Page 20: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (October 15, 1973)

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U.S. Tanker Building

Should Be Doubled

To Meet Fuel Needs

To provide vessels to transport

Alaskan North Slope crude oil and percentages of oil imports envision- ed by legislation now pending be- fore the 'Congress, "the present

U.S. shipyard order book for tank- ers should be swiftly doubled if sequential deliveries are to be 'on stream' as needed."

This is the judgment of the board of directors of the Shipbuild- ers Council of America, composed of major shipbuilders and allied suppliers in all sections of the coun- try, conveyed in nearly identical letters to Chairman Leonor K. Sul- livan of the House Merchant Ma- rine and Fisheries Committee and

Chairman Warren G. Magnuson of the Senate Commerce Committee.

These letters were signed by Ed- win M. Hood, Council president and 'board chairman.

In urging prompt enactment of legislation to reserve certain per- centages of oil imports for U.S.- flag U.S.-'built tankers, Mr. Hood wrote: "Shipbuilding capabilities and tanker requirements are inexorably related. Usual tenets of supply and demand are, and wi'll be, control- ling. Measured against current forecasts of demand, the annual 88 SHIPYARDS IN 37 COUNTRIES

NOW BUILDING, REPAIRING AND

LAUNCHING ALL TYPES OF VESSELS

UP TO 60,000 TONS D.W.T. WITH

SUI1CRDLIFT DRYDOCKS AND TRANSFER SYSTEMS

Of * * •* )0 r * • 1 ¥

I END & SIDE TRANSFER

TO ASSIST YOU IN PLANNING A NEW DRYDOCK

INSTALLATION, WE WILL VISIT YOUR SITE ANY-

WHERE IN THE WORLD AT NO COST OR OBLIGATION.

WRITE TO: PEARLSON ENGINEERING CO.

P.O. Box 8 (8970 S.W. 87th Ct.) Miami, Fla. 33156 U.S.A.

Phone (305) 271-5721 Telex 051-9340 Cable SYNCROLIFT

BUILDING A NEW BOAT ? call MfitthU first...

Matton Shipyard Company, Inc. offers complete facilities for all new construction of vessels up to 200 feet in length. • Repairs • Conversions • Overhaul

For your next new vessel or repair job ... call

Matton first.

MATTON SHIPYARD COMPANY INC.

P. 0. Box 428, Cohoes, New York 12047

Tel: 518 CE 7-3911

DIAL DIRECT VIA SINGLE SIDEBAND

ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD!

SHIP-TO-SHORE or

POINT-TO-POINT ON LAND

FOR OCEAN OR RIVER-VESSELS, PIPE LINES,

UTILITY COMPANIES, INDUSTRIES & GOVERNMENT

L0RAIN eliminates voice calling and voice monitoring

LORAIN SE-IX ENCODER PUTS CALL

THROUGH IN 2 SECONDS

The Lorain SE-IX Encoder generates the necessary tones to operate the SD-VI Decoder through an SSB transmitter. The SE-IX has a capability of over 36,000 five-digit codes utilizing nine tones. Operating controls are thumb-wheel type tone selector switches, transmit switch and indicating lamps. Simply select the as- signed five-digit code on the selector switches then press the transmit button. The correct code sequence at the required speed will then be transmitted. The transmitter is turned off at the completion of the sequence. Operates from 117 Volts AC, 50/60 cycles or 13.6 Volts DC. •Patent No. 3716790 LORAIN SD-VI SELECTIVE DECODER*

SILENTLY SCANS 6 CHANNELS

IN 2 SECONDS

When the called party's 5-digit code is received and recog- nized, the channel is indicated and an au- dible signal sounds.

The channel indicator lamp remains on until reset.

The Lorain SD-VI Decoder is designed to register a call on board a selected vessel, or at a shore station or fixed site, originating from a calling station utilizing an SSB transmitter. It can receive and store up to six calls, and the call may be received on any of six fre- quencies. A calling code consists of five sequential tones sent in two seconds. A typical code is 24536. The

Lorain SD-VI consists of the Decoder, in which all com- ponents are housed, and a Call Indicator. An auxiliary alarm capability is standard with every unit. Operates from 117 Volts AC, 50/60 cycles, or 13.6 Volts DC.

ELECTRONICS

Decoder Call Indicator

CORPORATION 2307 LEAVITT ROAD — LORAIN, OHIO 44052

Area Code 216 —Telephone 282-6116 AONO.S aggregate U.S. tanker building ca- pacity is expected to increase from the present level of 1.5-million dwt to more than 2-million dwt by 1976-77, and then to expand to more than 3-million dwt by 1978 and thereafter. "But, these expectations presup- pose that additional shipyard con- tracts will be quickly placed so as to enable tanker construction and deliveries in an orderly man- ner. Placement of contracts for tankers, now or in the immediate future, will, in the ultimate sense, determine the near-term and long- term characteristics of the Ameri- can-flag tanker fleet. Our prelimi- nary estimate is that the present

U.S. shipyard order book for tank- ers should be swiftly doubled if sequential deliveries are to be 'on stream' as needed to transport both

Alaskan and import oil."

As of August 1, 1973, U.S. ship- yards held orders for 49 tankers totaling 4.5-million dwt ranging in sizes from 25,000 to 265,000 dwt.

Deliveries are presently scheduled at the rate of five in 1973, eigh- teen in 1974, ten each in 1975 and 1976, and six in 1977.

Hydronautics, Inc.

Names Dr. Wechsler

Chief Mech. Engineer

Dr. Laskar Wechsler

Phillip Eisenberg, president of

Hydronautics, Incorporated, 7210

Pindell School Road, Laurel, Md. 20810, has announced the appoint- ment of Dr. Laskar Wechsler to the position of chief mechanical engineer. Dr. Wechsler brings a strong 'background in ships ma- chinery design and maintenance, accumulated during 33 yeafs with the Naval Ship Systems Command and its predecessor, the Bureau of

Ships. He recently retired from the position of technical director of the Machinery Division of the

Naval Ship Engineering 'Center.

Philadelphia Resins

Names Golten Marine

Golten Marine Co., Inc., 330

Broad Avenue, Wilmington, Calif., has been named California dis- tributor for Philadelphia Resins

Corp., Moritgomeryville, Pa. Gol- ten will be responsible for the sale of Chockfast pourable resin chock- ing systems to shipyards and ship- owners, primarily in port cities, in- cluding San Diego, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. The appoint- ment was announced by David P.

Kollock, company vice president. 14

Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.