I think engine is running at 60 rpm as an engine cadet from my first VLGC LPG ship experience i am telling from that engine sound
@TopNoTchVSOP3 күн бұрын
This is not something that I look forward to doing it myself and damn sure not paying $2500 to $3500 for this.
@nascar05096 күн бұрын
Five floors high...🤔
@steamman91936 күн бұрын
@@nascar0509 goes down 2 more to the bottom of the oil sump can’t see that without going inside
@michaeleast2167 күн бұрын
Steam turbines are the equivalent to bows and arrows unless they have a nuclear reactor before them
@steamman91937 күн бұрын
@@michaeleast216 I still bow hunt. Actually sailing on a diesel version of one of my other steamships. This one has no soul, and for the fuel consumption and cylinder oil consumption of the period definitely an inferior powerplant to the steam version
@michaeleast2165 күн бұрын
I would keep quiet about fuel consumption difference between diesel and steam. Diesel propulsion is a no brainer. Diesel up to 56% thermal efficiency. Need I say more
@steamman91935 күн бұрын
@ yes you do need more because gas turbines with waste heat steam have up to 80% thermal efficiency. Diesels are soulless machines that require no intelligence to operate that’s why they are preferred
@JonDoe-z2s7 күн бұрын
This was a great video, but you left so much out
@steamman91937 күн бұрын
@@JonDoe-z2s this video was years ago there was already alot of 3.6 videos out there with those details. This was kinda tailored to the relatively new 3.6 wranglers
@U2BER201218 күн бұрын
Question is: can you fill a bucket with steam🤔🙃?
@tireballastserviceofflorid777126 күн бұрын
You win...lol. Damn thats big.
@richardw2566Ай бұрын
Every Blue Jacket is a fire fighter. That didn't do the Bonhomme Richard much good, a few years ago. But it was gospel on every ship I served aboard. Thank you for the memories.
@paulsto6516Ай бұрын
👍👍
@AesopsFablesthe2ndАй бұрын
I will take my Nany Training over this bullshit.
@dawsonj7679Ай бұрын
what ship? looks like a mt46 veteran class tanker
@steamman9193Ай бұрын
@@dawsonj7679 yes that’s one of the Philadelphia built US tankers I forget which one exactly I was on a lot of them
@douro20Ай бұрын
It is possible to convert the burners so that they will burn low-sulphur oil properly but I guess they decided to repower anyway.
@steamman9193Ай бұрын
@@douro20 they were burning low sulfur heavy oil when I filmed this. The costs is just too high. Ship laid up shortly after filming. Sister ship conversion to diesel is complete
@krzysztofwaleskaАй бұрын
Po ch..... żeś dzwonił z klaksonu. To nie tak się robi. Opanuj emocje na drodze.
@timp.9582Ай бұрын
what kind of diesel engine did they end up installing? LNG-ready?
@thomass8362Ай бұрын
@steamman9193- I have a question that's not directly related to the NTSB report, but do you know if anyone from the NTSB would have stayed on board the Dali as it cruised back to its home port in China to observe if there were any further brownouts, blackouts, etc.. I just wonder if there wasn't anyone from the USA on board to observe, if indeed there were further problems, because of further liabilities with the owners of the ship, would this new info even get back to the NTSB! Just curious.
@steamman9193Ай бұрын
@@thomass8362 I don’t know. A friend of a friend was on the ntsb team when the ship was still in the USA. I’m a little disappointed in the last information of a possible lose wire being the cause. It doesn’t explain all the black smoke
@derekcrittenden40512 ай бұрын
You're right poses no threat. Check steam leaks with your hand from here on out.
@epsail2 ай бұрын
That red gasket punch works much better with some scrap of the same material on the opposite side so it clamps down straight
@MrLaydownsally2 ай бұрын
Beleive it or not although this is a ' two stroke' it still has an exhaust valve..
