Claims
- 1. A surface effect ship comprising in operative combination:
- a main hull subtended along opposite sides thereof by side hulls;
- ship driving power train means including engine means and directional and speed reducing gearbox units in operationally coupled relation carried rigidly upon a sled means which in turn is mounted upon shock absorbing means;
- said shock absorbing means comprising all-directionally resilient spring units affixed to and sandwiched between said sled means and fixed structural members of said side hulls;
- ship propeller drive shafts operationally coupled to said power train means and extending rearwardly and angularly downwardly therefrom through said side hull structures to protrude therebeyond;
- ship driving propellers carried at the distal ends of said drive shafts; and
- structurally fracturable and dimensionally collapsible non-resilient compression resistant back-up means positioned in association with said resilient spring units and dimensioned so as to be normally out of contact with both of said sled means and said structural members but engageable and compressible therebetween upon relative displacements thereof exceeding those encountered during normal operations of said ship, so as to non-resiliently provide substantial assistance in retarding further displacements of said power train means beyond their normal positions relative to said side hulls.
- 2. A surface effect ship as set forth in claim 1 wherein said sled means comprise in plan view rectangularly shaped rigidly constructed platforms accommodating at opposite ends thereof said engine means and said gearbox means in vertically offset relationship.
- 3. A surface effect ship as set forth in claim 2 wherein said spring units and back-up means are arranged alternately in rows beneath opposite side edge portions of said platforms.
- 4. A surface effect ship as set forth in claim 3 wherein at least some portions of said platforms lie in planes parallel to said propeller drive shafts whereby to introduce angularly intersecting force components into said spring units upon displacements of said platforms from their normal positions relative to said hull supporting structures.
- 5. A surface effect ship as set forth in claim 1 wherein relative displacement degree adjustable contact means are provided for fine-tuned operation of the shock absorbing system.
- 6. A marine surface ship comprising in operative combination:
- a hull;
- ship driving power train means including engine means and a directional and speed reducing gearbox unit in operationally coupled relation carried rigidly upon sled means mounted upon portions of iso-directionally resilient spring means which are also at other portions thereof affixed to a structural portion of said hull;
- a ship propeller drive shaft operationally coupled to said power train means and extending rearwardly and angularly downwardly therefrom through said hull structure to protrude therebeyond;
- a ship driving propeller carried at the distal end of said drive shaft;
- said power train mounting sled means being configured so that at least some portion thereof is inclined in parallelism with said propeller drive shaft; and
- structurally fracturable and dimensionally collapsible non-resilient compression resistant back-up block means positioned between said sled means and said structural portion of said hull and dimensioned so as to be normally out of contact with both said sled means and said structural portion despite minor displacements thereof towards one another, but operable upon major relative displacements thereof in response to severe shock loadings on said ship so as to non-resiliently provide substantial assistance to the action of said spring means in retarding still further displacements of said power train means from its normal position relative to said hull structure.
- 7. A ship as set forth in claim 6 wherein said sled means comprise in plan view a rectangularly shaped rigidly constructed platform accommodating at opposite ends thereof said engine means and said gearbox means in vertically offset relationship.
- 8. A ship as set forth in claim 7 wherein said spring means comprise separate units arranged in rows beneath opposite side edge portions of said platform.
- 9. A ship as set forth in claim 6 wherein said back-up block means comprises a plurality of separate back-up blocks dispersed intermediately of separated portions of said spring units.
- 10. A ship as set forth in claim 9 wherein at least some portion of said sled means lies in a plane parallel to said propeller drive shaft whereby to introduce angularly intersecting force vectors into said spring units upon displacements of said sled means from its normal position relative to said hull supporting structure.
- 11. In a surface effect ship having a glass fibre main hull structure provided with side hull keels and means for supporting most of the weight of the ship by an air cushion confined under the main hull structure while only the side hull keels are slightly submerged;
- a ship propeller driving engine/gearbox arrangement and a platform mounting said arrangement so as to form a sled unit;
- resilient means interposed between said sled unit and said main hull structure and elevating the sled unit above the hull structure for minimizing the magnitudes of underwater vibration and acoustic signatures of the ship when it is involved in surveillance operations or the like so as normally to support the weight of the sled unit and mildly restrain it against motion in any direction relative to the hull structure; and
- crushable means interposed between said sled unit and said hull structure and normally out of contact with one of them for contact and non-resilient crushing by the other of them in response to vertically directed high energy shock loadings caused by severe mine explosions nearby the ship.
- 12. In a surface effect ship as defined in claim 11 wherein the crushable means comprises a honeycomb structure.
- 13. In a surface effect ship as defined in claim 12 wherein said resilient means comprises coil spring sets disposed between the sled unit and the hull structure with the axes of the spring sets generally parallel thereto.
- 14. In a surface ship as defined in claim 13 including brackets on said hull structure and said sled unit which nest diametrically opposite portions of said spring sets therewithin.
- 15. In a surface ship as defined in claim 14 wherein adjacent spring sets are disposed so that one half the coils on one side thereof are generally perpendicular to the sled unit and the hull structure while the remaining coils on that side are oblique thereto.
- 16. In a surface ship as defined in claim 15 wherein said one half of the coils are oblique on the opposite side and the remaining coils on such opposite side are generally perpendicular to the sled unit and the hull structure.
- 17. In a surface effect ship as defined in claim 16 wherein said crushable means comprises a honeycomb structure.
- 18. In a surface effect ship as defined in claim 11 wherein said ship propeller driving engine/gearbox arrangement includes a propeller shaft which is downwardly inclined and is provided with a propeller at its distal end;
- said resilient means comprising coil spring sets, at least some of which have their axes inclined with said propeller shaft.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of co-pending application Ser. No. 055,968 filed on Mar. 28, 1981, abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (16)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
2251432 |
May 1973 |
DEX |
17040 |
Jan 1984 |
JPX |
741003 |
Jun 1980 |
SUX |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
55968 |
Mar 1981 |
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