If anyone is interested I found a good detailed report on the Bugsier 2 at the following link:
http://www.tugboats.de/index2e.html
The thing that has got interested is it's propulsion system, the Aquamaster rudderpropeller, or azimuth rudder. Does anyone have any operating tips on this type or is it best just to learn by experimintation. I found the tug won't turn unless the propeller is engaged. Each propeller can be rotated simultaneously or independtly which is nice to allow nearly a zero turning radius at low speed. I guess this is what it was designed for?
Another word on turns and course corrections: On the tug, or any ship with dual propellers, would you realistically idle or shut off one propeller in order to turn that direction (e.g. shut off port propeller and let starboard propller push boat in gradual left turn)? In game I don't think it matters and it can be done, but in the real world would you do this or is this too hard on the engines? I guess the only senario I can come up with is I have a long way to go and maintain a heading of 90 degrees but am heading 95 degrees and to adjust slowly without risk of hard banking or over-correcting shut off one propeller until I come about on the right heading. I know what happens in a airplane when one side engines shut down, but the reaction is much more complicated with more dire consequences. The whole point might be trivial, but I'm just wondering.
Speaking of tugs, in another topic I saw someone designing a new one. The grafic looked so good I thought at first that I was looking at miniature scale model photo. If ship sim extremes gets around to doing some vintage tugs my suggestion would be one of the Santa Fe Railroad tugs: The Paul P. Hastings or John R. Hayden. They were post-war tugs built for the U.S. Army in 1945 but bought by the A.T. & S.F. R.R. a few years later, repainted into Santa Fe livery and worked out of San Francisco (and seeing how we've got a San Fran environment I think one of these tugs would be a nice touch, or maybe I'm just a hopeless romantic of hisotry). These tugs are a little longer/bigger. The Hastings sank in 1992 but the Hayden still operates today. You can read about here:
http://www.ireference.ca/search/Santa%20Fe%20Railroad%20Tugboats/