Page 18: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (August 1985)
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Inland Waterways/
Great Lakes Yards (continued) working bay and increased crane capacity enable this shop to fabri- cate and pre-outfit large ship mod- ules, reducing overall production costs. A one-sided welder designed and built through the cooperative efforts of Bay Shipbuilding, Mani- towoc Engineering, and Manitowoc
Shipbuilding has been installed in the fabrication shop. This unit has the capability of welding 50-foot stiffened plates together to form module panels with a single welding pass.
Additional improvements in- clude: a steel shot blast and prime line adjacent to the fabrication shop; renovation and enlargement of the pipe shop, with automatic ever in the field of marine refrigeration and air conditioning has one company offered so much to so many. Total creature comfort. Peak product freshness.
Painstaking manufacturing quality. State-of-the-art technology. Expert service and factory parts in over 60 ports worldwide. And the most experienced people in the industry. Together it can only mean Victory at Sea for your fleet.
Expect our air conditioning to keep your crew comfortable on board—and at their best on the job. We offer a com plete line of water-cooled condensing units, air- and water-cooled liquid chillers, central station air handlers, and single- package cooling units.
And we install them on offshore rigs, platforms and their support vessels, tankers, container ships, and naval vessels.
Our air-conditioning and refrigeration systems can be manufactured to meet
ABS, USCG, special naval, and other worldwide governing agency requirements.
You can spec the features, capacities, and performance you need in any system in our full line. We build in sea-proven reliability, to ensure long life under the toughest conditions.
Contact Walter Berg, Manager of Marine Systems, 315/432-6417. Carrier Transicold Division,
Carrier Corporation, P.O. Box 4805,
Syracuse, NY 13221. Telex: 937 306.
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES
CARRIER TRANSICOLD
THE MARINE AIR CONDITIONING
AND REFRIGERATION PEOPLE
GO CARRIER TRANSICOLD
Circle 165 on Reader Service Card 20
The Bay Shipbuilding yard in Sturgeon Bay,
Wisconsin. pipe welding and burning machin- ery; and modernization and enlarge- ment of the electrical shop to in- crease its capacity to design, engi- neer, and build electrical panels and switchboards.
FRASER
Circle 11 on Reader Service Card
Fraser Shipyards, Inc., located in the Port of Duluth/Superior at the west end of Lake Superior, recently completed a busy winter. The yard converted the USS Great Lakes
Fleet, Inc.'s George A. Sloan to die- sel power. Sea trials were held in
June this year. In addition, the ship- yard performed major as well as routine repair and maintenance work on several other Great Lakes vessels.
The current backlog of work scheduled for the drydocks includes six vessels for five-year inspection and routine repairs. In addition,
Fraser maintains a fleet of work- boats that service vessels in the port on an around-the-clock basis.
The decline in tonnage on the
Great Lakes as a result of the down- turn in the economically depressed steel industry has adversely affected the yard, which had been a leader in vessel lengthenings and self-unload- er conversions. Fraser management is confident that their efforts to sur- vive the recession in the shipbuild- ing and repair industry have strengthened the yard. They plan to aggressively pursue their market share of conversion and repair work in the future.
HUMBOLDT BOAT
Circle 12 on Reader Service Card
The past year has been a very active one for Humboldt Boat Ser- vice Company in St. Louis. Some of the major projects completed by the yard's craftsmen were new decking on five 200-foot barges and exten- sive hull repair on five other deck barges. Five boat hulls received complete new plating or bows and towknees, and 14 boats had exten- sive rudder, shaft, and propeller re- pairs. One 1,000-bhp boat received an additional third engine.
Two 300-passenger excursion ves- sels received extensive hull and deck plating, along with shaft and rudder repair, and a 265-foot barge was modified to accommodate the 2,500- passenger excursion vessel Presi- dent as a dock barge. Two boats had new hydraulic steering systems in- stalled, and one dredge was dry-
Maritime Reporter/Engineering News