Full Transcript

·YouTLDR

They Doubted His Engine — Until It Powered Every U.S. Submarine in the Pacific !

23:283,759 words · ~19 min readEnglishTranscribed Apr 22, 2026
AI Summary

The Fairbanks-Morse opposed-piston diesel engine, derived from a German aircraft design, became the critical mechanical backbone of the U.S. submarine campaign that strangled the Japanese Empire's supply lines during WWII.

It demonstrates how unconventional engineering—eliminating cylinder heads to reduce stress points—can create extreme reliability in high-stakes environments like submarine warfare or nuclear emergency systems.

Section summaries

0:00-2:00

Industrial Origins

optional

Covers the history of the company's scale and windmill business which is context but not core engineering.

2:00-5:00

The Submarine Crisis

watch

Explains why the Navy desperately needed a better engine for the Pacific's vast distances.

5:00-8:00

Engineering Deep-Dive

watch

Detailed explanation of the opposed-piston mechanics and why they are superior.

8:00-10:00

Hugo Junkers and Licensing

optional

Discusses the German origin of the design and its failure as an aircraft engine.

10:00-17:00

War Performance

watch

Connects the engine's reliability to the systematic destruction of the Japanese merchant fleet.

17:00-23:00

Post-War and Nuclear Legacy

watch

Explains why this 1930s engine is still used on modern nuclear submarines today.

Key points

  • The Opposed-Piston Advantage — Designed by Hugo Junkers, this engine uses two pistons facing each other in one cylinder, eliminating the cylinder head—the most common failure point under the stress of depth charge concussions.
  • Geometric Synergy: Submarine vs. Engine — While the engine's height made it a failure for aircraft, its tall, narrow profile fit perfectly into the vertical space of a submarine's cylindrical pressure hull.
  • The Strategy of Economic Strangulation — U.S. submarines focused on sinking Japanese merchant shipping (tankers, bauxite, and iron ore carriers) rather than just warships, effectively starving the island nation's industry.
  • Legacy in the Nuclear Age — Even after the advent of nuclear power, the Fairbanks-Morse design remained the gold standard for emergency diesel generators on nuclear submarines due to its ability to reach full power in under 10 seconds.
Fairbanks gave them precision. The scales sold in their thousands... spreading... all the way to Imperial China. Narrator
If the engines fail, the submarine cannot charge its batteries. If the batteries drain, the submarine cannot maneuver underwater. If the submarine cannot maneuver underwater, it cannot survive. Narrator

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

In 1941, the United States Navy faced a

0:03

crisis that most Americans never knew

0:05

about. It had nothing to do with

0:07

aircraft carriers or battleships. It had

0:09

nothing to do with codes or strategy or

0:11

diplomacy.

0:12

It had everything to do with a problem

0:14

buried deep inside a steel tube hundreds

0:17

of feet beneath the surface of the

0:18

Pacific Ocean. The submarines were

0:21

failing and the men inside them were

0:23

dying. Not always because of enemy fire,

0:25

but because of engines.

0:28

The story of how that crisis was solved

0:30

does not begin in a naval shipyard. It

0:33

does not begin in a laboratory in

0:34

Washington or a design office at

0:36

Electric Boat in Groton, Connecticut. It

0:38

begins in Wisconsin in a factory that

0:41

used to make weighing scales.

0:43

Fairbanks, Morse & Company was born in

0:45

1823 in St. Johnsbury, Vermont.

0:48

Thaddeus Fairbanks was an inventor with

0:49

a practical mind. He started by making

0:52

plows and stoves, but his real

0:54

breakthrough came in 1832 when he

0:56

patented the platform scale. A simple

0:59

lever-based device that could weigh a

1:00

loaded wagon without unloading it first.

1:03

It sounds ordinary today. In the 19th

1:05

century, it was a revolution.

1:07

Farmers, merchants, and shippers had

1:09

spent generations guessing at the weight

1:11

of their goods.

1:13

Fairbanks gave them precision.

1:15

The scales sold in their thousands, then

1:17

their tens of thousands, spreading

1:19

across the United States, into South

1:20

America, into Europe, and all the way to

1:23

Imperial China.

1:25

Fairbanks scales won 63 medals in

1:27

international competition.

1:29

For a time, the company was the most

1:31

recognized industrial manufacturer in

1:33

the entire United States.

