Getting into the Swing of Things

Getting into the Swing of Things

Getting into the Swing of Things

Deck machinery is meant to make a mariner’s job on a board a vessel safer and easier, all the while creating a more efficient operation for the vessel owner. To that end, a number of deck machinery suppliers are developing new technologies to bring efficiency on board across a variety of vessel types and fleets. (Extended coverage from Marine Log's April 2016 issue). With the goal of improving the safety and capability of the marine research industry, Allied Marine Crane, a division of Allied Systems Company, has developed the A-Stern A-Frame. Hydraulically powered, the A-Frame is used to launch and recover trawls, dredges, and ROVs. Its crossbeam rotates freely as it deploys, ensuring that the load—the unit has a 30,000 to 40,000 lb dynamic load capacity—and lighting are properly oriented throughout the entire range of motion. Last year, the innovative unit was successfully fitted onto the R/V Sikuliaq. The vessel, owned by the National Science Foundation and operated by the University of Alaska Fairbanks School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, conducts oceanographic and fisheries related research in polar and sub-polar regions. Allied says, the A-30 Stern A-Frame’s maintenance position allows crew to access the crossbeam from the deck at a standing height furthering safety during setup and rigging. The provider also supplied the U.S. Navy’s Office of Naval Research vessels the 238 ft Neil Armstrong and Sally Ride with two sets of crane components. The Neil Armstrong is being operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, while the Sally Ride is currently operating for the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego. Under the contract, the company designed and manufactured an identical set of handling equipment for each vessel. The units consisted of a davit; the Stern A-frame; a telescoping knuckle-boom crane; a starboard side handling system and a CTD handling system—both of which extend all the way to the waterline for more stability when loading; a portable telescoping knuckle-boom crane—among the first of its kind in the industry, the unit can be bolted down to a standard UNOLS mounting pattern anywhere on deck and can be removed when its not needed; and two hydraulic power units.