Showing posts with label sheikh mohammed bin rashin al-maktoum.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sheikh mohammed bin rashin al-maktoum.. Show all posts

Friday, 25 September 2009

more on the fabulous Eclipse


photo courtesy of the Daily Mail.

As promised, more details on Eclipse - the yacht to end all yachts.  Owned by the amazing Roman Abramovich:

Eclipse, which has said to have more than doubled in cost to £724 million, glided out of Hamburg a week or so ago on its maiden voyage.  It will be put through its paces over 10 days. under the watchful eye of 150 engineers and maritime experts.

Eclipse has 2 helipads, 2 swimming pools - the biggest doubles up as a dance floor when drained - and 6ft-wide cinema screens in 24 guest cabins.

The master suite has a retractable roof, so its owner can sleep under the stars.

With piracy on the high seas becoming a problem, Eclipse has a hull and windows able to withstand a missile attack.  And just in case, it has a mini-sub for emergency get-aways.

 It will also be fitted with a missile defence system. What can I say but 'Wow'.

Roman is due to take delivery of Eclipse on December 22 - and what a Christmas present that will be!

The definitive size of Eclipse cannot be confirmed owing to a confidentiality clause, but a spokesman for the shipyard says "It will be the largest private yacht of all time.'  Rumour says it is 557 ft.

(The current record for a large yacht is held by - surprise, surprise - Dubai, in the shape of a 524 foot vessel owned by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashin al-Maktoum, the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates.)

Abramovich also own the world's biggest private jet, a Boeing 767 nicknamed 'The Bandit'.

Eclipse is likely to need a crew of at least 60 people, said to include a security team of former veterans of the French Foreign Legion.

The most unusual feature of Eclipse is the anti-paparazzi shield.  Infrared lasers detect the electronic light sensors in nearby cameras.  When it detects such a device, it fires a focused beam of light at the camera, disrupting its ability to record an image.

More, and somewhat less frivolous, comments on all this to come on my next post.