This application claims the benefit of French Patent Application No. FR 07 00749 filed with the French Patent Office on Feb. 2, 2007, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates in general to the field of survival at sea and, more specifically, it relates to improvements made to a sea survival device comprising a container that encloses several pneumatic liferafts in the deflated and folded-up state, together with inflation means for inflating said liferafts while the device is being deployed operationally.
Sea survival devices of the above-mentioned type are already known, with two pneumatic liferafts enclosed in a common container.
Thus, document U.S. Pat. No. 4,362,517 discloses a set of two pneumatic liferafts housed, in the deflated and folded-up state, in a common rigid container, together with common inflation means. On inflation, the two liferafts are deployed simultaneously while coupled together. However, simultaneously deploying the two liferafts is possible only when they are relatively small in size. Simultaneous inflation is impossible, in practice, when they are liferafts of high-capacity or indeed of very high capacity (e.g. for 100 or more people), and, even more so, when they are liferafts of the self-righting type that must be isolated from each other in order to right if necessary.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 4,639,229 discloses a parachutable survival device that comprises a container enclosing two pneumatic liferafts; on being parachuted, the container is opened and the two liferafts, which are themselves suspended from respective parachutes and which are united by a long floating rope, are released in time-shifted manner and are deposited on the water at some distance apart from each other. Such a device is specifically arranged for aircraft rescue of survivors in water, but it is not structurally and functionally designed to be deployed from a ship carrying passengers (liner, ferry, etc.) or from an offshore platform, in order to enable a large number of people to survive at sea.
An essential object of the invention is to propose an improved arrangement of a sea survival device including several pneumatic liferafts that is suitable for enabling the liferafts to be operationally deployed rapidly, including and especially when the liferafts are of high-capacity or indeed of very high capacity and/or when they are of the self-righting type, the device also, if necessary, being capable of incorporating means for rapidly evacuating a large number of people from a ship.
To these ends, the invention provides a sea survival device comprising a container that encloses several pneumatic liferafts in the deflated and folded-up state, together with inflation means, which sea survival device, as arranged according to the invention, is characterized:
By means of these features, each liferaft is inflated separately, and can be deployed without being hindered by another liferaft, which is essential for operationally deploying liferafts of very high capacity and thus of very large dimensions. In addition, it is essential for the liferafts to be deployed individually when they are self-righting liferafts, whose self-righting capacity can be guaranteed only if nothing hinders them as they are righting in the event that they are inflated upside-down.
With regard to sequential inflation of the liferafts, various solutions can be considered. Thus, depending on the operating needs, it is possible to make provision for the inflation trigger means of the other liferafts to be of the manually actuated type, or of the automatically triggered type associated functionally with means for detecting the end of inflation of the previously inflated liferaft.
It is possible to make provision for the inflation means to comprise several inflation means operationally associated with respective ones of the liferafts, for the inflation means to be common to the liferafts.
It is also possible for a tie to be provided between the successive liferafts in a manner such that, while a liferaft is being inflated, the remaining portion of the container enclosing the other liferafts remains secured to the liferaft that is being inflated. Naturally, the tie is flexible and is of a length that is sufficient for the floating remaining portion of the container not to be swept too far away while the first liferaft is being deployed, but also for it not to hinder deployment of that preceding liferaft.
The features that are descried above can apply as they are to sets of several liferafts, which makes it possible to reduce the amount of space necessary on the deck of the ship for stowing the container enclosing the liferafts (for the same liferaft capacity, such a common container is significantly less voluminous and less heavy than several containers each enclosing a single liferaft).
However, the features of the invention would seem to find a particularly advantageous application in the context of high-capacity and high-speed evacuation systems with which large ships for carrying passengers (liners, ferries, etc.) are currently or soon to be provided. It is, in particular, in this context that it is possible to make provision for the first liferaft of the present invention to be a boarding platform, at least a portion of which is arranged as a zone for receiving evacuees, in particular by means of rapid evacuation means. An example of such a boarding platform with a reception zone is given in document FR 2 756 809. Also in this context, it is then possible to make provision for the survival device to further comprise an inflatable pneumatic slide that, when the device is in the stowed condition, is folded up and rolled up around the container from its entry end which is secured to the container. Advantageously, the device can further comprise fastening means that, in the in-use position, are suitable for securing the exit end of the slide to the first liferaft in register with the reception zone provided therein. Also in the same context, it is possible for tie means to be provided for securing the first liferaft to each of the other liferafts with their sides touching once they are deployed (optionally one after another) in a manner such as to make it easier for people to go from one liferaft to another, in particular from the boarding platform to the liferaft proper. The features that are described above can find a particularly advantageous application for liferafts of very high capacity (typically several tens of people, or indeed more than about one hundred people) that are starting to equip ships for carrying passengers (cruise liners or other liners, car ferries, etc.).
