Good Morning Chief! As a man living in a small landlocked town in Virginia, USA and having a love for all things mechanical I thoroughly enjoy your videos. It's my opinion that the men working for you are lucky to have a mentor such as yourself. May God continue to watch over and Bless You, your Family, and of course your Crew.
He really has a huge responsibility, since they figure time down in big dollars per second. And the number of critical machinery to keep one of those big boys operational can be overwhelming. I felt like a lost puppy when I started on ships even after being an industrial tech supervisor for 20 years at a Port facility and did avionics, yachts and locomotives.
Great to see correct tools used, methodical working , along with team work. As a retired engineer of forty years it's great to see skills passed onto the young engineers. And a mentor like yourself, can't get any better
As another retired engineer did your ship(s) have a fixed purifier cleaning station close to the purifier room? All my ships had a steel tub at waist height exclusively for cleaning purifiers.
@@runsolo7418 That's what I was thinking. As an automotive mechanic, having a solvent tank to clean parts is way easier than using a cut up plastic jug.
Wow. Must be a tense experience, for the cadet, turning on the oil purifier for the first time after it has been cleaned and reassembled. "Gee, I sure hope I'm not about destroy this $50,000 machine!" Excellent video and great work! You must be excellent to work under Chief !
Interesting to see the differences between the Mitsubishi (I believe you said) and the Alfa-Laval, in our powerhouse, but that was ~30 years ago. Best wishes from the far North.
"Now that the device has been fully assembled, it is time to hold up [random small part that needs the thing to be taken apart completely to be installed] and ask the cadet 'and what about this one?'"
In many factories there are expensive machines, so training is done with experienced staff, worse is when managers call hired contractors ( mostly foreigners ) who know nothing about neither work nor safety.
I'm about to finish undergrad with a cell biology degree; I TA for a wet lab course where one of the most often used tools is the centrifuge. We have it on a yearly service contract (higher service frequency if the kids try to spin samples with unequal masses), this video makes me seriously appreciate the work and knowledge seafarers have, especially in situations that depend on your knowledge to keep the entire team moving.
In a microbiology research lab myself. Had to get good at fixing machines (shakers and PCR machines come most readily to mind, although we also have centrifuges of course). Unfortunately, nobody else seems to want to get trained on that . . . .
@@Lucius_Chiaraviglio Yeah I've been co opted as the lab's handyman for whenever things need fixing (putting new flint on strikers to refilling toner), but never tried messing with the centrifuge since there are just so many parts that can quickly become out of place!
Chief this reminds me of my days on the farm working the cream separator as a youngster and coming from a oil pipeline job this is very well done. I sure this youngster will go from strength to strength. Regards
I have to laugh at your comment. I’m from Sacramento, CA. Every other year we visited our families in the mid west. Farmers, horsed people, dairy farmers and crop farmers. I was 15 the last time I visited. I was 17 when I joined the Navy. In the kitchen of my uncle’s home was a de Laval separator. They placed milk on the breakfast table in #10 metal cans. It’s 1973 and I am in MM A School at the Great Lakes Training center. I saw it and said, “What does a milk separator have to so with main propulsion support systems”? Brings back memories. It’s 2024 and the scars on my hands are still visible.
Chief. Great job on teaching your team. The way they go about the job, shows that they have a solid foundation on which they perform their work. And that is something you learn. No-one is born that way. Congratulations to you and your team. I wish you all fair seas.
Good day, Chief!! Fascinating content on one of many parts that keep a ship in top shape. Good on the Senior Engineering staff for not only teaching, but allowing this Cadet to prove his training and knowledge. To quote another channel I frequent, when he started to reassemble, all of those parts were "nice and shiny!!" Finally, good luck to this Cadet in his promotion to Fourth Engineer. May your travels encounter favorable winds and smooth sailing. And, when you encounter the rough seas of Life, may your training be a solid beacon to guide you through to safe harbour.
Patience, care and delicacy.... with big hammers! Fascinating film Chief, thanks for sharing. Incidentally, many years ago in a previous life I worked in UK agriculture and both Alfa Laval and Westphalia were known to us as milking machine makers!
That can be nerve racking. I remember how it was exactly. So many times, there were no manuals on board, so we relied on pictures during disassembly and lots of phone calls to ask for specs. More videos like this please Chief!
Never thought I'd see another... Spent many hours stripping cleaning De Laval fuel and engine oil purifiers .... That brought back some taxing memory's lol...... Thanks Chief :-)
I used to hate changing the main bowl seals on purifiers. A nightmare to remove and fit without damaging them. Great video brought back memories good and bad.
With the Alfa-Lavals (FOPX) you had to take care that the three nylon valve plugs under the bowl bottom were of the same height, (especially when the purchasing dept. had not ordered them at Alfa Laval) The first time I came across these non original ones I noticed that they did not have that green dot on them. Took a caliper and started to look for a matching set. Happy days, especially when the HFO day tank was not a “real” day tank and when a failure occurred in the middle of the night, you were more or less obliged to start immediately with the non-scheduled overhaul of the bowl.
Wow! It's incredible how much gadgetry goes into one of these great ships. And it's incredible how much knowledge goes into designing, making, operating and maintaining them. And that fuel purifier is only one of hundreds... or thousands... of things that have to be worked on by the engineers? Respect to Chief Makoi and his boys.
