The present application relates generally to systems for monitoring floating vessels and responding to cyclical and sometimes unexpected motions. Still more particularly, the present application relates to systems for monitoring motion of floating vessels and compensating for the effect of such motion on cranes. Still more particularly, the present application relates to a system for providing heave compensation for cranes arranged on floating vessels, the heave compensation being adapted for reducing the effect on an object suspended from a crane that is oscillating due to wave action.
Heave compensation systems may be provided to monitor motions of the sea and for causing line payout or haul in of a crane line in response to the motion. The compensation allows an object that is suspended from the line to remain substantially stationary below the surface and the compensation also helps to reduce the load on the line due to the heaving sea.
Many cranes use multiline systems for lowering or raising objects on and off of a vessel and/or to and from deep locations below the sea surface. To accommodate the multiline systems and avoid intricate and excessive line handling systems, portions of current heave compensation systems may be mounted on the boom of the crane. In addition, a large amount of hydraulic equipment and piping may be mounted near the base of the crane for controlling the portion that is on the boom.
These systems cause a large mass of equipment to be located relatively high on a vessel affecting the stability of the vessel. In addition, the systems may be integrated into the multiline system such that line wear occurring at or near the heave compensation system may require the full line to be replaced. Moreover, much of the line may commonly be below water and unavailable for inspection. Still further, the portion of the system that is located on the boom can take away from the overall capacity of the crane boom on which it is mounted.
In one embodiment, a crane having a remote heave compensation system may be provided. The crane may include a base, a crane boom extending from the base, and a multiline system arranged on the crane for raising and lowering objects from the crane boom. The crane may also include a remote heave compensation system associated with the crane boom. The remote heave compensation system may include a heave compensator configured to translate in association with and to compensate for heaving motion of a vessel. The heave compensation system may also include an equalizer arranged on the crane boom and coupled to an end of the multiline system. The heave compensation system may also include a heave line secured to the equalizer at a first end and secured to the heave compensator at a second end. Compensating motion of the heave compensator may be transferred to the equalizer by the heave line to compensate for heaving motion of the vessel and stabilize objects suspended from the multiline system.
In another embodiment, a remote heave compensation system may be associated with a crane on a vessel. The system may include a heave compensator configured to translate in association with and to compensate for heaving motion of the vessel. The system may also include an equalizer arranged on the crane and coupled to an end of a multiline system of the crane. The system may also include a heave line secured to the equalizer at a first end and secured to the heave compensator at a second end. Compensating motion of the heave compensator may be transferred to the equalizer by the heave line to compensate for heaving motion of the vessel and stabilize objects suspended from the multiline system of the crane.
While multiple embodiments are disclosed, still other embodiments of the present teachings will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, which shows and describes illustrative embodiments. As will be realized, the teachings are capable of modifications in various aspects, all without departing from the spirit and scope of the present teachings. Accordingly, the drawings and detailed description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not restrictive.
The present application, in some embodiments, relates to a remote heave compensation system for a crane on a vessel. The remote heave compensation system may be associated with a crane, but the compensator portion of the system may be arranged remote from the crane boom and below the deck of the vessel, for example. The system may include a heave line that extends from the compensator portion of the system, to the pedestal or base of the crane, along the crane boom, and upwards to an equalizer, which is connected to the lifting lines of the crane. Accordingly, the compensator portion of the system may be placed in a remote location and, yet, may maintain operable coupling to the lifting lines to compensate for heaving motions of the vessel.
Locating the compensator portion of the heave compensation device below the deck of the vessel may be advantageous for several reasons. First, there are generally heavy hydraulic systems that allow the compensator to function and these systems may now be placed at a lower elevation on the vessel thereby helping to stabilize the vessel. Relocating the hydraulic systems may also free up available space at or around the base of the crane. Second, known systems may include locating a portion of the compensator on the boom. By relocating the compensator portion of the system below the deck of the vessel the dead loads on the boom may be reduced thereby freeing up capacity of the crane for lifting larger live loads. Still further, placing the compensator below deck allows for shorter piping runs between components. Placing the components below deck allows for better physical arrangement with shorter hydraulic piping runs.