1:35

A company employee named Charles Hosmer

1:37

Morse opened a branch office in Chicago

1:40

and began steering the business in new

1:41

directions.

1:43

He brought in Leonard Wheeler, a former

1:45

missionary from Wisconsin, who had

1:46

designed a particularly durable windmill

1:48

for pumping water, the Eclipse Windmill.

1:52

Wheeler had set up his operation in

1:53

Beloit, Wisconsin just after the Civil

1:56

War and within a generation half a

1:58

million Eclipse Windmills dotted the

2:00

American landscape from the Great Plains

2:02

to the Australian Outback.

2:04

When Morse formalized the partnership,

2:06

the firm became Fairbanks, Morse &

2:08

Company headquartered in Chicago and

2:10

manufacturing from Beloit.

2:13

The product catalog grew year by year.

2:15

Pumps, tractors, stationary engines,

2:17

generators, radios, and eventually

2:19

locomotives.

2:21

The Beloit factory was not a

2:22

single-purpose building.

2:24

It was a monument to industrial

2:26

flexibility.

2:27

But flexibility, it turned out, was

2:29

exactly what the United States Navy

2:31

would one day desperately need.

2:33

To understand why, you have to

2:35

understand the challenge facing American

2:37

submarines in the Pacific.

2:39

When Japan struck Pearl Harbor on

2:41

December the 7th, 1941, the United

2:44

States had a small but capable submarine

2:46

force.

2:47

The Navy's strategy immediately shifted.

2:50

With the battleship fleet crippled at

2:51

Pearl Harbor, with the concept of a

2:53

massive set piece gun battle suddenly

2:55

obsolete,

2:57

the submarine became the instrument of a

2:58

different kind of war,

3:00

a war of strangulation.

3:02

Japan was an island nation. It had no

3:05

oil of its own, no iron ore, no rubber.

3:08

Every ounce of the raw material that

3:10

kept its factories running and its army

3:11

fighting had to cross the Pacific on

3:13

merchant ships.

3:15

Sink those ships and Japan would slowly

3:17

strangle.

3:18

The plan was sound. The execution was

3:21

hampered by one enormous practical

3:23

problem. A submarine is not simply a

3:25

ship that travels underwater. It is a

3:27

diesel-electric machine that must

3:29

perform two entirely different tasks. On

3:31

the surface, it runs on diesel engines,

3:34

large, powerful combustion engines that

3:36

drive the propeller shafts and

3:38

simultaneously charge vast banks of

3:40

batteries.

3:41

Underwater, where the diesels cannot

3:43

breathe, it runs purely on those

3:45

batteries, powering electric motors in

3:47

near silence.

3:48

The diesel engines, therefore, are the

3:50

heart of everything. They are the source

3:52

of all stored energy, all offensive

3:55

range, all tactical endurance. If the

3:58

engines fail, the submarine cannot

3:59

charge its batteries. If the batteries

4:01

drain, the submarine cannot maneuver

4:03

underwater.

4:05

If the submarine cannot maneuver

4:06

underwater, it cannot survive.

4:09

The early Pacific patrols revealed the

4:11

problem in brutal fashion. American

4:13

fleet boats were conducting patrols of

4:15

60 to 75 days across the vast distances

4:18

of the Western Pacific, from Pearl

4:20

Harbor to the coast of Japan and back.

4:23

The Gato-class submarines that would

4:25

become the workhorses of this campaign

4:27

were designed with exactly this

4:28

endurance in mind.

4:30

They were large boats, 312 feet long,

4:34

equipped with showers, refrigerated food

4:36

stores, air conditioning, and bunks for

4:38

nearly the entire crew,

4:40

luxuries unheard of in the Royal Navy's

4:42

boats or the German U-boat fleet.

4:45

Admiral Charles Lockwood, commanding the

4:47

Pacific submarine force, understood that

4:49

if you wanted men to spend 75 days at

4:52

sea in a steel tube, uh you had to give

4:54

them a reason to function.

4:56

But none of that mattered if the engines

4:58

failed.

4:59

The Navy had relied primarily on Winton

5:01

and General Motors diesel engines for

5:03

its fleet submarines, along with

5:05

Cleveland diesel units.

5:07

These were conventional four-stroke

5:08

designs, known quantities, broadly

5:11

serviceable.