Building capacity of those underneath you is the best thing a senior officer can do. Knowledge, experience, confidence, and responsibility. Mistakes always have a role too, but good leadership can limit them and make that a positive thing. Nice work Chief.
Chief, another amazing and informative video. Thanks for sharing and documenting. Viewers, I’ve got a couple observations. First, I lost count of the dedicated tools needed to disassemble and reassemble this, but there seemed to be quite a few dedicated spammers, wrenches etc. Second, and what hit home the strongest, was in the beginning Chief mentions 18,000 RPM. If you’re unaware, this is fast, really fast. Not quite in the neighborhood of needing air bearings, but it’s pushing the envelope and all these rotating parts must have incredible balance and precision tolerances. This is truly incredible. I’m still perplexed that’s it’s more economical to purify the ship sludge oil on-board rather than at the refinery. I suppose contaminants are introduced in the supply chain up until the engine, so of course filtration will always be needed. Chief, keep making these great videos. Thanks
I was wondering about the economy of a fuel oil purifier, too. I guess there's little commercial use for the stuff in this oil's section of the cracking tower, so it's dirt cheap to buy, and the onboard purifier pays for itself & its upkeep. I'd like to hear the Chief's take on this.
I was also amazed at how many specialized tools this disassembly needed, and just for this one component of the ship. They must have thousands of tools for all the parts of the ship, storing them all must be a feat in itself.
@@MrPesht trust me, that ship has space to spare. If The Chief doesn't have a dedicated tool room, he's got as many bulkhead-mounted lockers as he needs for tools & spares.
It’s been a long time since I had to do this job. Cleaning discs was not one of my favorite things to do on the ship. The care of these is so important and occasionally one would have an engineer on the ship that did not do the right maintenance and troubles would follow! This was an excellent video Chief! It was very thorough and would make a great training video for the cadets back at the school. Your recording was very clear and it was easy to see everything. Your crew worked well together. You can see that they have been trained well by a great Chief. I would have loved to have worked for a Chief like you back in the day. Thanks for the memories. Ram
This was surprisingly fascinating! I'm a chef that's never been on a ship and I live 2,000 miles from the ocean but it's still neat to see how things work.
When I was in the Navy, we used "De Lave," oil purifiers. They were similar to yours. I suppose there's not a lot of difference in the concept, so designs will be similar. We had that stack of filtration baskets, like in yours. And we had to remove the baskets and clean them individually as well. We didn't use them for fuel oil, because the ship's engines, generators, and about everything, ran on JP5 jet fuel. They were used to purify the engine's lube oil. You got a good crew there, they did a great job on that purifier. It looked brand new after they got all the crap out of it! Now, I did notice the digital readout, of the purifier status. "That's a cheat in the Navy!" On the De Lave purifiers, there was a little button, that popped in and out as the purifier ran up to speed. We had to count the number times the little button popped in and out. It had to pop out a specific number of times to mark the point where the purifier could be used. Like 60 times in one minute. Something like that.
Also ex-Navy, I had a similar "context-shift" struggle with FO purifiers. Never envied the MMs who had to manually clean sludge from 2-3 dozen bowls. Also always remember the time I came into the engine room one evening in port on a duty day. There was a hazy smoke throughout the ER. FN Jones was on watch, sitting on a rail at main control. I asked him what was going on. He said, "Just chillin', sir." He was unaware that he was cooking the oil in the purifier. I forget further details. But it's one of those classic Navy experiences about meeting all types. FN Jones was one of the friendliest guys around, certainly beloved by family & friends. Less popular with his LPO, chief, and DivO.
Likewise! We had one each for our main engines reduction gear and disassembled, cleaned it nightly. As our was smaller we only needed the lock ring and shaft puller. The overhead hoist would have nice lol!
Chief I have never overhauled the fuel oil purifier or the lube oil purifier on the Coast Guard ships I sailed on but viewing your video takes me back about 40 years.
That is a lot of pieces and parts and pullers. Great job. I am sure the manuals are very concise for re-assembly. Amazing how much work goes into a fuel filter. !!! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for posting videos Chief of your mentoring programs . It's everyone's duty preparing future generations to take over for our families futures .
The Chief makes some of the most soothing and educational vidoes on youtube. Especially that guitar in the background. Sometimes it feels like a Discovery Channel documentary. Definately my favourite.
Truly an excellent video, showing the step by step process and sharing the significance of assigning this complex maintenance job to a cadet! Thanks for sharing!
It was a pleasure to watch the maintance of this piece of equipment.. nothing was rushed, the correct tools & jigs were used and nothing was “forced”.. it was not a contest as to who could do it the quickest or use the biggest hammer !! They have been well trained / mentored.. Promotion Approved!
Thankyou sir for giving him the opportunity to overhaul the purifier. I hope theres a lot of CE like you that letting the cadet to gain knowledge and experience. - aspiring engine cadet
Watching is the ultimate in relaxing content. It's interesting of course, plus because I'll never have to do the task myself, there's no pressure to learn it. I started watching your channel because it shows me things I'd never otherwise see .. OR even think about!
