Quieter and with less vibration than a diesel engine
There, below deck, it is not dark, but it is cramped. Shiny silver insulation hangs all over the wall. It is warm. Nevertheless, you feel at ease, because Timo Bakaric and Dieter Ehinger spread an infectious cheerfulness. They both love the sound of the engines - the gas engine is significantly quieter than a comparable diesel engine. mtu diesel engines are familiar to them, as all five ferries of the Constance public utility company that shuttle between Meersburg and Constance around the clock are powered by them.
The gas processing, the heating and cooling systems, the heat recovery, the nitrogen processing, the alarm systems - the two had to understand all that. Of course there were briefings from the respective suppliers, "but they are gone again at some point, and the questions always come afterwards," says Dieter Ehinger.
They quickly understood the mtu drive system from Rolls-Royce, also thanks to the good support of the Rolls-Royce contact persons. "We already know each other from previous projects, so it worked out well again this time," says Ehinger. They also visited the Netherlands, where two ferries are already running with mtu gas engines. "The good experiences of our colleagues there motivated us to set up our system," says Ehinger. But how does the system work in detail?
The mtu gas drive system in detail
First there is the fuel tank: there are two of them on board, one for each engine. Both are white, round and seven metres long. They can be reached via a lock and only if you are equipped with a gas meter. Better safe than sorry. These two tanks each hold 18 cubic metres of LNG - enough to run the ferry 24 hours a day for a week. The LNG is cooled down to minus 160 degrees Celsius so that it remains liquid.