DC generator question
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			Bruce in Bangkok  wrote in  
: 
 
 It seems to be more a matter of size as the BIG engines are all low 
 RPM engines that at lower RPM while lower power engines are usually 
 higher speed engines. for example, the Emma Mursk uses a 108,920 H.P. 
 @ 102 RPM engine and probably doesn't require a reduction gear,  while 
 a smaller ship might use a 5,800 Hp @ 600 RPM engine with reduction 
 gear. 
  
 Bruce-in-Bangkok 
 (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) 
  
  
 
I've stood atop the 7-cylinder, 2-stroke beast that powers SeaLand  
"Performance".  It's 38,800hp at 102 RPM and burns 75 tons of heavy oil  
boiled in the exhaust stack before injection to thin it at about 76 RPM,  
her econocruise speed give or take the load, of course.  The massive  
flange aft of the engine is directly coupled with huge bolts to the  
screwshaft going out to her single screw.  If you were standing on a  
platform at the base of a blade, you could extend your hand about  
halfway up that blade towards the hub.  I can't remember how many blades  
were in the picture, sorry. 
 
The engine is computer controlled so noone has to sit and baby sit it in  
the air conditioned control room where the massive power panel is also  
located for the large array of 3-phase 408?V diesel gensets power that  
are located in a compartment under the main shaft under the rudder gear.   
The day I was there they were about half loaded for sea and the panel  
said they were generating a little more than half a megawatt to keep the  
fruit cool and the frozen food frozen in the freezer containers.  They  
got plenty of AC power! 
 
If the computer sees something it doesn't like on an array of engine  
sensors in each cylinder, it pages the duty engineer wherever he may be  
to come look.  If something really bad were to happen, the computer  
would shut her down to prevent further damage and all hell would break  
loose. 
 
Captain Larry, a ham friend of mine, is one of her two masters and he  
says he never gets tired of playing with her...(c;  Forward or reverse  
she will run either way, being two stroke with no valves.  Big blowers  
ventilate her when the ports are open at BDC before the next 5 foot trip  
up the cylinder, injection and explosion drives her down again.  Oh how  
I wanted to go to sea with them to see it run and hear that thumping for  
myself. 
 
Captain Larry claims he can do an emergency stop from econocruise speed  
in NEARLY 2.5 MILES!....which is also about her "turning circle" in flat  
water.  Not bad considering she's 980' long.  Standing on the bridge, I  
commented, "Well, at least you won't get hurt in a front end collision.   
Hell, you're half a mile back from the accident!"  A color TV system  
let's you watch for those damned crab pots over the bow, but I doubt  
they worry over them like we do....(c; 
 
Air start....either way.  Very exciting. 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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