I hade done research on the east and west cost and i i was able to find the tugboats and other vessels basis that most match up with them Background music: • Ween - Ocean Man - A T...
A lot of the TUGS characters were inspired by a lecture Rob Carsona went to. - Sunshine was inspired by a tug that worked for a california towing company. - Warrior was named after a Navy tug. - Ten Cents got his name from the price of whiskey and Izzy Gomez was named after a brothel owner. - Boomer (or atleast his story) was based off a tug called the "Sea Prince". Whilst his physical basis is apparently a tug called Mike. - The version of OJ we have now was originally the "Delta Queen".
I am impressed by some of these, more specifically the buildings that were seen. While I don’t agree with every one of these, I do like effort you put in to each one. I think it would help if you included the names of all the basis’ along with the year they were built.
I like where they get the ideas for modeling the ships and boats and tugboats after the real ships and boats and other crane barges as well i like watching the cartoons with the tugs on salty lighthouse and i like Thomas and friends as well
Actually Hercules was built all the way on the side of the world in New Jersey before being shipped over to San Francisco and the image you see in my video is an early image of Hercules when he worked on the Hudson River
I was just wondering about the real life names of the tugs you featured in this video the real life ones I mean, do you think you can create like a list so I can identify them by name?
@@Daintygirl2006 no actually olympic made it to the 1920s. If city port was real then the star and zero tugs might get to see rms olympic before her scrapping in 1935.
Huki Huki, a tug-launch, stands for her por- trau Tug-launches were a West Coast phenomenon be- cause of the temperate climate. An open craft such as this would be fine in the Northeast during the summer, but her crew would find the going rough during the winter. Tug-launches were developed for harbor utility work; they handled barges and schooners and pertormed other yard tasks. Thev usuallv towed with a single line, so the main towing bitt was placed well forward to facilitate handling and maneuverabilitv. Thev featured strong, plain construction. were well fastened, and their hulls were short to enable them to turn easily between wharves. Tug-launches usually had gas engines of the two- cycle heavy-duty marine type from 50 to 150 horse- power. Gas engines allowed the engine controls to be placed alongside the steering station; this was unusual for the time, for most tug captains had to signal the engineer below to control the speed and direction of the engine. During the early decades of this century, gasoline cost more than coal, yet in the smaller tugs, the operating costs were lower even with gasoline engines because of reduced labor requirements-the Huki Huki, for in- stance, required only a crew of two. (The seven others in this photograph most likely are a barge crew hitching a ride.) The following table, from a 1907 issue of Interna- tonal Marine Engineering, illustrates the point
@@nickiabyrd-gk1gs The picture thats in this video is from a book that i own called (on the hawser a tugboat album) and when looked at the vessel Huki Huki it was a perfect match to the coast guard and davy jones
A lot of the TUGS characters were inspired by a lecture Rob Carsona went to.
- Sunshine was inspired by a tug that worked for a california towing company.
- Warrior was named after a Navy tug.
- Ten Cents got his name from the price of whiskey and Izzy Gomez was named after a brothel owner.
- Boomer (or atleast his story) was based off a tug called the "Sea Prince". Whilst his physical basis is apparently a tug called Mike.
- The version of OJ we have now was originally the "Delta Queen".
O.J is based on eppelton hall. Eppelton hall is also docked at Hyde street pier on San Francisco along with Hercules
That is the Eppelton hall in my video
Can you say the basis' by list?
I am impressed by some of these, more specifically the buildings that were seen. While I don’t agree with every one of these, I do like effort you put in to each one. I think it would help if you included the names of all the basis’ along with the year they were built.
And the remix of “Ocean Man.” Very clever!
I like where they get the ideas for modeling the ships and boats and tugboats after the real ships and boats and other crane barges as well i like watching the cartoons with the tugs on salty lighthouse and i like Thomas and friends as well
What Sunshine basis
Why does the old man and boomer was also have the same basis as the rest of z-stacks that being Moran fleet tugboats
It’s just a class of tugboat it doesn’t have to be specifically that tug if you see my Big Mac basis it is the same tugboat class
well I say this is very nice!
Lillie Lightship was built in 1915
Hercules was based of himself that also work at San Francisco. And he is still afloat into today
Actually Hercules was built all the way on the side of the world in New Jersey before being shipped over to San Francisco and the image you see in my video is an early image of Hercules when he worked on the Hudson River
Hercules is real?
