and propulsion systems. “They expect exceptional service, genuine parts and world-class technical support 24 hours per day, seven days per week, 365 days of the year, at ports all over the world,” says Young.“We receive a lot of emergency requests in very far off destinations and we’re ready to go at a moment’s notice.”
The office in Alameda, California is located eight miles away from the USCG base, where three Legendclass cutters are stationed. Most engine service is performed on shore, but there are times that a cutter is serviced at sea as well. The Coast Guard covers a huge area – from the Arctic Circle to the southern tip of South America. Technicians are often sent to distant ports all over the eastern Pacific to perform service. Sometimes, they’re helicoptered to the cutter hundreds of miles offshore.
Typically, a national security cutter such as the USCG Stratton is at sea for three months at a time. It’s on patrol 265 days a year and stationed at port for scheduled and on-scheduled maintenance for the other 100 days – usually a three-month period and a one-month period.
“Running 3,500 hours per engine per year is substantial for any marine engine of this