Godfrey Promoted
At Maxim Evaporator
Norman B. Godfrey
Norman B. Godfrey has been
promoted to manager, Maxim®
Evaporator Products. Joining the
company in 1972 after 12 years of
prior industry experience, Mr.
Godfrey has been responsible for
Marine Evaporator Products. He
will now be in charge of market-
ing and engineering of all of the
evaporator products, which in-
cludes marine and land-based
evaporators, heat transfer prod-
ucts, strainers, and distillate fuel
systems.
Mr. Godfrey's education in-
cludes a Bachelor of Science in
mechanical engineering from
Clarkson College in Pottsdam, N.Y.
Ferrous Announces FMS,
System For Administering
Catalyst Into Fuel Oil
— Literature Available
Ferrous Corporation, Bellevue,
Wash., a manufacturer of combus-
tion catalyst for marine diesel and
boilers has developed a complete
system for administering catalyst
into the fuel oil. The Ferrous Ma-
rine System (FMS) provides the
user with a proportioning pump,
depulsing unit and 24-gallon day-
tank for injecting Ferrous FE-4
Catalyst into the fuel oil at a ratio
of one gallon per 3,000 gallons of
fuel. The FMS automatic injection
system mixes the fuel and catalyst
with a minimum of effort and
maintenance and a high degree of
reliability. The standard FMS
package also includes a 90 gallon
storage tank.
The FMS proportioning pump
allows accurate proportioning of
FE-4 Catalyst from the catalyst
daytank into the fuel line. It is
powered by a variable stroke, oil
driven, diaphragm pump. The
standard pump operates on 115
VAC. DC and multiphase pump
motors are available on special or-
der. The pump comes in various
output capacities, measured in
gallons per minute or hour, to
meet virtually any fuel oil flow
requirement.
The FMS Depulsing Unit is de-
signed to smooth out the pumping
pulses in the flow from the cata-
lyst proportioning pump to the
fuel oil line.
The FMS Daytank incorporates
a sightglass and measuring mark-
ings which allows easy on-board
calibration. The daytank permits
monitoring the addition of catalyst
to maintain a constant "fuel to ca-
talyst" ratio.
The FMS includes a pump
mounting plate measuring 12 by
14 by 3 inches; the daytank meas-
ures 15 by 15 by 32 inches. The
system includes an in-line filter,
pressure gauge and a spring-loaded
in-line check valve as well as op-
erating and installation manuals.
For free literature containing
full information about the FMS
System and Ferrous FE-4,
Circle 67 on Reader Service Card
UNIPAR Offers Literature
On Diesel Power Packs,
Parts And Components
UNIPAR, Inc., a division of Na-
tional Marine Service, Inc., has
made available literature that
highlights the 40,000-square-foot
facility the company has in St.
Louis, Mo., to provide the diesel
engine power packs, parts and
components that industry requires.
The literature points out that
robotics, monorails and accumu-
lating conveyors in UNIPAR's
semi-automated process play ma-
jor roles in the company's commit-
ment to quick service and quality
products at competitive prices. The
semi-automated line of work sta-
tions are well illustrated with
black-and-white photographs, and
there is a discussion of each pro-
cess along the way through the fi-
nal work station.
For more information on UNI-
PAR's diesel engine power packs,
parts and components,
Circle 74 on Reader Service Card
Philip Burguieres Named
National Ocean Industries
Association Chairman
Philip J. Burguieres has been
elected chairman of the board of
the National Ocean Industries As-
sociation (NOIA) for 1984-85. He
is president and chief operating of-
ficer of Cameron Iron Works, Inc.
of Houston. With 425 member
companies, NOIA is the only na-
tional trade association represent-
ing all facets of the offshore and
ocean-oriented industries engaged
in the economic development and
use of marine resources.
Other officers elected at the As-
sociation's 12th Annual Meeting
held recently in Washington, D.C.,
are: vice chairman, R. Nelson
Crews, president and COO of
Raymond International, Inc.,
Houston; treasurer, C.D. Paget-
Clarke, senior vice president of
Oceaneering International Inc.,
Houston; assistant treasurer, Ar-
don B. Judd Jr., staff vice presi-
dent and Washington counsel of
Dresser Industries, Inc., Washing-
ton, D.C.; and secretary, Robert
G. Burke, editor, Offshore maga-
zine, Houston.
Charles D. Matthews and
Phillip A. Clark were re-elected
president and vice president, re-
spectively, of the Association, and
will continue to direct NOIA activ-
ities from the Washington office.
C. Robert Palmer, chairman,
president, and CEO of Rowan
Companies Inc. of Houston, hav-
ing just completed an outstanding
and productive term as NOIA
chairman, will remain on the board
for the next three years in the po-
sition of past chairman, joining
past chairmen James R. Lesch,
chairman and CEO of Hughes Tool
Company, Houston, and Edward
A. Wardwell, chairman of Oce-
aneering International.
Litton Industries Awarded
$7.4-Million Contract
Litton Industries Incorporated,
Ingalls Shipbuilding Division,
Pascagoula, Mississippi, is being
awarded a $7,490,730 face value
increase to a previously awarded
cost-plus-fixed-fee contract for an
extension of lead yard technical
and engineering services for the
Aegis shipbuilding program. The
Naval Sea Systems Command,
Washington, D.C., is the contract-
ing activity.
A UNIT UNEDAI, KIQNA
Ri
HENSCHEL
Digital Master
Clock System
The Henschel Digital Master
Clock System provides a syn-
chronized display of time in
various shipboard locations. The master clock
displays both local time and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
This crystal controlled, microcomputer based master clock
transmits multiplexed time (hours, minutes and seconds)
and date (month, day and year) information to a maximum
of 40 remote repeater clocks and/or data and bell loggers.
The remote repeater
clocks display either
local time or GMT J J U C
i _/ in various mounting
configurations to suit
most applications.
Time is continuously
displayed on both the master and repeater clocks by red, 6
digit LED displays, easily viewed up to 25 feet away. The
date is displayed on the master clock by use of a front panel
switch. This calendar function is set to maintain the correct
date for changes in month, day, year and leap year.
Battery back-up is provided to maintain both time and date
in the master clock and in a few selected repeater clocks
during any loss of input power.
Clock accuracy is maintained independent of the input
power frequency by a self-contained crystal oscillator. Time
and date are easily set by means of pushbuttons on the front
panel. When changing time zones, hours may be changed
independently of minutes and seconds so that time accuracy
is not lost.
HEIMSCHEL
Henschel Corporation
9 Hoyt Drive
P.O. Box 30
Newburyport, Massachusetts 01950 U.S.A
(617) 462-2400 Telex: (RCA) 294074
August 1,1984 Circle 105 on Reader Service Card 49
Digital Wave Publishing