The present invention relates to a winch, and in particular, a winch for use with a composite seismic cable for towing behind a survey vessel at sea.
Marine seismic data acquisition is normally done by towing multiple, typically 6-14, sensor cables 1 behind a vessel 2 as is shown schematically in
The sensor cable is connected to the vessel by a lead-in cable 4 providing electrical power to the sensor cable. It is also used for transmitting data signals to and from the sensor cable. The lead-in cable is typically 1000-1500 meters long.
Onboard the vessel the cable system—i.e. the lead-in cable and sensor cable—is normally stored on a common winch 5, as shown in
There are two main problems with the common winch arrangement: firstly, there is no access to the lead-in cable when the cable system is stored onboard the vessel, making it time-consuming and difficult to do maintenance and repairs of the lead-in cable; and secondly, it is time consuming to change length of the sensor cable—cable sections must be removed or added in order to change sensor cable lengths.
The traditional solution to the problems described above is illustrated in
The two-winch solution described above gives increased operational flexibility and allows easier maintenance and repair of the lead-in cable. It also allows sensor cable lengths to be changed significantly more efficiently than with the common winch arrangement. Thus, the key advantages are: (1) when the cable system is stored on board, the lead-in cable is always available for inspection and repairs; (2) any damaged or defective lead-in cable can easily be removed and replaced with a new one; and (3) it is easy to change lengths of sensor cables. However, this system does also have significant disadvantages: (1) there is significant added cost since number of winches is doubled; and (2) there are additional space requirements—most vessels have limited deck space and so there may not be room for additional winches.
According to the present invention there is provided a winch system for use with composite marine seismic cables comprising a sensor cable and a lead-in cable for providing electrical connections to the sensor cable, the winch system comprising a winch having a first cable compartment for the lead-in cable and a second cable compartment for the sensor cable, wherein the lead-in cable and the sensor cable may be deployed or recovered independently of each other.
The present invention also provides a seismic data acquisition system comprising a composite marine seismic cable and a winch, the composite marine seismic cable comprising a sensor cable and a lead-in cable for providing electrical connections to the sensor cable, and the winch comprising a first cable compartment for the lead-in cable and a second cable compartment for the sensor cable, wherein the lead-in cable and the sensor cable may be deployed or recovered independently of each other.
The present invention also provides a winch system for use with composite marine seismic cables comprising a sensor cable and a lead-in cable for providing electrical connections to the sensor cable, the winch system comprising a winch having a first cable compartment for the lead-in cable, a second cable compartment for the sensor cable, and a slip ring box mounted in an axle of the winch, wherein the slip ring box is for providing power, control and/or data connections to at least one of the sensor cable and the lead-in cable, and wherein the lead-in cable and the sensor cable may be deployed or recovered independently of each other.
Thus, by means of the invention, a desired length of each cable may be deployed and then recovered without the need for two separate winches. In addition, it is possible to access the two cables for maintenance, repairs, or to change sensors on the sensor cable. A further advantage is that, since the two compartments preferably rotate together, no additional hydraulic or electrical power supply is required. Thus, the invention provides the same functional benefits as the two-winch arrangement but comes at a significantly lower cost and will normally not require any additional deck space.
As noted above, the two compartments are preferably arranged to rotate together, for example by being formed as parts of a common rotating structure, typically a winch drum. Thus, the two compartments are preferably co-axial.
Whilst it is possible to arrange the separate cable compartments in different ways the preferred arrangement is co-axial compartments axially off-set from each other. This also has the advantage of providing ready access to either cable. A convenient structure is to provide a radially extending wall, for example, in the form of an annular disc around the centre of a winch drum, that separates the two compartments.
Another convenient structure of radially extending wall may be provided where the winch comprises a rotatable drum having sidewalls and the compartment for lead-in cable is formed as an annular recess in one of the sidewalls. Thus, one of the main sidewalls may have an annular recess formed in it or provided on it, for example by attaching a suitably shaped member to the outside of the wall of a conventional single winch, as will be discussed further below.
