As a 16 year old apprentice electrician in Alexander Stevens Shipyard in Linthouse, Govan, I spent many days working on the, almost new, SS Shieldhall. Her berth where she loaded sludge was in the shipyard alongside new building ships. I helped fit boat overside lights which at the time were a new requirement and although I was an electrical apprentice I spent as many hours in the engine room as possible working out how the reversing eccentrics worked. I had a strong urge to be a mechanical engineer and finally my dream came true when I went to sea in 1956 as a 20 year old 7th engineer/electrician with the BP Clyde Tanker Company. How happy I was to come across this You Tube video. Finally at nearly 83 how I wish I could once more stand in that beautiful little engine room and wonder at the magnificence of these twin triple expansion engines.
I did a navy dockyard apprenticeship as an engine fitter and worked on board all types of ships from steam engines to gas turbines and I still like the triple expansion engines I am seventy six and have a great interest still in all things mechanical. This is a great video.
Great video! Sadly the era of steam propulsion is gone. I had the privilege of taking a trip on a Great Lakes self unloading ore ship that was also powered by a triple expansion steam engine. Went from Detroit to Roger City to pick up a load of limestone when I was a boy. My dad was a Merchant Marine Engineer for most of his life. That trip changed my life!
Steam propulsion is alive and well, many ships and the US nuclear subs are steam powered, by using nuclear power, it's just a fancy way of making steam 🌫️
Great to see it. It reminds me of my days in the 1980s in the engine room of the W.C. Daldy Tug. The W.C.D. had a very similar Engine room and layout. BUT it doesn't have an diesel oil warmer. I have served in both in the E.R. and on deck. Oh remember the smell of the Steam tug. I hope you can keep it going for years to come. Cheers. Steve M.
Superb film Alex, thank youfor it. What a maginificient ship Ss Shieldhall is. Long may she sail, certainly longer then ssbn boats powered by steam! (Ex RN Dolphineer)....
As a 15 year boy from the technical school came on board of a SS Steentreate Belguim Cargo schip with boiler and Turbines we have to learn abouth the Tripple expansion up and down engine now I see the differend of steam engines . Verry learnfull and interesting to now after al the years I am now 75 so Thanks to keep it alive ! Sorry for the bad English writing .( I Do My Best) Jean BUYL
as an oiler i helped steam the ss crapo on the great lakes usa a coal burning triple expansion cement boat (ship) sporting firetube scotch boilers. served about a year on her and it was a special time in my life. circa 1989.
In the war films I grew up with there was none of this getting boilers warm etc they just raced away from wherever they happened to be. Really enjoyed it, thanks to all you volunteers.
An incredible documentary of how to maintain an old triple expansion steam piston engine powered ship! I would like to visit this vessel some day and would like to thank the many volunteers that work hard to preserve this vessel! A real working and living vintage machinery!
I worked on many steamships in the US Navy running Babcock & Wilcox 600 pounders and Foster Wheeler 1200 pounders , and then when I left the Navy I went in the Merchant Marine and then ran diesel engines, Sulzer, Alco EMD's Delaval, Etc. I love Steam. Thank you for posting this.
This brings back memories of watching the Shieldhall sailing down from Glasgow towards the dumping grounds further down the Firth of Clyde. She was known as one of the cleanest vessels and regularly carried Glasgow pensioners on outings. Excellent video - maybe a similar one could be done by the folks operating the PS Waverley.
Very interesting to see, my forefathers were involved in British maritime endeavour in the Mediterranean, especially in maintenance. Brings back memories when I was an apprentice in the Malta Dockyards. Thank you.
Excellent vid , happy memories of doing my spell in the engine room on Shieldhall . It was so good to come up on deck , after a 2 hour watch . And when the cruise ended , enjoy a good sleep in the stern crew berth . Best wishes .
👍👌👏 Simply fantastic! A very well done video. Thanks a lot for making teaching explaining recording editing uploading and sharing. Best regards luck and health to all involved people.
