Old uss ships

Discussion board focusing on Great Lakes Shipping Question & Answer. From beginner to expert all posts are welcome.
William Lafferty
Posts: 1492
Joined: March 13, 2010, 10:51 am

Re: Old uss ships

Unread post by William Lafferty »

Tall funnels help draft boilers of smoke and gas from combustion and keep the particulate farther away from the vessel itself. Forced draft boilers eventually made funnel height less of an issue. Comparison to the Pargny is apples to oranges since for over a third of its commercial life its powerplant was a Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton RB-821 single-acting, two-cycle, 3000-bhp Diesel, The earliest Scandinavian motorships didn't even have traditional funnels since the engine exhaust could be ventilated quite simply by a simple exhaust pipe. Aesthetics eventually played a role and most motorships received a funnel that also included silencers while announcing the owner's livery, and even contained dog kennels on passenger vessels, or the radio shack or additional deck storage.
ashland69
Posts: 516
Joined: March 13, 2010, 4:34 pm

Re: Old uss ships

Unread post by ashland69 »

Guest wrote: March 9, 2024, 12:38 pm Speaking of old USS boats, any news on what actually caught fire on the Mississagi (ex- George A Sloan)?

Wonder why it ended up at the SOO instead of MRC.
I may be mistaken, but from my vantage point, it looked like the fire was in the area of the old engine room. Old oil and lubricants, etc. may have been ignited accidentally.
Guest

Re: Old uss ships

Unread post by Guest »

Speaking of old USS boats, any news on what actually caught fire on the Mississagi (ex- George A Sloan)?

Wonder why it ended up at the SOO instead of MRC.
Mn bob

Old uss ships

Unread post by Mn bob »

Why did some of the old uss boats such as the Eugene j buffington have a tall and skinny smoke stack and some of the newer uss boats such as the eugene j pargny have a short and fatter smoke stack?
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