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A tugboat or tug is a
marine vessel Any vehicle used in or on water as well as underwater, including boats, ships, hovercraft and submarines, is a watercraft, also known as a water vessel or waterborne vessel. A watercraft usually has a propulsive capability (whether by sail, o ...
that manoeuvres other vessels by pushing or pulling them, with direct contact or a tow line. These boats typically tug ships in circumstances where they cannot or should not move under their own power, such as in crowded
harbour A harbor (American English), harbour (British English; see spelling differences), or haven is a sheltered body of water where ships, boats, and barges can be docked. The term ''harbor'' is often used interchangeably with ''port'', which is a ...
or narrow canals, or cannot move at all, such as barges, disabled ships,
log raft Timber rafting is a method of transporting felled tree trunks by tying them together to make rafts, which are then drifted or pulled downriver, or across a lake or other body of water. It is arguably, after log driving, the second cheapest mean ...
s, or
oil platform An oil platform (or oil rig, offshore platform, oil production platform, and similar terms) is a large structure with facilities to extract and process petroleum and natural gas that lie in rock formations beneath the seabed. Many oil platfor ...
s. Some are ocean-going, some are icebreakers or salvage tugs. Early models were powered by
steam engine A steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid. The steam engine uses the force produced by steam pressure to push a piston back and forth inside a cylinder. This pushing force can be trans ...
s, long ago superseded by diesel engines. Many have deluge gun water jets, which help in
firefighting Firefighting is the act of extinguishing or preventing the spread of unwanted fires from threatening human lives and destroying property and the environment. A person who engages in firefighting is known as a firefighter. Firefighters typically ...
, especially in harbours.


Types


Seagoing

Seagoing tugs (deep-sea tugs or ocean tugboats) fall into four basic categories: #The standard seagoing tug with model bow that tows almost exclusively by way of a wire cable. In some rare cases, such as some USN fleet tugs, a synthetic rope
hawser Hawser () is a nautical term for a thick cable or rope used in mooring or towing a ship. A hawser passes through a hawsehole, also known as a cat hole, located on the hawse.The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, third edition, ...
may be used for the tow in the belief that the line can be pulled aboard a disabled ship by the crew owing to its lightness compared to wire cable. #The "notch tug" can be secured by way of cables, or more commonly in recent times, synthetic lines that run from the stern of the tug to the stern of the barge. This configuration is generally used in inland waters where sea and swell are minimal because of the danger of parting the push wires. Often, this configuration is employed even without a "notch" on the barge, but in those cases it is preferable to have "push knees" on the tug to stabilize its position. Model bow tugs employing this method of pushing nearly always have a towing winch that can be used if sea conditions render pushing inadvisable. With this configuration, the barge being pushed might approach the size of a small ship, with the interaction of the water flow allowing a higher speed with a minimal increase in power required or fuel consumption. #The "integral unit", or "integrated tug and barge" (ITB), comprises specially designed
vessels Vessel(s) or The Vessel may refer to: Biology *Blood vessel, a part of the circulatory system and function to transport blood throughout the body *Lymphatic vessel, a thin walled, valved structure that carries lymph *Vessel element, a narrow wat ...
that lock together in such a rigid and strong method as to be certified as such by authorities (classification societies) such as the
American Bureau of Shipping American(s) may refer to: * American, something of, from, or related to the United States of America, commonly known as the "United States" or "America" ** Americans, citizens and nationals of the United States of America ** American ancestry, pe ...
, Lloyd's Register of Shipping, Indian Register of Shipping, Det Norske Veritas or several others. These units stay combined under virtually any sea conditions and the tugs usually have poor Seakeeping, sea-keeping designs for navigation without their barges attached. Vessels in this category are legally considered to be ships rather than tugboats and barges must be staffed accordingly. These vessels must show navigation lights compliant with those required of ships rather than those required of tugboats and vessels undertow. #"Articulated tug and barge" (ATB) units also utilize mechanical means to connect to their barges. The tug slips into a notch in the stern and is attached by a hinged connection, becoming an articulated vehicle. ATBs generally utilize Intercon and Bludworth connecting systems. ATBs are generally staffed as a large tugboat, with between seven and nine crew members. The typical American ATB displays navigational lights of a towing vessel pushing ahead, as described in the 1972 ColRegs.


