When men were men, and we made things called ships in GB
http://www.shipsnostalgia.com/guides/William_Doxford_and_Sons#The_Manufacturing_Process
I may be wrong but believe the is one of their engines at Beamish in the engine sheds. certainly seen one in one of the old museum type places.
Adrian
[Edited on 24-1-12 by AdrianH]
Well I didnt know that ! - Ive been a few times but have avoided certain bits of it due to the crowds.
In the early 80s I got taken to British Engines in Byker, it was fascinating.
Superb pictures! I'm quite amazed that oxy-acetylene can cut through such a thick bit of metal though.
South Tyneside College had/had the single cylinder engine that was prototype of both the P & J type it was/may still be in running order.
ISTR Glasgow Transport Museum have a cutaway model of 7 cylinder Doxford
http://www.flickr.com/photos/terry_wha/sets/690077/detail/ Link
"My name is William Doxford, I come from Sunderland,
And I make the finest engines built in all the land,
the top ends clang,
the bottom ends prang,
but the engine chugs away,
You have to oil the dammed thing 50 times a day."
[Edited on 24/1/12 by britishtrident]
it was an amazing place, plus the whole banks down to the sea both side.
You can blame Thatcher for the demise, hope she rots in hell....
When you think that the UK was once known as 'The Workshop of the World', it's heartbraking to see what successive Governments have done to us.
quote:
Originally posted by coozer
it was an amazing place, plus the whole banks down to the sea both side.
You can blame Thatcher for the demise, hope she rots in hell....
quote:
Originally posted by Confused but excited.
When you think that the UK was once known as 'The Workshop of the World', it's heartbraking to see what successive Governments have done to us.
Yea found the bit to back up my ageing grey matter
Talking of the railway station at Beamish wiki has the following statement:
The station is dominated by the Regional Museums Store (completed in 2002, and externally disguised as "Beamish Waggon and Iron Works, estd
1857", which Beamish shares with Tyne and Wear Museums. This houses, amongst other things; railway rolling stock and other vehicles; a large
marine diesel engine by William Doxford & Sons of Pallion, Sunderland (1977); and several boats including the Tyne wherry (a traditional local
type of lighter) Elswick No. 2 (1930).
Link off to website with picture
AdrianH
[Edited on 24-1-12 by AdrianH]
A friend had cause to spend some time in a local (unionised) engineering firm and watched one bloke take 45 minutes to drill a couple of holes.
That, I suspect is more likely the reason we make no so much these days.
ATB
Simon
I hear far too many stories about how the unions ruled the roost when it came to modernising work practice & prodution methods etc for there to be no truth in it. Easy to see with hindsight but there must have been folk back then that could see it too, if we dont modernise & become more efficient at the cost of some jobs then others will do it & get the work while we go to the wall & everyone loses their job.
quote:
Originally posted by coozer
You can blame Thatcher for the demise, hope she rots in hell....
My Sister's Father in Law worked as a shipwright for Doxford all his life and when in his 70's (He died in his late 80's 10 years ago)
The British Maratime museum called him. They had taken possession of an Engine with his name engraved on the crank and invited him to come down to
London to help with its restoration.
Amazing. He was there for 3 months off and on and when it went on display he was invited to open the exhibit. It made his retirement.
I have to say he was a very skilled man and as I was working in Petro-chemicals as an Engineer in my early career we had some great conversations. I
was choked when he left me a load of tools in his will.
A true Gentleman Craftsman.
......Neil
We build quite a lot of superyatchs too. Princess, Sunseeker, Oyster to name but a few
ATB
Simon
|How do you start an engine that big, surely not a starter motor or is the starter the size of a bungalow
Where I live we still make those (not so) little things that go under the water......and occasionally run aground....but we don't talk about
that.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cumbria/content/articles/2008/02/12/bae_ambush_2nd_sub_08_feature.shtml
Been a while since we did a surface ship to be honest. They've got rid of and then rehired most of the skilled labour a few times now.
Rich
Well my middle brother worked for the Port of Tyne in the 1970s, engineering apprentice. Started off in the docks on the haulmasters & fork
trucks, then did a spell on the dock cranes, and for the final bit of his apprenticeship, worked on the dredger on the Tyne.
Its still there - The Hedwin.
He now works in a shipyard in Batam, Indonesia - Has 1500 people building ships for him !
Thats £9750 an hour, if the 1500 all get paid the minimum wage of £6.50 an hour - I very much doubt it costs £9750 an hour to run an Indonesian
shipyard.
Thats why we dont build volume ships anymore - economics (profit) not unions....
quote:
Originally posted by norfolkluego
|How do you start an engine that big, surely not a starter motor or is the starter the size of a bungalow
One hell of a lot of compressed air directly into the cylinders, by slow speed marine 2 stroke diesel standards Doxfords we not biggest
around when they started to put diesels into VLCCs and ULCCs in the mid 1970s in place of steam turbines slow really big engines were
required.
Here is a big Sulzer that dwarfs anything from the Doxford era.
quote:
Originally posted by T66
Well my middle brother worked for the Port of Tyne in the 1970s, engineering apprentice. Started off in the docks on the haulmasters & fork trucks, then did a spell on the dock cranes, and for the final bit of his apprenticeship, worked on the dredger on the Tyne.
Its still there - The Hedwin.
He now works in a shipyard in Batam, Indonesia - Has 1500 people building ships for him !
Thats £9750 an hour, if the 1500 all get paid the minimum wage of £6.50 an hour - I very much doubt it costs £9750 an hour to run an Indonesian shipyard.
Thats why we dont build volume ships anymore - economics (profit) not unions....
Not a single pair of goggles, gloves or PPE between them! I wonder if they were asked to remove them for the photos - or, more likely they were never asked or expected to wear them!
We still build a lot of big engines and generators in this country, perkins are a good example another company in peterborough i used to deal with build generators for ships the size of houses.
quote:
Originally posted by Simon
We build quite a lot of superyatchs too. Princess, Sunseeker, Oyster to name but a few
ATB
Simon