Marinisation (original) (raw)
Marinisation (also marinization) is design, redesign, or testing of products for use in a marine environment. Most commonly, it refers to use and long-term survival in harsh, highly corrosive salt water conditions. Marinisation is done by many manufacturing industries worldwide including many military organisations, especially navies. There are three main factors that need to be considered for a product to be truly marinised.
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dbo:abstract | Marinisation (also marinization) is design, redesign, or testing of products for use in a marine environment. Most commonly, it refers to use and long-term survival in harsh, highly corrosive salt water conditions. Marinisation is done by many manufacturing industries worldwide including many military organisations, especially navies. In some instances, cost is not a guiding force, and items may be designed from scratch with entirely non-corrosive components engineered and assembled to resist the effects of vibration and constantly changing attitude. In others, particularly in "marinising" an existing product that was not designed specifically for a marine environment for sale in the public marketplace, a balance must be found between the competing criteria. There are three main factors that need to be considered for a product to be truly marinised. * Resistance to corrosion. * Resistance to vibration. * Ability to function properly in conditions of constantly changing attitude (an object's orientation about its center of gravity). (en) |
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dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 1118245761 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Electronics dbr:Alloy dbr:Hydrogen_chloride dbr:Vibration dbr:Orientation_(geometry) dbr:Gel_battery dbr:Copper dbr:Corrosion dbr:Corrosion_engineering dbc:Material_protection dbr:Zinc dbr:Tin dbr:Corrosive dbr:Brass dbr:Bronze dbr:Flight_dynamics dbr:Marine_electronics dbr:Sulfuric_acid dbr:Metals dbr:Salt_water dbr:Stainless_steel dbr:VRLA_battery dbr:Marine_(ocean) dbr:Galvanised_steel |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:Navy-stub dbt:Unreferenced |
dcterms:subject | dbc:Material_protection |
rdfs:comment | Marinisation (also marinization) is design, redesign, or testing of products for use in a marine environment. Most commonly, it refers to use and long-term survival in harsh, highly corrosive salt water conditions. Marinisation is done by many manufacturing industries worldwide including many military organisations, especially navies. There are three main factors that need to be considered for a product to be truly marinised. (en) |
rdfs:label | Marinisation (en) |
owl:sameAs | wikidata:Marinisation https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4rQqz |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Marinisation?oldid=1118245761&ns=0 |
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is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of | dbr:SR.N4 dbr:PT_boat dbr:Marinised dbr:Motor_torpedo_boat dbr:Marinization dbr:Marinized |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Marinisation |