chuck wrote:Latin American country is unlikely to be able to handle PE's demanding and unreliable high pressure steam plant, which operates in a pressure range unmatched by any British and American ships.
Of course that's the main tumbling block - which is why this is something the voices inside my head ask...

Perhaps the deal includes visas for German engineers?
Also, why would one hand ex-German ships to nations with suspected axis sympathies during the war? Why would those nations settle for a unmaintainable ship from a defeated power when loads of surplus ships will soon be available from the victorious powers with much larger stocks of spare parts?
Brazil arguably had no such sympathies, and neither had Mexico. Why would they want one? Perhaps because it was immediately available (important for Brazil after the Bahia desaster).
Jorit
[quote="chuck"]Latin American country is unlikely to be able to handle PE's demanding and unreliable high pressure steam plant, which operates in a pressure range unmatched by any British and American ships.[/quote]
Of course that's the main tumbling block - which is why this is something the voices inside my head ask... :big_grin: Perhaps the deal includes visas for German engineers?
[quote]Also, why would one hand ex-German ships to nations with suspected axis sympathies during the war? Why would those nations settle for a unmaintainable ship from a defeated power when loads of surplus ships will soon be available from the victorious powers with much larger stocks of spare parts?[/quote]
Brazil arguably had no such sympathies, and neither had Mexico. Why would they want one? Perhaps because it was immediately available (important for Brazil after the Bahia desaster).
Jorit