Harbour

Compared with seagoing tugboats, harbour tugboats that are employed exclusively as ship assist vessels are generally smaller and their width-to-length ratio is often higher, due to the need for the tugs' wheelhouse to avoid contact with the hull of a ship, which may have a pronounced rake at the bow and stern. In some ports there is a requirement for certain numbers and sizes of tugboats for port operations with gas tankers. Also, in many ports, tankers are required to have tug escorts when transiting in harbors to render assistance in the event of mechanical failure. The port generally mandates a minimum horsepower or bollard pull, determined by the size of the escorted vessel. Most ports will have a number of tugs that are used for other purposes than ship assist, such as dredging operations, bunkering ships, transferring liquid products between berths, and cargo ops. These tugs may also be used for ship assist as needed. Modern ship assist tugs are "tractor tugs" that employ azimuthing stern drives (ASD), propellers that can rotate 360 degrees without a rudder, or cycloidal drives (as described below).


River

River tugs are also referred to as towboats or pushboats. Their hull designs would make open ocean operations dangerous. River tugs usually do not have any significant hawser or winch. Their hulls feature a flat front or bow to line up with the rectangular stern of the barge, often with large pushing knees.


Propulsion

The first tugboat, ''Charlotte Dundas'', was built by William Symington in 1801. It had a steam engine and paddle wheels and was used on rivers in Scotland. Paddle tugs proliferated thereafter and were a common sight for a century. In the 1870s schooner hulls were converted to screw tugs. Compound steam engines and scotch boilers provided 300 Indicated Horse Power. Steam tugs were put to use in every harbour of the world towing and ship berthing. Tugboat diesel engines typically produce 500 to 2,500 Kilowatt, kW (~#Mathematics, ~ 680 to 3,400 Horsepower, hp), but larger boats (used in deep waters) can have power ratings up to 20,000 kW (~ 27,200 hp). Tugboats usually have an extreme power (physics), power:Net Register Tonnage, tonnage-ratio; normal cargo ship, cargo and passenger ships have a P:T-ratio (in kW:Gross Register Tonnage, GRT) of 0.35 to 1.20, whereas large tugs typically are 2.20 to 4.50 and small harbour-tugs 4.0 to 9.5. The engines are often the same as those used in railroad locomotives, but typically drive the propeller mechanically instead of converting the engine output to power electric motors, as is common for diesel-electric locomotives. For safety, tugboat engines often feature two of each critical part for redundancy. A tugboat is typically rated by its engine's power output and its overall bollard pull. The largest commercial harbour tugboats in the 2000s–2010s, used for towing container ships or similar, had around of bollard pull, which is described as above "normal" tugboats. Tugboats are highly manoeuvrable, and various propulsion systems have been developed to increase manoeuvrability and increase safety. The earliest tugs were fitted with paddle steamer, paddle wheels, but these were soon replaced by propeller-driven tugs. Kort nozzles (see below) have been added to increase thrust-to-power ratio. This was followed by the nozzle-rudder, which omitted the need for a conventional rudder. The Voith-Schneider, cycloidal propeller (see below) was developed prior to World War II and was occasionally used in tugs because of its maneuverability. After World War II it was also linked to safety due to the development of the Voith Water Tractor, a tugboat configuration that could not be pulled over by its tow. In the late 1950s, the Z-drive or (azimuth thruster) was developed. Although sometimes referred to as the Aquamaster Schottel (company), or Schottel system, many brands exist: Steerprop, Wärtsilä, Berg Propulsion, etc. These propulsion systems are used on tugboats designed for tasks such as ship docking and marine construction. Conventional propeller/rudder configurations are more efficient for port-to-port towing.


Kort nozzle

The Kort nozzle is a sturdy cylindrical structure around a special propeller having minimum clearance between the propeller blades and the inner wall of the Kort nozzle. The thrust-to-power ratio is enhanced because the water approaches the propeller in a linear configuration and exits the nozzle the same way. The Kort nozzle is named after its inventor, but many brands exist.


Cyclorotor

The cycloidal propeller is a circular plate mounted on the underside of the hull, rotating around a vertical axis with a circular array of vertical blades (in the shape of hydrofoils) that protrude out of the bottom of the ship. Each blade can rotate itself around a vertical axis. The internal mechanism changes the angle of attack of the blades in sync with the rotation of the plate, so that each blade can provide thrust in any direction, similar to the collective pitch control and cyclic in a helicopter.


