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D D E S C R I P T I O N
Flying Christine III is
powered by twin Caterpillar V8 turbo-charged diesel engines,
each developing 435 horsepower @2800 rpm, giving a maximum speed
of about 22 knots and is served by a 13-feet fibreglass dory
moored permanently in St. Peter Port Harbour.
The fibreglass hull is the
well-proven Nelson 45 hull, designed
to cut through the waves rather than ride on the surface of the
sea, and with the wheelhouse positioned well forward, and the
engine room to the stern, the stretcher cabin is situated
amidships where patients have a smooth ride in the area least
affected by the motion of the sea.

She has a stretcher cabin larger
than those found in road ambulances, giving ambulance
practitioners or medical staff plenty of room to examine and
treat patients with the comprehensive array of medical equipment
carried.
This includes a defibrillator,
resuscitators, pulse oximeter, oxygen and a wide range of first
aid materials sufficient to treat a number of casualties. In
addition, medical supplies are on board for use by paramedics or
doctors, such as laryngoscopes, suture packs and drip sets.
Stretchers are interchangeable
with those used in road ambulances, so patients with severe
injuries need not be moved from the time they board the Flying
Christine III until they reach hospital.
The stern deck has steps to water
level to enable patients to be recovered from the water in a
stretcher, and can be used for transfer to helicopter if
necessary.
Radio equipment includes
transceivers on two Ambulance and Rescue Service frequencies and
marine frequencies with DF and there is also a Furuno radar,
depth sounder, auto-pilot and navigator.
A full complement of marine
equipment, together with charts and British and French ensigns
is carried. Lifejackets for more than 14 people are stored on
board and a self-inflating life raft is included in addition to
a 9-foot inflatable dinghy which can be used for close inshore
work from the mother ship.
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