The inboard, fixed end of the cables are preferably fed to their respective compartments via openings at the axial end(s) of the winch. The opening(s) are preferably provided by means of slip ring box(es) mounted in the axle(s) of the winch. Such slip ring boxes are known in the art for use with conventional winches. However, since the winch of the invention has two compartments, it preferably further comprises means for selectively feeding a cable from/to the first or second cable compartment to/from the opening(s) to facilitate selective deployment and recovery of cable from each compartment.
The outboard (free) ends of the cables are preferably fed from the outside of their respective compartments, i.e. in the conventional manner.
Although it is envisaged that winches according to the invention would be supplied as complete units, it is also convenient to convert a conventional single winch to provide a winch according to the invention. Thus, a compartment for the lead-in cable may be attached, e.g. welded or bolted, to an existing cable winch drum. This ability to retrofit an existing winch is a further advantage of the invention.
The invention also extends to a method of deploying and/or recovering a composite seismic cable using the seismic data acquisition system or the winch system described above.
The invention also extends to a method of using the winch, thus, viewed from a still further aspect, the invention provides a method of deploying a composite seismic cable comprising a lead-in cable and a sensor cable, the method comprising: providing a winch having a first cable compartment holding the lead-in cable and a second cable compartment holding the sensor cable; wherein: a desired length of the sensor cable is deployed from the second cable compartment; the deployed sensor cable is disconnected from the sensor cable remaining in the second compartment; the deployed length of sensor cable is connected to the lead-in cable, and then the lead-in cable is deployed from the first compartment, thereby deploying the composite cable.
Preferably, the method comprises the use of the winch system described above and its preferred forms.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, and with reference to the accompanying drawings:—
The slip ring box 6 allows electrical and control/data connections to be made between, on the one hand, a power supply, control system and data recording computers on board the vessel and, on the other, the lead-in cable 4 through axle 8. Thus, connections are provided to the cable as the drum 5 is driven by drive unit 9 in order to deploy or recover the sensor cable 1 and lead-in cable 4.
The free end of cable 1 is led from the outside of the drum to the sea.
A short portion of lead-in cable 4 is then deployed from its winch 12 to enable it to be connected to the proximal end of deployed sensor cable 1 at connection point 13. The sensor cable 1 is then detached from the dedicated strong point so that it is connected to the vessel only via lead-in cable 4 and winch 12, as shown in
The reverse process is used to recover the cable system.
An embodiment of the invention is shown in
The compartment 22 for the sensor cable 1 corresponds to the single cable compartment of prior art winch drum 5, with the compartment 21 for the lead-in cable being formed as an annular recess in one side of the drum wall. Thus, a radially-extending wall 23 separates cables 1 and 4.
A single slip-ring box 24 is provided in axle 25, again as in the
The free ends of each cable 1, 4 are led from the outside of their respective compartments 22, 21 for deployment.
To deploy the cable system, as shown in
At this point, a short length of lead-in cable 4 is deployed from its compartment 21 so that the free end 30 of that cable may be connected to the free end 28 of sensor cable 1, as shown in
Recovery of the cable system is the reverse of deployment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1315511.4 | Aug 2013 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2014/052608 | 8/28/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/028802 | 3/5/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2334141 | Zierden | Nov 1943 | A |
3010594 | Farmer et al. | Nov 1961 | A |
3958594 | Masters | May 1976 | A |
4570245 | Thigpen | Feb 1986 | A |
5632219 | Fleming, Jr. | May 1997 | A |
6053255 | Crain | Apr 2000 | A |
20040196737 | Nicholson | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20130146827 | Serra | Jun 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0877262 | Nov 1998 | EP |
2493067 | Jan 2013 | GB |
2014190973 | Dec 2014 | WO |
Entry |
---|
German text of Barg et al. (WO 2014/190973) with paragraph numbers added, document created Apr. 27, 2018 11 pages. (Year: 2014). |
Machine translation into English of German text of Barg et al. (WO 2014/190973) with paragraph numbers added; document created Apr. 27, 2018, 13 pages. (Year: 2014). |
International Search Report and Written Opinion of International Application No. PCT/GB2014/052608 dated Nov. 28, 2014. |
UK Examination Report in Application No. GB1315511.4 dated Feb. 4, 2014. |
UK Examination Report in Application No. GB1315511.4 dated Oct. 24, 2016. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20160209535 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |