Off in the distance, I believe those lights are Greys Reef and Skillagalee . . . and the
ship is another 1000-footer named for an Indiana port. Maybe it’s the time of day, but I think I see the iron ore dust on the white paint.
Getting back to my invented TTT unit (twenty-ton trailer), she has the capacity of 3942.5 trucks off the road.
Algoway (1972) is another appropriate -sized laker, serving ports otherwise possibly inaccessible, and replacing 1200 trucks.
Here she passes through the Round Island Channel, eastbound.
Notice the hatch in the hull below the stack?
An engineer taking some fresh air?
American Spirit . . . another 1000-footer . .. has a capacity equal to 3120 TTT. Imagine having all those trucks on the highways between the mines and the steel mills 500+ to the south!
Anyone know how many tons of cargo these boats lug in a season?
Philip R. Clarke, 1265 TTTs.
I do love the paint scheme of USS Great Lakes fleet.
James R. Barker, 3165 TTT.
She’s been running for 41 years on the lakes.
And as James R. Barker disappears in the direction of the Soo and Lake Superior, Hon. James L. Oberstar (1550 TTT) heads for the steel mills.
Here’s a list of the 1000-footers on the Great Lakes
American Century
American Spirit
Burns Harbor
Edgar B. Speer
Indiana Harbor
Paul R. Tregurtha
Stewart J. Cort
For an alphabetical listing of these Great Lakes-locked vessels, check out Dick Lund’s page.
All photos here by Will Van Dorp.
4 comments
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September 28, 2017 at 11:19 am
Mike
The Burns Harbor is on long-term charter to ArcelorMittal and along with the Stewart Cort are engaged in a season-long ore shuttle from the BNSF dock in Superior to the mill in Burns Harbor. She’ll average between 30-40 loads per sailing season, weather, traffic and conditions permitting, with each load running around 65-70,000 net tons.
September 28, 2017 at 3:01 pm
tugster
Mike– Thx much for the info.
October 24, 2017 at 5:55 pm
David
So is TTT to be the bulk carrier equivalent to the TEU?
October 24, 2017 at 5:58 pm
tugster
Please understand that TTT is my invention and intended only to make these amounts of bulk cargo easier for me to picture. It is certainly NOT an industry standard.