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OTOH a lot of companies were very fond of steam power and clung to it,
possibly your uncle was in one. Maxprop wrote: Guy owned his own tug. He contracted with one of the smaller firms in NY Harbor. He was the same sort who protested the internal ("infernal") combustion engine replacing the horse. Bet he never had to shovel manure, then ![]() ... He explained the diesel as a means of reducing the crew by one man--the fireman. The fireman was a featherbed job, actually, because most of the steam tugs were fueled with coal oil automatically. Yes and no... keeping a steam boiler lit up properly is not easily automated, even in this day & time. One of my bread-and-butter jobs is troubleshooting, repairing, and calibrating combustion controls. Back in those days, it would be very easy to lose fires due to loss of fuel pressure, gunk in the fuel, sticking blower throttle, or even on a small boat, a wave lapping over the uptakes. But it still beats shoveling coal! Guy proudly stated that he'd never lost power during his years as a tugboat captain. Then again Guy was Irish and inclined to "exaggeration." It's possible that he never did lose power, just rather unlikely IMHO. It would be a testament to his engineer(s) if true. In the 17 years or so I worked in steam ships, I saw plants drop off line by genuine accident maybe 20 times or so, usually during warm-up. I hope he was having fun anyway. He never seemed to enjoy himself. I think he was only happy when he was at the helm of his boats, or when complaining. His negative comment about my Perkins did bring the hint of a grin to his lips, however. We used to say "A bitchin' sailor is a happy sailor." DSK |
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