T3 tanker


The T3 tanker, or T3, are a class of sea worthy large tanker ships produced in the United States and used to transport fuel oil, gasoline or diesel before and during World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. The T3 tanker classification is still used today. The T3 tanker has a full load displacement of about 24,830 tons.

Design

T3 tankers are about in length and are able to sustain a top speed from. The T3 tanker is larger, and usually faster, than a T2 tanker. The hull designation AOG is used by the US Navy to denote that the ship is a T3 gasoline tanker. The AO designation denotes that the ship is a T3 fleet oiler, also referred to as a replenishment oiler.
Most of the T3 ships were built for private companies and named by the manufacturer. Some T3 tankers were built for or sold to the US Navy, which were renamed after Native Americans, rivers and lakes.
T3 tankers are operated by the US Navy, War Shipping Administration and United States Maritime Commission.
The T3 tanker can carry from of oil. Some T3 tankers were used to transport other goods like black oil-crude oil and chemicals. T3s are also called liquid cargo carriers. The T3 tanker has a full load displacement of about 24,830 tons.
Each T3 has emergency life rafts on the boat deck. The ships have cargo booms and piping to load and unload fuel. During wartime, the T3 ships were armed for protection with deck guns, mainly for anti-aircraft purposes. A typical ship may have one single /50 caliber dual-purpose gun, two guns and three single Oerlikon 20 mm cannon| cannons. T3 ships normally carry 81 to 304 crew members. If operating as a United States Merchant Marine ship, the crew would be a mix of civilian Merchant Marines and US Navy Armed Guards to man the deck guns.
The World War II T3-class tankers were considered large for their day, but are small compared to modern oil tankers. Among "supertankers", the ultra large crude carrier is over 300,000 metric tons and the very large crude carrier is over 200,000 metric tons.
The attack on Pearl Harbor brought up an urgent need for aircraft carriers. This led to some T3 tankers being converted to escort carriers. is an example of a T3 tanker, hull AO-33, that was rebuilt to be an escort carrier. The T3 tanker's size and speed made it a useful escort carrier. There were two classes of T3 hull carriers: the and es.

Designs

Design & classPropulsionPowerSpeed Length × beam × draftGross register tonnageTankage
T3-S-A1 tanker, 2 × steam turbine, single screw9,880
T3-S2-A1 tanker, 4 × turbine, twin screws11,335
T3-S2-A3 tanker, Ashtabula classgeared turbines, twin screws7,423
T3-S2-A3 "jumboized"12,840
T3-S-AZ1 tanker5-cylinder two-cycle oil engine, single screw11,401
T3-S-B tanker2 × steam turbines, single screw11,016