The invention relates to a tug. More specifically, the invention concerns a tug having an all around towing system.
In harbors and restricted sailing areas, ships are usually assisted by one or more tugs. The ship and tug are connected by a towline and the tug maneuvers in the required position to pull the ship. In addition to towing, the tug can also perform pushing operations.
Tugs in general have a fixed towing hook or towing winch on deck and the towline is connected to this equipment. Further an accommodation and wheelhouse are mounted on deck, thereby hindering the towline to rotate freely around.
A solution to enable free rotating all around in the horizontal plane is offered by various rotating towing installations. Examples include DE881312 (Schlepper für Schiffe by Buff 1951), NL1012977 (Ontwerp van sleepboot by M. van der Laan 1999) and NL1027414 (Sleepboot met verplaatsbare sleepinstallatie by Mampaeij 2006). These patents describe a 360° rotatable towing installation on either a circular track or an oval track, running on the outer side of the accommodation/wheelhouse. Typical diameter or width of the towing installation is in the range of 66%-100% of the tug's width. By moving the towing point to the ship's side, the heeling moment is reduced and capsizing risk minimized.
The tug designs all have a horizontal deck surface whereon the towing installation is fitted. In addition, the installation is positioned at a relatively low height to reduce the capsizing moment whilst towing sideward. To establish a straight line from the towing installation to the towed vessel, the bow and stern area must remain low, a typical sloping upward angle of 10° may be considered. The result hereof is a tug with a relative low freeboard beneath the towing installation and a relatively small volume in the bow area below the main deck. For harbor tugs operating in calm water and limited crew members (day operation), these design limitations by rotating towing installations are acceptable, but set clear limitations for operations at sea and longer voyages with 24 hr crew.
Therefore, these towing arrangements mounted in a horizontal plane cannot be combined with important tug design requirements for sea operations and longer voyages like e.g. minimum bow height, sufficient buoyancy volume in bow area and in addition sufficient below deck space for e.g. accommodation.
The object of the present invention is to provide an improved tug design which does not have the drawbacks described above, i.e. to have sufficient bow height, sufficient volume in the bow area for buoyancy and sufficient below deck space.
In one aspect, the invention provides a tug comprising:
a rotatable towing installation disposed on the central deck;
wherein the towing installation and central deck slope upwards from the aft deck to the forward deck with respect to a horizontal plane;
wherein the upward sloping angle of the towing installation is at least 5 degrees.
This object is achieved by arranging the towing installation at an upward sloping angle from the aft deck to the forward deck. The central deck level below the towing installation shall preferably be arranged at a parallel angle to the towing installation or may consist of a number of horizontal and straight or curved sloping parts upward from the aft deck to the forward deck. At the forward position, the towing installation has a higher position enabling to raise the bow deck upward and thereby creating a higher bow height, more buoyancy volume in the bow area and sufficient below deck space for e.g. accommodation. Towing installations may comprise all kind of designs which are known in prior art and include both circular, oval and other shapes. Forward of the towing installation, the deck height may slope upward at typical 10° to enable a straight line of the towing installation to the assisted ship. At the aft position, the towing installation has a lower position enabling to lower the aft deck. Towing operations can be performed from the rotating towing installation, but can also be performed from a second fixed towing installation on the aft deck at low height. The first rotatable towing point can preferably be used for ship assistances in port area and the second fixed towing point can be used for conventional towing operations, including longer voyages outside port areas. The sloping angle of the towing installation from the aft deck to the forward deck shall be at least 5 degrees and preferably in the range of 6-12 degrees in upward direction. Tugs with conventional shaft propulsion have a clear definition of bow and stern as the propellers are located aft and the bow on the opposite side. However, for all kind of new tug designs with various hull shapes and propulsor types and positions, bow and stern definitions may not be clear and therefore bow should be considered as the higher end of the tug and stern as the lower end of the tug.
According to another advantageous design, the described sloping angle of the towing installation starts at the aft end of the rotating towing installation and ends at the forward end of the towing installation, thereby creating a horizontal higher forward deck area and a horizontal lower aft deck area. The horizontal area enables safe crew operations on deck and useful space with constant height below the main deck for crew and installations.
According to another advantageous design, the deck below the towing installation slopes upward according to the described angle and both forward and aft decks have a slope angle. The aft deck slopes down in forward direction and the forward deck slopes upward in forward direction. Typical angle for aft deck downward is in range of 4-8 degrees and forward deck upward in range of 5-10 degrees. The sloping angle of the towing installation may corresponds to approximate the height of one accommodation layer, e.g. a human length plus height of supporting structures. Hereby the crew can enter the accommodation at the aft end above the towing installation and at the forward end proceed to the internal accommodation/spaces below the towing installation.
According to another advantageous design, the towing installation consists of a circular towing installation in the sloping plane and a circular vertically extending pipe structure below the towing installation. As a result of the sloping angle, the vertically extending circular pipe does not (fully) correspond to the circular towing installation. In order to bridge these small misalignments, a single heavy thick plate is welded on top of the circular supporting pipe structure. The thickness of this heavy thick plate depends on the size of the tug and the pull forces, typical sizes are 80-100 mm for smaller sized tugs with dynamic pull forces of 500-600 kN, up to 200 mm for large sea going tugs. The diameter/width of the heavy thick plate shall be in the range of 66%-100% of the tug's beam. The supporting steel structure below deck level can maintain a fully vertically extending structure in either transverse and/or longitudinal direction. On the inner side of the pipe additional stiffening and plating can be fitted for support of the heavy thick plate or curved or multi-chine vertical pipe. This aligns with standard building practices in ship yards and facilitates ease of building and cost reduction.
