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One of my owners, John Heater,
who also has a Black Crown 31, has had an everlasting
intrigue with tugboats and over the years that we have
known each other, many sketches and drawings have
crossed both of our desks as we attempted to translate
the other's ideas and wishes. His latest sketch was for
a small, 22 foot long harbor tug, well under the 26 foot
length limit that requires a Masters License for
operation as a true tug. Accommodations would be Spartan
and befitting the size of the boat with mostly day use
as a small push-boat and barge hauler. I was instantly
captivated by the type and his sketch immediately sent
me to my drawing board where in just few hours the
"Godzilla" concept was given life. Off to the post
office to send the drawings back to John and in a couple
of days and a few phone calls later, a deposit check was
in hand, lumber ordered up and a clear shop waiting for
another boat start.
A few months later, the little
"Godzilla" was launched and she is a real "cutie" in all
the sense of the word. I can't tell you how much fun
this little tug has been to build with her small but
perky pilothouse and fantail stern. I felt like a little
boy building my dream boat just waiting for her days out
in the sun poking around the shallow waters in our
inlet. The finish was purposely intended to be simple
and work-boat-like with no shiny fancy paints but just
good old paintbrush-type ones that you apply by hand and
take joy in her annual maintenance, The beauty of this
type of finish and work-boat character is that with just
a few hours of care each year, the boat looks and feels
new with the added bonus of the sweet, faint smell of
fresh drying paint for a couple of months whenever the
sun comes out.
For her engine the "Godzilla"
has a used, but rebuilt, Sabb (not related to the car
and aircraft manufacturer Saab) diesel engine, a big,
single cylinder beast with a large heavy flywheel that
makes a reassuring chunk-chunk-chunk noise when she is
running. These little engines are made in Norway and
find themselves into the most interesting boats, almost
all of them as eccentric as the engines themselves. They
don't use a normal reduction gear with forward and
reverse shifting but instead, have a feathering
propeller that, with a lever, moves the blades of the
propeller back and forth and with rotation all the same
direction, gives you forward, reverse or stationary all
without a clutch shifting. Getting used to this kind of
an engine and drive takes a couple of hours but in time
becomes second nature with its capability of going from
forward to standstill to reverse all without changing
the rpm and all uncannily calm and smooth. The boat
needs to be literally built around such an engine and
much of the installation is unlike your normal Yanmar or
other such small diesel. With the Sabb engine, she runs
out at a top speed of almost 6 knots with a flat and
very unnoticeable wake (this is a good type of boat for
running around marinas or places that have a restricted
wake zone). Top rpm on the Sabb is 1800 rpm and she
seems happy at almost any revs including the 300 rpm
idle.
There's lots of deck space on
the "Godzilla" with twin port and starboard opening
doors on the pilothouse and a short, 6 inch step down
into the house. The deck is walk-around, self bailing
and deeply bulwarked. There is a small trunk cabin
forward with a berth flat long enough for most at 6'-6"
length and with a small air mattress, you could take a
nap or the off-watch crew could sleep on a long tow. We
fitted the cabin with a small butane cooker, teapot, pan
for heating soup, and a plastic cooler to hold drinks
and the groceries. That's about as small, compact and
useful a galley as you can get but it works extremely
well. There is excellent visibility through the nine
windows in the pilothouse, all of simple, laminated
glass construction and when it gets too hot, you can
open one or both of the pilothouse doors for some air. A
large bench seat, the full width of the pilothouse, can
seat up to 3 adults and the best helm seat is a
bar-stool. John came up with a neat sounding chime horn
that runs with compressed air. With polished copper air
lines and a brass ball valve for the control, it can
toot with the best of them.
There are tow bits forward and
aft, substantial things of heavy wood construction with
grown knees for reinforcement at the decks, a mast with
the required 3 white towing lights shown and that about
sums it up except for the excellent fenders that Barbara
Merry made for us. A bow puddin forward for pushing and
six fenders at the sides for coming up against a barge,
dock, or boat. The fenders are aircraft tires with a
puddin of baggywrinkle for chafe resistance. All and
all, she looks very workmanlike as she sits at the dock
waiting to start her day's worth of work. John just sent
me a sketch of a twenty foot barge that his small John
Deere tractor can fit on and with a small deposit check,
it looks to be the next project. As for me, I am content
with thinking about building my own "Godzilla" and can
just imagine idling away a warm summer day. Taking a
break from the grind by letting her just drift on the
tide with the engine shut down listening to the small
noises it makes as it cools down. A cup of good strong
tea and if it's a special day, perhaps a good cigar
saved for just this type of moment. Ahh....life can't
get any better than this, unless I add a bit of rum to
the tea!
I hope you enjoy our latest.
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Specifications |
| Length |
22' |
| Beam |
8' 1" |
| Draft |
2' 2" |
| Displacement |
3,000 lbs |
| Power |
Inboard diesel |
| Top speed |
6
knots @ 1,800 rpm |
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