I really appreciate visiting Steamship Shieldhall for the first time. Everything on the ship is very well maintained. I congratulate the whole Team and in particular for the attentive explanation of the Engine Room Team - for the work carried out with mastery in the so finely tuned orchestra of gears from the 1800's - which is still in full swing and available for visitation to the general public!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I can't thank enough the people who went through the trouble of making this video. The video is far more informative than any History or discover channel would ever do. Needless to say I love ships and this has answered a lot of my long awaited questions, though I do have a hundred more to ask. Thanks again!
This video reminded of the time I joined the Merchant Marine as a Junior Engineering Officer on a vessel fitted with a single Triple Expansion Steam engine with HP Poppet Valves. The year was 1964. I retired in the year 2000 after acquiring my Chief Engineers Combined (Steam and Motor) Competency Certificate. Personally I think this was the most exciting career a person could have. A great video, and for me a very nostalgic one as well. Keep up the good work.
Thanks so much Bryan, you explained it real well! It's a lot of hot work, in the hole. I worked as assistant and chief for about 12 yrs.on diesel engine ships, up to 7000 hp.I held a Designated Duty Engineering Lic. which is really only good for vessels up to 500 tons, and unlimited H.P.,all oceans.It's a USCG license that came out in the 90's for the increase in ships this size.I started on gaming ships out of Port Canaveral,Fl.,in 1990. I'm retired now, after 47 yrs. of diesel engines and the related machinery.Now I can sit back with my computer and happily watch the world pass by.You and your black gang made my day, and Bryan, Happy Motoring!
Thank you for the memories! Shovelled coal in a Puffer (Auld Reekie) back in '88, from Campbeltown to the Glasgow Garden Festival, and later through the Crinan Canal. Great experiences, both of them. Loved the engine on her, it was a double expansion but much the same. The Waverley, I remember, left us standing...
Shieldhall used to take pensioners from the Glasgow area on day trips down the Clyde Estuary to near the Ailsa Craig where the cargo would be discharged. Shieldhall is a district of Glasgow. As an ex steamship Engineer it was good to see the Engineroom routines again. Good film with excellent explanations.
Absolutely fantastic video. I have never before seen the engine movement indicators (not the telegraphs), I can see the value when harbour manouvering, brilliant
Fantastic effort all round saving this old girl from the breakers yard, and putting her back into service as a pleasure cruiser on the Solent and other waterways within its operating area. I really enjoyed this, thanks so much for posting and along with historic aeroplanes restorations I now have historic ship restorations and operations to watch. Cheers from Australia.
I just marvel at the thought that this set up was used in combat with high-speed manoeuvring, guns ablaze and telegraph commands coming thick and fast as Jackie Fischer and company had a blue with the Germans.
Thank you,It takes me back when I used to go to the Isle of Man with my Dad,Manx Maid I think the ship was called,I went on the bridge and the captain let me put it to full ahead when I was 10 years of age, Many thanks again. :)
Absolutely wonderful!! Incredible ship. Incredible video tour. Incredible crew! Amazing how the machinery and the human beings running it create this amazing symphony that moves the Shieldhall with seeming ease for her passengers and anyone looking at her steaming away. Blown away by the knowledge and professionalism involved in keeping this wonderful old girl from another time steaming in the 21st century. A true window into the past and what it took to operate a steam vessel at sea. Thank you so much for this video and for keeping out maritime history alive.
given a choice of a trip on the sludge boat or on QM2 - no competition!!! - sludgeboat wins hands down!!! QM2 is a magnificent ship too!! this is a totally outstanding tour 😁😁😁
memories of the south coast Buff Funnel paddle steamers came back, looking at the passengers. Instructions to the helmsman did not seem very precise, or his responses. I think I prefer a separate wheelhouse below the bridge.
Utterly fascinating and enjoyable video movie. The complexity of this old steam powered ship is staggering. Thank you for this wonderful, vicarious journey.
Engineer thank you for your Brilliant guide on what happens below deck in the Heart of ship out of sight to the public..when ever I visit any ship of size im always drawn to the engine room.amazing .
very well crafted video. Excellent explanations and demonstrations. BUT, I'd have loved to have seen the engines in full operation while underway down the channel. Cheers Mates.