According to another advantageous design, the towing installation consists of a circular towing installation in the sloping plane and a vertically extending curved or multi-chine pipe structure below the towing installation. As in previous design, the curved or multi-chine pipe structure does not (fully) correspond to the circular towing installation. In order to bridge these small misalignments, a single heavy thick plate is welded on top of the supporting pipe structure. Again, the supporting structure below deck level can maintain a fully vertical extending structure in either transverse and/or longitudinal direction. The multi-chines can be advantageously aligned with the transverse and/or longitudinal plate and stiffener structures. The outer edges of the outer pipe are at least 85% preferably 90% of the radius of the heavy plate.
According to another advantageous design, inside the vertical curved or multi-chine pipe structure, a smaller multi-chine pipe can be used with plating parallel to the outer multi chine pipe. The multi-chine pipe can for example use 8 chines for inner and outer pipe but also higher numbers like 12 or 16 can be used. Further also a combination of different chine numbers can be used, in general the outer pipe needs to align with the outer curvature of the towing installation and needs more chines than the inner pipe. For example, a 12 or 16 chine outer pipe can be combined with a 8 or 12 inner pipe. Also, a combination of multiple chines and part curvature can be used for either the outer and/or the inner pipe.
According to another advantageous design, the accommodation shape above the towing installation aligns with the outer pipe chines and uses the same number of chines to obtain an aligned structure in vertical direction. Although more space inside the accommodation is in general advantageous, the accommodation outer shape can also align with the inner pipe chines. And for specific design cases also a partial support from the outer and inner pipe can be used.
According to another advantageous design, the towing installation consists of a non-circular towing installation in the sloping plane and e.g. oval or elliptical shapes can be used. The single heavy plate follows the same outer shape of the towing installation. Again, the vertically extending pipe structure below the single heavy plate installation can approximately match the shape of the towing installation and the application of a single heavy thick plate can again bridge small misalignments along the curvature.
According to another advantageous design, the towing installation can be welded to the single heavy thick plate in any suitable way.
According to another advantageous design, the towing installation can be mounted to the single heavy thick plate with any suitable means e.g. by using heavy bolts for compression and/or connecting plates with mounting edges to take the shear force. Mounting the towing ring offers additional operational advantages for (dis)mounting, repairs, replacements and maintenance. Mounting can be done on the upper side, the outer side or the lower side, or any advantageous combination. One example is a combination of mounting both on the upper side and the lower side and by forming an ‘U’-shaped grabbing structure around the heavy thick plate.
According to another advantageous design, the towing installation can be mounted on rail (segments) which are mounted on the single heavy thick plate in machined grooves along the outer edge and connected by multiple bolts or equivalent connectors.
According to another advantageous design, the building process can be further facilitated by building the deck structure first without the single heavy top plate. The single heavy top plate can be separately built on a flat construction floor and composed of various plate segments to form the circular shape. Finally, the deck structure can be lifted by heavy cranes and lowered upside down on the heavy top plate. Welding between the upside-down deck structure and the heavy plate can be performed in an efficient way, since welding material is held in position by downward operating gravity force. All welding is performed in flat position (according to ASME 1F and 1G code for welding) and not in overhead position because welding in an overhead position (4F and 4G codes) increases risk for welding failures and is not ergonomic for human functioning. Once the top plate is welded all around to the supporting deck structure, the whole deck structure including the top plate can be lifted up by heavy cranes and turned upside down to mount on the other building blocks of the tug's hull. At the final stage, the accommodation, wheelhouse and funnels can be mounted on top of this single heavy thick plate.
The present invention will become more clearly understood from the following description of the embodiments thereof, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. However, the embodiment and the drawings are given only for the purpose of illustration and explanation, and are not to be taken as limiting the scope of the present invention, the scope of which is to be determined by the set of appended claims.
The conventional tug 1 represented in
The tug 11 represented in
In another embodiment, the central deck 12 has the same height but along the sides the height is reduced over a width of e.g. 600-1000 mm and fitted with a bulwark 17. Hereby the crew can move safely along the sides of the central deck 12. This embodiment can be applied for larger sized (sea going) tugs. In another embodiment, the whole central deck 12 moves down with e.g. 700-900 mm and is fitted along the sides with a bulwark 17; the aft deck 16 aligns with the aft end of the central deck 12 and the forward deck 15 aligns with the forward end of the central deck 12.
In another embodiment, a railing is fitted inside the towing installation to enable the crew to move safely between the accommodation 18 and towing installation 13. Also various combinations with and without bulwark 17 are possible, depending on the intended purpose of the tug 11. On the aft deck 16 the optional secondary towing point 22, in this case shown as a winch and a towline 24 over the stern 26, which can be used for conventional towing.
The upward sloping angle α of the towing installation 13 is between 5 to 12 degrees. The forward deck 15 slopes upward with a sloping angle β with respect to a horizontal plane in the range of 5 to 10 degrees. The aft deck 16 slopes downward with a sloping angle γ with respect to a horizontal plane in the range of 4 to 8 degrees.
Although the invention has been described above with reference to a preferred embodiment, numerous modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present application. The all around towing installation may be constructed in all kind of different arrangements of bearings, rails and rollers both on fully circular shapes and on oval or non-circular shapes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2018700310 | Jan 2018 | MY | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2019/050544 | 1/23/2019 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2019/145861 | 8/1/2019 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5575230 | Eronen | Nov 1996 | A |
10836617 | Holmberg | Nov 2020 | B2 |
20060102060 | Vila Boixadera et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1012591 | Jan 2001 | NL |
2016204726 | Dec 2016 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20210047011 A1 | Feb 2021 | US |