Fenders

Tugboat fenders are made of high-abrasion-resistance rubber with good resilience properties. They are very popular with small port craft owners and tug owners. These fenders are generally made from cut pieces of vehicle tires strung together. Often the rendering on the sides of the tug is composed of large heavy equipment or aircraft tires attached to or hung on the side of the tug. Some rendering is compression moulded in high-pressure thermic-fluid-heated moulds and have excellent seawater resistance, but are not widely used owing to the cost. Tugboat bow fenders are also called beards or bow puds. In the past they were made of rope for padding to protect the bow, but rope rendering is almost never seen in recent times. Other types of tugboat fender include Tug cylindrical fender, W fender, M fender, D fender, and others.


Carousel

A recent Netherlands, Dutch innovation is the carousel tug, winner of the Maritime Innovation Award at the Dutch Maritime Innovation Awards Gala in 2006. It adds a pair of interlocking rings to the body of the tug, the inner on the boat, the outer on the ship by winch or towing hook. Since the towing point rotates freely, the tug is very difficult to capsize.


Races

Vintage tugboat races have been held annually in Olympia, Washington, since 1974 during the www.harbordays.com, Olympia Harbor Days Maritime Festival. Tugboat races are held annually on Elliott Bay in Seattle, on the Hudson River at the New York Tugboat Race, the Detroit River, and the Great Tugboat Race and Parade on the St. Marys River (Michigan–Ontario), St. Mary's River.


Ballet

Since 1980, an annual tugboat ballet has been held in Hamburg harbour on the occasion of the festival commemorating the anniversary of the establishment of a port in Hamburg. On a weekend in May, eight tugboats perform choreographed movements for about an hour to the tunes of waltz and other sorts of dance music.


Roundups

The Tugboat Roundup is a gathering of tugboats and other vessels in celebration of maritime industry. The Waterford Tugboat Roundup is held in the late summer at the confluence of the Hudson and Mohawk Rivers in Waterford, New York. The tugs featured are river tugs and other tugs re-purposed to serve on the New York State Canal System.


In popular culture

''Tugboat Annie'' was the subject of a series of ''Saturday Evening Post'' magazine stories featuring the female captain of the tugboat ''Narcissus'' in Puget Sound, later featured in the films ''Tugboat Annie'' (1933), ''Tugboat Annie Sails Again'' (1940) and ''Captain Tugboat Annie'' (1945). The Canadian television series ''The Adventures of Tugboat Annie'' was filmed in 1957 in television, 1957.


Film and television

To date, there have been four children's shows revolving around anthropomorphic tugboats. * In the late 1980s, 13 episodes were made of Tugs (TV series), ''TUGS'', a series depicting the life of tugboats in the 1920s. * An American adaptation using edited footage from ''Tugs'' followed: ''Salty's Lighthouse''. * In the 1975's Soviet short animation musical film ''В порту/ In the sea port'' a tugboat sang a song: "Through a harbour area" * One of the creators of ''Tugs'' went on to direct ''Theodore Tugboat''. * Animated preschool series ''Toot the Tiny Tugboat'' started broadcasting on Channel 5 (UK), Channel 5 ''Milkshake!'' in 2014 and on Cartoonito in 2015, with a Welsh-language version airing on S4C Cyw. "Tugger" is a tugboat in the animated series ''South Park''. He appears in the episode "The New Terrance and Phillip Movie Trailer" as a sidekick for Russell Crowe in a fictitious television series entitled ''Fightin' Round The World with Russell Crowe''. Tugger follows Crowe as he engages various people in physical conflicts, providing emotional support and comic relief. At one point Tugger even attempts to commit suicide, upon being forced to hear Russell Crowe's new musical composition.


