Education 1965 Shell Industrial Experience Index
Education 1965 Shell Industrial Experience Notes
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Education 1965 Shell Industrial Experience
I have included copies of my higher education notes on this website, that amount to ten years of my life approximately, for the following reasons. They prove that in a world of over population and hence competition, incomplete and out of date courses, the inability to find out where the job vacancies are and then know how to apply for them, plus too much automation, education beyond the three R's is for most people a complete waste of time, money and effort. Only a technocracy, that is government by highly intelligent, qualified and trained technocrats, supported by artificial intelligence, can put this matter right, providing purpose, an identity, mental well being and hence loyalty to the state. Such a system can only come about through a technocracy. A world technocracy can lead to greater benefits, the obvious one being the directing of finance for war towards finance for scientific research.
1965 Shell Industrial Experience Notes |
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Page No. | Subject |
1 | (A) Preparing the vessel for sea securing hatches & anchors |
11 | Loading drums into fore hold |
15 | Oil lanterns |
21 | Bergen Nautik Log |
22 | Walkers Commodore Log |
25 | SAL-24 Nautical Log with PPTM-2 |
27 | Insecticide spray |
30 | (B) Cleaning & overhauling cargo blocks & gear. Sounding tanks & bilges. Preparing steel for painting. Cleaning tanks & preparing for cargo |
31 | Derricks & Samon posts |
37 | Sounding tanks & bilges |
38 | Painting |
45 | Cleaning cargo tanks |
58 | (C)Musters, fire drill & boat drill |
61 | Rescuing a man from gas filled pumproom |
63 | Schat davits |
67 | Siebe Gorman breathing apparatus |
69 | Form 31A fire appliances |
71 | Maintenance & testing of fire fighting equipment |
77 | Steam smothering installation |
79 | stevenson Minuteman Resuscitator |
84 | Fear Naught suit & Siebe Gorman bellows |
86 | (D) Lifeboat maintence & its equipment |
87 | Replacing lifelines |
91 | Lifeboat contents |
94 | Reversing ends of lifeboat falls |
96 | Welin type davits |
101 | Making U bolts & brackets for lifeboats |
106 | Fresh water tanks |
107 | Use of stencile brush |
109 | Maintenance to rope ladder, axe cover & mast |
114 | (E) Preparing vessel for entry to a port Gear layout, clearing anchors, testing & cleaning deck machinery, stripping hatches |
115 | Mooring lines, stoppers & fenders |
119 | Clearing anchors |
120 | Sun sights using sextant for noon position |
123 | Star sights using sextant at dusk & dawn |
127 | Working out gyro errors |
131 | Ship's position by horizontal sextant angles |
134 | The sextant |
135 | The hand lead line |
136 | The Kelvin Hughes sounding machine |
138 | (F) A description of mooring the vessel in at least two ports |
138 | Guayanilla, Puerto Rico |
141 | Ports visited on phase IV |
142 | Swansea, Wales |
148 | Bremerhaven, Germany |
151 | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
153 | Curacao, Netherlands Antilles |
155 | Cardon, Venezuala |
156 | Abidjan, Ivory Coast |
158 | Copenhagen, Denmark |
159 | Nha Be, nr. Saigon, South Vietnam |
161 | Manila, Philippines |
163 | Panama Canal, Panama |
165 | Ports visited on phase II |
166 | (G) Unusual aspects of seamanship, navigation or weather witnessed |
166 | High wind & direction in Swansea, Wales |
168 | Reversing anchor cable |
169 | Removing the rudder |
170 | Unusual weather experienced |
170 | Lightning & mirage at Guayanilla |
171 | Hurricane Celia in Atlantic Ocean |
171 | High wind & direction in Swansea, Wales |
172 | Fog in Skaggerak & Kattegat |
173 | Tropical rainstorm in Curacao |
175 | Meteorological instruments Barometer |
180 | Stevenson screen |
181 | Anemometer |
182 | (H) Engine room |
183 | Engine room experiences |
185 | Engine room schematic |
187 | Transmission of thrust to vessel |
188 | Steering gear |
188 | Emergency steering |
189 | Main boiler gauges |
191 | Oil-water interface detector |
192 | Cathodic protection |