5:12

But as the building program accelerated

5:14

toward hundreds of submarines, the Navy

5:17

needed something more, something more

5:19

powerful per unit of volume, something

5:21

more compact, something that could fit

5:24

into the long, narrow pressure hull of a

5:26

fleet submarine without consuming space

5:27

desperately needed for torpedoes,

5:30

batteries, and crew berthing.

5:32

The answer, when it came, arrived from

5:35

an unexpected direction, from Germany,

5:38

and from a man who had been building

5:39

engines since the age of the Kaiser.

5:41

Hugo Junkers was a German engineer of

5:43

the old school, methodical, brilliant,

5:46

and possessed of a particular obsession

5:48

with the two-stroke combustion cycle.

5:51

He began his experimental work on diesel

5:52

engines as early as 1892 at a small

5:55

factory in Dessau, Germany.

5:58

His central insight was radical.

6:00

In a conventional diesel engine, each

6:03

cylinder has a single piston that moves

6:05

up and down inside a closed bore with a

6:07

cylinder head forming a sealed cap at

6:09

the top.

6:11

Combustion gases, heat, and mechanical

6:13

stress concentrate at that head, which

6:16

must absorb enormous punishment.

6:18

The head is also a source of

6:20

inefficiency, dissipating energy that

6:22

should be driving the crankshaft.

6:24

Junkers proposed eliminating the

6:26

cylinder head entirely. Instead of one

6:28

piston per cylinder, he used two.

6:31

They faced each other from opposite ends

6:32

of the same cylinder, moving toward each

6:34

other on the compression stroke and

6:36

being driven apart by the force of

6:37

combustion. There was no head at all.

6:40

The combustion chamber formed naturally

6:42

in the space between the two piston

6:44

crowns at the moment of closest

6:45

approach, a space that was pure

6:47

combustion with nowhere for heat to

6:49

escape except into the pistons

6:51

themselves, which could be cooled

6:53

through hollow cores.

6:55

To manage intake and exhaust without

6:56

valves, Junkers used ports cut directly

6:59

into the cylinder liner walls.

7:01

As the pistons separated, they uncovered

7:03

rows of intake and exhaust ports. A

7:05

supercharger blower pushed fresh air

7:07

through from one side while burned gases

7:10

exited from the other.

7:12

Because the two crankshafts were timed

7:14

so that the exhaust ports opened

7:15

slightly before the intake ports,

7:18

the system scavenged the cylinder of

7:19

spent gases with remarkable efficiency.

7:23

The result was an engine with two

7:24

crankshafts, one at the top of the

7:26

cylinder block and one at the bottom,

7:28

geared together to transfer their

7:29

combined power to a single output shaft.

7:32

It was tall and narrow in cross-section.

7:35

It was extraordinarily powerful for its

7:36

displacement. It produced almost no

7:39

wasted heat from cylinder heads because

7:41

there were no cylinder heads. And

7:43

because both crankshafts ran at exactly

7:45

the forces demanded by the firing

7:47

strokes, the engine was nearly perfectly

7:49

balanced. No excessive vibration,

7:52

smooth, quiet.

7:55

By the standards of marine engineering,

7:57

it was a revelation.

7:58

Junkers developed this concept into an

8:00

aircraft engine family known as the Jumo

8:02

204 and later the Jumo 205.

8:06

These powered early versions of the

8:07

Junkers Ju 86 bomber and the Dornier

8:10

flying boats that patrolled Germany's

8:11

maritime frontiers.

8:13

They were efficient, particularly at

8:15

altitude, but their power output was

8:17

limited compared to the liquid-cooled

8:19

gasoline engines that were coming to

8:21

dominate military aviation, the

8:23

Daimler-Benz 601 that powered the

8:25

Messerschmitt Bf 109, or the Rolls-Royce

8:28

Merlin that pulled Hurricanes and

8:30

Spitfires across the skies of Britain.

8:32

Hugo Junkers himself was gone by then.

8:35

The Nazi regime had seized his patents

8:37

and placed him under house arrest in

8:38

1933, and he died in 1935 stripped of

8:42

his factories and his work.

8:44

The Nazis continued building his engines

8:46

without him, but someone else had been

8:48

watching.

