Wärtsilä Power for Long-distance Towage

June 4, 2004

Wärtsilä won a contract to provide propulsion plants for a pair of deep-sea tugs being built by Niigata Shipbuilding & Repair, Inc in Japan for the Rotterdam-based towage contractor Fairmount Marine BV.

The 246 ft. long tugs will each be powered by a complete Wärtsilä propulsion system, comprising Wärtsilä engines, Wärtsilä gearboxes, Lips controllable pitch propellers, Lips high efficiency nozzles and a Lipstronic integrated control and manoeuvring system.

The four Wärtsilä 6L32 diesel engines in each tug deliver a combined maximum output of 12,000 kW at 750 rpm. The engines are connected to a pair of twin-in/single-out gearboxes with a secondary driven 1,200 kW power take-off for electricity generation at sea. The two Lips CP propellers run in special high-performance HR nozzles, which generate up to 8 percent greater thrust than conventional nozzles, in both bollard pull and free-running conditions. This means that the Niigata-built tugs will have a maximum bollard pull as high as 200 tons, and still maintain a free-running speed of 16.5 knots. The Lipstronic control system ties together the control and monitoring of the machinery installation and includes a Lipsstick joystick system for simultaneous control of propellers, rudders and thrusters.To be named Fairmount Sherpa and Fairmount Summit, the tugs are intended for long-distance deep-sea towage. They will, however, be fully equipped to work as anchor-handling tugs serving offshore rigs and floating production, storage and offloading vessels. The vessels are scheduled for delivery in May and October 2005.

Related News

Houthi Leader Vows to Escalate Attacks on Merchant Shipping Greece Aims to Deter Russian Oil Ship-to-Ship Transfers Colombia's Ecopetrol Talking to Very Large Offshore Wind Players Authorities Identify Sixth Bridge Collapse Victim Cambodia to Cut Shipping Through Vietnam by 70% With New China-funded Canal