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How is tiny, little tug able to pull a vast liner or ship which is 30 times its weight? Also, why use a tug at all, what's wrong with using the main engines on the ship?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Tugs are small, but they have seriously big engines, able to get a liner moving very slowly, which is all that's required.
They use tugs because liners are very hard to manouvre in relativly small harbour spaces. It takes a lot of power to get a liner moving under its own engines, and more importantly, quite a distance for it to stop. This makes it simple to control them with far more agile small tugs.
Tugboat engines typically produce 750 to 3,000 horsepower, but larger boats used in deep waters can have power ratings up to 25,000hp (The engine of a typical family car produces approximately 120bhp). The engines are often the same as those used in railroad engines and are highly manoeuvrable.
Not only are they used to tow ships, barges, disabled ships, or other equipment. They help guide ships through narrow sea channels, but they are the boats that get things done, the boats that keep the world's commerce moving. Today's massive tankers and freighters would be helpless in port without tugboats to manoeuver them. Tugs and their intrepid crews move our products, remove our rubbish, fight harbour fires, pilot other vessels into and out of port, perform salvage and rescue operations... and anything else they are called upon to handle.