- Joined
- May 25, 2025
- Messages
- 62
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- 58

On a general cargo ship there will be four spot lights located under the cross tree or upon the cross trees.
They would be aimed at the deck space between the cargo hatch and the ships side.
There are lights in the hold to accommodate lighting requirements below decks.
There are also cage lights along every deck structure ( usually about 10 feet apart) to accommodate night time lighting requirements for manpower moving about the decks.
None of the deck house(s) cage lights would be located in such a way as to shine into the wheelhouses forward facing windows.
And those peaked hatch covers from the magazine article…..
That’s not true to life.
Hatch covers were always flat, covered in heavy tarps, steel strapped and secured to the hatch coming.
A peaked hatch cover would have been impossible to keep watertight.
He probably got the idea by seeing a rain tarp hanging over the open hatch.
Rain tarps were hung to keep cargo dry if it was raining while cargo operations were in progress.
They would be aimed at the deck space between the cargo hatch and the ships side.
There are lights in the hold to accommodate lighting requirements below decks.
There are also cage lights along every deck structure ( usually about 10 feet apart) to accommodate night time lighting requirements for manpower moving about the decks.
None of the deck house(s) cage lights would be located in such a way as to shine into the wheelhouses forward facing windows.
And those peaked hatch covers from the magazine article…..
That’s not true to life.
Hatch covers were always flat, covered in heavy tarps, steel strapped and secured to the hatch coming.
A peaked hatch cover would have been impossible to keep watertight.
He probably got the idea by seeing a rain tarp hanging over the open hatch.
Rain tarps were hung to keep cargo dry if it was raining while cargo operations were in progress.
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