The features that are described above find a particularly advantageous application for constituting sets of two liferafts, in other words in a device comprising a container that is made up of two half-shells, namely a first half-shell and a second half-shell that are assembled together and that enclose respective ones of the first and second pneumatic liferafts in the deflated and folded-up state, together with inflation means, which sea survival device is characterized:
In practical manner, the inflation trigger means of the second liferaft may be of the manually actuated type, or indeed of the automatically actuated type operationally associated with means for detecting the end of inflation of the first liferaft.
It is possible to make provision for the inflation means to comprise first and second inflation means that are operationally associated with respective ones of the first and second liferafts, or indeed for the inflation means to be common to the first and second liferafts.
It is desirable that, while the device is being deployed, the various elements remain secured together. To this end, it is possible to provide a tie between the first liferaft and the second liferaft in a manner such that, whenever the container opens and while the first liferaft is being inflated, the closed second half-shell enclosing the second liferaft remains secured to the first liferaft.
The first liferaft may be a boarding platform, at least a portion of which is arranged as a zone for receiving evacuees. The device may then further comprise an inflatable pneumatic slide that, when the device is in the stowed condition, is folded up and rolled up around the container from its exit end; the device may further comprise fastening means that, in the in-use position, are suitable for securing the exit end of the slide to the first liferaft in register with the reception zone provided therein. Optionally, the device may advantageously further comprise tie means for securing the first and second liferafts together with their sides touching once they are deployed.
The invention will be better understood on reading the following detailed description of preferred embodiments that are given merely by way of illustrative example. In the description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Reference is made firstly to
The container 2 is made up of several assembled-together rigid shells 4, one of which is a special shell 3 that is described below. The shells 3, 4 can be made of any suitable material used for manufacturing containers designed to enclose liferafts, and the shells are shaped in a manner such that the container 2 has any desired shape that is appropriate for performing its function; the shells 3, 4 are mechanically assembled together in a manner such as to impart the required strength to the container, in particular if it is designed to be thrown into the water from a deck of a ship, or from a platform.
The container 2 encloses at least one internal partition 7 that subdivides it into several compartments C, the number of which is equal to the number of the shells 3, 4. In the example shown merely by way of illustration in
The liferafts in the deflated and folded-up state, the number of which is equal to the number of compartments C, are enclosed in respective ones of the compartments C. Said first compartment Ca encloses a liferaft referenced 5 that is referred to the “first” liferaft below, and the other compartments C enclose respective liferafts that are referenced 6.
Finally, the inflation means (not shown in
The other liferafts 6 are operationally associated with inflation trigger means (not shown) that are suitable for triggering inflation of their respective liferafts in succession and one at a time, after the first liferaft 5 has been inflated. Said inflation trigger means of the other liferafts 6 can be of the manually actuated type or else they can be of the automatically actuated type, operationally associated with detection means 20, as shown in
Depending on the applications and on the modes of deployment required for the survival device 1, it is possible to make provision for the inflation means to comprise several inflation means operationally associated with respective ones of the liferafts 5, 6, but it is also possible to make provision for the inflation means to be common to all of the liferafts, or to respective groups of liferafts.
In order for it to be possible for the liferaft 1 to be deployed reliably and entirely safely, it is desirable for all of the elements (the liferafts being deployed or already inflated, and the portions of the container that are still closed) to remain associated with one another both so as to enable them to be deployed fully and so as to enable the passengers to board them safely, in particular in the configuration explained below. To these ends, it is desirable to provide a tie between the successive liferafts so that, while a liferaft is being inflated, the remaining portion of the container that encloses the other liferafts remains secured to the liferaft that is being inflated or that has been inflated.
In an advantageous configuration of the survival device 1, in particular when it is designed for evacuating a large number of people onto liferafts of high-capacity or indeed of very high capacity (e.g. 100 or 150 people), it is advantageous for the first liferaft 5 to be a boarding platform, at least a portion of which is arranged as a zone for receiving the evacuees.