Literature

(Alphabetical by author) *The children's book ''Scuffy the Tugboat'', written by Gertrude Crampton and illustrated by Tibor Gergely and first published in 1946 in literature, 1946 as part of the Little Golden Books series, follows the adventures of a young toy tugboat who seeks a life beyond the confines of a tub inside his owner's toy store. *The Netherlands, Dutch writer Jan de Hartog wrote numerous nautical novels, first in Dutch language, Dutch, then in English language, English. **The novel ''Hollands Glorie'', written prior to World War II, was made into a Dutch miniseries in 1978 and concerned the dangers faced by the crews of Dutch salvage tugs. **The novella ''Stella (novel), Stella'', concerning the dangers faced by the captains of rescue tugs in the English Channel during World War II, was made into a film entitled ''The Key (1958 film), The Key'' in 1958. **The novel ''The Captain (1967 novel), The Captain'' (1967), about the captain of a rescue tug during a Murmansk Convoy, sold over a million copies. **Its 1986 sequel, ''The Commodore (1986 novel), The Commodore'', features the narrator captaining a fleet of tugs in peace-time. *''Little Toot'' (1939), written and illustrated by Hardie Gramatky, is a children's story of an anthropomorphic tugboat child, who wants to help tow ships in a harbour near Hoboken, New Jersey, Hoboken. He's rejected by the tugboat community and dejectedly drifts out to sea, where he accidentally discovers a shipwrecked liner and a chance to prove his worth. This story was animated as part of the Disney movie Melody Time. *Farley Mowat's book ''The Grey Seas Under'' tells the tale of a legendary North Atlantic salvage tug, the ''Foundation Franklin''. He later wrote ''The Serpent's Coil'', which also deals with salvage tugs in the North Atlantic.


Gallery

File:Svitzer Freja tug.jpg, Swedish harbour tug ''Svitzer Freja'' in tug-operation (3,600 KW#Kilowatt, kW / ) File:ErfgoedLeiden LEI001016475 Stoomsleepboot Mascotte II.jpg, Dutch river tugboat "Mascotte II" File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1983-0330-002, Rostock, Überseehafen, Frachter, Schlepper.jpg, German harbour-tug and DDR quick-freighter ''Karl Marx'' at Rostock harbour File:WOONA.JPG, The tugboat ''Woona'' in Sydney Harbour, Australia File:Svitzer Tyr - - Ystad-2018.jpg, Danish ''Svitzer'' Tyr in Ystad harbour 2018 File:Baltsund - Ystad-2019.jpg, Danish ''Baltsund'' in Ystad harbour 2019 File:Tugs on the starbord of vlcc.jpg, Tugs towing an oil tanker (VLCC) File:Tugboat Nancy Anne.jpg, Tugboat ''Nancy Anne'' assisting a tug and barge docking in Rogers City, Michigan File:Smit Rotterdam.jpg, Oceangoing tug ''Smit Rotterdam'' arriving at Rotterdam (1987) File:Watergeus 2008.jpg, Dutch tugboat ''Watergeus'' towing a barge in the locks at Kiel-Holtenau File:Ship and Tugs Sydney 1942 slnsw.jpg, Ship surrounded by tug boats, Sydney, 1942] File:Eppleton Hall.jpg, ''Eppleton Hall (1914), Eppleton Hall'', a paddlewheel tugboat, in San Francisco


See also

*Admiralty tug *American Waterways Operators *Azipod *Charlotte Dundas *E3 Tug Project *Fish tug *HydroTug *Maritime pilot *PS Comet *Pusher (boat) *Switcher, rail analog *Tugboats in New York City *Type V ship


Notes


References

*''Jane's Ocean Technology 1979–80'' / Jane's Yearbooks, 1979 – . *''On Tugboats: Stories of Work and Life Aboard'' / Virginia Thorndike – Down East Books, 2004. *''Under Tow: A Canadian History of Tugs and Towing'' / Donal Baird – Vanwell Publishing, 277 p., 2003 – *''Pacific Tugboats: / Gordon Newell – Superior Publishing Company 1957, Seattle Washington. *''Primer of Towing'' / George H. Reid – Cornell Maritime Press, 1992.


Further reading

* Nautical terminology specific to towboating on inland waterways. * Farrell, Paul (2016)
Tugboats Illustrated History, Technology, Seamanship
New York: W. W. Norton & Company. . A gorgeously detailed guide to the evolution, design, and role of tugboats, from the earliest days of steam to today’s most advanced ocean-going workboats.


External links


At the Port of FelixstoweBeacon Finland Ltd JAK®-ATB Coupling SystemCompagnie Maritime Chambon"Docking The World's Great Liners"
''Popular Mechanics'', May 1930, article on docking large ships in the first half of the 20th century using tugboats
Intercon ATB Couplers

Tugboat Enthusiasts Society

University of Wisconsin–La Crosse Historic Steamboat Photographs

Waterford Tugboat Roundup
{{Authority control Tugboats, Boat types Port infrastructure Ship types