Knowledge

Cabin (ship)

Source đź“ť

189: 129: 175: 387:
cabins have life support systems that should have the capability to meet a variety of off-nominal conditions, including cabin fires, depressurization, and component shutdown or failure. Frequently, these conditions occur so quickly that recovery can be provided only by automatic control systems. In the late 1960s, several experimental ground facilities were developed to evaluate regenerative life support systems for crewed space flight.
32: 262: 295:. Thus, when likely to be called from sleep or attending to administration, the commanding officer can go to the sea cabin and thereby be able to appear at the bridge or operations room immediately. The sea cabin is sparsely equipped, containing just a bunk, a desk, and basic toilet facilities. The in-port cabin is more lavishly furnished, with separate bedroom and combination 386:
for their crew. On missions lasting a year or longer, the cabins have to be self-sustaining, i.e. replenish their own water and oxygen. The space cabin for any long-range crewed mission is expected to be reasonably spacious, with approximately 28 cubic metres allotted to each occupant. In addition,
369:
terms, a cabin crawl is an event where passengers tour the cabins of fellow passengers. A cruise ship may also offer a cabin crawl of cabins or suites which did not sell for a particular sailing. The purpose of a cabin crawl is to give passengers an idea of the space and layout of various cabin
223:
On a warship, it was a privileged area, separate from the rest of the ship, for the exclusive use of the captain. In large warships, the cabin was subdivided into day and night cabins (bedrooms) by movable panels, called
353:, they are normally accommodated in cabins, taking the terminology familiar to seafarers. First-class cabins were traditionally referred to as 323:—the admiral also has a sea cabin (adjacent to the captain's sea cabin) and an in-port cabin, in addition to the captain's cabins. 266: 454: 429: 96: 68: 115: 188: 370:
options for their next cruise. Cabin crawls are normally organized prior to a cruise, through cruise-fan websites.
75: 53: 557: 49: 82: 552: 64: 42: 357:, and today many cruise lines now prefer to refer to passenger cabins as staterooms or suites. 20: 230:, that could be removed in time of battle to leave the cabin clear for the gunners to use the 313: 226: 180: 8: 193: 89: 401: 307: 213: 209: 450: 425: 208:, the officers and paying passengers would have an individual or shared cabin. The 396: 338: 310: 521: 284: 546: 331: 292: 205: 296: 238: 366: 320: 242: 159: 134: 192:
Commanding officer’s in-port cabin aboard the American aircraft carrier
379: 56: in this article. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 522:"A systems analysis of a regenerative cabin atmosphere control system" 216:
would occupy the "great cabin" that normally spanned the width of the
350: 231: 128: 31: 303: 261: 250: 155: 249:. The captain would be consigned to the cabin below on the middle 326:
Officers normally have their own cabins—sometimes referred to as
276: 246: 174: 132:
Interior of the great cabin of the 17th century Swedish warship
383: 470: 217: 495: 184:, a replica of a three-masted English 18th century-frigate. 151: 245:
the captain's cabin was sometimes appropriated by the
234:
several of which were usually stationed in the cabin.
158:. A cabin which protrudes above the level of a ship's 419: 283:, often adjacent to the ship's central control room ( 444: 299:/office, and more elaborate toiletry facilities. 544: 449:. The Kent State University Press. p. 11. 382:, cabins are required to fully supply food and 19:"Berthing" redirects here. For other uses, see 447:200,000 Miles Aboard the Destroyer Cotten 279:, the commanding officer has a main cabin—the 330:—which double as their offices. Some senior 116:Learn how and when to remove this message 260: 187: 173: 127: 519: 545: 424:. Naval Institute Press. p. 201. 334:may have cabins for similar reasons. 