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Joe February 4th 06 08:51 PM

Double hull spills!
 
Nothing worse than maintaining a double hull, sweats, and impossiable
angles to needle gun. We use to suitup in coveralls, go in the voids
with a wash down gun and spray the voids with pure fish oil. What a fun
summer job.

Joe


Matt Colie February 4th 06 10:52 PM

Double hull spills!
 
Joe,
Yes, that was part of the additional maintenance I was refering to early
in the thread and it is a a lot of what drove me to get a License
instead of working a card the rest of my life.
What did you work on?
Matt Colie


Joe wrote:
Nothing worse than maintaining a double hull, sweats, and impossiable
angles to needle gun. We use to suitup in coveralls, go in the voids
with a wash down gun and spray the voids with pure fish oil. What a fun
summer job.

Joe


Joe February 5th 06 12:22 AM

Double hull spills!
 
That was several old supply boats, They had on average 4-2000 sack
cement tanks arranged inside the hull, with very tight voids, areas you
could only stick an arm thru and spray like mad. In the summers it
would be in the 120 degree range. Worse than having to hand bucket out
the tanks last 60 or so sacks you could not blow out. Don't get me
going about liquid drilling fluid tanks and the work involved there.
Ever hear of black magic?

Joe


otnmbrd February 5th 06 12:28 AM

Double hull spills!
 
"Joe" wrote in news:1139086273.436449.238910
@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:

Nothing worse than maintaining a double hull, sweats, and impossiable
angles to needle gun. We use to suitup in coveralls, go in the voids
with a wash down gun and spray the voids with pure fish oil. What a fun
summer job.

Joe


Double hulls you would talk about for tankers would be coated. The biggest
problem was keeping down the mud buildup as this cost you cargo.

Joe February 5th 06 01:06 AM

Double hull spills!
 
Well yeah... But how long do you think that coating is going to last
15-20 yrs maybe, more like 10 if an excellent job was done in the first
place. The supply boats were coated when new.

Joe


otnmbrd February 5th 06 04:51 AM

Double hull spills!
 
"Joe" wrote in news:1139101562.623510.275140
@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:

Well yeah... But how long do you think that coating is going to last
15-20 yrs maybe, more like 10 if an excellent job was done in the first
place. The supply boats were coated when new.

Joe



Initially, many of these tanks were coated with inorganic zinc .....
mistake, as electrolysis tended to be a problem.
Now tend to be coated with various newer vinyl coatings.
Generally these are well monitored and re-done as needed during yard
periods (blasting)..... cheaper than replacing steel.

otn

Scotty February 5th 06 02:10 PM

Double hull spills!
 
How much space is between the 2 hulls?

SV


"otnmbrd" wrote in message
25.201...
"Joe" wrote in

news:1139101562.623510.275140
@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:

Well yeah... But how long do you think that coating is going

to last
15-20 yrs maybe, more like 10 if an excellent job was done in

the first
place. The supply boats were coated when new.

Joe



Initially, many of these tanks were coated with inorganic zinc

......
mistake, as electrolysis tended to be a problem.
Now tend to be coated with various newer vinyl coatings.
Generally these are well monitored and re-done as needed during

yard
periods (blasting)..... cheaper than replacing steel.

otn




otnmbrd February 5th 06 04:46 PM

Double hull spills!
 
"Scotty" wrote in news:43e6069f$0$25070$cd3e3bf6
@news.enter.net:

How much space is between the 2 hulls?

SV


The one I'm most familiar with is a relatively small 50,000 Dwt, double
bottom (not dbl hull) tanker.
The dbl bottom tanks had @8' of headroom, i.e. they were walk around,
though there was a good deal of framing which frequently required climbing
through limberholes to move through sections.
Generally, these tanks are used for ballast, so they are quite large and
there size will depend on the size of the ship.

otn



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