This application is the U.S. national phase of International Application No. PCT/FR2006/00523 filed on Mar. 8, 2006, which application claims priority to French Patent Application No. 05 02558 filed on Mar. 15, 2005, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to improvements made to solid buoyancy elements, for example lateral floats, for vessels.
Many embodiments of solid lateral floats for vessels are already known that make use of synthetic materials or most frequently of combinations of several synthetic materials at least some of which have a density less than that of water and procure the desired buoyancy. These materials are usually placed in successive layers surrounding a core made of a material of low density but of low mechanical strength and/or nonhydrophobic.
Particularly for example, documents U.S. Pat. No. 5,878,685, U.S. Pat. No. 6,371,040 B1, US 2004/0069203 A1 describe vessel floats of this type.
However, the known structures of solid floats are relatively complex to manufacture, use materials that may be costly and require expensive molds. These known solutions are therefore inappropriate for solid floats that can be made in economic conditions for example for fitting to bottom-of-the-range vessels, often of small dimensions, such as tenders.
The essential object of the invention is to propose an improved structure of a buoyancy block capable of being manufactured in attractive economic conditions and being able to serve to form buoyancy elements in various shapes for vessels of simple and economic design.
For these purposes, according to a first of its aspects, the invention proposes a buoyancy block for a vessel that is characterized, being arranged according to the invention, in that it comprises a concrete made of expanded foam balls with closed cells coated in a flexible binding, the unfilled volumes between the balls not exceeding approximately 20% of the volume of the buoyancy block.
According to a second of its aspects, the invention proposes a vessel with a rigid hull supporting at least one outer float extending at least bilaterally, in which this float consists of a buoyancy block as explained above.
According to a first of its aspects, the invention proposes a buoyancy block for a vessel that is characterized, being arranged according to the invention, in that it comprises a concrete 10 made of expanded foam balls 12 with closed cells coated in a flexible binding 14, the unfilled volumes 16 between the balls not exceeding approximately 20% of the volume of the buoyancy block. A exemplary embodiment is shown in
It is specified here that, in the context of the invention, the term “concrete” should be understood in the figurative sense as designating a block of heterogeneous or composite structure, consisting of expanded foam balls with closed cells coated in a flexible binding.
The expanded balls may consist of various materials, such as polypropylene, polyethylene, polystyrene, etc. The flexible binding also may be chosen from several materials, such as polyurethane, a methacrylate, an epoxy resin, etc. However, in a preferred embodiment, the buoyancy block comprises a concrete of expanded polypropylene balls coated in a polyurethane binding, the unfilled volumes between the balls not exceeding approximately 20% of the volume of the buoyancy block.
Therefore, it is possible to obtain a relatively dense concrete, geometrically, made of very light expanded balls (with typically a density of the order of 15 kg/m3) coated with a flexible binding, the whole element having a density of the order of 40 to 50 kg/m3. Unlike a conventional molding process consisting in having the balls thermally dilated in a mold, which leads to a substantially homogeneous block of expanded balls stuck to one another with no free gaps between them, the process according to the invention consists in binding together balls that are already expanded; this process allows spaces to subsist which however must not exceed approximately 20%, preferably 10 to 15%, of the total volume of the buoyancy block. The material forming the balls is totally insensitive to water; such a concrete, even totally submerged in water, retains an excellent buoyancy of approximately 800 kg/m3.
To be able to be used as a component element of a vessel, the buoyancy block shown in
The coating skin forms the outer protection, that is both mechanical and a water seal, of the core. For this coating skin to have a sufficient mechanical strength particularly when it involves forming a lateral vessel float that must be capable of withstanding frictions and impacts, provision is made for this coating skin to have a thickness lying between approximately 1 and 10 mm depending on the applications and the type of exposure, and this thickness may typically be approximately 3 to 4 mm.
The appropriate coupling film for bonding the skin is chosen according to the materials constituting respectively the binding and the coating skin. Preferably, this film may be a glue or an appropriate polyurethane mastic with a polyurethane coating skin; but it is also possible to use an acrylic, methacrylate, etc. film if these materials are compatible.
In a buoyancy block thus arranged, the coating skin may, if necessary, be multiple.
