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- Port Business Glossary -S-
Last updated on August 5, 2024.
The text is from here.
Port Business Glossary -S-
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
-Ah- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- - La- --wa-
-S-
- S(Starboard)
- Starboard (anti) P
- S/A(Shipping Application)
- Ship Application Form
- safe practice
- A safe way
- safe working load
- Safe use load
- safety factor
- Safety coefficient
- safety line
- Safety cables (temporarily stretched around hold and warehouses to prevent crashes)
- safety measure
- Safety standards
- sagging
- Sagging (the hull deflection caused by excessive weight in the center of the hull)
- salvage
- Withdraw (e.g. sea submerged cargo, etc.)
- save all(net)
- Seba All (a net stretched between the port side and the quay to prevent cargo from entering the sea)
- saw dust
- Sawdust (used to remove oil stains on deck)
- SBM(Single Buoy Mooring)
- A 1-point mooring Buoy. The buoy, which has large tankers off Kawasaki and Yokohama, is now connected to land tanks with rubber hoses, while the other is connected to the ship's pipeline for cargo handling.
- S/C(Service Contract; Space Charter)
- →(1)Service Contract (2) Space Charter
- schooner guy
- Schooner gai (also called Center gai) Two booms are tied with ropes when quarrels to prevent the movement of the outside.)
- S. C.M.(Supply Chain Management)
- A management method that minimizes time loss in order by exchanging information in a timely manner on the Internet. This will efficiently manage supply relationships between companies, reduce inventory, shorten delivery times, improve cost performance, and enhance CS.
- S. C.NET(Shipper/Carrier shipping information NETwork system)
- A system for exchanging information such as fares between shippers and shipping companies.
- scrap
- Scrap (dust)
- scraper
- Scraper (tool for cutting and dropping)
- scratch
- Scratching (e.g., the painted part peels off, etc.)
- seal
- Seals (barges, wagons, containers, etc.)
- seam
- Seams (such as canvas) seams, (iron plates) seams
- SEA-NACCS(SEA-Nippon Automated Cargo Clearance System)
- Marine cargo customs clearance information processing system. A system that connects customs, forwarders, and banks online to automatically process maritime cargo customs clearance procedures and customs settlements.
Operation of Keihin Port in October 1991. In October 1992, Hanshin and Nagoyako started operations. - seaworthiness
- Weather resistance
- secondhand
- Used
- section paper
- Directive paper
- secure
- Fix it
- security
- Valuables
- seizing
- Seasing, (at the end of the line)
- self insurance
- In-house insurance
- self-sustaining
- You can do it on your own (heavy items, etc., where you can load the cargo with the ship gear)
- sennit(sennet)
- Sennet (a thin cable used for edges, etc.)
- separation
- Boundaries (boundaries such as mats placed between one port of onboard loading and other port landings), separation
- severity rate
- Strength rate (Safety Management term refers to the number of days lost due to disasters to working hours)
- SF(San Francisco)
- Abbreviation for San Francisco (Port).
- sheave
- Cib (a heart car with a groove that can be used in a pulley)
- shed
- Shed
- shift
- Shift (moving cargo, unloading), working hours (replacement) and movement between quays of the vessel in the port
- shifting board
- Shifting board (other thick walls to prevent movement of roses on the center line of the ship hold)
- ship chandler
- Shipkeepers
- shipment
- Shipment (Products)
- SHIPNETS(Shipping Cargo Information Network System)
- Shipment cargo network system. It was developed with the aim of efficiently and promptly processing shipping documents, etc., using an online system linking four industries: shipping companies, sea freighters, inspectors, and inspectors. Operations began at Keihin Port in April 1986, commenced full-scale operation at Kobe Port in April 1987, Osakako in September 1987, and Nagoyako in October 2019.
- shipped B/L
- Billing of Lading (B/L issued after shipment)
- shipper
- Shipper (consigner)
- shipping agent
- Shipping agent
- shipping Application
- →S/A
- shipping broker
- Shipping matchmaker (Otsunaka)
- shipping charge
- Shipment fee
- shipping firm
- Ship company
- shipping order
- →S/O
- ship store
- Ship supplies
- shipyard
- Shipyard
- shoring
- Shoring
- short gang
- Insufficient workers
- short in dispute
- Insufficient examination (Determining the excess or deficiency based on the inspection number of unloaded land because the result of the inspection number of unloaded land does not match)
- short shipped
- Unloaded
- short ton
- Short ton, US ton (2,000 pounds, or 907 kilograms, 1 short ton. See Longton)
- sideboard
- Sideboards (for wagons, trucks, etc.)
- side sparring
- Onboard board
- sidewalk
- Sidewalk
- signal man
- A signal
- single whip
- Single whip (normal cargo handling method with one pulley and one motion cable)
- SKD(Semi-Knock Down)
- Abbreviation of semi-knockdown. Since CKD (Complete Knock Down) is assembled and manufactured overseas, all parts are exported as parts, while some parts contain parts partially completed. Both words are often used in exports of automobiles and home appliances.
- skelton deck
- Temporary deck
- skid
- Skid (low board table for carrying luggage), (slip of things) board
- skill differential
- Skill allowance
- skipper
- Captain (of a small ship)
- slack
- Slikey (such as wires) sagging
- SLB(Siberian Land Bridge)
- This route connects Japan, Europe, and the Middle East by Siberian Railway. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, its handling volume has dropped sharply.
- sleeper
- Sleepers (wood laid on deck when loading heavy objects, etc.)
- slewing
- (e.g. boom) turning
- sling
- Apply a sling, hang with a sling
- sling angle
- Fishing angle (angle made by the sling when pulling the cargo)
- smuggle
- Smuggling
- smuggler
- Smuggling
- snatch block
- Incidental pulley (a part of the shell can be opened and closed, making it easy to install wires, so it is suitable for temporary installation and use onboard cargo)
- sneaking
- Sneaking (to pull cargo into a wing, etc.)
- solicitor
- Sledsitter (collection staff at shipping companies, etc.)
- S/O(Shipping Order)
- Order book. Documents instructing the shipowner to ship the cargo upon receiving the shipping application from the shipowner. The shipper (mostly proxy/agent) submits it to the ship at the time of the shipbuilding, and the ship is carried out.
- space charter
- Space charter
- span
- Spans (distance between two points), length (those extending) length
- special cargo
- Special cargo
- specification
- Specifications and statements
- speed up
- (Consignment, etc.) rush
- splice
- Assembling and putting (a method of unraveling the cable end and incorporating the child trap between the other measures to prevent it from slipping out)
- split pin
- Split pin (a pin that is broken to bend the tip so that it does not come off)
- spontanous ignition
- Spontaneous fire
- spot check
- Unexpected inspection
- spray
- Splash
- spreader
- Spreaders, (commonly called Kanzashi, iron bars that spread the sling to prevent crushing of cargo, etc.)
- spring line
- Spring line
- SS(Suspended Solid)
- An insoluble substance suspended in water. It is also called a suspended matter. It is one of the numerical values that indicate the degree of dirt in water quality, and is indicated by PPM.
- SSA(Stevedoringe Service of America)
- The largest port cargo handling company on the west coast of the United States that operates port terminals from Alaska to San Diego. In addition to container terminals, a comprehensive port company that operates Bath and warehouse facilities such as conventional cargo, bulk cargo, and automobiles, as well as 19 intermodel rail yards.
- stability
- Reinstatement Power
- stack
- (Containers, pallet cargo, etc.)
- stand-by
- Standby, (Standby, Preparation)
- starboard
- Shipboard
- static load
- Static load (the load is still not moving)
- stay
- Stay (post measures such as mast)
- steadying
- Correcting the direction of hanging loads, etc.
- steamer
- Steamer
- step by step
- (When loading cargo)
- stern
- Stern
- stevedorage
- In-ship charge
- stevedore
- In-ship cargo handling company (worker)
- steward
- (e.g. ships)
- stiff
- Styph (a state of unpleasant shaking because the center of gravity is low and the horizontal shaking cycle is short)
- storage
- Storage and storage fees
- storekeeper
- Warehouse
- stowage
- (Not proper) loading
- stowage factor
- Loading factor (necessary legislative feet to load 1-ton of cargo)
- stowaway
- Smuggling
- straddle carrier
- Stradle carrier (large transporter carrying steel, containers, etc.)
- straight pull
- (Cargo wire, etc.)
- strain
- (on) Strength, strain
- strand
- A child
- strap
- Strap, thin band (with veil, etc. tied)
- strength
- Strength
- stress
- Strength (power to resist external force generated inside the elastic body)
- stretcher
- Stretcher
- stripping
- Take out cargo (from containers)
- strongback
- Stringback (called medium beam, a flat beam on the surface that supports the center of the wooden hatch lid)
- strop
- Strp (also known as ropes and slings)
- stuff
- Pack cargo in boxes and containers
- subcontractor
- Subcontractors
- summary
- Summary, summary
- supercargo
- Passenger (a person who acts on behalf of the shipper and supervises the loading and unloading of cargo on board)
- supervisor
- Supervisor
- sweat
- Sweating (cargo, etc.)
- sweepings
- Sweeping
- swing man
- Swing Man (a U.S. labor agreement, a basic worker and a worker who assists heavy hatch)
- swinging boom
- Swing boom (a state where you can freely turn and load with a single boom even if it is not a fight)
- switch
- (Railway) Replace a turning point, (such as a wagon)
- swivel
- Swimbells, round contacters (many of which use this method, such as rotary mounting brackets and cargo hooks that connect the two rings so that they can rotate each other)
Inquiries to this page
Port and Harbor Bureau General Affairs Department General Affairs Division
Phone: 045-671-2880
Phone: 045-671-2880
Fax: 045-671-7158
E-Mail address kw-somu@city.yokohama.lg.jp
Page ID: 187-402-963