1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to hoists, lifts, and the like, and particularly to a maritime transfer system for transferring personnel and/or equipment to and from a crew boat or vessel and an offshore gas or oil production platform.
2. Description of the Related Art
Offshore or maritime oil and gas drilling and production platforms have expanded nearly worldwide, as oil and gas deposits have been discovered beneath the sea floor in most areas of the world. The construction and maintenance of these platforms have necessitated the transfer of crews and equipment back and forth from land bases to the offshore platforms. This transfer process can be relatively complex, since travel must be accomplished from a stable land base to a platform at sea, and the platform is generally elevated at some distance above the water level.
Larger platforms used for drilling are generally sufficiently large as to require a full time crew and are usually equipped with a helicopter landing pad for the transfer of crews and certain equipment. These large platforms may have some means of accommodating supply boats and ships as well, and additional accommodations to facilitate the physical transfer of personnel to and from the supply boat or ship.
However, there are many quite small offshore platforms that are equipped only for oil or gas production. Many of these platforms have little more than a wellhead and a small surrounding platform, as they are completely automated and require only periodic visits by a crewman for maintenance or inspection, etc. These “normally unmanned installations” (NUT) are not typically of sufficient size to accommodate a helicopter, so that crew members are delivered to and from the site only by a relatively small crew supply boat. As a result, the means for transferring from the boat to the platform and back to the boat is generally primitive, at best. The general means of transfer is by a single rope. The crewman grabs a rope suspended from the platform and swings from the boat to the platform. Clearly, this is potentially hazardous due to motion of the boat relative to the fixed platform from wave action, wind, and/or other forces. There have been instances of serious injury to crewmembers when the crew boat was pushed against the platform structure, where no more than a swing rope was provided for transfer.
Thus, a maritime transfer system solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The maritime transfer system provides an economical and easily retrofitted assembly to facilitate the safe transfer of personnel and/or equipment to a small oil or gas production platform from a supply or crew boat, or other vessel. The transfer system includes a platform extension that is added (e.g., welded, bolted, etc.) to the existing platform. Nearly all necessary transfer equipment is located on the extension. The extension serves to position all electrical equipment at a predetermined distance (e.g., ten feet) from the wellhead on the platform in order to comply with regulations.
A prime mover, preferably an electric motor and winch, are installed on the extension. The winch controls a cable used to lift and lower a car or gondola. An overhead davit extends outward from the platform and beyond the extension. The cable runs up to the davit to support the car therefrom. Preferably, the cable passes through a double pulley and sheave assembly above the car, the lateral spacing of the pulleys providing additional stability for the car. Solar cells are provided to charge an electrical storage battery or batteries during periods of non-use of the system.
Control of the motor is provided by a remote switch that is connected to the free end of a flexible cable extending from the motor assembly. The control switch is not physically secured to any of the structure, other than to the distal or free end of the control cable. This permits the control switch to be positioned within or outside of the car, as required. Normally, the car is raised to the level of the platform when the platform is unattended in order to lift it clear of wave action and potential damage. However, the control switch is left hanging from its cable, only a short distance above the water level.
When personnel need to transfer to the platform, the crewmember may easily reach the hanging control switch from the boat or vessel to lower the car. When the car has been lowered to the boat, the crewmember can climb into the car while carrying the control with him or her into the car. The crewmember then uses the control to lift the car to the level of the platform, or more particularly, to the platform extension. The operation is reversed when the crewmember departs the platform. In this manner only a single switch box is required to carry out all control operations, rather than requiring multiple interrelated switches in parallel and installed in various locations.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
The maritime transfer system provides a quickly installed and economical means for greatly increasing the safety of workers visiting smaller offshore oil and gas production platforms that are otherwise ordinarily equipped with only a swing rope for access. Such smaller production platforms generally have only a wellhead installed thereon, and do not have the size or facilities for a helicopter landing pad or for conveniently mooring a boat or other vessel thereto. The maritime transfer system greatly reduces, if not eliminates, the chance of injury to a crewmember during the process of transferring from a crew boat or supply vessel to the platform, and from the platform back to the boat or vessel.