The general features of the invention that are described above can be complex to implement in practice if the number of liferafts enclosed in the container is large (a container of very large size and thus of very large weight is difficult to throw from up on a deck, and it is difficult and lengthy to deploy the liferafts, etc.).
Consequently, an embodiment that is practical to implement from all points of view, and that therefore constitutes the currently preferred embodiment, consists in a survival device comprising a container arranged to enclose two liferafts, and this particular embodiment, which is currently preferred and which satisfactorily complies with practical requirements, is described in more detail below, it being understood that the particular features mentioned in the context of a survival device comprising a container enclosing two liferafts can be extrapolated for a survival device comprising a container enclosing a larger number of liferafts.
In accordance with the invention, provision is made for the first and second liferafts 5, 6 as deflated and folded-up to be disposed in respective ones of the compartments Ca, C of the first and second half-shells 3, 4 of the container 2, and the container 2 is arranged such that the second half-shell 4 enclosing the second liferaft 6 is closed in watertight manner at D by a closure partition 7. For greater clarity, in
In addition, the inflation means are of the automatically triggered type and they are operationally associated with at least the first liferaft 5 disposed in the first half-shell 3 so that it is the first liferaft 5 that inflates first when the survival device 1 is deployed operationally. This is the situation that is shown in
As shown in
Depending on the operating constraints and on the cost constraints, the inflation means can comprise first and second inflation means operationally associated with respective ones of the first and second liferafts 5, 6, each pressurized gas reservoir being wrapped in the folded-up canvas of the corresponding liferaft, as is common practice in a container enclosing a single liferaft. But, if necessary, it is possible to make provision for the inflation means to be common to the first and second liferafts (as shown by the common inflation member 23 of
Preferably, at least one tie 9 or lashing rope is provided between the first liferaft 5 and the second liferaft 6 in a manner such that, whenever the container 2 opens, and during inflation of the first liferaft 5, the closed second half-shell 4 enclosing the second liferaft 6, at least so long as it has not been inflated, floats in the vicinity of the first liferaft 5 while remaining secured thereto as shown in
The features of the invention as described above can be applied to various practical operating configurations. However, it seems that a particularly advantageous application of the invention relates to survival devices designed for a large number of people, e.g. for equipping large ships for carrying passengers (such as liners, cruise ships, car ferries, etc.). For equipping such ships, high-capacity or indeed very high capacity liferafts (typically for several tens of passengers or indeed for over one hundred passengers) are currently provided. Unfortunately, operationally deploying such liferafts poses numerous problems as regards both deploying the liferafts properly on the water, and also transferring the passengers onto them. The currently developed solution consists in using rapid mass evacuation means of the gravity type, which requires the evacuated passengers to land firstly on a reception platform from which they are immediately removed so as not to hinder the following evacuees.
It is in this context that the features of the invention appear to be particularly advantageous. It is then possible to make provision, as applies in the liferaft configuration shown in
Among the various rapid mass evacuation means of the gravity type that are currently in use or being tested are pneumatic slides that can be stowed in relatively small volumes in the deflated and folded-up state. It is then possible to make provision to construct a sea survival device in which a pneumatic slide is associated with a container enclosing two liferafts as described above.
In order to be deployed, and after any tarpaulin 16 has been removed, the survival device 1 stowed on the deck 12 is released and thrown overboard. Entrained by the weight of the container 2, the slide canvas 14 unrolls until it reaches the surface of the water and retains the container 2 floating on the water, as shown in
It should be emphasized that, by the very design of the survival device as a whole, the slide canvas is secured, at its top end or entry end 18, to the deck 12 of the ship 13 by the securing means 17 (shown diagrammatically in
In a preferred but non-exclusive mode of deployment, firstly inflation of the slide 14 is triggered by its own inflation means (not shown), then inflation of the first liferaft 5 can be triggered, by any suitable means (manual by pulling a percussion cord, or automatic triggered by the end of inflation of the slide) under the conditions described above.
Once the first liferaft 5 and/or the slide 14 have/has finished inflating, inflation of the second liferaft 6 is triggered, it being possible for the second liferaft to be inflated together with the slide 14 being inflated.
Finally, when in the operational position as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07 00749 | Feb 2007 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4033002 | Higgs | Jul 1977 | A |
4362517 | Martin | Dec 1982 | A |
4639229 | Wright et al. | Jan 1987 | A |
5993275 | Lavorata | Nov 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2756809 | Jun 1998 | FR |
1181980 | Feb 1970 | GB |
1465062 | Feb 1977 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080188148 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |