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T2 tanker Marine Duval

17K views 30 replies 13 participants last post by  Randy Skopinski 
#1 ·
MARINE DUVAL was built in 1944 by the Kaiser Companies Swan Island yard in Portland Oregon as the T2 tanker CHALMETTE. She was renamed STANVAC BRISBANE in 1948, ESSO LYNCHBURG in 1951, LYNCHBURG in 1956 and MARINE DUVAL in 1969.
When seen in Galveston, Texas on the 31st March 2002 she was operating as a chemical tanker for Marine Transport Corporation with a gross tonnage of 15008 and looking much modified.
 

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#2 ·
Re "Marine Duval".
Amazing! She must have had extensive and extreme renovations because I feel like saying "Where are the masts, and what did they do with the bridge section amidships?".

Astonishing that they can take a hull that old, make it totally unrecognisable and still call it a 'T2'. Obviously they did, but it still leaves me scratching my head.
 
#9 ·
Marine Duval House



They cut off the amidshiphouse from the main deck and reweld it Shelter Deck and all above the Engineers Level. So all the natural vents were replaced by noisey electric fans under the mates rooms.

All the rooms kept its T2 charm salt water heads, deck, engine and steward toilets and showers for the unlicensed crew but with the addition of Air Conditioning. The Chief Stewards room was used for the Cargo Office. The Wheelhouse still had the telemotor system and a Window Air Conditioning Unit.

The hull foward of the Aft Pumproom was replaced. But they put back the steam winches back on.

Just forward and aft of the manifold there were posts with small booms on them.


TTFN
Joe
 
#8 ·
Marine Duval

The Marine Duval is a name from the past I use to borrow parts from her while she was layed up in Galveston around 1991 or 92. Back in those days Penzoil which owned the Marine Duval would keep a Chief Engineer onboard so I had to sign for the parts. Over the years Penzoil updated the machinery on the Duval. While the Floridian's engine room stayed pretty much original. Both ships still had its turbo electric power plant.

I was Chief Engineer on the Marine Floridian which was on the same charter but was owned by MTL or the bank. The normal trip was from Galveston to Tampa. Sometimes we would go to Port Sulfur and Moorehead City.

Both ships were converted to carry molten sulfur. The cargo was kept at around 280 F. It was the only Tank Vessel I was on that we would use the biggest rose bud to heat the cargo pipes to melt the sulfur to get the cargo flowing again. Then the Mates and Captain would fire the deck hands for having lighters in their pockets while on deck.

TTFN
Joe
 
#13 ·
Joe was the Marine Super for the Marine Duval, Marine Floridian and the Marine Reliance. So Joe was my boss while I was on the Marine Floridian and the Marine Reliance.
My standing orders from Joe was not to call only when I needed something or when there was a problem. So about once a week I would call him at home while he was tending to get his children ready for school. This way I would not be on the phone to long and get the monthly lecture about the communication cost were to high.

TTFN
Joe
 
#15 ·
Hopefully attached is what they probably looked like from the front view..... they were unmistakeable as a class and once you knew the mods that had been done as a T2. The new hulls forward of the after pumproom were built in Germany and I remember passing one under tow in the English Channel to the shipyard where the engineroom was awaiting for it. There were a whole host of them done during the mid 60's if I remember.

Fascinating tales about the Stars of the thread .... We had a number of T2s in BP but whilst I heard many tales about them I did not get top sail on them ....

Barnsey
 

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#16 ·
There were two other sister ships to the Marine Duval and the Marine Floridian they were the Marine Texan and the Louisiana Brimstone.

Both the Marine Texan and the Louisania Brimstone ended there operating life with accidents. The Marine Texan went aground in Texas sat on the bottom with the house sticking out of the water. The Louisania Brimstone broke her back at Coatzacoalcos Mexico 20.2.91 & broken up at Alang 21.1.93

The Marine Floridian hit a bridge and had the bridge span land on the deck just in front of the house with a few of the cars still on the bridge. The official cause was steering gear knife switch vibrated out. After the accident all of the switches were turned around so the switch will close by gravity instead of opening. I heard twenty years later that the block of wood holding the main contacts closed fell out when the elctrical box popped open.

Other pictures of the ships are at
http://www.aukevisser.nl/inter/id476.htm
http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/19/19157.htm
 
#18 ·
No, Joe Walsh Just like the singer. I use to have a tape of Isn't life grand just for Joe when he came to visit the ship.

