What’s the Difference Between a Cruise Ship and an Ocean Liner?

Written by News Channel 2 on August 27, 2013. Posted in Engine spare parts, Marine spares suppliers, Supply of spare parts

Cruise vessel parts and equipment

Ocean liners and cruise ships are two very different things, though most people don’t know it. To the layman, they are both just large ships that move people across water, but actually, they are very different. And, it is very important which you are traveling on for companies like marine spares suppliers who supply cargo vessel parts, or vessel parts for other types of marine transportation.

  • A Cruise ship is used for pleasure voyages for passengers when the ship’s amenities and the voyage itself are part of the whole experience. Rather than efficient transportation, cruise liners move leisurely, and often make several stops along the way to the final destination.
  • Cruise ships often take their passengers on a route that returns to their point of origination, which means that the ports of call are normally in a predestined region on a continent or area.
  • Royal Caribbean International’s Oasis of the Seas as well as it’s sister ship, the Allure of the Seas, are the largest cruise ships in the world. They have to be, because they make frequent voyages through the vast open waters of the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean.
  • Even though cruise ships and ocean liners are functionally different, retired ocean liners like Mona Lisa and Marco Polo now serve as cruise ships, which can add a little history to any vacation.
  • Provisioning is very important on any vessel, but especially on a cruise ship, as they tend to serve several thousand meals per sitting.
  • Marine spares suppliers also have to be at the ready more so with a cruise ship than with cargo vessel parts and equipment, because the cargo on a cruise vessel is human beings. There have been a few problems recently with cruise ships being stranded at sea, and it is thanks to marine spares suppliers that people were able to get home as soon as they did and were liberated from unsanitary conditions because the cruise ship was not equipped for extra days on open water. Read more: globalmarinecare.com

Comments (6)

  • October 25, 2013 at 8:59 am |

    i didnt’ kreally know that those two things were different, other than one is a little more luxury than the other …

  • Theodore Mann
    March 12, 2014 at 7:14 pm |

    Yeah, an ocean liner isn’t going to really have the same amenities as a cruise ship, since one is for vacation and one is for work.

  • Zachary Jonston
    April 11, 2014 at 9:43 pm |

    Yeah, an ocean liner isn’t going to really have the same amenities as a cruise ship, since one is for vacation and one is for work.

  • Eva Collins
    May 12, 2014 at 3:59 pm |

    Yeah, an ocean liner isn’t going to really have the same amenities as a cruise ship, since one is for vacation and one is for work.

  • June 11, 2014 at 4:00 pm |

    Yeah, an ocean liner isn’t going to really have the same amenities as a cruise ship, since one is for vacation and one is for work.

  • Evelyn Hernandez
    July 11, 2014 at 4:01 pm |

    Yeah, an ocean liner isn’t going to really have the same amenities as a cruise ship, since one is for vacation and one is for work.

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