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The Canaller
Table of Contents

Title Page
Abstract
Introduction
The Canals
The Canaller
Limiting Dimensions
Hull Form
The Bulk Canaller
The Turret Vessels
Package Freighters
TANKERS
Paper Carriers
Coal Carriers
Cement Carriers
Ocean-going Vessels
Traffic And Other Considerations
Machinery
The Future Of The Canaller
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Table 5 Tabulation of Owners and Canallers
Discussion
Table of Illustrations
Index

Cement Carriers

Fig. 34 Self-Unloading Vessel Cementkarrier Built in 1930
There is a considerable movement of bulk cement along the canals and in the lakes, two specially designed vessels being used for the trade. These vessels, the Cementkarrier and the Bulkarrier are generally similar in arrangements and are owned by the Canada Cement Company Limited. The Cementkarrier (Fig. 34) is a Diesel-electric vessel with electric auxiliary machinery. The cargo space is divided into 6 hopper-type holds by 4 transverse and one centerline bulkhead and to protect the cargo a double shell is fitted in way of the holds. The holds are filled by a shore pipe system led into small watertight hatches and discharge into two scraper tunnels running fore and aft.

The discharge gear consists of a Sauerman scraper, supported on an overhead trackway, situated in each tunnel and hauled along the scraper tunnels by steel wires led to two electric haulages. These drag the scrapers up an inclined path and discharge the cement into a hopper bunker which, in turn, feeds it through a sliding gate into the archimedean screw of an electrically driven highspeed Fuller Kenyon cement pump. The cement is then blown overboard through an 8-in-diameter compressed-air discharge line (11).

 


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This paper was presented at a meeting of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers and is reproduced with permission.