21/12/41
Australia anchors at Townsville, and langy has a long boring day -"dipping tanks"
new to the ship, he is stil coming to grips with the seemingly bewildering numbers and locations of each tank -there capacities -and more importantly -dipping points.
he is assigned at first to one of the stbd wing tanks, which to his dimay has its sounding point in one of the messes.
besides the noise of the mess -which is substantial and annoying as it masks the sound powered phones far too well -there is the terror of overfilling the tank -and the equal terror of spilling just one drop of the horrible thick black crude into the mess.
As one finds on any ship -there is no love lost between gunnery rates and the stokers -to spill just a tiny drop into this mess would not help at all!
Preparations are standard though -this he can quickly grasp - the collection of the goose necks, drip trays and Lime wash ( heaven help you if the XO found any stains on his precious wooden decks!)
The oil is checked for the prescence of water, and the pumping begins
His job is simple.
The first tank is 22 feet deep, the sounding tube 2 foot long
-24 feet.
The dip tape is a long, thin strand of steel -like a tape measure -graduated.
Langy short dips - he drops the brass plumb bob only 10 feet though -this expediates the dipping
The bob comes up -carefully cleaned in the waste rag as it comes
Oil shows at 4 feet on the tape -4 feet plus the 14 feet that he has dipped short -equals 18 feet in the tank.
-if he went to 100%
One never goes to 100% -one aims for 95% -never less -but always a little more.
the bob goes down -quickly, it comes up -14 foot 3 inches -he calls the figure to the controlling fuelling station - 18 ft 3!
And so it goes -18ft 6!, 18ft 10!, 19 ft!
Open sluicing Vv Y! ten turns, shut sluicing Vv x ten turns!
Open X fully, shut Y fully!
The day goes on
Eventually , thankfully with out a mess , langy gets topside.
There is little to see -a fuelling barge -some mangroce covered shores -a few buildings.
There is news -but no mail.
The papers report a naval battle at palua -the Dutch De ruyter and 5 DDs has hit a convoy hard west of the island. The Dutch are fighting hard.
wake holds out still -but under heavy , heavy carrier attack.
Still nothing of the 1st malaya Brigade -or the 7th Division
Langy takes this as good news. At anchor or not -the day still has much to do -the defect log -war or no war -is always steadily trying to grow.
Langy returns to the chippie shop, and turns his mind and hands again to brazing, cutting, and bending, and the never ending war against the greatest enemy -corrosion.
