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davit

/ˈdævɪt/
IPA guide

Other forms: davits

When a large ship has a small, onboard crane that lowers lifeboats into the water, that crane is called a davit. Oil rigs and cruise ships are examples of vessels that have permanent, fixed davits.

One of the less well-known facts about the Titanic disaster is that its crew wasn't properly trained on how to operate the davits. The lifeboats were boarded and lowered so slowly that the crew wasn't able to use every available lifeboat in time. Modern ships installed with davits make it easy to get passengers into these boats and get them into the water. Davit comes from David and a tradition of referring to objects with a person's name.

Definitions of davit
  1. noun
    a crane-like device (usually one of a pair) for suspending or lowering equipment (as a lifeboat)
    see moresee less
    type of:
    crane
    lifts and moves heavy objects; lifting tackle is suspended from a pivoted boom that rotates around a vertical axis
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