Great video as usual. It constantly impresses me how many moving parts and machinery is involved in the operation of a vessel. I am also amazed at the array of skill sets needed to repair and maintain every part of the ship. Knowledge must be passed down from one generation to another by studying manuals and books . However there is no substitute for hands on repetition, under the guidance of an experienced crew member or supervisor. I will never see any of this in person. I live on the land and my career days are behind me. I do have a brother that is a second mate on an articulating tug and barge. Usually Carrying gasoline and diesel fuel. Generally from the Gulf of Mexico to northeastern states and Canada. He enjoys his career and has been doing it a long time. I would love to be able to ride along on a trip sometime but that’s never gonna happen. Anyway thanks for the information. You’re a great instructor. I hope you continue to have safe travels.
A ship is a single monolithic object, it is amazing that huge thing, depends on 2inch or smaller parts inside the "coolest oil filter ever". Always amazing Chief. I really enjoy finding out how much I do not know
God bless you I am learning from a lot more than I can learn from people I am working with. Now I am preparing for my 3rd . I am a qmed . God bless u you are indeed great chief Engineer.
Really nice your company allows you to document these otherwise hidden procedures. I don't work anywhere near a shipping vessel but it is fascinating to see this kind of work. Cheers! Thanks for the content :D
You are absolutely right chief. When you do the job yourself there is tremendous boost in confidence. On my first ship as a cadet I was made incharge of purifier maintenance after 2-3 months onboard. That gave me confidence that I can be a good marine engineer. After 20 years at sea and now switching to offshore jackup barges I still remember those days.
There's no better way to train a person than hands on experience. The more you do it the easier it gets. The young Cadet looks to be well trained and on his way to a good career maintaining ships.
I remember removing old plumbing that was used for transferring that #6 bunker oil to the boilers at the municipal power plant where I work at. Messy stuff!! Great videos of your time on board the ship!
Haha, that brought back memories... When I was a " motorman" in the late 80's, on merchant marine vessels of the Dutch company " Spliethoff", I did this job so many many times, in the end, I could do this with my eyes close... I absolutely hated it though...same as grinding valves for our 4-stroke Hanshin main engine. I was so glad to be promoted to 2nd engineer, so the next motorman could take over, haha. But still....those were the days !
Chief you made it clear, with a few crossings and you and 2nd,3rd engineers teaching the cadets who want to excel upward mobility is available as the cadet being tested will promote on next crossing to 4th engineer. Bravo to you boss, and cadet.
The First Rule of Management, that a lot of managers seem to miss, is "Always train your replacement. If you cannot be replaced, you cannot be promoted."
So back in about 91 or 92 I was using one of those to separate oil and water. We had a factory rep come by for a service and teaching session. He spent most of his time on ships helping with rebuilds etc. Then I started working for Kraft foods. They used a full stainless steel version to strip cream from milk. And also used to strip whey from cheese culture to make cream cheese and and other processed cheese food. Really cool machine. We rebuilt all 14 once a year at Kraft. Crack checks and all new bearings.
Chief, that was a LOT of editing. I can't imagine how hard you worked on that. Thank you. That was also a complex mechanism but I can imagine you do it so many times it becomes routine. I was surprised how no power tools were used at all in this but I can imagine torque issues and feeling how tight something is. However, you had just about every wheel puller in existence :) Finally, I can also imagine this thing looking that clean for about 10 minutes once in usage before it turns to what it used to look like. :) p.s. It's obvious you have an amazing crew that works for you. They really work so hard.
When I first started working for the United States Post Office as a mechanic, we had some trucks that had an oil spinner filter system, quite similar to this. Obviously a lot smaller, but still effective. Only the oil pressure from the engine supplied the spinning motion, via small jets in the spinning drum assembly. It worked very well at separating the heavy solids from the oil. I could tell a difference when the spinner was cleaned out versus dirty. The sound had certain harmonics when the spinner slowed down after the engine was turned off. In these cases, these were used on 1984-1997 Chevrolet 6.2 and 6.5 liter v8 diesel engines used in medium sized trucks. There also was a conventional engine oil filter in the system. The vehicles were similar in size to the brown colored delivery trucks used by another carrier.
Hi Chief.....I just stumbled on your channel recently and I'm hooked on it. I spent years in the fuel industry , where I delivered heavy fuel oil to cargo ships , factories and mills. It's nice to get a view of how things work on board , especially as we usually only got as far as deck to present fuel samples and get triplicate paper work signed when we were bunkering. Dragging that extra long by per hose damn near killed me back in the day. You have a brilliant presentation style. Makes watching the vids a pleasure.
This video showed me many tools I had never seen before. I could use that ring-shaped one with a "handle" to open jars! Well, maybe not. Thank you from Liz and Ginger in Australia.
Chief Makoi, I absolutly love this style of video. The deep dive into the task is very interesting to watch. To me, a fuel purifier is a few pages in a text boox. To actually see a crew take one down was fantastic. If you can, I would like to see more task specific videos.
What an interesting insight into what I'm sure is many machines used on board. Good training & dedication from the crew certainly pays off. That's for taking the time to post.
It’s amazing the small parts that keep a large ship running. We burned No.6 oil in our boilers. The wear on the hardened tips of the oil guns always made me wonder how ships could use this in their engines.
Chief - Great video. Any chance you could do a video explaining what happens in the purifying process? If that is fuel oil, what purpose does the water serve? What happens when the fuel goes into the filtration unit? As an aircraft mechanic, I find this stuff fascinating! Hey thank you!