265:Bunks on the French aircraft carrier 150:is an enclosed space generally on a 54:adding citations to reliable sources 25: 13: 344: 256: 16:Enclosed space generally on a ship 14: 569: 169: 30: 41:needs additional citations for 513: 488: 463: 438: 420:James L. Holloway III (2007). 413: 360: 1: 520:Averill, R.D. (August 1968). 445:C. Snelling Robinson (2000). 407: 373: 302:For ships intended to act as 7: 390: 10: 574: 18: 422:Aircraft Carriers at War 220:and had large windows. 162:may be referred to as a 528:. NASA (published 1968) 526:Langley Research Center 272: 201: 185: 139: 21:Berth (disambiguation) 471:"Cruise Critic Board" 264: 191: 177: 131: 558:Nautical terminology 50:improve this article 178:Great cabin on the 402:Compartment (ship) 349:In ships carrying 308:United States Navy 306:, like the former 273: 214:commanding officer 202: 186: 140: 553:Ship compartments 456:978-0-87338-698-2 431:978-1-59114-391-8 337:Sailors sleep in 126: 125: 118: 100: 65:"Cabin" ship 565: 538: 537: 535: 533: 517: 511: 510: 508: 506: 492: 486: 485: 483: 481: 467: 461: 460: 442: 436: 435: 417: 397:Berth (sleeping) 311:aircraft carrier 291:adjacent to the 241:warships in the 121: 114: 110: 107: 101: 99: 58: 34: 26: 573: 572: 568: 567: 566: 564: 563: 562: 543: 542: 541: 531: 529: 518: 514: 504: 502: 494: 493: 489: 479: 477: 469: 468: 464: 457: 443: 439: 432: 418: 414: 410: 393: 376: 363: 347: 345:Passenger ships 339:berthing spaces 285:operations room 275:In most modern 259: 257:Modern warships 172: 122: 111: 105: 102: 59: 57: 47: 35: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 571: 561: 560: 555: 540: 539: 512: 487: 462: 455: 437: 430: 411: 409: 406: 405: 404: 399: 392: 389: 375: 372: 362: 359: 346: 343: 332:petty officers 258: 255: 171: 168: 124: 123: 38: 36: 29: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 570: 559: 556: 554: 551: 550: 548: 527: 523: 516: 501: 497: 496:"Cabin Crawl" 491: 476: 475:Cruise Critic 472: 466: 458: 452: 448: 441: 433: 427: 423: 416: 412: 403: 400: 398: 395: 394: 388: 385: 381: 371: 368: 358: 356: 352: 342: 340: 335: 333: 329: 324: 322: 318: 317: 312: 309: 305: 300: 298: 294: 290: 286: 282: 281:in-port cabin 278: 270: 269: 263: 254: 252: 248: 244: 240: 235: 233: 232:stern chasers 229: 228: 221: 219: 215: 211: 207: 206:sailing ships 199: 197: 190: 183: 182: 176: 170:Sailing ships 167: 165: 161: 157: 153: 149: 145: 137: 136: 130: 120: 117: 109: 106:December 2008 98: 95: 91: 88: 84: 81: 77: 74: 70: 67: â€“  66: 62: 61:Find sources: 55: 51: 45: 44: 39:This article 37: 33: 28: 27: 22: 530:. Retrieved 525: 515: 503:. Retrieved 499: 490: 478:. Retrieved 474: 465: 446: 440: 421: 415: 377: 364: 354: 348: 336: 327: 325: 315: 301: 297:sitting room 288: 280: 274: 267: 239:three decker 236: 225: 222: 203: 195: 179: 163: 147: 143: 141: 133: 112: 103: 93: 86: 79: 72: 60: 48:Please help 43:verification 40: 532:November 2, 500:Cabin Crawl 367:cruise ship 361:Cabin crawl 321:museum ship 243:age of sail 547:Categories 408:References 380:spacecraft 374:Spacecraft 355:staterooms 351:passengers 328:staterooms 268:Clemenceau 227:bulk-heads 181:Grand Turk 76:newspapers 316:Lexington 314:USS  304:flagships 289:sea cabin 237:On large 164:deckhouse 391:See also 287:)—and a 277:warships 251:gun-deck 198:(CVN-68) 156:aircraft 148:berthing 319:—now a 247:Admiral 210:captain 90:scholar 505:7 July 480:7 July 453:  428:  384:oxygen 293:bridge 196:Nimitz 154:or an 92:  85:  78:  71:  63:  218:stern 144:cabin 97:JSTOR 83:books 534:2013 507:2015 482:2015 451:ISBN 426:ISBN 194:USS 160:deck 152:ship 135:Vasa 69:news 378:In 365:In 212:or 204:In 146:or 52:by 549:: 524:. 498:. 473:. 341:. 253:. 166:. 142:A 536:. 509:. 484:. 459:. 434:. 271:. 200:. 138:. 119:) 113:( 108:) 104:( 94:· 87:· 80:· 73:· 46:. 23:.

Index

Berth (disambiguation)

verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Cabin" ship
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message

Vasa
ship
aircraft
deck

Grand Turk

USS Nimitz (CVN-68)
sailing ships
captain
commanding officer
stern
bulk-heads
stern chasers
three decker
age of sail
Admiral

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