Every single part of this vessel, from the buttress of her bow to the screw at her stern, is outstanding. Great name for a ship with this heritage too! So glad they were able to save her from the breakers!
A POX on any of the NAYSAYERS, this is a GREAT VIDEO. Thank heavens we still have such dedicated men to keep this history of steam ships alive. Well done to each and everyone who made this possible
Really great Video I spent 15 years as a merchant mariner and it is so cool to watch any history on how things used to be done ,I always loved working with older engineers you can learn so much fro them thanks for sharing this video .
What an amazing video. So many different tasks to perform and you have such a wealth of knowledge. My late father would have loved to watch this. He was a chief engineer in the Blue Funnel Line in the 1930`s.
I started my apprenticeship in ship repair in 1967 and I only got to work on one steam up and downer, this video was very well presented and gave an excellent insight into the workings of an old steamship well done to all involved, I so wanted to throw my boiler suit on and head down to the engine room I wish there were more similar videos of this quality.
Well put together video. Thanks for taking the time to make and publish it here on UA-cam for all to see and enjoy! Anything "steam" is wonderful to see, hear, and to experience.
@@04clemea Thanks Chief. Brilliant job! Sailed in a compound up&downer to West Africa, 1936 vintage and a twin screw (Ferguson's 1951) tug. Shades of Sand Pebbles! Watching the two five-legged Doxfords in action in an old whale factory ship, Kosmos V (Tyne built), was as fascinating!
Thank you Mr. Girling for this excellent documentary video, which as you brought it to a close seems to have brought tears to my eyes, for some mysterious reason. Thanks and best wishes also to Paul, Allen, Tony, Willy, Andy, Peter, and the others who make _Shieldhall_ work. Perhaps I'll one day be lucky enough to see her in person.
Reminds me so much of my training and early days in the RN; still amazes me how much room you chaps have to work in though. Subs tend to a little more cramped. Very well made video, sadly I can only give 1 'Like/Thumbs-up'.
Very interesting tour of the ship since I also worked on a ship built in 06 with coal , hand fired boilers and a single triple expansion engine. I was Fireman and later Oiler. The experience gained there was valuable later when I worked on Steam Turbines, because on the old one everything was manual so you knew what was going on all the time. Hope I did not nod off, but I did not notice the Dynamo or switching over from shore power to your own.
The sound of Willy answering telegraphs and moving to slow ahead is the start up noise to the sound system on my model steam tug! Really well made film.
This was very enjoyable. I was a machinist mate in the US Navy during and after Vietnam Nam. Old stuff has always interested me, This video was very enjoyable. Thankyou for making it.
This guy is very clear about the operations of the ship's engine room and I understood most of the operations
Give this man a medal for the knowledge and speaking skills he possesses!
As a 16 year old apprentice electrician in Alexander Stevens Shipyard in Linthouse, Govan, I spent many days working on the, almost new, SS Shieldhall. Her berth where she loaded sludge was in the shipyard alongside new building ships. I helped fit boat overside lights which at the time were a new requirement and although I was an electrical apprentice I spent as many hours in the engine room as possible working out how the reversing eccentrics worked. I had a strong urge to be a mechanical engineer and finally my dream came true when I went to sea in 1956 as a 20 year old 7th engineer/electrician with the BP Clyde Tanker Company. How happy I was to come across this You Tube video. Finally at nearly 83 how I wish I could once more stand in that beautiful little engine room and wonder at the magnificence of these twin triple expansion engines.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts sir!
Looks like they are taking passengers so I do declare you can probably get some tickets somehow
You can at www.ss-shieldhall.co.uk/
It all goes by so quickly, doesn't it?
I did a navy dockyard apprenticeship as an engine fitter and worked on board all types of ships from steam engines to gas turbines and I still like the triple expansion engines I am seventy six and have a great interest still in all things mechanical. This is a great video.