Water is used to move the piston removed at 11:23 up and down. The piston is closed during operation, and then when enough solids have built up at the outer wall, the piston is pushed down by an injection of water to eject the solids. It happens very fast, a fraction of a second.
Chief MAKOi Please do! I would find it fascinating to know how HFO is purified as well! Seeing the water supply part has me quite confused! Fuel and water are usually enemies! Lol
I worked for a while on a ship that had these two massive HFO Purifiers of the Alfa Laval kind. We were supposed to maintain one of them the first weekend was onboard, but the evening before the other one broke down, so we had to spend the whole weekend maintaining and cleaning both.
I had a great experience carrying out top overhaul with this type of purifier. currently my favourite type of purifier. on my previous ship, the purifier model was SJ-G50. thanks to my previous 4th engineer, he taught me well.
This reminds me of my days as an engineer on a bulk carrier back in the 80's. We had to clean the heavy-oil purifier evrey day of the week; took 1,5-2 hourse every time, every day.
Hi from uk Chief MAKOi 👋👍 nice to see this in depth bit of maintenance on behalf of your team and pass on good luck wishes to your Junior engineer to fourth engineer step 👍 wish him all the luck on his potential move👌 and laws of learning is first watch me then I watch you then we both can get it done as one 👌 hope your all ok thanks for your time be safe and see you soon 👍👋 p.s I watch a thing on t.v about vessels and crews in bad scenerios and as a ship was listing under power to get to safety the engine oils sensor was on opposite side to list and shut down engines for safety but sealed the ships fate as was in too deep of water and sunk after problem (wasnt to far from shelf what the skipper was aiming for but never made it ) thanks agin 👋👍
it's quite remarkable how closely the interior of that oil purifier resembles the insides of an old cream separator. My grandparents had a farm and they used to separate some milk and it was my job to clean the separator when used.
Really interesting, and enlightening. Your cadet will benefit immensely from the knowledge and understanding you share with him. Thanks for sharing it with us too.
Another great video. It really is interesting watching all the amazing tasks you are expected to perform while at sea. It was also nice to see how you were also using this time as an opportunity for one of your crew to do it themselves successfully all the way through for the first time. Doing something massive like that has to be a confidence booster. It goes without saying, there was tons of learning steps he had along the way to get to this successful milestone. All that said, that is a really complex job. Sitting back had to take some effort. In scouting, we train kids by EDGE. Explain, Demonstrate, Guide and Enable. It is neat to see similar methods used by others.
The episode is interesting as usual. But the best part of it is knowing you and your mates have not been trapped in the black sea at the burst of the ukrainian war.
Good Morning Chief! As a man living in a small landlocked town in Virginia, USA and having a love for all things mechanical I thoroughly enjoy your videos. It's my opinion that the men working for you are lucky to have a mentor such as yourself. May God continue to watch over and Bless You, your Family, and of course your Crew.
He really has a huge responsibility, since they figure time down in big dollars per second. And the number of critical machinery to keep one of those big boys operational can be overwhelming. I felt like a lost puppy when I started on ships even after being an industrial tech supervisor for 20 years at a Port facility and did avionics, yachts and locomotives.
Where bouts in VA? Me, I'm in the Winchester area...
@@jameslanning8405 Gate City.
@@patelliott8035 I live in Bristol. Such a small world..
Great to see correct tools used, methodical working , along with team work. As a retired engineer of forty years it's great to see skills passed onto the young engineers. And a mentor like yourself, can't
get any better
As another retired engineer did your ship(s) have a fixed purifier cleaning station close to the purifier room? All my ships had a steel tub at waist height exclusively for cleaning purifiers.
@@runsolo7418 That's what I was thinking. As an automotive mechanic, having a solvent tank to clean parts is way easier than using a cut up plastic jug.
Wow. Must be a tense experience, for the cadet, turning on the oil purifier for the first time after it has been cleaned and reassembled. "Gee, I sure hope I'm not about destroy this $50,000 machine!"
Excellent video and great work! You must be excellent to work under Chief !
Interesting to see the differences between the Mitsubishi (I believe you said) and the Alfa-Laval, in our powerhouse, but that was ~30 years ago.
Best wishes from the far North.
My first time 47 years ago the Chief just showed me the tools and said you'll figure it out
"Now that the device has been fully assembled, it is time to hold up [random small part that needs the thing to be taken apart completely to be installed] and ask the cadet 'and what about this one?'"
Feels similar to my experience with a variable volume hydraulic pump... So many bits but it worked
In many factories there are expensive machines, so training is done with experienced staff, worse is when managers call hired contractors ( mostly foreigners ) who know nothing about neither work nor safety.
I'm about to finish undergrad with a cell biology degree; I TA for a wet lab course where one of the most often used tools is the centrifuge. We have it on a yearly service contract (higher service frequency if the kids try to spin samples with unequal masses), this video makes me seriously appreciate the work and knowledge seafarers have, especially in situations that depend on your knowledge to keep the entire team moving.
In a microbiology research lab myself. Had to get good at fixing machines (shakers and PCR machines come most readily to mind, although we also have centrifuges of course). Unfortunately, nobody else seems to want to get trained on that . . . .
@@Lucius_Chiaraviglio Yeah I've been co opted as the lab's handyman for whenever things need fixing (putting new flint on strikers to refilling toner), but never tried messing with the centrifuge since there are just so many parts that can quickly become out of place!
