Laminar Flow
Well-Known Member
Nice. Who says engineers don't have a sense of humour.![]()
(It's in Bolton, rather elegantly.)
Nice. Who says engineers don't have a sense of humour.![]()
(It's in Bolton, rather elegantly.)
I am guilty of making a bold assumption over on the other thread... however.. now armed with a few more of the facts I am still wondering if - when the pilot decided to enter with just the two tugs - the wind wasn't blowing quite as hard?
Nice. Who says engineers don't have a sense of humour.
I have commented on another thread here from a Chief Engineers perspective. However having now slept on it I recall an old shipmate who became a Singapore pilot regailing the following.I have been chatting this one through with a group of friends who are former colleagues, I mention this because they are Masters and Chief Engineers - British, Australian, New Zealand, Filipino, Chinese - with several hundred years experience in command between them. So I pass on the group’s conclusions.
1. The ship is flying light, and to judge by the state of the paint she may be fresh out of dry dock.
2. The berth where this was shot is immediately after a roughly 90 degree turn to starboard in the channel.
3. The stern tug is a water tractor type and is pulling with full power in the correct direction but she is simply not powerful enough to make a difference.
4. The ship went into the turn at 9.2 knots (dead slow ahead, probably) according to the AIS, and came out of it at 5.6 knots.
This was also my thought that the Ship was still going ahead and turning to starboard to avoid the ship berthed ahead on the port side.I think you are probably onto something. The turbo lag smoke from the emergency full astern goes sideways over the berth but the water is flat...
“Big ship, flying light, bucket loads of horsepower - I get the impression, looking at the AIS track, that the pilot didn't factor that in when he made his turn and approach. Completely overcooked it.”
“From a naval architecture point of view, the prop walk effect, that might have been relied upon to shove the stern to starboard (assuming a RH prop) would be reduced as the prop is out of the water, however when the engines went astern the effect would increase shoving the stern to port. Rudder not fully submerged would reduce it’s effect also. There but for the grace of God....”
Ah... toolbox meetings and checklists... the latter to be filled in after the ship is alongside...The bit about “a full risk assessment to be carried out ahead of any docking manoeuvre” ... is NOT FUNNY...????
The die was - most probably - cast in this case prior to the pilot arriving on the bridge...
Trying to compare maneuvering a light weight racing yacht to berthing one of the world's largest moving objects isn't great.Poor seamanship IMHO. OK, the pilot was attempting a standard Flash Harry handbrake-turn, reverse-thrust, arse-in docking maneuver.Fair enough, racing yachts often deploy this in equally lightweight condition. It all started well with a hairy approach speed and nervous bystanders. That's good.
Then it went tits:
Mistake 1: the crew forgot a big juicy round fender on the stern quarter. This is essential when one winds-up that reverse thrust and the arse swings in.Mistake 2: where was the crew with a line to lassoo a handy bollard/cleat with a forward spring? This is essential to arrest any excess motion. But care is required; I once lassoed a neighbour's £50 dan buoy, never a crane mind.
Mistake 3: a full risk assessment must be carried out ahead of any docking maneuver, to include the level of YouTube Risk posed by prying smartphones. If a military ship, just jam the damn things, if not, steady.
But what I don't understand is why deploy this technique with an onshore wind. Here the Flash Harry approach is to arrive abeam-on, switch engine(s) off, and go below decks to sneakily YouTube scared neighbouring crews as your boat gently floats alongside![]()
Trying to compare maneuvering a light weight racing yacht to berthing one of the world's largest moving objects isn't great.
Rule 7c:
Assumptions shall not be made on the basis of scanty information especially scanty radar (or video) information.