Page 34: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (September 2005)
Marine Propulsion Annual
Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of September 2005 Maritime Reporter Magazine
34 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News
The SNAME Maritime Technology Conference &
Expo and Ship Production Symposium named the speaker for its Annual Banquet during the yearly
SMTC&E and SPS, scheduled to be held at the George
R. Brown Convention Center in Houston on October 20-21, 2005. Dr. John Lienhard will speak, and Alan
C. McClure Associates, Inc. is sponsoring his appear- ance.
Lienhard is the M.D. Anderson Professor Emeritus of
Mechanical Engineering and History at the University of Houston where he has taught since 1980. Lienhard holds his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from the
University of California at Berkeley, M.S. and B.S. degrees in Mechanical Engineering from the
University of Washington and Oregon State College, and honorary doctorates from the University of
Houston and Sacred Heart University. Known for his research in the thermal sciences, as well as in cultural history, he is a member of the National Academy of
Engineers, an Honorary Member of the American
Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), and a fel- low of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
Dr. Lienhard is the author and voice of more than 1,800 episodes of The Engines of Our Ingenuity, a daily public radio series about creativity and invention.
Full information about the radio program along with transcripts of all episodes may be found at www.uh.edu/engines. For his work on Engines, ASME awarded him the 1989 Ralph Coates Roe Award for contributions to the public understanding of technolo- gy, the 1998 Engineer Historian award, and the 2000
ASME Church Award for his contributions and com- mitment to the engineering field. The American
Women in Radio and Television honored him with their 1991 Portrait Division Award.
In 1991 the University of Houston presented Dr.
Lienhard with its highest faculty honor, the Esther
Farfel Award for excellence in research, teaching and service to his profession and the community.
For information on visiting or exhibiting, visit www.sname.org
SNAME Introduces
Innovation Sessions
SNAME will introduce Innovation Sessions during the SMTC&E and SPS, scheduled to be held in
Houston on October 20-21, 2005. Exhibitors will pres- ent brief presentations on new products or technologies on Thursday, October 20, from 12:30 pm - 2:00 pm and 4:00 pm - 4:30 pm; and on Friday, October 21 from 8:30 am - 9:30 am and 12:30 pm - 3:30 pm. Following are brief descriptions of the presentations scheduled at press time.
Title Biotechnology Provides Cost-Effective Solution for Bilge Water Treatment in Compliance with
New IMO Regulations
By Jason Caplan and Richard Penny
EnSolve Biosystems
Abstract New IMO regulations are tightening the requirements for approved bilge-water treatment systems. This technical paper will discuss the new carriage requirements and their impli- cations for oily water separator equipment. The authors will also present the results of sea trials for a unique biomechanical solution, which uses safe, non-pathogenic, naturally occurring microbes to "eat" emulsified oil and other hydrocarbons con- tained in the bilge water to meet the IMO clean-water specifica- tion for overboard discharge.
Title Eliminate filter disposal - protect your engine with self-cleaning filter
By Theodore Esplin, Alfa Laval
Abstract The Alfa Laval automatic self-cleaning filter is an opti- mized lube oil treatment solution that promotes oil conservation and provides additional operational benefits. It eliminates the need for cartridge filters along with their inventory and disposal issues and the potential for cartridge changeout oil spills. This filter was designed to have a low, constant pressure drop. This reduces parasitic loading on the engine, while increasing flow to other parts of the engine.
Title Treatment of Emulsified Oily
Wastewater - Oil Content Below 5ppm
By Cameron Scot Seifert, Alfa Laval
Abstract Cleaning oily wastewater poses distinct challenges.
The composition and flow of the wastewater changes over time, making efficient treatment difficult while also meeting require- ments for safety, reliability and compactness. Centrifugal separa-
Circle 205 on Reader Service Card
Circle 218 on Reader Service Card
STRONGER REPAIRS FASTER, EASIER
Unique epoxy resin system bonds to almost anything—produces proven, long lasting repairs with outstanding impact strength, tensile strength, and abrasion resistance. • Repairs everything from pinholes and ruptures to complete breaks in pipes, pumps, ducts, tanks, valves, flanges, joints, and machinery casings, including equipment carrying water, low-pressure steam, gases, gasoline, oil, alcohol, and caustics • Bonds tenaciously to most surfaces including steel, plastic, fiberglass composites, ceramic and wood
STANDARD RESIN for small holes/cracks (large holes/cracks with reinforcement)
RED PUTTY for medium to large holes, cracks and other defects
STEEL PUTTY for steel-like repairs on metal— can be drilled, tapped, machined
SEALER for small holes and cracks
LEVELING COMPOUND for corroded surfaces
UNDERWATER PUTTY for repairs in dry, moist, or submerged conditions
For detailed literature contact:
Ferro Corporation
Liquid Coatings and Dispersions Division 1301 N. Flora St., Plymouth, IN 46563
Tel: 574-935-5131 • Fax: 574-935-5278
SNAME Preview
Dr. John Lienhard to Address SNAME Banquet
Dr. John Lienhard
MR SEPTEMBER 2005 #5 (33-40).qxd 9/1/2005 10:54 AM Page 34