1 |
dwtDeadweight tonnage. See tankers.
|
2 |
dwtAbbreviation for deadweight tonnes. A measure of the maximum weight in tonnes a ship can safely carry. It includes cargo, fuel, fresh water, ballast water, provisions, passengers and crew.
|
3 |
dwt don't wanna talk
|
4 |
dwt Dressed weight.
|
5 |
dwtDeadweight tonnage
|
6 |
dwtis D-wt., i.e. denarius-weight (penny-weight). (See CWT.)
|
7 |
dwtDeadweight tonnes. |A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z| EEC - European Economic Community, the European Common Market.
|
8 |
dwtDeadweight Tonnes
|
9 |
dwtDeadweight tons.
|
10 |
dwtDeadweight Ton
|
11 |
dwtDead weight tonnage
|
12 |
dwtDeadweight
|
13 |
dwtDeadweight tonnage
|
14 |
dwtDeadweight tonnes.
|
15 |
dwtDeadweight tonnes (DWT) is a measure of the total weight that a vessel can carry when loaded down to its marks, including the weight of cargo, fuel, stores, water ballast, fresh water, crew, passenger [..]
|
16 |
dwtDeadweight Tonnes
|
17 |
dwtDeadweight
|
18 |
dwtDeadweight ton. A measure expressed in metric tons (1,000 kg) or long tons (1,016 kg) of a ship's carrying capacity, including bunker oil, fresh water, crew and provisions. This is the most impor [..]
|
19 |
dwtDeadweight tonnage
|
20 |
dwtDeadweight tons.
|
21 |
dwtLoading capacity of a vessel in terms of weight. Number of tons that a vessel can transport, including supplies and bunker (which must be subtracted to obtain the "payload").
|
<< dcw | Dressed weight price >> |