Air draft (or air draught) is the distance from the surface of the water to the highest point on a vessel. This is similar to the deep draft of a vessel which is measured from the surface of the water to the deepest part of the hull below the surface. However, air draft is expressed as a height (positive upward), while deep draft is expressed as a depth (positive downward).[1][2]
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The vessel's clearance is the distance in excess of the air draft which allows a vessel to pass safely under a bridge or obstacle such as power lines, etc. A bridge's "clearance below" is most often noted on charts as measured from the surface of the water to the under side of the bridge at the chart datumMean High Water (MHW),[3][4] a less restrictive clearance than Mean Higher High Water (MHHW).
In 2014, the United States Coast Guard reported that 1.2% of the collisions that it investigated in the recent past were caused by vessels attempting to pass under structures with insufficient clearance resulting in bridge strikes.[1]
Examples
The Bridge of the Americas in Panama limits which ships can traverse the Panama Canal due to its height at Шаблон:Convert above the water. The world's largest cruise ships, Шаблон:MS, Шаблон:MS and the Шаблон:MS will fit within the canal's new widened locks, but they are too tall to pass under the bridge, even at low tide (the two first ships are Шаблон:Convert, but do have lowerable funnels, enabling them to pass the Шаблон:ConvertGreat Belt Bridge in Denmark). New vessels are rarely built not clearing Шаблон:Convert, a height which accommodates all but the largest cruise and container ships.
The Bayonne Bridge, an arch bridge connecting New Jersey with New York City, undertook a $1.7 billion modification to raise its roadbed to Шаблон:Convert.[5]