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. This is great. I was always mystified how ships could run on that sludge. That purifier is suprisingly complex.
Chief this reminds me of my days on the farm working the cream separator as a youngster and coming from a oil pipeline job this is very well done. I sure this youngster will go from strength to strength. Regards
I have to laugh at your comment. I’m from Sacramento, CA. Every other year we visited our families in the mid west. Farmers, horsed people, dairy farmers and crop farmers. I was 15 the last time I visited. I was 17 when I joined the Navy. In the kitchen of my uncle’s home was a de Laval separator. They placed milk on the breakfast table in #10 metal cans.
It’s 1973 and I am in MM A School at the Great Lakes Training center. I saw it and said, “What does a milk separator have to so with main propulsion support systems”? Brings back memories. It’s 2024 and the scars on my hands are still visible.
Chief. Great job on teaching your team. The way they go about the job, shows that they have a solid foundation on which they perform their work. And that is something you learn. No-one is born that way. Congratulations to you and your team. I wish you all fair seas.
Good day, Chief!!
Fascinating content on one of many parts that keep a ship in top shape.
Good on the Senior Engineering staff for not only teaching, but allowing this Cadet to prove his training and knowledge. To quote another channel I frequent, when he started to reassemble, all of those parts were "nice and shiny!!"
Finally, good luck to this Cadet in his promotion to Fourth Engineer. May your travels encounter favorable winds and smooth sailing. And, when you encounter the rough seas of Life, may your training be a solid beacon to guide you through to safe harbour.
Now I'm on a research kick on how these things work and do what thay do ..keep up the awesome work of keeping the world moving
Takes me back to my Navy days in Engineering. You've got a great crew Chief! 👍👍
I used to work for Westfalia Separator, it’s nice to see your guys doing a thorough job on the overhaul.
Great guidance...❤ People working alongside you are really lucky... Hope all juniors get seniors like you..
Patience, care and delicacy.... with big hammers! Fascinating film Chief, thanks for sharing.
Incidentally, many years ago in a previous life I worked in UK agriculture and both Alfa Laval and Westphalia were known to us as milking machine makers!
Love the more technically themed videos like this!
That can be nerve racking. I remember how it was exactly. So many times, there were no manuals on board, so we relied on pictures during disassembly and lots of phone calls to ask for specs.
More videos like this please Chief!
Never thought I'd see another... Spent many hours stripping cleaning De Laval fuel and engine oil purifiers .... That brought back some taxing memory's lol...... Thanks Chief :-)
The sound of your voice is very conducive to learning! I wish all instructional videos were like this.
I used to hate changing the main bowl seals on purifiers. A nightmare to remove and fit without damaging them. Great video brought back memories good and bad.
With the Alfa-Lavals (FOPX) you had to take care that the three nylon valve plugs under the bowl bottom were of the same height, (especially when the purchasing dept. had not ordered them at Alfa Laval)
The first time I came across these non original ones I noticed that they did not have that green dot on them. Took a caliper and started to look for a matching set.
Happy days, especially when the HFO day tank was not a “real” day tank and when a failure occurred in the middle of the night, you were more or less obliged to start immediately with the non-scheduled overhaul of the bowl.
@@janvisser2223
Out of bed from a deep sleep to skin yar knuckles and get yar hands dirty..
Oh well...
@@charliepearce8767 That happened, and no, that was no fun. (From an air conditioned cabin to a separator room which was sometimes 50 degr. C)
Great team of engineers! Well trained and well managed.
Wow! It's incredible how much gadgetry goes into one of these great ships. And it's incredible how much knowledge goes into designing, making, operating and maintaining them.
And that fuel purifier is only one of hundreds... or thousands... of things that have to be worked on by the engineers?
Respect to Chief Makoi and his boys.
Building capacity of those underneath you is the best thing a senior officer can do. Knowledge, experience, confidence, and responsibility. Mistakes always have a role too, but good leadership can limit them and make that a positive thing.
Nice work Chief.
Chief, another amazing and informative video. Thanks for sharing and documenting. Viewers, I’ve got a couple observations. First, I lost count of the dedicated tools needed to disassemble and reassemble this, but there seemed to be quite a few dedicated spammers, wrenches etc. Second, and what hit home the strongest, was in the beginning Chief mentions 18,000 RPM. If you’re unaware, this is fast, really fast. Not quite in the neighborhood of needing air bearings, but it’s pushing the envelope and all these rotating parts must have incredible balance and precision tolerances. This is truly incredible.
I’m still perplexed that’s it’s more economical to purify the ship sludge oil on-board rather than at the refinery. I suppose contaminants are introduced in the supply chain up until the engine, so of course filtration will always be needed.
Chief, keep making these great videos. Thanks
I was wondering about the economy of a fuel oil purifier, too. I guess there's little commercial use for the stuff in this oil's section of the cracking tower, so it's dirt cheap to buy, and the onboard purifier pays for itself & its upkeep. I'd like to hear the Chief's take on this.
I was also amazed at how many specialized tools this disassembly needed, and just for this one component of the ship. They must have thousands of tools for all the parts of the ship, storing them all must be a feat in itself.
@@MrPesht trust me, that ship has space to spare. If The Chief doesn't have a dedicated tool room, he's got as many bulkhead-mounted lockers as he needs for tools & spares.
