Use the data export button to extract customised data sets from the Ship Plan and Survey Report Collection. Available in TSV and CSV formats.
Date recorded as the time of writing.
The year in which a vessel’s construction is completed.
Abbreviations of the names of ports with Lloyd’s Register survey offices.
Official administrative title (often printed) of a record used by Lloyd’s Register or external organisations.
The listed port to which a given vessel belongs.
The individual and/or organisation listed
Name of the individual/entity/organisation responsible for authoring the record
Name of surveyor.
Classification symbol assigned to a vessel by Lloyd’s Register’s Classing Committee denoting the quality of construction and maintenance.
Recorded information related to a vessel’s movements.
Physical arrangement of a ship’s masts, sails and rigging.
Predominant material(s) utilised in a vessel’s construction.
System of admeasurement referred to as ‘Builder’s Old Measurement’ (BM or BOM) in place between 1786 and 1836.
Confirmation as to whether the vessel was equipped with refrigeration machinery to aid in the transport of frozen or chilled cargo/goods.
Does the vessel possess an auxiliary power source?
Is electric lighting fitted to the vessel?
Physical extent of a record.
Name of ship as recorded on the record
The port or place in which the vessel’s construction took place, at the time of writing.
Unique internal numbers used for identifying, referring and retrieving a specific survey report.
Other/additional record(s) specifically mentioned, referenced or associated to another record.
Records that constitute Lloyd’s Register’s first official encounters with a specific vessel, e.g. a survey report.
An officially licensed mariner (post 1850) holding ultimate command and responsibility for a vessel.
Location where the document is written.
Location where a vessel’s survey was undertaken.
Date of the meeting of the Classing Committee.
The name of the port/place of destination given.
A vessel’s means of propulsion.
Is the steamer assisted by sail?
System of measurement that replaced ‘Builder’s Old Measurement’, taking a vessel’s internal capacity as the standard. Vessels built between 1836 and 1854 were legally required to display both tonnages.
Is machinery fitted at the aft of the vessel?
Generally a smaller additional auxiliary boiler (often used while the vessel is at port).
Name of the Proving House responsible for the public testing and certification of a vessel’s anchors and/or chain cables.
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