Great video! Sadly the era of steam propulsion is gone. I had the privilege of taking a trip on a Great Lakes self unloading ore ship that was also powered by a triple expansion steam engine. Went from Detroit to Roger City to pick up a load of limestone when I was a boy. My dad was a Merchant Marine Engineer for most of his life. That trip changed my life!
We do have many active steamships in the American Merchant Marine.
I know because I've sailed on them.
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
Coal fired steamship Titanic
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
Steam propulsion is alive and well, many ships and the US nuclear subs are steam powered, by using nuclear power, it's just a fancy way of making steam 🌫️
Great to see it. It reminds me of my days in the 1980s in the engine room of the W.C. Daldy Tug. The W.C.D. had a very similar Engine room and layout. BUT it doesn't have an diesel oil warmer. I have served in both in the E.R. and on deck. Oh remember the smell of the Steam tug. I hope you can keep it going for years to come. Cheers. Steve M.
The discussion of the ships hull was riveting
Funny this
Haha.
Modern ships hulls are welded not riveted
Coal fired steamship Titanic
I loved that film. I have seen out and about many a time aboard my own boat. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you very much keeping steam alive...
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😊 0:47
Want to thank you so much for maintaining her. Bravo Zulu from a US Navy steam plant operator.
Anyone wishing to make an instructional video for the general public should learn a lesson from this. Brilliant!
Wow, they really did think of everything. Just when I had a steam plant question, it was answered. Brilliant.
Bill Shaughnessy I still think we missed a few things, there's only so much you can fit into one film.
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
Absolutely lovely video. Marvellous that it has been saved. I dread to think what working in an engine room must have been like during wartime !.
good video, thanks for taking the time to show all the operations necessary to run the ship
Superb film Alex, thank youfor it. What a maginificient ship Ss Shieldhall is. Long may she sail, certainly longer then ssbn boats powered by steam! (Ex RN Dolphineer)....
As a 15 year boy from the technical school came on board of a SS Steentreate Belguim Cargo schip with boiler and Turbines we have to learn abouth the Tripple expansion up and down engine now I see the differend of steam engines .
Verry learnfull and interesting to now after al the years I am now 75 so Thanks to keep it alive !
Sorry for the bad English writing .( I Do My Best)
Jean BUYL
Titanic wooden pineapple titanic museum in Orlando Florida
A UA-cam gem. Thank you to those people who have preserved this ship.
as an oiler i helped steam the ss crapo on the great lakes usa a coal burning triple expansion cement boat (ship) sporting firetube scotch boilers. served about a year on her and it was a special time in my life. circa 1989.
Ahh the cold iron start up make me cry have to do them quite often
I am exciting to see passionate people that preserve their culture! Greetings from Greece!
Outstanding, riveting, and incredibly informative. Not enough can be said about the care and quality of the documentary you've made. Wow!
Interesting how
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
In the war films I grew up with there was none of this getting boilers warm etc they just raced away from wherever they happened to be. Really enjoyed it, thanks to all you volunteers.
Thank you for all your hard work in maintaining this lovely old Lady and showing the elements that go into getting ready to sail.
Diesel boiler
My Dad, Tommy Myers, worked on the engine build when he was an apprentice. He is 86 now.
From California thank you for making such a lovely documentary . Great to see a beautiful ship like this is in. Such good hands and how it works
An incredible documentary of how to maintain an old triple expansion steam piston engine powered ship! I would like to visit this vessel some day and would like to thank the many volunteers that work hard to preserve this vessel! A real working and living vintage machinery!
Thank god for people that can still run these amazing old vessels as a living testament to the ingenuity of our forbears.
There is nothing better then seen all these beautiful people keeping history alive ! We thank you from the bottom of our harts for that !
Brilliant I’ll come for a ride one day with my best mate and my son, wonderful ship and fantastic tour thankyou 😊👍
I worked on many steamships in the US Navy running Babcock & Wilcox 600 pounders and Foster Wheeler 1200 pounders , and then when I left the Navy I went in the Merchant Marine and then ran diesel engines, Sulzer, Alco
EMD's Delaval, Etc. I love Steam. Thank you for posting this.
