Heckler
Well-Known Member
Excellent description
Stu
Stu
And because we need more of the light stuff than is naturally in crude, cracking is the process of breaking up the heavy stuff to the light stuff.
Cracking = Heating and then condensing
Stu
It is widely used to convert the high-boiling, high-molecular weight hydrocarbon fractions of petroleum crude oils to more valuable gasoline, olefinic gases, and other products.
In effect, refineries use fluid catalytic cracking to correct the imbalance between the market demand for gasoline and the excess of heavy, high boiling range products resulting from the distillation of crude oil.
All the crackers I worked with used heat
One of the marinas I visit (Ramsgate ?) has a sign saying "No bunkering in the marina". Since I don't know what "bunkering" means, I live in anxiety that I might be doing it.
Tempted to say - why don't they just say "refuelling", but it would be a breach of nautical tradition to use plain language. Good heavens, people might start to think a sheet was a bit of cloth!Bunkering just means refuelling. Whether you burn road tar, diesel, or petrol.
Some marinas worry about people topping up from jerrycans and spilling fuel everywhere.
Pete
Good heavens, people might start to think a sheet was a bit of cloth!
Tempted to say - why don't they just say "refuelling", but it would be a breach of nautical tradition to use plain language. Good heavens, people might start to think a sheet was a bit of cloth!
Bunkering just means refuelling. Whether you burn road tar, diesel, or petrol.
Some marinas worry about people topping up from jerrycans and spilling fuel everywhere.
Pete
Was any part of her cargo usable as the vessel's fuel?
Very interesting stuff. I suppose that however hellishly thirsty big crude-carriers are, they must potentially have the longest range of any non-nuclear vessels!
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I wonder what her gallons-per-mile consumption was?