@MrLaydownsally2 ай бұрын
The rocker to valve gap is relative to size, relatively speaking it's 25 thou
@NRZ-3Pi103 ай бұрын
Hi `SteamMan´, you may already have noticed Sal posted new video wrt latest investigation of MV Dali incident (kzbin.info/www/bejne/aITPk4iAaZZqo8U). He did quite comprehensive walkthrough both updated NTSB report as well as corresponding US claim. The latter came up with very interesting detail wrt the fuel pump setup on MV Dali. If I understand sections 9 & 10 of the US claims (Base 1: 24-cv-00941-JKB Document 82) correctly, this `flushing´ pump as used for the generators appears not to be a proper approach, at least not `fail safe´ since it doesn’t automatically recover after blackout. The report also says “… diesel generators. Starved of fuel, …” - would this also explain the heavy (black) smoke observed once power came back online for the first time which puzzled a lot of us - ? So to me that seems to be one of the most important, systemic weakness of this incident. However, I’d be interested about your opinion here as Chief Engineer who really knows about such stuff in very detail from daily practice. Best regards & safe `sailing´ always!
@johnal-kel90633 ай бұрын
Why Is The Turbine Kept Behind Glass? Does It Get Hot, Or For Safety Reasons?
@steamman91933 ай бұрын
@@johnal-kel9063 yes. Incredibly hot in the module. Plus you don’t want any foreign objects at all in there that could catch fire or hit something accidentally
@tone4354 ай бұрын
You could of disconnected the exhausr at the cat and then take the bead out with manifolds and take the bolts out on a bench so they dont brake
@stevem22454 ай бұрын
So if the 900lbs/sqare inch steam went through a leak with the leak diameter being a 10th of the size of 1 inch...... while its also flowing and not bottled up, it wouldnt be less than 90 pounds of force?
@steamman91934 ай бұрын
@@stevem2245 you are in the ballpark. The old sea story was any superheated leak would cut a mans arm of and cortorize the wound. 90 psi is basically a warm compressed air nozzle. I’m sure larger volumes would burn flesh but not likely to cut anything
@AnimalsVehiclesAndMore4 ай бұрын
Considering the immense size of that set, I'd definitely say it's more of a display piece than a toy to play with.
@saviomaschiofurtado6205 ай бұрын
MISSION D TYPE BOILER?
@steamman91935 ай бұрын
@@saviomaschiofurtado620 just a big vertical firetube
@singleproppilot5 ай бұрын
Fascinating machinery. I have spent my whole career working on big airplanes, but steam ships are on whole other level of complexity compared to a plane. Below decks is a bewildering array of machinery that must take years to learn to operate.
@305dreamhonda5 ай бұрын
What a pain in the ass! I guess just plan on pulling the timing cover!
@305dreamhonda5 ай бұрын
Nice work, came across this 2013 Jeep Wrangler Sahara unlimited *Needs head gasket replacement* (107k miles)
@ForensicCats6 ай бұрын
Just stopping in to say hello... hope all is well.
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
My email is my my about section if you ever just want to BS
@kevinspratt45356 ай бұрын
Tappets need resetting
@RyderUwU6 ай бұрын
Why is it making a beat? It's Jammin
@milosvukajlovic97686 ай бұрын
On which ship?
@LynxStarAuto6 ай бұрын
6:57 there was nothing wrong with that head gasket. It's normal for the ridge there to be missing. Usually it stays behind on the block when you pull the gasket. The gasket is the MLS style, which stands for "multi layered steel", that means it's several sheets of steel gasket sandwiched together. Overall, nothing looked out of the ordinary on that cylinder head. If it was passing coolant, the combustion chamber and piston would be squeaky clean. It's called steam cleaning. The water evaporates, and steams the cylinder clean. All three of those combustion chambers look identical, black and carbon. The way they should be.
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
That’s the skewed view of social media. Engine didn’t run, pushed up driveway. only change was head gaskets. Engine has run for years since. The camera doesn’t always pick up everything
@pranays5 ай бұрын
@@steamman9193glad it worked out for you I have a 2014. Not my daily so it is in good condition still. But if this happens to me I would rather rebuild a 5.7 same gas mileage anyway easier engine with more aftermarket support.