This is one of the coolest videos I've ever seen.
Steamships, so very different from the aux.boilers now, thank you for the long video. That steam driven sector steering gear is something else.
This brings back memories of watching the Shieldhall sailing down from Glasgow towards the dumping grounds further down the Firth of Clyde. She was known as one of the cleanest vessels and regularly carried Glasgow pensioners on outings. Excellent video - maybe a similar one could be done by the folks operating the PS Waverley.
Gourockian1 one the Waverley would be pretty nice, but sadly they don't use the traditional boilers anymore. They have modern industrial ones instead.
yes as well as the Dalmarnock .Worked with Rankin and Blackmore designers who were sent to Scotts when their company closed abt 1960.
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
An amazing video. Thank you!
Thank you for the trip with the venerable old lady and her crew.
Very interesting to see, my forefathers were involved in British maritime endeavour in the Mediterranean, especially in maintenance. Brings back memories when I was an apprentice in the Malta Dockyards. Thank you.
This was great. Thank you for posting.
Excellent vid , happy memories of doing my spell in the engine room on Shieldhall . It was so good to come up on deck , after a 2 hour watch . And when the cruise ended , enjoy a good sleep in the stern crew berth . Best wishes .
👍👌👏 Simply fantastic! A very well done video. Thanks a lot for making teaching explaining recording editing uploading and sharing.
Best regards luck and health to all involved people.
So much of our heritage has been lost but such a fine example as this helps fill the hole. Thank you all for keeping the lovely steamship alive.
I really appreciate visiting Steamship Shieldhall for the first time. Everything on the ship is very well maintained. I congratulate the whole Team and in particular for the attentive explanation of the Engine Room Team - for the work carried out with mastery in the so finely tuned orchestra of gears from the 1800's - which is still in full swing and available for visitation to the general public!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I can't thank enough the people who went through the trouble of making this video. The video is far more informative than any History or discover channel would ever do. Needless to say I love ships and this has answered a lot of my long awaited questions, though I do have a hundred more to ask.
Thanks again!
Thank you we enjoyed making it ....
This video reminded of the time I joined the Merchant Marine as a Junior Engineering Officer on a vessel fitted with a single Triple Expansion Steam engine with HP Poppet Valves. The year was 1964. I retired in the year 2000 after acquiring my Chief Engineers Combined (Steam and Motor) Competency Certificate.
Personally I think this was the most exciting career a person could have.
A great video, and for me a very nostalgic one as well. Keep up the good work.
As an ex marine engineer I thoroughly enjoyed that. Thank you
Thanks so much Bryan, you explained it real well! It's a lot of hot work, in the hole.
I worked as assistant and chief for about 12 yrs.on diesel engine ships, up to 7000 hp.I held a Designated Duty Engineering Lic. which is really only good for vessels up to 500 tons, and unlimited H.P.,all oceans.It's a USCG license that came out in the 90's for the increase in ships this size.I started on gaming ships out of Port Canaveral,Fl.,in 1990. I'm retired now, after 47 yrs. of diesel engines and the related machinery.Now I can sit back with my computer and happily watch the world pass by.You and your black gang made my day, and Bryan, Happy Motoring!
Watching this docu while helping my uncle finish his thesis about ship engine. Thanks for the vid!
Maecy Borras No problem, glad you enjoyed it.
Thank you for the memories! Shovelled coal in a Puffer (Auld Reekie) back in '88, from Campbeltown to the Glasgow Garden Festival, and later through the Crinan Canal. Great experiences, both of them. Loved the engine on her, it was a double expansion but much the same. The Waverley, I remember, left us standing...
Super, fantastic entertaining and highly informative presentation, Fair sailing to all!
I never realised triple expansion engines were being fitted into new ships as late as 1955. Brilliant video.
Shieldhall used to take pensioners from the Glasgow area on day trips down the Clyde Estuary to near the Ailsa Craig where the cargo would be discharged. Shieldhall is a district of Glasgow.
As an ex steamship Engineer it was good to see the Engineroom routines again. Good film with excellent explanations.