8:50

In the early 1930s,

8:52

engineers at Fairbanks, Morse in Beloit

8:54

obtained access to the Junkers design

8:56

through a licensing arrangement and

8:58

studied it with the same methodical

9:00

precision that had characterized

9:01

everything the company had done since

9:03

Thaddeus put his platform scales on the

9:05

market a century earlier.

9:07

They recognized immediately what Junkers

9:09

had understood.

9:10

This engine was not suited for aircraft.

9:13

Its height and its twin crankshaft

9:14

architecture made it awkward where

9:16

frontal area was everything.

9:18

But in a submarine, those same qualities

9:20

became virtues. A submarine hull is

9:22

essentially a long, narrow cylinder. The

9:24

opposed piston engine was also long and

9:26

narrow. Its height, which was a problem

9:29

in an aircraft installation, translated

9:31

perfectly into the vertical space

9:32

available in a submarine's engine room.

9:35

Its two crankshafts were simply geared

9:37

together at one end and the output taken

9:39

from a single shaft.

9:41

No wasted volume, no wasted heat,

9:43

no cylinder heads to crack or warp under

9:46

the stress of depth charge concussion.

9:49

By 1934, Fairbanks, Morse had their own

9:51

version of the opposed piston engine

9:53

running, the Model 38 in an

9:55

eight-cylinder variant designated the 38

9:58

A 8.

9:59

The bore was 8 in, the stroke was 10 in,

10:02

and in this configuration the engine

10:03

produced 1,200 horsepower at 720

10:06

revolutions per minute.

10:09

In December of that year, the United

10:11

States Navy ordered eight of these

10:12

engines,

10:14

four each for two Porpoise class

10:15

submarines, the USS Plunger and the USS

10:20

The relationship between Fairbanks Morse

10:22

and the Navy had begun.

10:23

Those early engines had problems.

10:26

The 38 A 8 design went through revisions

10:28

and redesigns through the late 1930s.

10:31

By 1938, the engineers in Beloit had

10:34

produced a refined variant designated

10:36

the 38 D 8 and 1/8, the D indicating the

10:40

design generation, the 8 and 1/8 the

10:42

bore diameter in inches, fractionally

10:45

widened from the original.

10:47

It was this engine that would become one

10:48

of the most significant pieces of

10:49

machinery in the Second World War. The

10:51

designation tells you the mechanics at a

10:53

glance.

10:54

Two crankshafts, upper and lower, no

10:57

cylinder heads,

10:58

a Roots type supercharger blower driven

11:00

by the upper crankshaft feeding

11:02

pressurized air into the intake manifold

11:04

at the top of the engine,

11:05

exhaust ports near the lower end of each

11:07

cylinder liner, intake ports near the

11:09

upper end,

11:10

two pistons per cylinder s- facing each

11:13

other connected by long connecting rods

11:16

to their respective crankshafts.

11:18

12 pistons in a six cylinder variant, 18

11:22

in a nine cylinder, 20 in a 10 cylinder.

11:25

The Navy's fleet submarines used nine

11:27

and 10 cylinder versions as main

11:29

propulsion engines.

11:31

A smaller auxiliary variant, the 38 E 5

11:34

and 1/4, served as backup power.

11:37

To install these engines in a submarine

11:39

hull, the Navy required one further

11:41

adaptation.

11:43

In the original design, both upper and

11:45

lower pistons could be removed from

11:46

their respective ends for maintenance.

11:49

But when engineers measured the engine

11:51

against the internal dimensions of the

11:52

Gato and Balao class hull frames, there

11:55

was a problem.

11:56

The engine was 4 in too tall to allow

11:58

the upper pistons to be serviced in

12:00

place.

12:01

The engineers at Beloit solved this by

12:02

shortening the upper connecting rods by

12:04

4 in

12:05

and reducing the block height above the

12:07

intake manifolds by the same amount.

12:09

The compromise was that removing an

12:11

upper piston became a more involved

12:12

procedure.

12:13

The Navy accepted the trade-off because

12:15

the alternative was no engine at all,

12:17

and the war was not waiting.

12:20

What the war was doing from December of

12:22

1941 onward was consuming engines at the

12:25

rate that no peacetime planning had

12:26

anticipated.

12:28

As the building program accelerated, 77

12:31

Gato class submarines, 120 Balao class

12:34

submarines and beyond,

12:36

the industrial capacity of existing

12:38

suppliers could not keep pace.