@SierkBluhm-mn8hu6 ай бұрын
Hi, what do you think about the update, is it possible to send me some pictures or an video, thanks man
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
@@SierkBluhm-mn8hu I’ve been really busy no idea when I’ll get back to this
@matpol0986 ай бұрын
Thank you for this very informative and easy to understand video, always fascinated to learn about the older steam plants that we don't see much of today. I'm guessing these turbines must be a lot more quiet than diesel engines?
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
Significantly quieter than diesels. We had a sound study done when I was onboard and the only place requiring hearing protection was in the diesel generator spaces. This ship had a caterpillar power box added and an emergency generator room
@matpol0986 ай бұрын
@@steamman9193 Damn, thats quite impressive
@halimturqui50076 ай бұрын
One of the most impressive machine room I've seen. What is the logic behind the alignment of the 2 electric motor on the same shaft ? Redundancy ? Power ? At least this removes the need for a heavy gearbox,were they paralleled. The controls must be tight. thanks
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
@@halimturqui5007 this was a reaserch vessel. And had quite a bit of acoustic considerations in design. I don’t know if that had anything to do with it or it was a redundancy thing. It was an SCR drive so very noisy power supply
@singleproppilot6 ай бұрын
Another reason for very high voltage is to reduce the amount of loss when transmitting power over such a long distance. It’s the same reason why the powerlines you see on land the big metal towers run at hundreds of thousands of volts; to reduce the loss between the powerplant and the substation which transforms it down to a lower voltage that’s usable in your home.
@CJTJBI16 ай бұрын
Did you have to change anything else? Only just top/lower arms? Let me know.
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
Oh man this was a long time ago pretty sure it’s was the arms and the axles everything else fit
@CJTJBI16 ай бұрын
@@steamman9193 do you still have this car?
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
@@CJTJBI1 yes! Drove it a few months ago
@CJTJBI16 ай бұрын
I have an E maxx with the short arms and short chassis and I don’t think they sold it with the short arms the 3906 model has the long Arms so I think the .15 t maxx was there only model that included the narrow stance
@steamman91936 ай бұрын
@@CJTJBI1 I’m not sure what you mean. Mine was the original model, short chassis, narrow wheelbase. It had the 2 speed transmission with dual brushed motors.
@sailordave10007 ай бұрын
Find a super heated steam system and try that. I saw what a super heated steam leak can do. I arrived on my first ship in November 1990. My first ship was the USS Iwo Jima LPH-2. At the end of October 1990 the bonnet of a main steam valve blew completely off filling the fire room with super heated steam in a matter of seconds. Was so glad I wasn’t there to see what it did to the 10 guys who were killed. Did see what it did to the fire room since I was part of the crew restoring to get underway December 23rd for Desert Shield.
@steamman91937 ай бұрын
I’ve had 900psi leaks straight out of the superheater, they still don’t cut a broom. The incident you are referring to wasn’t catastrophic because of the superheat but the volume of steam that leaked
@HarryPost-o9c7 ай бұрын
Could you do videos on emergency actions and on the different alarms that occur in a steam plant and what the possible corrective actions would be?
@steamman91937 ай бұрын
It would be hard I don’t have a steam ship To work with. They all had different personalities too as what was more critical. I ve had plenty of tubes blow you learn how long you can run each size hole for, sometimes it’s a long long time, like weeks. Other times it’s minutes. I’ve had wires melt and kill a boiler. Other boiler still cruising fine. I’ve had wind box fires all kinds of crazy failures, not sure how I’d ever re create them
@HarryPost-o9c7 ай бұрын
@@steamman9193 Can you at least name as many of the types of alarms you might get on a steam plant and some of the corrective actions, please?
@steamman91937 ай бұрын
@@HarryPost-o9c that’s weeks worth of discussion and classes I don’t see that as practical. In simplest terms possible need water add water. Need fire add fire. When in doubt call for help experience is what knows what to do. I’ve had tubes blow out where I have 15 minutes to shut down a boiler and leaks that I could manage for weeks. You have to know your equipment
@singleproppilot7 ай бұрын
“Your hearing loss is not service-related.” “WHAT?”
@jerrylundegaard25927 ай бұрын
So how much is the OP paid by the company to post this BS? Or does he prove there actually is a fool born every minute?
