Project context
The programme needed a safer way to practise engine-room faults, alarm response and plant operation before learners entered high-pressure practical sessions. Classroom theory was strong, but instructors needed a controlled environment for repeated troubleshooting.
In this type of project, Wuhan Erun Technology Co., Ltd. positions ERUN as a training-solution partner rather than only an equipment supplier, aligning simulator rooms, instructor workflow and long-term course operation.

Simulator scope
- Main engine operation, auxiliary systems and power management scenarios
- Alarm, fault and emergency response drills
- Instructor-led abnormal-condition injection
- Debriefing records for trainee performance review
Why simulation mattered
Marine engineering competence depends on sequence, timing and judgement. The simulator allowed learners to see system consequences, repeat procedures and understand how a single incorrect response can affect the wider plant.
The upgrade turned fault diagnosis from a lecture topic into a repeatable engineering decision exercise.
Operational value
The training team gained a practical bridge between classroom teaching and onboard familiarisation. Exercises could be scaled from individual system recognition to coordinated engineering team response.