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An Entity of Type : dbo:Ship, within Data Space : dbpedia.org associated with source document(s)
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Tokio Express was a container ship, built and registered in Hamburg in 1973 for Hapag-Lloyd. In 1984 she was renamed Scandutch Edo before being acquired by Pol Gulf International in 1993 and restored to her original name. In 1997, she was acquired by Westwind International and in 1999, by Falani, before being broken up for scrap in 2000.

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  • Tokio Express (nl)
  • Tokio Express (en)
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  • Tokio Express was a container ship, built and registered in Hamburg in 1973 for Hapag-Lloyd. In 1984 she was renamed Scandutch Edo before being acquired by Pol Gulf International in 1993 and restored to her original name. In 1997, she was acquired by Westwind International and in 1999, by Falani, before being broken up for scrap in 2000. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Tokio_Express.jpg
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Ship operator
Ship power
  • Stal-Laval AP-40 turbo electric steam turbine. Output: (en)
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Ship builder
  • Blohm + Voss, Hamburg (en)
Ship caption
  • Tokio Express off Calshot in 1988 (en)
Ship class
  • Hamburg Express-Class Container ship (en)
Ship completed
Ship fate
Ship image
  • Tokio Express.jpg (en)
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Ship launched
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Ship registry
  • Hamburg (en)
Ship tonnage
  • * * (en)
Ship yard number
has abstract
  • Tokio Express was a container ship, built and registered in Hamburg in 1973 for Hapag-Lloyd. In 1984 she was renamed Scandutch Edo before being acquired by Pol Gulf International in 1993 and restored to her original name. In 1997, she was acquired by Westwind International and in 1999, by Falani, before being broken up for scrap in 2000. Tokio Express is best known for being hit by a rogue wave on 13 February 1997 that caused her to lose cargo, including one cargo container loaded with 4.8 million pieces of Lego. Ever since, Lego pieces including octopuses, dragons, flippers and flowers have been washing up on Cornwall beaches and are commonly found after storms. (en)
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  • Scrapped 10 January 2000,Jiangyin,China
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