@steamman91937 ай бұрын
$0, I made this when I was building my channel requiring views for Monetization from KZbin not the manufacturer. It’s a sincerer and honest review I found a product that had no good English or scientific anything and made a video. It cost me $5 many many years ago and I believe it did work in that vehicle. It definitely does not in my newer vehicle
@SierkBluhm-mn8hu7 ай бұрын
Hi, I have bought this train Last week and IT cant move in curves, so If you can send me some short Videos or a list of parts I need to buy to get this train motorised and in curves, than you Help a lot, otherwise I will send Back The train because only as an Decoration IT isnt usefull For me, thanks a lot
@SierkBluhm-mn8hu7 ай бұрын
Hi, ist this The onliest Video you have. I am in Germany and I have bought The Jie Star Big Boy but it doesnt go in The curves of The lego system and The secound The model isnt motorised. Can you make a Video of only to motorised your model? Thanks man. Sierk
@steamman91937 ай бұрын
I’m not happy how it runs so I’m trying to get it right before I make another video. 4 M motors isn’t working well. I had to delete the front carriage and remove wheels from the coal car
@robertware86437 ай бұрын
There’s tabs on the head gasket for that reason
@robertware86437 ай бұрын
I have to change the heads on mine, but the engines out of the vehicle so much easier
@robertanderka7297 ай бұрын
Stuxnet
@jamesm89827 ай бұрын
Lots of experts who have never set foot in an engine room . I was 10 years at sea with a Chief Engineer Certificate and this post is accurate
@zionbrin17 ай бұрын
I'm curious as well, been out the navy a while and this is making me think back on ring bus safeties hard. I know they won't be the same but I'm thinking some of the principles might be. I know trips would be designed to open breakers as close to the fault as possible to prevent taking down any necessary and still safely operating equipment. So if the hr1 and lr1 breakers to transformer 1 tripped it was prob an issue with the transformer? You would want this to trip before it could cause a problem that would trip up stream which we see as it does not cause the main hv breakers connecting the generator to the bus, dgr3 and dgr4 to trip. It could be a fault on the lv bus but in theory there would be breakers down stream closer to sub circuits and pannels supplying them and equip that should have tripped before tripping the transformer hence breaker pannels. That and tripping both to a piece of electrical equip was usually an equip fault if I remember correctly. But the crew manually closed hr1 and lr1 putting the transformer back on line. And in less than a minute dgr3 and dgr4 trip. This is also when smoke starts bellowing. could this be under volt or over throttle trips bc they could not supply some insane load bc of a fault in the reconnected transformer? I seem to remember there is a brief time after large breakers close that the trip is not "rearmed" bc an initial transient could re trip them. Again I'm almost 20 years out from my operator days. I deff get that insufficient fuel would cause rpm and torque to reduce resulting in and under power trip of then generators but would that cause all the smoke? Or was all that smoke dgr 2 coming on and loading hard? They also never say if dgr 2 shuts down or any other trips occur once they change to transformer 2 and dgr 2, but if it was fuk and the dgrs are on common fuel lines it should have dropped after a spell. If it was in the lv or hv bus it would have also eventually re tripped as the fault (if not in trnasformer1) would have not have been isolated. Im also surprised and curious about immeadiate actions why not split the bus and bring both transformers online bc there are some basicish (at least how we ran) indicators it might have been thr transformer. Also dont know how much civilian ships are set up and capable of runing split bus. I do get why, sort of, they never tried to restart the main engine. It doesn appear that they kept main power restored for any significant time so that they could. At 0125 they tripped, 0126 and seconds first restoration, then 0127 second trip, dgr 2came up but it took 30 more seconds to restore power to 440v bus using transformer 2 mere sends before impact.
@steamman91937 ай бұрын
Here’s something I’ve been thinking about since too if there was a piece of failed electrical equipment like a transformer it should have been discovered by now. My thought is there was an electrical load not seen since the accident and they haven’t been able to reproduce while stuck
@ZilogBob7 ай бұрын
The amount of designing, fabrication and installation of all that heavy engineering is mind blowing.