Island’s 76 ball is 86ed
- Share via
Andrew Edwards
For 15 years, the bright orange Union 76 ball above the Island Marine
Fuel dock was part of Newport Harbor’s skyline. On Thursday, the
local icon was retired.
“The ball’s been kind of a landmark,” David Beek recalled.
Beek’s family owns the fuel dock and the adjacent Balboa Island
Ferry service. He remembered people would tell others “meet me at the
76 mart,” or “the ferry’s next to the 76 ball.”
The Union 76 sign was replaced with a white, black and yellow sign
advertising ValvTect Marine Fuel. The new sign promotes fuel
additives sold at the dock that are designed to prevent water damage
to diesel engines and to kill microbes that can thrive in diesel
fuel, Beek said.
Beek said his company started selling boaters fuel with ValvTect
additives around April 2003, and the enhanced fuel became popular
with local mariners within six months.
“Every boat that tried it never went back to regular diesel,” Beek
said.
If his station serviced cars, Beek said he would never get rid of
the Union 76 ball, but he wants the fuel dock’s image to reflect its
waterfront locale.
“We just want to be a marine fuel station. We don’t have anything
to do with cars,” he said.
Early Thursday morning, a crane barge motored its way through the
harbor and pulled up next to the fuel dock. Higinio Ramirez sat on a
small wooden plank that was hooked up to the crane. Barge operator
Felipe Rodriguez lifted Ramirez above the orange sphere, and
Rodriguez attached a cable to the old sign.
“We always do this kind of work, so I’m not scared,” Ramirez said.
While Ramirez worked above the sign, fuel dock maintenance
director Tom Smith, and operations manager Lowell Swett loosened the
bolts that held the ball in place. After the bolts were out, Smith
snipped a wire that ran down from the ball and gave a thumbs up to
Rodriguez, who lifted the sign above the fuel station and carried it
to the middle of the harbor.
The ball was lowered onto a ferry, and work to install the new
sign began.
In less than two hours, the 15-year-old Union 76 ball had been
replaced.
“I’ve been on this barge 22 years, so it makes it easy,” Rodriguez
said.
Beek said he would wait awhile to find out if anyone has a claim
to the old sign. If not, he suggested the ball could be sold on EBay.
“I don’t think there’s a manual on how to dispose of 76 balls,”
Beek joked.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.