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For the 1944 movie, see Lifeboat (movie).

A lifeboat is a boat designed to save lives of people in trouble at sea. There are two quite different usages. One usage is the lifeboats carried by passenger ships, the other the boats designed to be launched as coastal rescue vehicles. Other types of lifeboat are stationed at offshore platforms.


The first boat specialized as a lifeboat was tested on the River Tyne on January 29, 1790. William Wouldhave and Lionel Lukin both claimed to be the inventor of the first Lifeboat.

1 Ship-launched lifeboats

These are large whaleboats designed to be lowered from davit s on a ship's deck. They are designed to be unsinkable, with buoyancy that cannot be damaged. They have a cover that can be erected to form a storm shelter. They usually carry three days of food and water, oars, and an engine, heater and basic navigational equipment.

Lifeboats for the North Sea included an electric heater for the engine oil, which was left on in cold weather. Modern lifeboats should also carry an emergency position-indicating rescue beacon.

Traditionally, lifeboats for passages in the Pacific or Indian Oceans were thought unsafe unless they permitted self-rescue. Thus these also included sailing equipment, navigational equipment, solar water stills, rainwater catchments and fishing equipment.

Origins of the Ships Onboard lifeboat.

By the turn of the 20th Century the risks taken with a passage by sea were beginning to outweigh the considered responsibility of the passenger. It was to be with the loss of the ‘ Titanic’ on 16th April 1912, that came another call to compel the Board of Trade to supply sufficient Lifeboats on the larger cruise ships to account for the safety of all the passengers.

The need for so many more Lifeboats on the decks of passenger ships after 1912 led to the real overtaking of most of the deck space available even on the large ships, creating the alternative problem of restricted passageways, an equally dangerous position, which was to some extent resolved by the introduction of many more collapsible Lifeboats, a number of which had been installed on the ‘Titanic’~ and as such, those built by the ‘ Birthon Boat Company’.

The ship's tenders of modern cruise ships are often designed to double as lifeboats.

Also see the discussion in dinghy and liferaft .

2 Rescue lifeboats

This type of lifeboat is also occasionally known as a rescue boat. These are designed to be launched from shore, and rescue ships' crews out to a hundred miles or so. Their most unique traits are that they can be launched in any weather, through heavy surf. Modern lifeboats have diesel power and are fast but have a limited rescue radius. Older lifeboats have sails, which are more reliable, slower, and have an unlimited rescue radius. Both types remain in use. All lifeboats of this type have radios to help locate the ships, as well as whale-boats, slings to rescue injured persons, and medical and succoring supplies, such as food.

The most famous group maintaining these lifeboats is the

Royal National Lifeboat InstitutionThe Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) is a charity dedicated to saving lives at sea around the coasts of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. It is an all-volunteer organisation founded in 1824 as the National Institution for the Prese (or RNLI) of the United KingdomThe United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is a state in Western Europe, usually known simply as the United Kingdom the UK Britain or less accurately as Great Britain . The UK was formed by a series of Acts of Union which united the formerly, composed of volunteers, and paid for by voluntary donation - web-site at www.rnli.org.uk. Most ScandinaviaScandinavia is the cultural and historic region of the Scandinavian Peninsula. The Scandinavian countries are Norway, Sweden and Denmark, which mutually recognize each other as parts of Scandinavia. The collective label "Scandinavia" reflects the culturaln countries also have active volunteer lifeboat societies. The local branch of a society generally schedules practices, maintains a lifeboat and shed, and is contacted by commercial marine radio operators when a rescue is needed.

In AustralasiaAustralasia is the area that includes Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea, and the many smaller islands in the vicinity, most of which are the eastern part of Indonesia. The name was coined by Charles de Brosses in Histoire des navigations aux terres austr, surf lifesavingSwimming Surf lifesaving is a competitive sport which evolved from the training activities of lifeguards at Australian surf beaches, though most events share little with modern inflatable-boat based surf rescue techniques. The sport is still based around clubs operate inflatable rescue boats (IRB) for in-shore rescues of swimmers and surfers. These boats are best typified by the rubber Zodiac and are powered by an outboard motor. The rescue personnel wear wet suits and expect to get wet. The Rigid Hulled Inflatable Boat (RIB) is now seen as the best type of craft for in-shore rescues as they are less likely to be tipped over by the wind or breakers. Specially designed JetA jetboat is a boat propelled by a jet of water ejected from the back of the craft. Unlike a powerboat or motorboat that uses a propeller in the water behind the boat, a jetboat draws the water from under the boat into a Pump-jet inside the boat then expe rescue boats have also been used successfully. Unlike ordinary pleasure craft, these small to medium sized rescue craft often have very low freeboard so that victims can be taken aboard without lifting. This means that the boats are designed to operate with water inside the boat hull and rely on flotation tanks rather than hull displacement to stay afloat and upright.





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