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Champion Cornelia - IMO 9113147

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Photo
details

Photographer:
Tomas [ View profile ]
Captured:
Mar 21, 2017
Added:
Mar 21, 2017
Views:
914
Image Resolution:
2,806 x 1,871

Description:

Champion Cornelia, at Herøya Norway.
Photo by Tomas, 3,5 km away at Herre.



"Champion Cornelia"

Vessel
particulars

Current name:
OZICHUKWU

Former name(s):

 -  Champion Cornelia (Until 2018 Oct)

 -  Cariad (Until 2011 Jun)

 -  Libertad (Until 2000 Jan)

Current flag:
Nigeria
Home port:
Lagos
Vessel Type:
Oil/chemical Tanker
Gross tonnage:
28,337 tons
Summer DWT:
46,632 tons
Length:
183 m
Beam:
32.2 m
Draught:
12.2 m

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of this ship

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Photo
Categories

This ship exists in the following categories:

Shipping - 3 photos

Ships under Repair or Conversion - 5 photos

Tankers built 1991 - 2000 - 48 photos

Photographers
of this ship

(27)

Pilot Frans

3 photos

Tom Turner

2 photos

Phil English

1 photos

Rozenburg

2 photos

Eero Isotalo

1 photos

Ulf Kornfeld

1 photos

Tomas

5 photos

grady

1 photos

Christian

1 photos

Marc Boucher

1 photos

Viktor

7 photos

WARTSILA

2 photos

Peter M P

2 photos

Gabriel Bedo

3 photos

csaba

2 photos

har

1 photos

Holly

2 photos

COMMENT THIS PHOTO(8)

Newest First
person
Hey guys, i did this one, the gt star and csl elbe in one battery actually.
I use a phantom 4 pro, and the battery is pretty decent! This is the furthermost i have sent it away, from my homepoint. No obstructions, allthhough i loose connection once in a while.

Tomas

Edit
comment

person
Tomas, that's a marvelous combination of technology and art. Thank you.

You are confident of your battery capacity to last 3.5 km each way plus hover time. As Andrecas said "there could not have been much left in the "tank". " Or do you have ample capacity to cope with longer flights?

Edit
comment

person
Interesting aerials coming from your side of the globe. Taking into consideration standard rules & regulations for flying drones, at 3.5 km distance you are getting up there in flying time. Just wondering what your battery reading/flight time remaining at the time your drone arrived back to "base-camp"?
Some folks have (extreme) tested their Phanthom 4 drones to distances up to 6.8 km (4.2 miles). To achieve that presumably conditions were "beyond" ideal (i.e. clear line-of-sight/perfect weather conditions/little or no radio interference/battery @ 100%, etc). Nevertheless, with that length of air time there could not have been much left in the "tank".
With increased drone popularity, great stuff being uploaded from different parts of the world. Well done...!

Edit
comment

person
So no fresh winds blowing through your hairs....

Edit
comment

person
Hehehe, pretty much!!!
Tomas

Edit
comment

person
So you do shipspotting from behind a console at home?

Edit
comment

person
Sorry, i meant that i pressed the shutter-button on the remote controller 3.5 km away.
Tomas

Edit
comment

person
Tomas, are you implying that this shot was taken from 3.5 km distance?

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comment