Some photos of our new OSRV in Barbados

Bajansailor

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Further to my previous thread ( http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=237131 ) describing our visit to England to attend sea trials on the new Oil Spill Response Vessel for the Oil Terminal in Barbados, here are a few photos of her after she arrived here last week.

Here she is at the haul out yard in Bridgetown, finally, after being shipped from Newcastle to Antwerp, where she had to wait 6 weeks for the ship bringing her to Barbados.
Astute anoraks have probably already noticed the port propeller missing.... it got dinged while loading in Newcastle, and was sent on later after being repaired, and was fitted soon after these photos were taken.

P6120103.jpg


There were two Bertram 31s hauled out in the yard - one is lurking in the photo below.

Responder-11Juneathaul-outyard.jpg


There were very neat little swing out brackets on the trailer to make it effectively wider.
She has a very simple dory type hull form, with a very effective (against spray flying up) aircraft carrier style bow overhang!
It all looks a bit precarious, but she was well strapped down on the trailer.

Responder-aircraftcarrierbows.jpg


The Travel-Lift usually has longitudinal 'I' spreader beams supporting the straps, but as this is quite a tight fit, they had to take the beams off, and attach the straps directly to the lifting pulleys.

Responderintheslings.jpg


A virtual pint for anybody who recognises the bow of the boat to the right of the Travel-lift in the photo above, or the Builder of the sportsfishing vessel in the background below :

ResponderinTami-lift1.jpg


It looks like a rather tight fit......

Responder-tightfit.jpg


Nah, loads of room on each side!

Responder-loadsaroomtospare.jpg


Bow view - trimming nicely.

Responderbow17June.jpg


Stern view - the open hatches are the accesses to the steering gear compartments. There are 4 water tight compartments in each hull, which is a good safety feature.

Responderstern17June.jpg


Here we are on passage up the south coast from Bridgetown, heading east to Oistins, trundling along at 8 knots, 2,000 rpm, into a slight head sea, and very comfortable.

Responder-headingupthesouthcoast.jpg


There are high rise (high for Barbados) condos all along the south coast now

Responder-toddlingalongthesouthcoas.jpg


A few wake shots while toddling along at full speed of 10 knots
(the new coastguard harbour is in the background of the first two)

Responder-portbowwake.jpg


Responder-stbdbowwake.jpg


Responder-wakeshot-1.jpg


And finally, we arrived in Oistins, and found that our mooring had gone awol, hence had to find somewhere temporary and safe to secure Responder until a new mooring could be laid - there were no tankers present discharging fuel, so we tied up to one of their mooring buoys, and were pretty certain that she wouldnt be dragging it during the night.....

Respondertemporarilyontankermooring.jpg
 
G'day Martin

Thanks for the pics, good to see everthing is working well.

The beam on sportsfisher looks like a 42' Bertie, the bow on flybridge looks European, don't know which brand though.
 
Aye, the sportsfisher is a Bertie (I am pretty sure it is a 42) - have a pint of VB (or a Bundy?) on me Andie!
And yes, the other one is of European origin - I was thinking that Poweryacht would have identified it by now. Any offers?
 
I can see the climate there is just slightly different to when you were doing the sea trials :)

Did you find anything needed attention after the transport over (apart from the prop) or was everything working as it should?
 
Nice pics, thanks bajansailor. And that's one seriously strong looking boat!

I don't know what the european boat is. Hull looks Fairline/Princess, but I cannot remember any with bruce anchors or 3 bars on the pulpit. So I think it will be an Astondoa or Ferretti
 
I don't know what the european boat is. Hull looks Fairline/Princess, but I cannot remember any with bruce anchors or 3 bars on the pulpit. So I think it will be an Astondoa or Ferretti

The 3 bars on the pulpit may be something to do with survey/coding (it is here anyway), and he suggests PowerYacht, so methinks it could be of Med. origin.
 