@@MrPesht and each one of those specialized tools is another reason to keep a dry bilge!
It’s been a long time since I had to do this job. Cleaning discs was not one of my favorite things to do on the ship.
The care of these is so important and occasionally one would have an engineer on the ship that did not do the right maintenance and troubles would follow!
This was an excellent video Chief!
It was very thorough and would make a great training video for the cadets back at the school. Your recording was very clear and it was easy to see everything.
Your crew worked well together. You can see that they have been trained well by a great Chief.
I would have loved to have worked for a Chief like you back in the day.
Thanks for the memories.
Ram
The fits on those parts are very satisfying well made part bit of kit there and nice to see it being well maintained with care
This was surprisingly fascinating! I'm a chef that's never been on a ship and I live 2,000 miles from the ocean but it's still neat to see how things work.
When I was in the Navy, we used "De Lave," oil purifiers. They were similar to yours. I suppose there's not a lot of difference in the concept, so designs will be similar.
We had that stack of filtration baskets, like in yours. And we had to remove the baskets and clean them individually as well.
We didn't use them for fuel oil, because the ship's engines, generators, and about everything, ran on JP5 jet fuel.
They were used to purify the engine's lube oil.
You got a good crew there, they did a great job on that purifier. It looked brand new after they got all the crap out of it!
Now, I did notice the digital readout, of the purifier status. "That's a cheat in the Navy!"
On the De Lave purifiers, there was a little button, that popped in and out as the purifier ran up to speed.
We had to count the number times the little button popped in and out. It had to pop out a specific number of times to mark the point where the purifier could be used. Like 60 times in one minute. Something like that.
Also ex-Navy, I had a similar "context-shift" struggle with FO purifiers. Never envied the MMs who had to manually clean sludge from 2-3 dozen bowls.
Also always remember the time I came into the engine room one evening in port on a duty day. There was a hazy smoke throughout the ER. FN Jones was on watch, sitting on a rail at main control. I asked him what was going on. He said, "Just chillin', sir." He was unaware that he was cooking the oil in the purifier. I forget further details. But it's one of those classic Navy experiences about meeting all types. FN Jones was one of the friendliest guys around, certainly beloved by family & friends. Less popular with his LPO, chief, and DivO.
Likewise! We had one each for our main engines reduction gear and disassembled, cleaned it nightly. As our was smaller we only needed the lock ring and shaft puller. The overhead hoist would have nice lol!
As yes the de leval lo pukeifyers
I really enjoy your videos. It’s like a relief to my anxiety and just get lost in time watching your videos. It’s appreciated.
Huge respect! Can’t imagine having to know how to repair all the equipment on a ship like that! Awesome job
That fuel oil looks like the crude oil we drilled for (Pool Offshore, rig 422 & 420) in the Santa Barbara Channel back in the day. Good video, Chief!
Hard to find quality, practical marine engineering videos anywhere. I could tell in the first 30 seconds this would be a great video. Thanks, Chief!
Chief I have never overhauled the fuel oil purifier or the lube oil purifier on the Coast Guard ships I sailed on but viewing your video takes me back about 40 years.
Your ship's Engine room is so advanced!!
That is a lot of pieces and parts and pullers. Great job. I am sure the manuals are very concise for re-assembly. Amazing how much work goes into a fuel filter. !!! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for posting videos Chief of your mentoring programs . It's everyone's duty preparing future generations to take over for our families futures .
The Chief makes some of the most soothing and educational vidoes on youtube. Especially that guitar in the background. Sometimes it feels like a Discovery Channel documentary. Definately my favourite.
Truly an excellent video, showing the step by step process and sharing the significance of assigning this complex maintenance job to a cadet! Thanks for sharing!
It was a pleasure to watch the maintance of this piece of equipment.. nothing was rushed, the correct tools & jigs were used and nothing was “forced”.. it was not a contest as to who could do it the quickest or use the biggest hammer !! They have been well trained / mentored.. Promotion Approved!
I feel like people from the Philippines carry the weight of the world on their shoulders. So many smart hard working Filipinos all around the globe!
wow, interesting, much more work than i anticipated, amazing how much work you can do yourselves and not rely on other contractors
Wow. That is an amazing amount of work. The organization and focus required is astounding.
Cor! Once again the utter beauty of precision engineering shines forth. Fascinating, thanks for posting, Chief!
Thankyou sir for giving him the opportunity to overhaul the purifier. I hope theres a lot of CE like you that letting the cadet to gain knowledge and experience.
- aspiring engine cadet
Watching is the ultimate in relaxing content. It's interesting of course, plus because I'll never have to do the task myself, there's no pressure to learn it. I started watching your channel because it shows me things I'd never otherwise see .. OR even think about!
Great video as usual. It constantly impresses me how many moving parts and machinery is involved in the operation of a vessel. I am also amazed at the array of skill sets needed to repair and maintain every part of the ship. Knowledge must be passed down from one generation to another by studying manuals and books . However there is no substitute for hands on repetition, under the guidance of an experienced crew member or supervisor. I will never see any of this in person. I live on the land and my career days are behind me. I do have a brother that is a second mate on an articulating tug and barge. Usually Carrying gasoline and diesel fuel. Generally from the Gulf of Mexico to northeastern states and Canada. He enjoys his career and has been doing it a long time. I would love to be able to ride along on a trip sometime but that’s never gonna happen. Anyway thanks for the information. You’re a great instructor. I hope you continue to have safe travels.
