prv
Well-Known Member
I have sailed on Stavros a couple of times as one of the volunteer crew, and one of my jobs was opening and closing the W/T doors whenever we were entering or leaving a port or anchorage.
That's interesting - they close them from the bridge these days after a tannoy announcement to stand clear. The doors move so slowly and the sirens and flashing lights are so un-ignorable that it's hard to imagine any risk of someone getting caught by one.
We do a demo as part of the first-day drills so everyone knows what it's like when they close, and we emphasise strongly the rule against trying to go through a door once the siren starts sounding. Each one also now has a charming MCA poster next to it with a picture of a heavily bloodstained jacket, taken from the MAIB report of a watertight door accident on a merchant ship a few years ago. Just what you want to see next to your bunk every morning
Despite all the above, I can see that on a cruise liner local control rather than remote from the bridge is a good idea. We were once berthed among the cruise ships at Madeira, with their self-loading cargo ambling past us all day, and I wouldn't trust some of those people to get out of the way of a moving door even as it closed onto their leg
She only has 3 watertight doors along her length on the accommodation deck, but they would each take a few minutes to manually close - I had ear plugs, as the siren was right next to my lughole while pressing the closing button......![]()
Schoolboy error - the levers work from both sides, so if you're doing the demo (when they are operated manually) you always want to stand on the side away from the siren
Pete