In addition to the location of the compensator being below deck, the present system is advantageous because, when compared to known systems, the amount of line that is involved in the compensation system may be reduced by isolating the lifting lines from the heave compensation lines. This is advantageous because the limited amount of line involved in the compensation process allows for operators to develop known areas of wear. In addition, these known areas of wear may be in the open viewable space along the crane boom and not below water or otherwise obstructed from view. Accordingly, the heave line may be more easily monitored for wear. Still further, because the compensation system lines are isolated from the lifting lines, the heave compensation lines may be considerably shorter and, as such, may be more easily and cost-effectively replaced. That is, the whole spool of lifting line (thousands of feet of line) may not need to be replaced, but rather, a much shorter line extending from the equalizer to the compensator may be replaced.
Referring now to
For purposes of further discussion of the remote heave compensation system 50, a brief discussion of the parts of the crane 50 of
The crane 50 may be arranged on the pedestal 54 and may include a crane base 52 for supporting the boom 56 and the tie back system 60 relative to the pedestal 54. The crane base 52 may be operable to pivot about the vertical axis of the pedestal 54 or another vertical axis substantially parallel to the pedestal axis. The boom 56 may extend from the crane base 52 and may be pivotable in a vertical plane and operable to pivot from a substantially vertical position, or beyond, down to a substantially horizontal position, or beyond. The boom 56 may be configured for supporting the loads of the lifting lines 62 through compression and may be maintained in a given selected position by the tie back lines. The tieback system 60 may include a plurality of structural framing members supporting a plurality of tie back lines extending from the framing out to a location near the boom tip 58. The tie back lines may be configured for tensile forces and for tying back the boom tip 58 in resistance of line loads.
The crane 50 may also include a lifting line system 62. This line system 62 may include one of several different lifting line arrangements. In the embodiments shown, a multiline system in the form of a deep water lowering system of lifting lines 62 is shown. In this embodiment, a spool 64A of right lay line 66A and a spool 64B of left lay line 66B may each be provided and located at or near the crane base 52. Each of the lines 66 may extend from the spool or drum 64, through a traction winch 68, and upward along the crane boom 56 via a series of sheaves to a boom tip sheave 70. The lines 66 may pass across the boom tip sheave 70 and may extend downward to a load block 72 where an object to be lifted may be supported off of a crane hook attached to the load block 72. Each of the lines 66 may pass across one or more sheaves in the load block 72 and may then extend upwardly to the boom tip 58 where the lines 66 may each pass across an alignment sheave 74 and extend to an equalizer 76. In one embodiment, the lifting lines may include 60 mm diameter rope having a capacity of 325 MT B.S. Other line diameters and sizes may also be provided.
It is noted that this arrangement of right and left lay line 66A/66B, each having an outgoing and incoming portion, may help to resist twisting of the line under load and at great depths. More information regarding deep water lowering systems may be found in U.S. patent application Ser. No.: 13/728,040, filed Dec. 27, 2012 and entitled Deep Water Knuckle Boom Crane, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. However, other lifting line arrangements may also be used including single line systems with no portion returning from the load block 72 and single line systems with a portion returning from the load block 72. Still other lifting line arrangements including larger numbers of lines and/or outgoing and incoming portions of lines may be provided.
As shown in
As shown in
It is to be appreciated that, while an equalizer 76 with a horizontally oriented pivot axis has been described, an equalizer with vertical or other oriented axis may alternatively be provided. In still other embodiments, the incoming lines may pass around separate sheaves one or more times and the two ends of the incoming lines may be dead ended together. Several different approaches may be used to cause the tension in the incoming lines to balance. Where other arrangements of equalization are provided, the equalization system may be arranged on a frame the same or similar to the frame 82 described such that the heave compensation system may interact with the lifting lines via the incoming lines and the equalization system.
