their huge spherical tanks on deck.

Additionally, Chemical cargo ships, on the other hand, have many tanks to keep the various compounds they transport from combining. 

5. Cargo Ship

Cargo Ships
by chumlee10 is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

Cargo ships are also different types of ships. They are typically used to move cargo safely from one location to another.

Their boat will have a multi-deck or single-deck hull. Thousands of cargo ships are on the move worldwide, transporting merchandise.

Cargo ships are vital to international trade. They can transport food, furniture, metals, clothing, and machinery

6. Fishing Vessel

Fishing Vessels
by sludgegulper is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

Fishing vessels are ships or boats used for recreational or commercial fishing at sea.

Trawlers and non-trawling vessels are the two primary types of fishing vessels.  

Furthermore, Trawlers, also known as draggers, are commercial fishing vessels intended to run fishing trawls.

However, Trawling is a type of fishing in which a trawl is actively dragged or pulled across the water by one or more trawlers.  

A purse seine is a massive netting wall surrounding a vast region or school of fish.

However, the top line of the seine has floats, while the bottom line has a lead line threaded through rings.

Once a school of fish has been identified, a boat with a net encircles the school. 

A factory ship, a fish processing vessel, is a sizeable oceangoing vessel with substantial onboard processing and freezing capabilities for catching fish or whales. 

7. RoRo (Roll on Roll off)

RoRo (Roll on Roll off)
by hemkes is licensed under CC BY 2.0

A Roll Roll the ship is used to transport most cars across international waterways.

This ship is so famous for transporting autos because driving a vehicle onto the boat is safer and faster than employing a crane.  

Once on board, the cars are secured to the ship’s deck to prevent them from rolling about while at sea. 

8. Cruise Ship

Cruise Ship
by sgbirch is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Cruise ships are descended from transatlantic ocean liners, which have seen their services supplanted by jet aircraft since the mid-twentieth century.  

Even into the 1990s, some cruise ships were ocean liners adapted to tropical cruising from the 1950s and 1960s through purely cosmetic changes.

For example, it includes swimming pools and other amenities to suit warm-latitude cruising. 

In addition, most cruise ships in operation today, however, were built mainly for the cruise industry after 1970.  

Because they are made to carry vast passengers (perhaps thousands), they have towering superstructures with multiple decks, and their main routes are in warm seas.

They are often painted white and have a “wedding cake” appearance that can be seen from a long distance.

Additionally, A closer look usually reveals many motor launches onboard for ferrying passengers ashore.  

However, many cruise ships include stern ramps, similar to those found on cargo-carrying roll-on/roll-off ships, to let passengers get to the launches and function as docking facilities. 

9. Miscellaneous Ship

The term “miscellaneous” has a limited meaning in this context. It’s meant to include classifications like icebreakers and research vessels, which the government frequently owns.

Because no goods are to be transported, neither type has to be substantial.

On the other hand, icebreakers are typically large enough to cut a wide swath through ice and have the solid propulsive force to overcome the resistance of the ice layer.

Furthermore, Icebreakers also have steeply sloping bow profiles, particularly near the waterline, to wedge themselves onto thick ice and crack it from the static weight.

To protect the hull from damage, the ship’s waterline must be reinforced with layers of armor and braced by massive stiffeners.

10. High-Speed Craft

High-Speed Craft
by Samson Ng . D201@EAL is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

High-speed craft is one of the various types of ships. They are a subset of high-performance (usually high-speed) maritime vehicles with modern technology.  

Although most technologies aren’t employed on commercial vessels, a handful have been successfully deployed and tested on small-scale commerce ships.  

Furthermore, the following are some of the most common high-speed craft: Wave piercers are included in multihulls.

Ground Craft with a small waterplane area, twin-hull (SWATH) Surface effect ship (SES), and Hovercraft Hydrofoil Wing (WIG) 

11. Dredger

Dredgers
by Wolfgang.W.  is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Dredgers are also types of ships. Dredging is an excavation that takes place underwater, in shallow oceans or freshwater environments, to collect bottom sediments and enlarge the channel.  

Furthermore, Dredgers are vessels equipped with excavation tools to remove sand and sediment from the bottom.

Dredgers are employed for various tasks, including navigating shallow coastal areas, deep-sea mining, etc.

There are two classifications of dredgers: mechanical and hydraulic dredgers. 

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