Marine Link
Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Dockside Load Testing with Unique Seaflex

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

September 11, 2014

  • Gerard de Reuver
  • The successful Costa Concordia Parbuckling project. Ropes made with Dyneema help Titan Salvage nd Micoperi on this historic salvage operation.
  • Dextron 12 Plus ropes made with Dyneema Fiber These ropes were specifically chosen for the Concordia salvage project because during the installation process, the ropes with Dyneema did indeed not drag along the seabed as steel ropes would have. Nevertheless, since they are in constant contact along much of their length with the hull of the ship, they need surface protection, which is why Dextron 12 Plus ropes with patented protective jackets from leading Norwegian rope maker Offshore and Trawl S
  • Gerard de Reuver Gerard de Reuver
  • The successful Costa Concordia Parbuckling project. Ropes made with Dyneema help Titan Salvage nd Micoperi on this historic salvage operation. The successful Costa Concordia Parbuckling project. Ropes made with Dyneema help Titan Salvage nd Micoperi on this historic salvage operation.
  • Dextron 12 Plus ropes made with Dyneema Fiber These ropes were specifically chosen for the Concordia salvage project because during the installation process, the ropes with Dyneema did indeed not drag along the seabed as steel ropes would have. Nevertheless, since they are in constant contact along much of their length with the hull of the ship, they need surface protection, which is why Dextron 12 Plus ropes with patented protective jackets from leading Norwegian rope maker Offshore and Trawl S Dextron 12 Plus ropes made with Dyneema Fiber These ropes were specifically chosen for the Concordia salvage project because during the installation process, the ropes with Dyneema did indeed not drag along the seabed as steel ropes would have. Nevertheless, since they are in constant contact along much of their length with the hull of the ship, they need surface protection, which is why Dextron 12 Plus ropes with patented protective jackets from leading Norwegian rope maker Offshore and Trawl S

Static load testing is an essential part of many engineering, building and manufacturing businesses – and the shipping, marine and offshore industry is no exception. Water filled weights (also known as ballast bags) provide a flexible method for load testing. Test weights must be sufficiently heavy to ascertain the maximum load of an object, but they should also be reusable and safe to deploy in a test environment.  Where there is easy access to a plentiful supply of water, water-filled weights can provide a quick, efficient means to undertake such testing. When empty the bags weigh a small fraction of the filled weight (typically less than 1% of their capacity) – and can be packed into transit crates, making them easy to deploy and pack down again for storage between jobs.  In use they can be partially filled for any exacting requirements, or used in combination to achieve larger test capacities.
Once filled with water, these bags will generally weigh anywhere from 1,000 Kg to 50,000 Kg.  Larger sizes are possible, but beyond 50t the handling benefits start to diminish.  Objects can be tested in various ways: for example, test weights might be attached to the center of a steel arch to ascertain load capacity before being (vertically) affixed to one end to test tensile strength. Understanding how components, parts or materials behave under extreme loads in different positions can help engineers create safer and more powerful systems.
Although capable of being used almost anywhere, water-filled weights are often deployed in docks to ensure that parts can be tested without fear of causing structural damage (failed components and the weights attached to them can simply fall into the water). To ensure that materials are tested accurately, the risk of cable failure is reduced by the inclusion of telemetry dual-load shackles and tensile load cells. There are no globally-recognized standards governing this field of work, but the nearest are the 051 Guidelines as developed and published by the Lifting Equipment Engineers Association (LEEA) – a U.K. body which is gaining increased worldwide recognition.  Its 051 Guidelines cover the design, inspection and use of such bags as test weights within the offshore and marine industries – and focuses in particular upon subjects such as component suitability and traceability, manufacturing test regimes, and the desirability of having drop-tested bags of each size to prove that they are capable of withstanding a peak load of 6x their capacity, or working load limit. Unique Maritime Group’s Unique Seaflex is at the forefront of being able to demonstrate compliance to these LEEA guidelines. Working within the limitations of the largest test rig it could find, all of its water bags have proven themselves capable of withstanding overloads many times in excess of their working load limits – with Type Test Certification and Product Design Assessment Certification from ABS by way of independent verification of the integrity of their designs. 
www.uniquegroup.com
 

(As published in the August 2014 edition of Maritime Reporter & Engineering News - http://magazines.marinelink.com/Magazines/MaritimeReporter)
 

Subscribe for
Maritime Reporter E-News

Maritime Reporter E-News is the maritime industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email five times per week