*Disclaimer* My username cyberbadger has nothing to do with the S.S. Badger - it is merely a coincidence.
I had a pretty good time at the S.S. Badger Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering/Excursion.
Unfortunately they did not give a tour of the Engine room or engineering areas this year.
-CB
2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June 4th
- cyberbadger
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Re: 2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June
At the Wisconsin Maritime museum:
-CB
-CB
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Re: 2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June
The U.S.S. Cobia WWII submarine was interesting to take a tour through.
-CB
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Re: 2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June
Note that those pistons in the first pic of the second post, don't have rings, only labyrinth grooves, even at that size.
Retirement is about doing what floats your boat!
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
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Re: 2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June
No rings = no cylinder oil needed, a smaller sacrifice in leakage with bigger pistons. (The amount of leakage with small pistons having no rings is generally a larger percentage of the steam flow, hence small steam engines need rings more than larger engines.
Lots of brass and bronze in those pictures, very nice to see this "eye candy"
Lots of brass and bronze in those pictures, very nice to see this "eye candy"
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Re: 2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June
Last photo is a torpedo power plant I think?
While at EB I was told there was a steam propelled torpedo that would go 110 knots, with 10,000 horsepower (hydrogen-oxygen) power plant inside the standard torpedo dimensions. While this torpedo looked good in the test tank runs, in actual sea service the controls could not adequately maintain a set depth of submergence, and at sea the torpedo would often launch above the surface of the water due to poor control response. The result was spectacular overspeed and machinery destruction.
While at EB I was told there was a steam propelled torpedo that would go 110 knots, with 10,000 horsepower (hydrogen-oxygen) power plant inside the standard torpedo dimensions. While this torpedo looked good in the test tank runs, in actual sea service the controls could not adequately maintain a set depth of submergence, and at sea the torpedo would often launch above the surface of the water due to poor control response. The result was spectacular overspeed and machinery destruction.
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Re: 2016 Annual Badger Boatnerd Gathering - S.S. Badger June
Yup. It's a Mark 14 I believe.fredrosse wrote:Last photo is a torpedo power plant I think?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_14_torpedo
They were not incredibly dependable: "They tended to run too deep, explode prematurely, run erratically, or fail to detonate." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gato-class_submarine
Including also running in a circle back towards the firing vessel.
Personally I don't know whether I classify it really as a steam turbine or instead more of a chemical jet engine almost.
-CB