by David Fox » Mon Jan 28, 2013 1:13 pm
Then there was that other chap, grey boilersuit (was it Nigel or somebody could have been an ex 3rd or a shore side fitter, but was never a super) who used to appear and twiddle with the Ruston Genny's, not sure what he actually did, there wasn't any improvement nor did they get any worse. Perhaps they were Grace & Favour jobs that BSL handed out, bit like our Albert F.
Wasn't it Bert Miles who always used to appear when doing a Safety Equipment Survey, you allways had a stack of work on, units and the like, then he would pull two engineers off to help him, rather than Bert Wade (wasn't it) send a couple of coasting chaps down just to help with the survey.
It is lucky we didn't have any ER fires as invariably the wires for the tank trips were either rusted in the box on the boat deck or the pulleys in the ER were well and truly painted up, this was common with most ships.
I always wanted as 2nd to carry out a mock fire drill actually pull the trips, do a black start, control the rudder from the tiller flat, and start the "A" boat ME's from the starting platform rather than the control room and even practice a proper abandon ship, but don't forget your docking bottle if abandoning ship ( but whilst at anchor of course , we did enough of that). BOT sports was ok but just an excuse for the mates to wear sunglasses and steaming bonnets on deck whilst the Engineers wore minty boilersuits. On one ship the 2nd told the lads to all wear shades ( it wasn't even sunny) but the mates had them on, I think they got the message.
The Mandama and perhaps her sister ship (Ex Federal Line/NZS/P&O) had a darn great Emergency genny in a deck house aft, we were never allowed to start and run it as it was supposed to. She also had a small one on the bridge somewhere for the radio and nav lights like the "A" boats.
Those were the days my friends.
Last edited by
David Fox on Mon Jan 28, 2013 6:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.