Turning now to the remote heave compensation system 100, reference is again made to
With reference to
It is noted that the outgoing and returning arrangement of the heave line 104 in the heave compensator 102 may allow for double the output of a straight line compensation system. That is, for any distance L that the compensator sheave 112 translates along the rack 108, the compensator 102 will payout or haul in a length of heave line 104 equal to 2L. Accordingly, for example, if the compensator sheave 112 translates 1 meter, then 2 meters of heave line 104 will be paid out causing the equalizer 76 to translate at the boom tip 58 by a distance of 2 meters. The outgoing and incoming nature of the lifting lines 66 shown will cause the load block 72 at the bottom of the lifting lines 66 to translate by 1 meter, a distance equal to the compensator sheave translation distance. Accordingly, the heave compensator portion 102 of the system may have a stroke length of ½L where L is the stroke length available at the boom tip 58 for the equalizer 76, as shown in
The heave line 104 may be a substantially strong line extending from the compensator portion 102 described upward through the pedestal 54, along the boom 56, and to the equalizer 76 near the boom tip 58. In the present embodiment, the heave line 104 may be approximately 2 times as strong as the lifting lines 66 because the heave line 104 may counteract the forces placed on the equalizer 76 by the two incoming lifting lines 66. Where other arrangements of lifting lines 66 are used, other capacities of heave line 104 may be provided. In one embodiment, the heave line 104 may be a 90 mm diameter rope having a capacity of 695 MT B.S. Other diameters and strengths of heave line 104 may also be provided.
As mentioned, the heave line 104 may extend from the compensator portion 102 of the system 100 to a sheave 106A arranged below the deck of the vessel near the center of the pedestal 54 and at or near the axis of rotation of the crane 50. The heave line 104 may then extend upwardly to a center sheave 106B arranged substantially directly above the below-deck sheave 106A. The heave line 104 may pass across the top of the center sheave 106B, and may extend radially outward across the crane base 52 to a sheave 106C arranged at or near the pivotal axis of the boom 56. The heave line 104 may pass across the bottom of the sheave 106C at the pivotal axis of the boom 56 and then the heave line 104 may extend along the length of the boom 56.
The location of the heave line 104 as it extends from below the vessel deck, up the pedestal 54 and radially outward to the boom pivot axis is advantageous because the crane 50 is free to rotate without entangling the heave line 104. That is, as the crane 50 rotates about its base 52, the portion of the heave line 104 extending along the boom 56 may rotate about the base 52 together with the boom 56. The sheave 106C near the pivot axis of the boom 56 and the sheave 106B at the center of the base 52 may rotate about the center of the base 52 keeping the radially extending portion of the heave line 104 in-line with the portion extending along the boom 56. The portion of the line 104 extending downward through the pedestal 54 may twist as the crane 50 rotates, but because it extends along the rotational axis of the crane 50, the line 104 may remain aligned with the center sheave 106B and the sheave 106A arranged below the vessel deck.
As the heave line 104 extends along the length of the boom 56 toward the boom tip 58, an offsetting sheave 106D may be provided at or near the mid-length of the boom 56 and the heave line 104 may pass across the top of the offsetting sheave 106D. As the heave line 104 reaches the boom tip 58, the heave line 104 may pass across the top of a ridge sheave 51 together with the pair of outgoing lift lines 66. As the heave line 104 passes across the top of the ridge sheave 51 it may continue around the ridge sheave 51, as shown in
In operation, before the remote heave compensation system 100 is activated, the equalizer 76 may be arranged in a distal most position along the boom tip 58, as shown in
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, persons skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/736,979 filed on Dec. 13, 2012, entitled Remote Heave Compensation System, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61736979 | Dec 2012 | US |