Learning About Diesel Engines
Stationary Engine|January 2018

The recent article about air-cooled engines reminded me of when in 1967, in my early twenties, I was offered the job as Deck Engineer on P&O’s TES Canberra, a 46,000 tonne ocean liner.

Roy Kington
Learning About Diesel Engines

The job entailed the responsibility for all of the engineering in the ship outside the engine room. As the job would free me from watch-keeping duties in a hot and cramped boiler room, and with the impetuosity and over-confidence of youth, I accepted immediately. Within a day or two I quickly realised that despite a heavy engineering apprenticeship and three years at sea on steam ships I had a very limited capability for the job in hand, the ship being full of leading-edge equipment, some never proved in a marine environment.

This was quickly brought home to me when I was asked to get four lifeboat engines ready for a Lloyds inspection before sailing. The boats had been lowered to deck level and I boarded one with my Indian crew assistant. My only IC engine experience to date was refitting a 1937 Standard eight four-cylinder petrol engine, and seeing a couple of large five-cylinder Allen Diesels being maintained. Still I thought this would be easy, all I had to do was press the start button and they would roar into life.

How do I start it

After I removed the engine enclosure I realised there were neither electrics nor starter handle, indeed there was no way to use one due to a lack of space. There was however, something that looked like a starter motor, and having read some limited instructions it seemed all I had to do was wind the handle and pull a lever. I went through the usual pre-start checks of dipping the oil and then realised there was no water-cooling circuit. I could not work this out but seeing there were three separate cylinders which had fins on them like a motorbike, I assumed the engine could well be air-cooled but I could see no fan, very strange, things were getting deeper and my initial confidence was fast disappearing.

This story is from the January 2018 edition of Stationary Engine.

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This story is from the January 2018 edition of Stationary Engine.

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