@@parker-boy98 Yes he’s been real for a long time
@@ElliotStanior I looked it up on Wikipedia, and yeah. The ironic thing is the real Hercule tugboat was female, because of that silly boat tradition.
@@parker-boy98 I do know the reasons for the tradition of calling boats she’s and I wish I didn’t know
It took me two minutes into the video to realise that the music Is a remix of ocean man
4:00
maruetania?
Titanic?
*gasp* THE MAJESTIC!?!??!?!!?!?
yeeah i dont mind this one actually.
I was just wondering about the real life names of the tugs you featured in this video the real life ones I mean, do you think you can create like a list so I can identify them by name?
O.J Eppleton hall
@@The_Tugs_Kid I do know that one yes but what about the others that I’m talking about? What are the names of the real tugs that you showed in this?
Can i ask what the name's of all these various tugs, submarines etc are called? 😊
Here are some are know the basis of Hercules is actually called Hercules I think and the basis of grampus is grampus too
Ten Cents Meets The RMS Olympic
No the titanic
@@Daintygirl2006 no actually olympic made it to the 1920s. If city port was real then the star and zero tugs might get to see rms olympic before her scrapping in 1935.
While top hat was sadly his basis NYC tugboat 13 was scrapped due to his failed restoration
Yah i know its sad that he was scrapped in 2017
@@ElliotStaniorR.I.P. Top Hat may he rest in peace....😢😔😭
NYC tugboat 13 Is A NYC Hudson?
@@LongIslandRailfanner, the stack and wheelhouse were saved.
@@marceloazzirabelo Not even close
Which characters currently have PRESERVED Basis’?
3:56 I think the Empress of Britain would be better for Princess Alice
This video is 2 years old now and i disagree with a lot of these basis choices
I knew I heard ocean man
you forgot the basics of both puffa and little owl the goods engine.
I noticed that now
Puffa Is Based On Märklin
And Little Owl Is based off New York Dock Railway 0-6-0Ts no.6 & 7
@@LongIslandRailfannerand puffa is based on the DRG class 80 just amercanized for a diamond stack, cowcatcher, and a giant headlamp
Bruh a custom little ditcher was used as the original picture and just put a real I,age of little ditcher
That’s not a custom little ditcher Model that’s actually a model of a dredger that existed irl
Wait titanic was in tugs ?
Puffa Based On Märklin
Goods Engine Based On ?????
0:50 Nice Colors Eh?
Tug Real Life
Where's big mickey
What's the name of the basis for Ten Cents?
He doesn’t have a particular basis Ten Cents is a harbor switcher
@@ElliotStanior No, no, that tug you showed alongside Tence very clearly has a name. Look on it's hull.
@@roadsnrails0195found some more images, and apparently that specific tugs name is Kirkham
What's Hercules Basis?
What is the name of the boat that is the bacis of the coast guard and Davy Jones
Huki Huki, a tug-launch, stands for her por-
trau
Tug-launches were a West Coast phenomenon be-
cause of the temperate climate.
An open craft such as this
would be fine in the Northeast during the summer, but
her crew would find the going rough during the winter.
Tug-launches were developed for harbor utility
work; they handled barges and schooners and pertormed
other yard tasks. Thev usuallv towed with a single line, so
the main towing bitt was placed well forward to facilitate
handling
and maneuverabilitv. Thev featured strong,
plain construction. were well fastened, and their hulls
were short to enable them to turn easily between wharves.
Tug-launches usually had gas engines of the two-
cycle heavy-duty marine type from 50 to 150 horse-
power. Gas engines allowed the engine controls to be
placed alongside the steering station; this was unusual for
the time, for most tug captains had to signal the engineer
below to control the speed and direction of the engine.
During the early decades of this century, gasoline
cost more than coal, yet in the smaller tugs, the operating
costs were lower even with gasoline engines because of
reduced labor requirements-the Huki Huki, for in-
stance, required only a crew of two. (The seven others in
this photograph most likely are a barge crew hitching a
ride.) The following table, from a 1907 issue of Interna-
tonal Marine Engineering, illustrates the point
I looked up at it but no pictures should the picture that's in the video.
@@nickiabyrd-gk1gs The picture thats in this video is from a book that i own called
(on the hawser a tugboat album) and when looked at the vessel Huki Huki it was a perfect match to the coast guard and
davy jones
Oh okay thank you
Hi
Hi 👋
sea rouge uncle the best