GL - The temps here on our cruise up the coast were about 30C more than when we went out on trials off Blyth during the week before Easter..... sunhats were the order of the day rather than wooly berets! :)
Re anything that needed attention, the alternator on the starboard engine had seized up totally while she was laid up waiting for the ship to bring her here - we took the belt off as a temporary measure for the trip up the coast to Oistins.
Other than that, pretty much everything else was working ok.
Oh, apart from the air conditioning unit for the wheelhouse - I don't think it has been installed yet. But it was still relatively cool inside as we could have the windows and roof hatch open, and we decided as an extra to have it painted white on the outside (trials photos previously showed it unpainted) and to have rockwool insulation under the roof.

JFM - re the European boat, sorry, its not an Astondoa or a Ferretti (unless they are related to the Builders) - but it is of Italian origin....... I'm sorry I haven't got any other pictures of her available. Here are a few more clues - she is 11 years old, over 50' long, and has two MTU 765 hp 8V lumps propelling her.

I was thinking that given Poweryacht's legendary ability to identify any power boat worldwide, it would be a doddle for him...... :)
 
Interesting stuff Banjan
Good follow on from the previous 'in build' thread.

Oh, the 'wake shots'?

4 out of 10 on the Forum Richter wake shot scale.
Snarf Snarf!!
 
My apologies Kwacka, that was the best we could muster re wakes, even going at full chat - pathetic I know (your 4 out of 10 is rather generous I think), but what can you do when you have a displacement power cat with only 300 hp available?

Methinks that a vessel like Mr Grant's lovely Alice (or even the Mucki Farter in semi-planing mode) would put us to shame most comprehensively on the wake front - at least a 6 or 7 out of 10 for them perhaps?

And as for my Kayak Kat here, no chance, we would be lucky to get an optimistic 3 or 4 out of 10 from Mr K I reckon, even when doing 20 odd knots with 2 x 150 hp in the photos below :

CaptainLew-wakeshot2.jpg


The Kayak Kat (also ally) has the same power as the OSRV, and about the same overall beam but is 3 m longer and less than half the displacement (approx 5 tonnes vs 12 tonnes).
But she wouldnt be too happy carting that big reel and HIAB around...... :)

CaptainLew-wakeshot1.jpg
 
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Here are a few photos of the OSRV taken last Friday when we went out on trials to test deploying and retrieving the oil boom.

We did not use it 'in anger' - that will happen for the first time in a couple of weeks time I think, when they lay the boom around a tanker loading crude oil at the Oistins terminal.
Rather, it was a good training session to see how everything works.

It is 1,200' long, and we found that retrieving it especially was hard work, and it takes a long time if the full length is out!

OSRV-boomtrials1.jpg


The top guardwire in the photo below is removed when boom operations are being carried out; here it is back in place temporarily while the crew get some practice towing the boom, and seeing how Responder behaves with such a big sea anchor out behind.

OSRV-boomtrials4.jpg


OSRVtrials-payingouttheboom.jpg


Alnmaritec designed and built a couple of very sturdy stern rollers as seen below, and they certainly proved their worth.

OSRV-payingouttheboom01.jpg


You can just see the boom stretching away in the far distance below.

OSRVtrials-payingouttheboom03.jpg


PS - Any more offers re the mystery yacht in the previous photos above?
Here is a bit more detail :

DistantDrumsstbdbow.jpg
 
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Good point, I hadn't thought about that - I wonder if anybody else has either?
How does one clean 1,200' of oil boom after it has been used in anger I wonder?

With difficulty I suppose is the answer.

As it retracts back to the spool, it appears to lay vertical, so one crew member (very fit) on each side with a soft broom and a cut-off, half sized 200 litre drum, with rope handles, full of hot soapy water, working back to back, pushing one broom against the other. Could be a tag-team effort?

May not be a perfect result, but may keep things basically clean-ish.
 
Given that the purpose is environmental control, I wonder if it is worth having a email with OilTechnics (www.oiltechnics.com) to see if they can advise on any suitable remediation / biological cleaning liquid for decontaminating the boom. They do all sorts of specialist stuff for oil companies on platforms , fuel stations, and for the Navy.
 
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