12:40

The Navy needed more engines, more

12:42

reliable engines, engines that could

12:44

handle the particular demands of Pacific

12:46

warfare.

12:47

The Balao class,

12:49

which began entering service in 1943,

12:52

was the boat that the Fairbanks Morse

12:53

engine was built to power.

12:55

The Balao was a deeper diving version of

12:57

the Gato with a pressure hull plated in

12:59

steel of greater yield strength that

13:01

pushed the test depth from 300 ft to 400

13:04

ft.

13:05

This mattered enormously in combat. A

13:07

depth charge, the primary anti-submarine

13:10

weapon used by Japanese destroyers

13:11

throughout the Pacific, detonates at a

13:14

specific depth. If the submarine could

13:16

dive below that depth, the blast force

13:18

dissipated before reaching the hull.

13:20

Every additional foot of test depth was

13:22

a margin of survivability.

13:25

The Fairbanks Morse engine proved

13:26

perfectly suited to this combat

13:28

environment.

13:30

Where conventional four-stroke diesels

13:31

were sensitive to the violent pressure

13:33

fluctuations caused by nearby depth

13:35

charge explosions, the opposed piston

13:37

design showed a remarkable resistance to

13:39

concussion damage.

13:41

Its lack of cylinder heads removed the

13:43

most vulnerable component in a

13:44

conventional diesel.

13:46

By 1943,

13:48

the Fairbanks Morse 38 D 8 and 1/8 had

13:52

become the standard main propulsion

13:54

engine for the Balao class submarine.

13:56

A typical Balao carried four main

13:58

engines. On the surface at full power,

14:01

all four operating together in a

14:03

diesel-electric arrangement, the engines

14:05

driving generators, the generators

14:07

powering electric motors. The boat could

14:10

make 17 knots.

14:11

This diesel-electric setup meant the

14:13

engines never drove the propeller shafts

14:15

directly.

14:17

The crew could regulate propulsion power

14:18

electronically, disconnect a damaged

14:21

engine without stopping the boat, and

14:22

run individual engines independently for

14:25

battery charging while others rested for

14:26

maintenance.

14:28

That last point mattered more than it

14:29

might seem.

14:31

In a German Type 7 U-boat running under

14:33

Karl Dönitz's Atlantic wolf pack

14:35

doctrine, the arrangement was simpler

14:37

but less flexible.

14:39

In an American fleet submarine running a

14:41

Pacific patrol, the ability to take one

14:44

engine offline for maintenance while

14:45

continuing to operate the others was

14:47

often the difference between completing

14:49

the patrol and aborting it.

14:51

The submarines powered by these engines

14:53

were rewriting the history of the

14:54

Pacific War in ways the public would not

14:57

fully understand until after it ended.

14:59

By 1943, with the Balao class entering

15:02

the fight in numbers,

15:04

the rate of merchants and kings

15:05

accelerated.

15:07

Japanese losses climbed above 3 million

15:09

tons that year.

15:10

In 1944, the figures became catastrophic

15:13

for Japan.

15:14

American submarines were sinking ships

15:16

faster than Japanese shipyards could

15:18

replace them.

15:19

Oil tankers that Japan depended upon to

15:21

move petroleum from the captured fields

15:23

of Borneo and Sumatra to the home

15:25

islands were being hunted down in the

15:26

South China Sea and the Luzon Strait.

15:29

The USS Flasher eventually claimed the

15:31

highest tonnage sunk by any single

15:32

American submarine during the entire

15:34

war.

15:35

Tang, on her patrols of 1944, sank 24

15:39

ships before a tragic accident ended her

15:41

run.

15:42

The Barb fired the only

15:44

submarine-launched rocket strike of the

15:45

war, hitting a Japanese railway train on

15:48

Karafuto Island.

15:49

These were the boats and the men that

15:51

the Fairbanks Morse engines were

15:53

enabling.

15:54

Without the reliability of those engines

15:56

across weeks of unbroken operations in

15:58

enemy waters, without the ability to

16:00

charge batteries every night and dive

16:02

before dawn, these patrols could not

16:03

have been sustained.

16:05

The Japanese merchant fleet experienced

16:07

this systematically.

16:09

The industrial capacity of the Japanese

16:11

home islands depended on a continuous

16:13

flow of raw materials, iron ore, coking

16:16

coal, bauxite, oil, rubber, and food.