It is also possible to provide for this coating skin to be covered at least partly by at least one outer layer 24, as shown in
In addition, the coating skin may have a thickness that varies depending on the locations. It is then possible to envision forming this coating skin in two steps:
A buoyancy block arranged as explained above may find various applications for equipping a vessel. One application that is particularly important, and most particularly the objective in the context of the present invention, consists in that this buoyancy block is conformed in the shape of an extruded elongated float 26 suitable for being fitted laterally to a hull 28 of a vessel 30, as shown in
Therefore, thanks to the means proposed by the invention, the user has solid floats for the lateral fitting of vessels that are of simplified manufacture and, therefore, that are less costly than the solid floats currently known and that may therefore find an application for fitment particularly to bottom-of-the-range vessels such as tenders.
However, the use of the buoyancy block according to the invention is not limited to the production of lateral floats and it is possible to conceive that the buoyancy block according to the invention is conformed so as to be suitable for being inserted and enclosed in a free volume 36 of a vessel, for example in some or all of the hull 28 of the vessel 30 or else, when the vessel is thus arranged, in some or all of the free volume 36 between the hull 28 and a deck structure 38 that surmounts the latter. An example of this embodiment is shown in
It may be noted here that, although the arrangements that have just been mentioned for the constitution of buoyancy blocks inside a vessel are those that are preferred, there is however, still for the purpose of producing a buoyancy and insubmersibility block inside the vessel, nothing against having recourse to a different use which, when it is practically feasible, consists in forming the concrete of expanded balls coated in a binding directly in the free volume of the vessel, which then takes the place of a mold.
According to a second of its aspects, the invention proposes a vessel with a rigid hull 28 supporting at least one outer float 26 extending at least bilaterally, in which this float 26 consists of a buoyancy block as explained above. Advantageously in this case, the float 26 may be bonded to the rigid hull 28 with a polyurethane glue. In practice, in order to obtain a strong structure, it is desirable to ensure that the float 26 has an inner face 32, by which it rests against the rigid hull 28, that is substantially flat or conformed so as to complement the surface of the hull, and a convex outer face 34, that may preferably be approximately semicylindrical of revolution.
Whether the vessel is or is not fitted with at least one float arranged as has just been indicated, it is possible to provide that the vessel provided with a rigid hull incorporate at least one buoyancy block arranged as indicated above according to the invention and enclosed in a free volume 36 included at least partly in the rigid hull 28. In addition, if the rigid hull 28 is surmounted by a rigid deck structure 38, it is possible to provide that the buoyancy block be enclosed in a free volume 36 defined between the rigid hull and the rigid deck, as shown in
The ability to install one or more buoyancy blocks in free locations of the vessel makes it possible to considerably increase the buoyancy of the vessel (insubmersibility) without encumbering the spaces assigned to the passengers. This solution may if necessary make it possible to reduce the volume of the outer floats and to give the vessel an esthetically original appearance without affecting its buoyancy.
An important advantage of the invention lies in the simplicity of obtaining the buoyancy block without cumbersome and costly toolage. The buoyancy block is formed without heating or at least without heating to high temperature, and without pressurization: all that is needed therefore is a light, low-cost mold. The use of such molds requires only a small amount of nonspecialist labor. In addition, its low cost makes it possible to increase the number of molds, for example in order to form products (floats, filler blocks) of various dimensions and shapes in response to user demand and/or to match different ranges of vessels.
When they are mass-produced, floats made according to the invention are less costly than pneumatic floats, while offering an eminently adequate floatation capability, even in the case of partial damage to a float.
Finally, an important advantage of floats made according to the invention lies in the very great ease of repair and restoration of a damaged float, with the possibility of regaining an outer appearance as satisfactory as the original.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05 02558 | Mar 2005 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2006/000523 | 3/9/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/14/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/097601 | 9/21/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2959508 | Graham et al. | Nov 1960 | A |
3585157 | Beck | Jun 1971 | A |
3596622 | Moore | Aug 1971 | A |
5218919 | Krulikowski et al. | Jun 1993 | A |
5489228 | Richardson et al. | Feb 1996 | A |
5878685 | Hemphill et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
20040069203 | Fleming | Apr 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2782695 | Mar 2000 | FR |
1537594 | Jan 1979 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090056614 A1 | Mar 2009 | US |