Page 64: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (September 1997)
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MARINE PROPULSION TECHNOLOGY the economics of engine manufac- ture by having each factory spe- cialize in one or two product lines.
Thus, major investments in engine block manufacturing and heavy assembly for the increasingly pop- ular Wartsila 46 are underway at the Turku plant in southwestern
Finland. The facilities are being extended to cater to an expected doubling of bhp demand over the second half of this decade.
One of the most significant developments this year has been the entry into service of the first of the new 320-mm bore engines from the Finnish stable. Although the
Vasa 32, one of the most successful medium-speed types ever launched, remains in considerable demand after 20 years of continu- ous refinement, the new Wartsila 32 brings a 12 percent higher power yield per cylinder, and a margin for long-term development no longer available to the Vasa 32.
Delivering 625 bhp per cylinder
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JSTTT-Line ((The substantial reduction in lub oil consumption and the resulting savings we have experienced since we began using Chris-Marine honing equipment is impressive. 59 C/aes Svensson, Chief
Engineer, M/S Peter Pan, TT-Line,
Hamburg. "Substantial reduction in lub oil consumption"
Regular deglazing and honing of engine cylinder liner surfaces can cut your lub oil costs dramatically. It can also notably increase time between overhauls while improving the service life of your engines.
Chris-Marine develops methods and manufac- tures portable engine maintenance machines, tailored for all types of slow speed and medium speed marine and stationary diesel engines.
Precision made machines for deglazing and honing, surface and valve grinding, wear edge and carbon deposit removal.
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Order the complete report by fax on: +46 40 21 40 68.
CHRIS-MARINE AB, P. O. Box 9025, S-200 39 Malmo, Sweden. Phone +46-40 21 03 20, Fax +46-40 21 40 68. AUSTRALIA: Phone +61-2 9667 2345, Fax +61-2 9317 4447.
B.W.I.: Phone +1-345 949 8132, Fax +1-345 949 9176. CROATIA: Phone +385-51 514 129, Fax +385-51 227 820. GERMANY: Phone +49-40 538 3845, Fax +49-40 538 3847.
JAPAN: +81-78 302 2870, Fax +81-78 302 2870. NORWAY: Phone +47-3279 8590, Fax +47-3279 8509. SINGAPORE: Phone +65-268 8611, Fax +65-264 3932.
SPAIN: Phone +34-1 575 2960, Fax +34-1 578 3898. U.S.A. East: Phone +1-904 354 6566, Fax +1-904 358 7862. U.S.A. West: Phone +1-253 593 3963, Fax +1-253 593 3962. at 750 rpm, the new type has an extended stroke of 400 mm com- pared with the earlier engine's 350 mm, and offers unit powers up to 11,260 bhp. Manufacture will be the province of the company's
Vaasa works, where a dedicated production unit has also been phased into operation this year for the smaller, medium-speed
Wartsila 20.
Vaasa will also feed engine parts for the Wartsila 20, and later for the Wartsila 32, to a new assembly facility being set up at
Innoshima under the aegis of the group's recently forged alliance with Hitachi Zosen. Entailing an investment of FMk 4.6 million (Yen 100 million) from the
European side, the new entity known as Wartsila Diesel Japan
Company will aim to strengthen the Wartsila NSD medium-speed presence in the Japanese ship- building and power plant markets.
Meanwhile, Hitachi Zosen's two-stroke engine building activi- ties, mainly involving the MAN
B&W marque at present, are to be transferred this year from
Sakurajima to a new machinery plant at Ariake.
Cummins link
Selective cooperation and alliances form a central part of the business strategy of U.S.-owned
Cummins, a leading manufacturer of engines over 200 bhp, which has achieved a dramatic growth in commercial marine sales of the uprated K/KV series in the past two years.
The joint venture with Wartsila
NSD has spawned two new engine families which have taken
Cummins from its 2,000-bhp top end to 6,000 bhp while strengthen- ing the Wartsila name in the high- speed category.
The Cummins-designated QSV, otherwise known as the Wartsila 200, became available in limited quantities in 1996 for power gener- ation customers and propulsion applications. Under the auspices of
Cummins Wartsila Engine
Company (CWEC), production of the vee engine series is gathering momentum at Wartsila's
Mulhouse plant in France.
In addition, the QSW, or
Wartsila 170, is being introduced this year in both diesel and gas versions from a dedicated CWEC manufacturing unit, scheduled to be completed this fall, within
Cummins' Daventry factory in the
English Midlands. Embracing
Circle 228 on Reader Service Card