16:19

As American submarine patrols closed off

16:21

one shipping route after another,

16:23

Japan's production indices began to

16:25

fall. Aluminum smelting dropped because

16:28

bauxite convoys were sunk. Steel output

16:31

dropped because iron ore convoys were

16:32

sunk.

16:33

Aircraft production dropped because both

16:35

dropped.

16:36

And perhaps most critically, oil stopped

16:38

flowing.

16:39

The Imperial Japanese Navy was

16:41

eventually forced to base its major

16:43

fleet units near the Borneo oil fields

16:46

rather than in home waters

16:48

because it could no longer guarantee

16:49

that oil tankers would survive the

16:50

voyage north.

16:52

Submarines had accomplished what no

16:53

surface force or air campaign alone

16:55

could have achieved.

16:57

After the war ended, Japanese military

16:59

and civilian leaders acknowledged this

17:00

explicitly.

17:02

They stated that the destruction of

17:03

their merchant shipping had been the

17:05

greatest single cause of Japan's defeat,

17:08

greater than the firebombing campaigns,

17:10

greater than the island-hopping advances

17:12

of MacArthur and Nimitz, greater than

17:15

the individual fleet engagements at

17:16

Leyte Gulf or the Philippine Sea.

17:19

The combined Gato, Balao, and Tench

17:21

classes destroyed 30% of the Imperial

17:23

Japanese Navy and 54% of all Japanese

17:27

merchant shipping.

17:29

The submarines had won the Pacific War

17:31

quietly, without ceremony, running on

17:33

diesel engines that nobody in the

17:35

civilian world had ever heard of,

17:37

built in a factory in Wisconsin that

17:39

used to make weighing scales.

17:41

The end of the war did not end the story

17:42

of the Fairbanks Morse engine.

17:44

As the United States demobilized and the

17:46

submarine force shrank from its wartime

17:48

peak, the 38 D 8 and 1/8 remained the

17:52

standard diesel for American

17:53

diesel-electric submarines through the

17:55

1950s.

17:56

When the Navy introduced the Tang class

17:58

submarines in the early part of that

18:00

decade with a new type of engine called

18:01

the pancake diesel, a radical flat

18:04

format design intended to save space,

18:07

the results were disappointing.

18:09

The pancake engines were innovative but

18:10

unreliable.

18:12

The Navy's solution was straightforward.

18:14

Remove them and install the wartime

18:16

Fairbanks Morse design that everyone

18:17

already knew.

18:19

The replacement was so complete that the

18:21

engine remained standard for American

18:22

diesel-powered submarines through the

18:24

early 1960s.

18:26

Then came the nuclear age. Hyman

18:28

Rickover's nuclear propulsion program,

18:30

which produced the USS Nautilus in 1955,

18:34

and fundamentally transformed how navies

18:36

thought about underwater warfare, made

18:38

the diesel-electric submarine largely

18:40

obsolete as a front-line combatant.

18:43

The Los Angeles class attack submarines,

18:45

the Seawolf class, and the Ohio class

18:48

ballistic missile submarines that formed

18:50

the backbone of America's nuclear

18:51

deterrent did not need diesel engines

18:54

for propulsion.

18:55

They ran on reactor heat, on steam

18:57

turbines, on electricity generated

19:00

without ever surfacing or burning a drop

19:02

of fuel.

19:03

But they needed diesel engines anyway

19:05

because a nuclear submarine cannot

19:07

afford to have its electrical systems

19:09

fail entirely.

19:10

If the reactor shuts down due to a

19:12

malfunction, an event submariners call a

19:15

scram, the crew needs emergency power

19:17

immediately.

19:18

Power to run the pumps that cool the

19:20

reactor,

19:21

power to maintain fire control, power

19:24

simply to survive.

19:26

The engineers who designed the first

19:27

generation of nuclear submarines

19:29

specified diesel generators as emergency

19:32

backup power, and they specified engines

19:34

they already knew and trusted.

19:36

A modified version of the 38 D 8 and 1/8

19:39

designated the 38 ND 8 and 1/8 became

19:42

the standard emergency diesel generator.

19:45

The same engine that powered Balao class

19:47

submarines hunting Japanese convoys in

19:48

1944 was sitting quietly in the engine

19:51

rooms of nuclear submarines throughout

19:53

the Cold War, waiting to be called upon.

