I have looked into that Dali further.
I find that there has been a return to direct diesel propulsion rather than diesel electric. Now you can't have a gearbox that handles that much power. So I have found out that there has been a return to large slow revving 2 cycle diesel engines. The reason for a return to two cycle diesel engines is that they can run in both directions, so no gearbox is required. The starting mechanism is compressed air. So to reverse you stop the engine and spin it the other way by letting compressed air into the right cylinders. This was pioneered by the Swiss firm Saltzer. Pretty much every cargo boat coming into the port of Medway when I was kid had that system. We were personal friends of the guy who was the Saltzer representative in SE UK at the time. So I was able to see it first hand.
Also our launch had a two cycle diesel engine, though not reversing, It had a Borg Warner hydraulic gear box. It was a four cylinder Coventry Climax K9 50 HP at 2000 RPM. It had a Rootes supercharger, as two cycle diesels will not naturally aspirate. They just have an exhaust valve and no inlet valve. If they are horizontally opposed pistons with two opposed pistons per cylinder, then there are no valves. The was the system in my father's next boat, which was three cylinder six piston, horizontally opposed and 120 HP Commer engine, designed by Tilling Smith.
Anyhow the Dali has a super long stroke nine piston in line two cycle diesel engine, which delivers 55,630 HP at 84 RPM. So the engine is connected directly to the propeller with no gearbox. It is a German
MAN diesel Turbo S90ME-C9.2 two cycle marine diesel built by Hyundai under license.
For maneuvering in ports,
Dali has a single 3,000 kW (4,000 hp)
bow thruster. Electricity is generated onboard by two 3,840 kW (5,150 hp) and two 4,400 kW (5,900 hp) auxiliary diesel generators.
So, it seems that all four generators failed and by what happened I suspect the bow thruster did also. It is pretty clear from all that black smoke that the main engine had a catastrophic failure, but how this caused all the other engines and systems to fail is a mystery to me. Hopefully all that will be revealed in the inquiries.
I should add that two cycle diesels are particularly unfriendly to the environment, with not only a high CO2 footprint, but a high raw carbon footprint as well. So it is small wonder that these engines are a target of the environmental lobby.