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
Absolutely fantastic video. I have never before seen the engine movement indicators (not the telegraphs), I can see the value when harbour manouvering, brilliant
Fantastic effort all round saving this old girl from the breakers yard, and putting her back into service as a pleasure cruiser on the Solent and other waterways within its operating area. I really enjoyed this, thanks so much for posting and along with historic aeroplanes restorations I now have historic ship restorations and operations to watch. Cheers from Australia.
Davdski Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed it.
I just marvel at the thought that this set up was used in combat with high-speed manoeuvring, guns ablaze and telegraph commands coming thick and fast as Jackie Fischer and company had a blue with the Germans.
Thank you so much for the wonderful tour!
Thank you,It takes me back when I used to go to the Isle of Man with my Dad,Manx Maid I think the ship was called,I went on the bridge and the captain let me put it to full ahead when I was 10 years of age, Many thanks again. :)
taxalterror Glad its brought back some happy memories for you.
Still being enjoyed Dec 2020.
Thank you everyone.
David and Lily.
Reading.
Absolutely wonderful!! Incredible ship. Incredible video tour. Incredible crew! Amazing how the machinery and the human beings running it create this amazing symphony that moves the Shieldhall with seeming ease for her passengers and anyone looking at her steaming away. Blown away by the knowledge and professionalism involved in keeping this wonderful old girl from another time steaming in the 21st century. A true window into the past and what it took to operate a steam vessel at sea. Thank you so much for this video and for keeping out maritime history alive.
And still used for dumping sewage at sea. In New York and Boston the Yanks call them “honey barges”
What a wonderful living, breathing piece of history. I envy you your job sir.
Excellent video. Thank you for showing this
Such a super documentary. Thank you too!
Well done, Brian. Superb stuff. I'm grateful that there are people such as yourselves keeping history living today. Thank.
👍 that introduction gave a perspective on the shipping industry today and yesterday
it was worth watching just for the whistle exchange of saluites alone. thanks
Those who man the boilers are the real unsung heroes on board any ship. Thank you.
given a choice of a trip on the sludge boat or on QM2 - no competition!!! - sludgeboat wins hands down!!! QM2 is a magnificent ship too!! this is a totally outstanding tour 😁😁😁
Well done. From a feller with 50 years on the Gulf of Alaska, the Bering Sea, and Arctic Ocean.
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
As a power engineer 2nd class, I found this was very interesting.
Fascinating, took me back 50 years to my days at sea.
memories of the south coast Buff Funnel paddle steamers came back, looking at the passengers. Instructions to the helmsman did not seem very precise, or his responses. I think I prefer a separate wheelhouse below the bridge.
Great job on the video. Thank you so much. 3 days heating to take her out. That is extreme dedication to her and her legacy. Carry on and godspeed.
Utterly fascinating and enjoyable video movie. The complexity of this old steam powered ship is staggering. Thank you for this wonderful, vicarious journey.
xKmotx thank you, it's definitely a bit different to a modern ship.
Absolutely wonderful. A treasure for anyone interested in marine steam propulsion. I will re-watch this many times!! Thank you!!
Thank you for this excellent documentary!
Engineer thank you for your Brilliant guide on what happens below deck in the Heart of ship out of sight to the public..when ever I visit any ship of size im always drawn to the engine room.amazing .
very well crafted video. Excellent explanations and demonstrations. BUT, I'd have loved to have seen the engines in full operation while underway down the channel. Cheers Mates.
I do have another video, that is the engine room cut from this voyage.
ua-cam.com/video/x5cvRE4l0c0/v-deo.html
Every single part of this vessel, from the buttress of her bow to the screw at her stern, is outstanding. Great name for a ship with this heritage too! So glad they were able to save her from the breakers!
A POX on any of the NAYSAYERS, this is a GREAT VIDEO.
Thank heavens we still have such dedicated men to keep this history of steam ships alive.
Well done to each and everyone who made this possible
Science-is-god Thanks for watching.
