SS Orizaba (1939)

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NameES Orizaba
NamesakeOrizaba, Mexico
OperatorHamburg America Line
History
Nazi Germany
NameES Orizaba
NamesakeOrizaba, Mexico
OwnerHamburg America Line[1]
OperatorHamburg America Line
Port of registryNazi Germany Hamburg[1]
RouteHamburg – Caribbean
BuilderDeutsche Werft, Hamburg[1]
Launched11 February 1939
Completed1939[1]
In service1939
Out of service26 February 1940[2]
HomeportHamburg
FateRan aground, 26 February 1940[2]
General characteristics
Tonnage4,354 GRT[1]
Length398.3 ft (121.4 m)[1]
Beam55.7 ft (17.0 m)[1]
Depth22.8 ft (6.9 m)[1]
Propulsion
Sensors &
processing systems
Notes

SS Orizaba (or "ES Orizaba", with "ES" standing for "Electroschiff" German: electric ship) was a Hamburg America Line (HAPAG) cargo ship that was built in Hamburg 1939[1] and wrecked off northern Norway in 1940.

Orizaba was built for trade between Germany and the Caribbean, and was named accordingly. Orizaba is a city in the Mexican state of Veracruz, on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.

Orizaba was built in Hamburg and completed in 1939.[1] She was one of three sister ships launched in 1939 for HAPAG. She and her sister Antilla were built by Deutsche Werft in Finkenwerder, Hamburg,[1][3] while their sister Arauca was built by Bremer Vulkan in Bremen-Vegesack.[4]

Orizaba and her sisters had turbo-electric transmission.[1][3][4] Each ship had two oil-fired high pressure boilers that fed a single AEG turbo generator.[1][3][4] This produced current for an AEG electric propulsion motor that drove a single propeller shaft.[1][3][4] This was a sophisticated propulsion system that required skilled operation. Both Antilla and Arauca suffered technical failures on their maiden voyages to the Caribbean.[5][6]

Orizaba and her sisters each had direction finding equipment and an echo sounding device.[1][3][4]

Career

Wreck

References

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