A ship is a single monolithic object, it is amazing that huge thing, depends on 2inch or smaller parts inside the "coolest oil filter ever". Always amazing Chief. I really enjoy finding out how much I do not know
That was fascinating. It was lovely to see everything nice and clean before it went back together.
I never thought I would miss cleaning out purifiers... But this brought back a lot of good memories. Thanks again, Chief !!!
God bless you I am learning from a lot more than I can learn from people I am working with. Now I am preparing for my 3rd . I am a qmed . God bless u you are indeed great chief Engineer.
All the best
Really nice your company allows you to document these otherwise hidden procedures. I don't work anywhere near a shipping vessel but it is fascinating to see this kind of work. Cheers! Thanks for the content :D
You are absolutely right chief. When you do the job yourself there is tremendous boost in confidence.
On my first ship as a cadet I was made incharge of purifier maintenance after 2-3 months onboard. That gave me confidence that I can be a good marine engineer.
After 20 years at sea and now switching to offshore jackup barges I still remember those days.
There's no better way to train a person than hands on experience. The more you do it the easier it gets. The young Cadet looks to be well trained and on his way to a good career maintaining ships.
I remember removing old plumbing that was used for transferring that #6 bunker oil to the boilers at the municipal power plant where I work at. Messy stuff!! Great videos of your time on board the ship!
Haha, that brought back memories... When I was a " motorman" in the late 80's, on merchant marine vessels of the Dutch company " Spliethoff", I did this job so many many times, in the end, I could do this with my eyes close...
I absolutely hated it though...same as grinding valves for our 4-stroke Hanshin main engine.
I was so glad to be promoted to 2nd engineer, so the next motorman could take over, haha. But still....those were the days !
Chief you made it clear, with a few crossings and you and 2nd,3rd engineers teaching the cadets who want to excel upward mobility is available as the cadet being tested will promote on next crossing to 4th engineer. Bravo to you boss, and cadet.
The First Rule of Management, that a lot of managers seem to miss, is "Always train your replacement. If you cannot be replaced, you cannot be promoted."
So back in about 91 or 92 I was using one of those to separate oil and water. We had a factory rep come by for a service and teaching session. He spent most of his time on ships helping with rebuilds etc. Then I started working for Kraft foods. They used a full stainless steel version to strip cream from milk. And also used to strip whey from cheese culture to make cream cheese and and other processed cheese food. Really cool machine. We rebuilt all 14 once a year at Kraft. Crack checks and all new bearings.
Thanks Chief.
As a mechanic myself, I thoroughly enjoyed this.
Glad to hear it!
Fascinating video. And seeing the block and tackle/ceiling hoist was a 'oh of course they'd have those' moment.
Chief, that was a LOT of editing. I can't imagine how hard you worked on that. Thank you.
That was also a complex mechanism but I can imagine you do it so many times it becomes routine.
I was surprised how no power tools were used at all in this but I can imagine torque issues and feeling how tight something is. However, you had just about every wheel puller in existence :)
Finally, I can also imagine this thing looking that clean for about 10 minutes once in usage before it turns to what it used to look like. :)
p.s. It's obvious you have an amazing crew that works for you. They really work so hard.
When I first started working for the United States Post Office as a mechanic, we had some trucks that had an oil spinner filter system, quite similar to this. Obviously a lot smaller, but still effective. Only the oil pressure from the engine supplied the spinning motion, via small jets in the spinning drum assembly. It worked very well at separating the heavy solids from the oil. I could tell a difference when the spinner was cleaned out versus dirty. The sound had certain harmonics when the spinner slowed down after the engine was turned off. In these cases, these were used on 1984-1997 Chevrolet 6.2 and 6.5 liter v8 diesel engines used in medium sized trucks. There also was a conventional engine oil filter in the system. The vehicles were similar in size to the brown colored delivery trucks used by another carrier.
yanmar diesel generators aboard ships that still use it, apart from a separate separator like one depicted in video
Absolutely fascinating video. I have no idea where else to find such content. Thank you! Great job.
Now that brings back memories of my time in US Navy engine rooms. Thanks for posting this video Chief.
As a centrifuge engineer, i really appreciateted watiching this, your videos are awesome
Need a 12 volt motor for mobile centrifuge?
Hi Chief.....I just stumbled on your channel recently and I'm hooked on it. I spent years in the fuel industry , where I delivered heavy fuel oil to cargo ships , factories and mills. It's nice to get a view of how things work on board , especially as we usually only got as far as deck to present fuel samples and get triplicate paper work signed when we were bunkering. Dragging that extra long by per hose damn near killed me back in the day. You have a brilliant presentation style. Makes watching the vids a pleasure.
Awesome Chief enjoyed this one. Love seeing how you all do maintenance. Great episode. Fair winds and following seas.
This video showed me many tools I had never seen before. I could use that ring-shaped one with a "handle" to open jars! Well, maybe not. Thank you from Liz and Ginger in Australia.
Great job Chief your team preserves quality of future engineering 😀😀😀
Chief Makoi, I absolutly love this style of video. The deep dive into the task is very interesting to watch. To me, a fuel purifier is a few pages in a text boox. To actually see a crew take one down was fantastic. If you can, I would like to see more task specific videos.