Really great Video I spent 15 years as a merchant mariner and it is so cool to watch any history on how things used to be done ,I always loved working with older engineers you can learn so much fro them thanks for sharing this video .
matt matthews Thanks very much matt.
What an amazing video. So many different tasks to perform and you have such a wealth of knowledge.
My late father would have loved to watch this. He was a chief engineer in the Blue Funnel Line in the
1930`s.
Michell thrust block, I have worked for them 28 years company still going strong, class film 10/10
Funny seeing Aaron jump a little as he lit the boiler at around 4:46 in...lol
beautiful documentary of this super steamship via UA-cam 👍👍🌞
Brilliant! So good to see a ship of that era with triple expansion power, riveted hull. Old school, but all the better for that.
Thoroughly enjoyed this! I'm taking the steam school onboard the 1942 Liberty Ship, John W. Brown in Baltimore.
Well done, excellent production, with a surprise ending of the Red Arrows and fireworks!
A wonderful documentary-! I enjoy all things mechanical and the bigger the better - watching the whole ships crew work together is truly a treat.
Titanic 2 engine cylinder engineering diesel generator room
I started my apprenticeship in ship repair in 1967 and I only got to work on one steam up and downer, this video was very well presented and gave an excellent insight into the workings of an old steamship well done to all involved, I so wanted to throw my boiler suit on and head down to the engine room I wish there were more similar videos of this quality.
MasticMan12345678 Thanks for enjoying the film, maybe you could make a trip on the ship, one day
Well put together video. Thanks for taking the time to make and publish it here on UA-cam for all to see and enjoy! Anything "steam" is wonderful to see, hear, and to experience.
Royall Clark Thanks, it's my first documentary, and took a while to make.
Royall Clark nne
@@04clemea Thanks Chief. Brilliant job!
Sailed in a compound up&downer to West Africa, 1936 vintage and a twin screw (Ferguson's 1951) tug. Shades of Sand Pebbles!
Watching the two five-legged Doxfords in action in an old whale factory ship, Kosmos V (Tyne built), was as fascinating!
Absolutely brilliant. Extremely knowledgeable engineer. Best video in a long time. Thank you.
Very nice video, thank you, Wish I was there
Thank you Mr. Girling for this excellent documentary video, which as you brought it to a close seems to have brought tears to my eyes, for some mysterious reason. Thanks and best wishes also to Paul, Allen, Tony, Willy, Andy, Peter, and the others who make _Shieldhall_ work. Perhaps I'll one day be lucky enough to see her in person.
We would be delighted to see you on board! Sadly the 2020 season has had to be cancelled.... so see you next year! Bryan G
Amazing video. Thank you for the knowledge
Reminds me so much of my training and early days in the RN; still amazes me how much room you chaps have to work in though. Subs tend to a little more cramped.
Very well made video, sadly I can only give 1 'Like/Thumbs-up'.
Loved this video. brings back memories of time spent in engine room THE MERCHANT NAVY
Very interesting tour of the ship since I also worked on a ship built in 06 with coal , hand fired boilers and a single triple expansion engine. I was Fireman and later Oiler. The experience gained there was valuable later when I worked on Steam Turbines, because on the old one everything was manual so you knew what was going on all the time. Hope I did not nod off, but I did not notice the Dynamo or switching over from shore power to your own.
That's a very well put together video! excellent explenation of all the Engine room work. And as a merchant engineer myself very very interesting!
Brilliant they even had a Decca Transar Radar with true motion? on the bridge . It really made my evening watching it thanks Mike
Glad you enjoyed it Mike, thanks for watching.
Just great !
Great video. Thanks,do more.
This is the best video of the workings of the old steam engines as I remember them,must take a trip when back in the U.K.
Ray sull it would be a great trip out on her.
The sound of Willy answering telegraphs and moving to slow ahead is the start up noise to the sound system on my model steam tug! Really well made film.
Thank you! Bryan G.
This was very enjoyable. I was a machinist mate in the US Navy during and after Vietnam Nam. Old stuff has always interested me, This video was very enjoyable. Thankyou for making it.