Joe Thelge may have been assigned to some other ships that I was not involved with. Each Marine Super had three ships to look after. I spent my time on the Sealift Tankers, the Marine Floridian,the Marine Reliance and some of the Cape H's also the Cape Douglas.

TTFN
Joe
 
#22 ·
The Sealift Tankers, too? I spent some time with those ships, too. Bill Schriever was superintendent at the time. We did segregated ballast conversion on those ships, in both Houston and Galveston.
I remember Bill. He had a funny ideal about torquing the bolts on the heads using the impact wrench. Every time I came back from vacation I had a lot of heads to retorque and most of the time the gaskets. required replacement.

TTFN
Joe
 
#21 ·
I never came across Norman Mc Askle.

The Marine Electric sank February 12, 1983 and I started with MTL in 1986 on the Sealift Arctic as the 1 A/E. Due to one of the settlement agreement's due to the sinking MTL had to have immersion survival suits and a welcome aboard pamplet on the use of the suit. This was before the USCG required them on other ships. Other than that I have no inside information about the Marine Electric.

What I do know that all of my repair request had be taken care of in a timely manner. With the exception of replacing the Captain's TV antenna. The Marine Super would not have the antenna tower replaced on overtime. Since there were only watch standers other than the pumpman and wiper in the Engine Department and according to the Union rules at the time I could not work with tools unless I had every one else on overtime. I also needed the Marine Super's permission to weld outside of the engineroom along with the company's safety committee. (The antenna tower was finally replaced when we got off the weekend in port schedule three weeks later). I always though the real reason for the delay was to punish the Captain for running the vessel close to shore to watch TV. If we took the normal route we would not have been in the storm that took down the antenna.

Another MTL T2 that was lost was the SS MARINE SULPHUR QUEEN, a T2-SE-A1 type tank vessel of U.S. Registry, converted to carry molten sulphur, departed Beaumont, Texas, with a full cargo of 15,260 tons on the afternoon of 2 February 1963 enroute Norfolk, Va. The ship and crew of 39 men disappeared. The vessel was last heard from at 0125 EST on 4 February 1963.

TTFN
Joe
 
#27 ·
Interesting. I wrote the software that replicated the ship's book for the Marine Duval and the Marine Floridian around 1992, I think. They were trying to eke a few more years out of the two by trying to minimize the stress on the hulls.

I know they did some tipping test at the Bethlehem Yards in 1970 (which was the date on the copy of the ship's book that I worked from).
 
#28 ·
Welcome Marine Software Guy to the site. You should enjoy your self.

The tables for the Duval and Floridian started to be pretty much the same but over the years differences appeared. The Duval had a waist belt riveted around the Engine and Boiler Rooms were the plates were wasted among other things. There was also a shallow stop at the loading port if you did not slack off the lines before finishing up the loading the middle would be sitting on the bottom while the ends would be floating free. More than once we had to reconnect the hoses to discharge some cargo before leaving the dock because the Plimsoll Marks would be underwater.

The Floridian always carried more cargo than the Duval during the years I was onboard the Floridian. The office and mates on the Duval did not notice the simple fact that the Duval always loaded their bunkers at the loading port and the Floridian always took bunkers at the discharge port.

Joe
 
#29 ·
MARINE DUVAL was built in 1944 by the Kaiser Companies Swan Island yard in Portland Oregon as the T2 tanker CHALMETTE. She was renamed STANVAC BRISBANE in 1948, ESSO LYNCHBURG in 1951, LYNCHBURG in 1956 and MARINE DUVAL in 1969.
When seen in Galveston, Texas on the 31st March 2002 she was operating as a chemical tanker for Marine Transport Corporation with a gross tonnage of 15008 and looking much modified.
 
#30 ·
MARINE DUVAL was built in 1944 by the Kaiser Companies Swan Island yard in Portland Oregon as the T2 tanker CHALMETTE. She was renamed STANVAC BRISBANE in 1948, ESSO LYNCHBURG in 1951, LYNCHBURG in 1956 and MARINE DUVAL in 1969.
When seen in Galveston, Texas on the 31st March 2002 she was operating as a chemical tanker for Marine Transport Corporation with a gross tonnage of 15008 and looking much modified.
 
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