Ophicleide's most enlightening post was based upon work carried out by Denny's of Dunbarton. The Lucy Ashton also featured in Denny's research work:
Something like 16 steamers for the Clyde or the Scottish Lochs were built at Rutherglen. In 1888, as a subcontract, Seath constructed the hull of a paddle steamer for the North British Railway. On completion, the new ship entered service causing little stir or sensation but 60 years later, when retired from the fleet, the Lucy Ashton had earned affection from the Clydesiders for her regular and dependable functioning in all conditions and weather. Her story did not end there.
A wonderful opportunity presented itself in 1949 to the British Shipbuilding Research Association (BSRA). They had been anxious to carry out full-scale systematic resistance tests on a ship hull, and preferably without the water being disturbed by propellers, paddles or even a tug nearby. Such experiments had not been carried out in Britain since the tests on HMS Greyhound in 1874 and scientific reasoning had come a long way since then.
In 1949 British Railways decided to dispose of their oldest Clyde steamer, the PS Lucy Ashton. She was purchased by BSRA and stripped down, engines and paddles removed, and just abaft of midships a bridge fitted by Denny of Dunbarton on which were placed four Rolls Royce Derwent jet engines for propulsion. During 1950, with ear-piercing screeches, the Lucy Ashton ran on the Gareloch mile during which time information was amassed on speed, power output and, by deduction, considerable information on the resistance of ships underwater skin to motion through the water.
Six exact scale models or 'geosms' were manufactured correct down to the 5.75-in. sag on the Lucy Ashton's keel, and these were tested in various ship-model tanks. When T. B. Seath built this fine little steamer at Rutherglen in 1888 and when the North British Railway bestowed the name Lucy Ashton taken from Scott's novels, little did they anticipate the fame she would eventually acquire in the world-wide technical press!!
Ref: Song of the Clyde
A History of Clyde Shipbuilding
FRED M WALKER