half speed ahead - meaning and definition. What is half speed ahead
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What (who) is half speed ahead - definition

TRUE MAXIMUM SPEED OF A VESSEL
Full speed ahead; Full speed; FLK AHEAD

Half-speed mastering         
Half Speed Mastering; Half-speed mastered
Half-speed mastering is a technique occasionally used when cutting the acetate lacquers from which phonograph records are produced. The cutting machine platter is run at half of the usual speed (16 rpm for 33 rpm records) while the signal to be recorded is fed to the cutting head at half of its regular playback speed.
The Road Ahead (album)         
2004 COMPILATION ALBUM BY BRADLEY JOSEPH
The Road Ahead (Bradley Joseph album)
The Road Ahead is a compilation album by Bradley Joseph containing songs from his albums One Deep Breath, Solo Journey, The Journey Continues, and Hear the Masses.
Go-Ahead Verkehrsgesellschaft Deutschland         
  • Logo of Go-Ahead Baden-Württemberg.
  • Logo of Go-Ahead Bayern.
  • GoAhead ET 4.08 (Stadler Flirt 3) at Stuttgart Hbf
Go-Ahead Verkehrsgesellschaft Deutschland GmbH; Go-Ahead Germany; Go-Ahead Bayern; Go-Ahead Baden-Württemberg
Go-Ahead Verkehrsgesellschaft Deutschland GmbH is a railway operator in Germany. A subsidiary of the Go-Ahead Group, it commenced trading on 9 June 2019.

Wikipedia

Flank speed

Flank speed is an American nautical term referring to a ship's true maximum speed but it is not equivalent to the term full speed ahead. Usually, flank speed is reserved for situations in which a ship finds itself in imminent danger, such as coming under attack by aircraft. Flank speed is very demanding of fuel and often unsustainable because of propulsion system limitations. The related term emergency may not be any faster than flank but it indicates that the ship should be brought up to maximum speed in the shortest possible time.

Other speeds include one-third, two-thirds, standard and full. One-third and two-thirds are fractions of standard speed. Full is greater than standard but not as great as flank. In surface ship nuclear marine propulsion, the difference between full speed and flank speed is of lesser significance, because vessels can be run at or very near their true maximum speed for a long time with little regard for fuel expended, an important consideration for oil-fueled ships.

"Flank speed" is exclusively an American phrase and as such is unknown in Commonwealth ("Ensign") navies. The Commonwealth navies use the following telegraph commands:

  • Slow ahead/astern, the number of revolutions is standardized for the individual ship and is unstated
  • Half ahead/astern, accompanied by an order for a power setting (e.g., "half ahead both engines, revolutions 1,500")
  • Full speed ahead/astern. This is reserved for emergencies and as such the word "speed" is included to distinguish it from the other commands mentioned. No power setting is expressed, it being implicit that maximum power is required

The term's origin is difficult to verify but likely comes from simplifying the term "Flanking speed" in which naval vessels would attempt to get around the sides or "flanks" of another vessel's vulnerable locations.