19:56

That is not a coincidence. That is a

19:58

testament to the fundamental correctness

20:00

of the original design.

20:02

An opposed piston engine with no

20:04

cylinder heads, two crankshafts, and

20:06

ports cut directly into the cylinder

20:08

liner has fewer components than a

20:10

conventional engine of comparable power.

20:13

Fewer components means fewer points of

20:15

failure.

20:16

Fewer points of failure means the engine

20:17

either works or it does not.

20:19

And in the decades between 1938 and the

20:22

end of the Cold War, it overwhelmingly

20:24

worked.

20:25

The company's own specifications

20:27

eventually noted that the emergency

20:28

diesels were designed to start, build to

20:31

full power,

20:32

and come online in less than 10 seconds.

20:35

In an emergency aboard a nuclear

20:37

submarine, 10 seconds is the difference

20:39

between a manageable situation and a

20:41

catastrophe.

20:42

At the Beloit facility, production never

20:45

stopped. Through the Cold War, through

20:47

the various restructurings and corporate

20:49

reorganizations that split the old

20:51

Fairbanks-Morse Company into its

20:53

constituent businesses, the scales going

20:56

one way, the pumps going another, the

20:58

engine business eventually becoming

21:00

Fairbanks-Morse Defense, the engine kept

21:02

being built.

21:03

Not in the wartime volumes of a thousand

21:05

boats to be equipped, but in the steady

21:06

quantities that Navy and being requires.

21:09

Replacement assemblies, new

21:11

installations, updates to fuel injection

21:13

systems, dual fuel variants that could

21:16

operate on both diesel and natural gas,

21:18

finding their way into hospitals, uh

21:20

power plants, municipal water

21:22

facilities, and flood control pump

21:24

stations.

21:26

The wartime engines themselves, the ones

21:28

that powered USS Pampanito and USS Torsk

21:31

and USS Ling and USS Blueback and dozens

21:34

of their sister boats are now museum

21:36

pieces.

21:37

Visitors who walk through the engine

21:39

room of the Pampanito preserved in San

21:41

Francisco can see them. Massive, tall,

21:43

narrow machines occupying the space

21:45

between the keel and the pressure hull

21:47

overhead.

21:48

Their cylinder blocks smooth and gray,

21:50

the two crankshaft covers running the

21:52

length of each engine like paired

21:53

spines.

21:55

They are not the aerodynamic elegance of

21:56

a Spitfire's Merlin or the cunning of a

21:59

Caldwell variable pitch propeller hub.

22:02

They are blunt industrial objects,

22:03

enormously heavy, designed not to be

22:06

graceful, but to be dependable.

22:08

Dependable in the engine room of a

22:10

submarine under depth charge attack.

22:12

Dependable on the surface at night in

22:14

the Luzon Strait with Japanese

22:15

destroyers on the radar screen and the

22:17

batteries needing 20 more minutes to

22:19

reach full charge.

22:21

Dependable after 63 days at sea when the

22:23

oil is dirty and the crew is exhausted,

22:26

and there are still a thousand miles of

22:27

open ocean between them and home.

22:30

That kind of dependability is not

22:31

glamorous. It does not appear in metal

22:34

citations. It does not get photographed

22:36

by newsreel cameras. But in war, it is

22:39

the difference between a weapon and a

22:41

liability.

22:43

Hugo Junkers imagined the architecture

22:45

in Dessau.

22:46

Fairbanks-Morse translated it into iron

22:49

and steel in Beloit and made it

22:50

manufacturable.

22:52

The women of Wisconsin built them, one

22:54

engine every day, while the men were

22:55

overseas.

22:57

And the submariners of the Pacific took

22:59

them to the bottom of the sea, ran them

23:01

for 75 days at a stretch, and brought

23:03

Japan's empire of ocean to a grinding

23:05

halt.

23:07

The engine that everyone doubted, too

23:09

unusual, too German, too different from

23:11

what the Navy already knew,

23:13

powered nearly every American submarine

23:15

that mattered in the most consequential

23:17

naval campaign in modern history, and it

23:19

is still being built today in the same

23:21

city in Wisconsin by the descendants of

23:24

the company that used to make weighing

23:25

scales.

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