A motorized winch and electrical storage battery assembly 14 is installed on the platform extension 12 to provide power for cable actuation, as explained further below. The winch may be powered by any suitable prime mover, but is preferably powered by an electric motor in combination therewith. The battery may be a conventional electrical storage battery (e.g., gel cell, or other suitable type), which receives power for recharging from one or more photovoltaic panels 16 installed at some suitable location with the transfer system 10 that communicate electrically with the battery in a conventional manner.
The motor, winch, and battery assembly 14 is preferably positioned near the outer edge of the platform extension 12, as shown in
A davit 18 is installed on the production platform P. The davit 18 has an elevated horizontal boom or arm 20 having a medial portion 22 extending over the platform extension 12 and a distal end 24 extending beyond the platform extension. The photovoltaic panels 16 may be installed along the boom 20 of the davit 18, or to some other suitable structure. A car suspension cable 26 extends from the winch assembly 14 up to and over a first or davit pulley 28 suspended beneath the medial portion 22 of the boom or arm 20. The distal end of the cable 26 is anchored or affixed to an attachment point 30 at the distal end 24 of the boom 20.
A crew and/or equipment transfer car or gondola 32 is suspended from the cable 26. The car 32 preferably comprises a rigid structure for protection of personnel therein while in use. At least the lower portion 34 of the car 32 is enclosed, although other car configurations may be used. The superstructure of the car 32 includes a double pulley bracket or housing 36 having laterally spaced first and second pulleys 38a and 38b (shown in broken lines in
Control of the lifting and lowering of the car 32 is accomplished by a control switch 40, which is housed in a weatherproof switch box. The control switch 40 is a conventional double-throw switch, enabling the motor of the winch assembly 14 to operate in one direction to draw the cable 26 in and raise the car 32, and to operate in the opposite direction to pay out the cable 26 to allow the car 32 to descend. Alternatively, other electrical switch arrangements may be used, e.g., two separate switches to operate the motor in opposite directions, etc. A conventional safety brake mechanism may be provided with the winch assembly 14. Additional safety may be provided by an emergency ladder 42 for deployment by personnel in the car 32 in the event of loss of power, e.g., a rope ladder or other suitably compact ladder or the like when folded. The emergency ladder 42 is shown in its stowed and folded configuration in broken lines in the floor of the car 32 of the upper position in
The platform P is normally unattended, as noted further above. In this situation, the car 32 is raised to a normally stowed position adjacent the platform extension 12, as shown in
When the crewmember wishes to leave the platform P, he or she enters the car 23 from the platform extension 12 and uses the control switch 40 to lower the car 32 back to the level of the crew or supply vessel V. The crewmember exits the car 32 onto the vessel V, and retains the switch 40 on the end of its control cable 44 to raise the car 32 back to its normally stowed position at the level of the platform P and extension 12, where it is clear of the water surface and potentially damaging wave action or other effects.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2874855 | Rees, Jr. | Feb 1959 | A |
2876919 | True et al. | Mar 1959 | A |
2963179 | Kanady et al. | Dec 1960 | A |
2986750 | Herreshoff | Jun 1961 | A |
2998148 | Himel, Jr. | Aug 1961 | A |
3064829 | Winfrey et al. | Nov 1962 | A |
3463271 | St. Louis | Aug 1969 | A |
3476263 | Ujihara et al. | Nov 1969 | A |
3512657 | Chambers | May 1970 | A |
3804268 | Barron et al. | Apr 1974 | A |
4180362 | Stair | Dec 1979 | A |
4257493 | Beckham | Mar 1981 | A |
4348960 | Staurseth | Sep 1982 | A |
4412598 | Kimon et al. | Nov 1983 | A |
4635802 | Hylton | Jan 1987 | A |
4666357 | Babbi | May 1987 | A |
4718564 | Bailey | Jan 1988 | A |
4858775 | Crouch | Aug 1989 | A |
5445094 | Kai et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
5713710 | Strong et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
5909817 | Wallace et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
6640934 | Edwards | Nov 2003 | B1 |
6666299 | Cole | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6681894 | Fanguy | Jan 2004 | B1 |
7021427 | Skovgaard et al. | Apr 2006 | B2 |
7252315 | Liberato et al. | Aug 2007 | B2 |
20040217611 | Liberato et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20050006175 | Overby et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20080087497 | Boswell et al. | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20080223278 | Carro Donna et al. | Sep 2008 | A1 |
20100252365 | Feller et al. | Oct 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2136037 | Sep 1984 | GB |