bloody silly thing is that the ferries carry things like coal to wellington where its put in plastic bags and sent back to the south island!
I've been reading a fair bit about this today and it's been very interesting indeed. It's also interesting reading some of the comments.
If you go through a blow-by-blow account of the project, with a focus on the extraordinary variations being reported against preceding forecasts and budget requests, it reminds me of what happened with Solid Energy and Don Elder's visions and how he got those agreed to by Treasury (visions which turned to coal dust in no time under John Key's Govt).
Anyway without wanting to get into all that, it's been even MORE interesting to read about all the different ferries available. That's really got my interest and stopped me from doing what I was supposed to be doing on the PC - some amazing engineering out there. I used to love taking ferries, and have done all sorts from the absolutely ginormous, to small ones on Rift Valley lakes that were assembled mostly by hand in Africa after being transported cross-country in parts.
There's no shortage of options for our seas.
All good fun and a real eye opener.
Just...say...the...word
It's the most efficient way to shift shipping containers from the major ports (Auckland and Tauranga) to where they are needed elsewhere in the country. Certain shipping outfits are not calling into the south Island at all on some services now I'm told, so the ability to efficiently send cans south and north is required as we don't have a coastal shipping outfit that is fully operating.
You should as China for a couple of ferries,they love to help developing countries with their infrastructure projects!
"Sixty percent of the time,it works every time"
do they build unicorn fart powered ones, just to keep it clean and green
may be sarcastic may be a bad joke
The straights between Norway and Denmark gets a bit choppy,but the cats seem to handle that well.
The North Sea is a bit rough and the ferries that ply the coast from Stavanger up to inside the Arctic circle always seem to run ok.
Maybe New Zealand has the wrong kind of water between the two Islands?
"Sixty percent of the time,it works every time"
We would not be having this discussion if the maintenance procedures for the equipment and the condition monitoring and reliability engineering on the equipment needing to be replaced were all up to scratch.
As a person with a proven reliability track record in the large marine, fixed plant, mobil equipment and diesel power generation industries I am qualified to make that statement.
But sadly maintenance penny pinching and a lack of ownership of machine reliability, is coming to hit us in the pocket also bringing with it an increased risk of accidents and disasters.
Just today I was looking at some of our haul truck data... over 80,000 meter hours on many trucks.. translated at a slow 50kph = 4 million hard kilometers up hill down dale rain hail mud and heat.... so yes safe reliable on going operation of the ferries is acheivable if best maintenance practices were in place.
But we would rather buy new toys for a billion than porperly maintain what we have for a few million more than we currently spend.
And that is my vent for the day, time for a beer.... btw, this is what I built today...
I would like to use it, but currently its just too expensive for me to justify driving south for a hunting trip.
Last time i went south for those fancy goats i flew down and rented a car.
If you can't kill it with bullets, dont f*ck with it.
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