A cargo ship or freighter is any sort of ship or vessel that carries cargo, goods and materials from one port to another. Thousands of cargo carriers ply the world's seas and oceans each year; they handle the bulk of international trade. Cargo ships are usually specially designed for the task, being equipped with cranes and other mechanisms to load and unload, and come in all sizes.
Before the middle of the 19th century, the incidence of piracy resulted in most cargo ships being armed, sometimes quite heavily, as in the case of the Manila galleons and East Indiamen.
Generally, the modern ocean shipping business is divided into two classes:
1. Liner business: typically (but not exclusively) container vessels (wherein "general cargo" is carried in 20 or 40-foot "boxes"), operating as "common carriers", calling a regularly-published schedule of ports. A common carrier refers to a regulated service where any member of the public may book cargo for shipment, according to long-established and internationally agreed rules.
2. Tramp-tanker business: generally this is private business arranged between the shipper and receiver and facilitated by the vessel owners or operators, who offer their vessels for hire to carry bulk (dry or liquid) or break bulk (cargoes with individually handled pieces) to any suitable port(s) in the world, according to a specifically drawn contract, called a charter party.
Larger cargo ships are generally operated by shipping lines: companies that specialize in the handling of cargo in general. Smaller vessels, such as coasters, are often owned by their operators.
Merchant vessels usually carry the designation M/V for "Motor Vessel". It is used as part of a ship's name, such as "M/V Independence", similarly to how "SS" (now seldom used) stands for "Steam Ship" in names such as SS Uganda.
Famous cargo ships would include the Liberty ships of World War II, which were prefabricated all over the USA and then assembled by the coast in an average of 6 weeks and as little as 4 days. These ships allowed the allies to replace older cargo vessels with ones that were faster then the Kriegsmarine's U-boats could sink and contributed significantly to the ability of the Allies to keep Britain in the war and build up troops and equipment for the D-Day landings.
Lake freighters built for the Great Lakes in North America differ in design from "salties" because of the difference in wave size and frequency in the lakes. A number of these boats are so large that they cannot leave the lakes because the do not fit into the locks on the Saint Lawrence Seaway.
Handelsskib | Frachtschiff | Navire cargo | Kapal barang | Cargo | 貨物船 | Navio cargueiro | Teretni brod | Rahtilaiva
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