Professional Skipper Magazine from VIP Publications

#S95 Sep-Oct 2013 with NZ Aquaculture

The only specialised marine publication in Oceania that focuses on the maritime industry, from super yachts to small craft to large commercial ships, including coastal shipping, tugs, tow boats, barges, ferries, tourist, sport-fishing craft

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Professional Pragmatic Proven Saving your business time and money by delivering design solutions that work. Naval Architecture, Marine and Electrical Engineering and Mechanical design, tailored solutions to suit your needs. • Concept and detail design • New-building, conversion or refit • Commercial and military ships, barges, yachts, work boats, small craft, offshore • Structural design and analysis (including FEA), production drawings and cut parts • Stability, powering and sea keeping analysis • Systems engineering – electrical high and low voltage, piping, HVAC • Bespoke mechanical design – winch equipment design is a speciality • Technical investigations and feasibility studies • Project management, tendering and contract process ABOVE: The massive power block LEFT: The new skiff doing bollard pull trials www.skipper.co.nz Auckland | 40 Triton Drive, Rosedale | 09 419 8440 Whangarei | 279 Port Road | 09 437 6760 VIP.S93 purse and super seiners, t k th next fl d i took the t flight to American Samoa to work with the owners and insurers. Together they assessed the damage and the best solution for repair was developed – this required that the ship be relocated to New Zealand. Before this could happen, and once Ship Repair New Zealand had secured the project to undertake the repairs and replacement of damaged items, Peter utilised Marine and Industrial Design to carry out the failure analysis and design of the replacement components through their existing partnering agreement. The problem was that in the intervening 32 years since the ship had been built, fishing technology had changed – nets had become larger, loadings greater and the skiffs with greater horsepower. Today, while the ships are built low, they can carry large amounts of fuel and over 1,200 tonnes of fish in their brine and freezer tanks, meaning that they maintain excellent stability even when heavy pulls are exerted on the mast or boom. Tuna are regarded as a high value catch, as fishermen have little to do apart from cooling the catch to below minus 22 degrees centigrade in the brine tanks as quickly as possible, and then pumping out the brine before it becomes one large 100 tonne block. It is the process of finding the schools and surrounding them with a huge purse seine net that is the secret to the tuna fishing method. As vessels have become older, and along with the potential loss of crew skills, it is easy to see that without an experienced bosun and chief how this type of accident might happen when huge loads are being exerted on the booms and mast. Especially when everyone is focussed on securing the next big catch. To begin the repairs to Carol Linda, Marine and Industrial Design created a model and calculations of the existing mast from historical information available. This was done in order to carry out a Finite Element Analysis to predict the failure mode and loads on the mast. Calculations included linear stress analysis and non-linear and buckling analysis, based on the reports of the angles of operation at the time of failure, as well as expected worst-case loading conditions. MID were then able to create preliminary designs for the replacement mast and booms to allow construction estimates for insurance purposes. The next task was to carry out an initial inclining contact@marinedesign.co.nz | www.marinedesign.co.nz SPECIALISTS IN HYDRAULIC DESIGN AND CONTROL FOR ALL CIVIL, INDUSTRIAL, MOBILE AND MARINE APPLICATIONS WWW.MCRAESGLOBAL.COM HYDRAULIC: ENGINEERING: MARINE: RELIABILITY ENGINEERING: 24/7 Support Service September/October 2013 Professional Skipper 29

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