What an interesting insight into what I'm sure is many machines used on board. Good training & dedication from the crew certainly pays off. That's for taking the time to post.
It’s amazing the small parts that keep a large ship running. We burned No.6 oil in our boilers. The wear on the hardened tips of the oil guns always made me wonder how ships could use this in their engines.
Chief - Great video. Any chance you could do a video explaining what happens in the purifying process? If that is fuel oil, what purpose does the water serve? What happens when the fuel goes into the filtration unit? As an aircraft mechanic, I find this stuff fascinating! Hey thank you!
I'll do that in a separate episode.
@@ChiefMAKOi Sweet!!! Thank you.
Water is used to move the piston removed at 11:23 up and down. The piston is closed during operation, and then when enough solids have built up at the outer wall, the piston is pushed down by an injection of water to eject the solids. It happens very fast, a fraction of a second.
Chief MAKOi Please do! I would find it fascinating to know how HFO is purified as well! Seeing the water supply part has me quite confused! Fuel and water are usually enemies! Lol
I was braving the comments to ask this very thing 😄
Good job po sir. Goodluck kai cadet nxt vessel mapapa sana all kanalg talaga. God Speed po sir Makoi.
Most interesting, Chief! I learn something in each video and admire your presentation methods and information! Can't wait for the next one!
Brilliant post Chief. I am very impressed by the engineers. Also, the really fine tooling of the gear. Many thanks and take care.
I worked for a while on a ship that had these two massive HFO Purifiers of the Alfa Laval kind. We were supposed to maintain one of them the first weekend was onboard, but the evening before the other one broke down, so we had to spend the whole weekend maintaining and cleaning both.
I had a great experience carrying out top overhaul with this type of purifier. currently my favourite type of purifier. on my previous ship, the purifier model was SJ-G50. thanks to my previous 4th engineer, he taught me well.
Interesting, and more complex than I would have guessed. Thanks for this detailed look!
Very impressed chief by the care and
Attention to detail these engineers
Take
This reminds me of my days as an engineer on a bulk carrier back in the 80's. We had to clean the heavy-oil purifier evrey day of the week; took 1,5-2 hourse every time, every day.
Hi from uk Chief MAKOi 👋👍 nice to see this in depth bit of maintenance on behalf of your team and pass on good luck wishes to your Junior engineer to fourth engineer step 👍 wish him all the luck on his potential move👌 and laws of learning is first watch me then I watch you then we both can get it done as one 👌 hope your all ok thanks for your time be safe and see you soon 👍👋 p.s I watch a thing on t.v about vessels and crews in bad scenerios and as a ship was listing under power to get to safety the engine oils sensor was on opposite side to list and shut down engines for safety but sealed the ships fate as was in too deep of water and sunk after problem (wasnt to far from shelf what the skipper was aiming for but never made it ) thanks agin 👋👍
Nice video. Having a little more about the theory of operation would have been a great addition.
I have seen Alfa-Laval purifiers before, so nice to see the Mitsubishi types too.
I love how every job is important and time-critical but nothing is rushed.
That was and extremely good documentary of how to service the oil purifier. Thank you for that video.
Fantastic. You could start an entire channel on teardown/maintenance videos. I’ll watch every one and forward them to my gear-head friends.
it's quite remarkable how closely the interior of that oil purifier resembles the insides of an old cream separator. My grandparents had a farm and they used to separate some milk and it was my job to clean the separator when used.
It's basically the same. Only the gravity disc needs to be changed accordingly to match the fluid density.
Ciao Chief MAKOi 👋 👋
Greetings from Greenwich London ⚓️ ⛵️
Cheers ☕️ 👍 🌹 ✅
Really interesting, and enlightening. Your cadet will benefit immensely from the knowledge and understanding you share with him. Thanks for sharing it with us too.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge Chief Makoi, mabuhay po kayo. Subscribed
I am sure you get a great satisfaction seeing some become successful under your tutor-ledge
Hi Chief.....love your videos. Watch every time. Loads of love and respect from the UK
Another great video. It really is interesting watching all the amazing tasks you are expected to perform while at sea. It was also nice to see how you were also using this time as an opportunity for one of your crew to do it themselves successfully all the way through for the first time. Doing something massive like that has to be a confidence booster. It goes without saying, there was tons of learning steps he had along the way to get to this successful milestone. All that said, that is a really complex job. Sitting back had to take some effort. In scouting, we train kids by EDGE. Explain, Demonstrate, Guide and Enable. It is neat to see similar methods used by others.
I watched this again in slo-mo. Very satisfying 🙂 . It is just like watching a surgeon.
The episode is interesting as usual. But the best part of it is knowing you and your mates have not been trapped in the black sea at the burst of the ukrainian war.
Please thank your cadet for letting us follow along with him. I would have been nervous as heck.
Next time I reassemble an oil purifier, I'll make sure to align the markings when I tighten the bowl nut. I hate when I miss that step.
The glamour's life of a Marine Engineer :-) great video.
Your videos so well.. and now I'm understanding all part of purrifier. I hope can be joining on supply vessel like you. God blessing u chief... ❤️
I’d never remember the order of reassembly unless I had it written down. Impressive.
The number of tools and spare parts aboard has to be astounding.
Thanks for sharing. I really enjoy ur log. Wish i could be there to watch first hand. Thanks again