Claims
- 1. An ocean mooring system including
- a vessel having a hull with an annular mooring recess in the bottom of the hull;
- a mooring element having an upper part that is engageable with the mooring recess in the bottom of the hull;
- a plurality of lines connecting the mooring element to the ocean floor, the mooring element being normally maintained at a stored depth below the bottom of the hull; and
- means for raising the mooring element from the stored depth to engagement with the mooring recess in the bottom of the hull, wherein the system further comprises:
- means for rapidly drawing seawater into the hull through an intake opening located within the mooring recess so as to reduce the downward hydrostatic pressure acting on the upper part of the mooring element as it comes into engagement with the mooring recess.
- 2. An ocean mooring system according to claim 1 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater into the hull provides a flow rate sufficient to produce a substantial net positive buoyancy condition of the combined lines and mooring element as the mooring element engages the submerged bottom portion of the hull.
- 3. An ocean mooring system according to claim 1 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater from the mooring recess into the hull includes a pump, a first conduit connecting an inlet of the pump to an intake opening within the mooring recess and a second conduit connecting an outlet of the pump to at least one discharge opening remote from the mooring recess.
- 4. An ocean mooring system according to claim 3 wherein the pump also functions as a bow thruster pump, and the at least one discharge opening comprises two underwater openings on opposite sides of the hull near the bow of the vessel.
- 5. An ocean mooring system according to claim 3 wherein the upper part of the mooring element comprises two concentric resilient annular members that make circles of sealing contact at locations of the mooring recess that are respectively radially inside and radially outside the location of the pump intake.
- 6. An ocean mooring system according to claim 1 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater from the mooring recess into the hull comprises a hermetic chamber inside the hull, the chamber having a valve opening to the mooring recess in the bottom of the hull and means for creating a vacuum in the chamber.
- 7. An ocean mooring system according to claim 6 wherein the vacuum creating means comprises a steam supply line, a vent line, and a cold water supply line, with respective valves for opening the steam supply and vent lines until substantially all air in the chamber has been replaced by steam, and a valve for opening the cold water supply line to condense the steam after the first two valves have been shut.
- 8. An ocean mooring system according to claim 6 wherein the upper part of the mooring element comprises two concentric resilient annular members that make circles of sealing contact at locations of the mooring recess that are respectively radially inside and radially outside the location of the valve opening from the hermetic vacuum chamber.
- 9. An ocean mooring system according to claim 1 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater from the mooring recess comprises an empty hold in the hull and a valve opening to the mooring recess to permit water to drain into the hold.
- 10. An ocean mooring system according to claim 1 wherein the upper part of the mooring element comprises at least one resilient annular member concentric with the vertical axis of the mooring element, the resilient annular member making initial contact with the mooring recess to cushion any impact between the mooring element and the vessel.
- 11. An ocean mooring system according to claim 10 wherein the resilient annular member makes a circle of sealing contact with the bottom of the hull so that the means for rapidly drawing seawater into the hull can pump out the region between the bottom of the hull and the upper part of the mooring element inside the circle of sealing contact.
- 12. An ocean mooring system according to claim 1 wherein the mooring element further comprises a lower part and means for mounting the upper part of the mooring element on the lower part for rotation about a vertical axis of the element, with the lines connecting the mooring element to the ocean floor being attached to the lower part so that the upper part and the vessel can swivel about the lower part when the upper part is engaged with the mooring recess in the bottom of the hull.
- 13. An ocean mooring system according to claim 12 wherein the means for mounting the upper part of the mooring element on the lower part for rotation about a vertical axis comprises a combined radial and thrust bearing, a first rotary seal located below the bearing between the upper part and the lower part, and a second rotary seal located above the bearing between the upper part and the lower part to prevent seawater from entering the bearing.
- 14. An ocean mooring system according to claim 12 wherein the upper part of the mooring element comprises a hollow annular tank with an inner vertical passage and an outer peripheral skirt extending below the bottom of the tank, and the lower part of the mooring element comprises a vertical cylindrical tank having a closed top and an open bottom.
- 15. An ocean mooring system according to claim 14 wherein the mooring element further comprises means for delivering compressed air to the cylindrical tank, and the cylindrical tank has a volume predetermined to be sufficient to raise the mooring element to the ocean surface when water in the tank has been displaced by compressed air.
- 16. An ocean mooring system according to claim 14 wherein the means for mounting the upper part of the mooring element on the lower part for rotation about a vertical axis comprises a radial bearing, a separate thrust bearing, and at least one rotary seal between the upper part and the lower part.
- 17. A vessel adapted for mooring to a submerged mooring element, the vessel having a hull, an annular mooring recess in the bottom of the hull being engageable with an upper part of a submerged mooring element that is connected by anchoring lines to the sea bottom, and means for raising the mooring element from a stored depth to engagement with the mooring recess in the bottom of the hull, wherein the vessel further comprises:
- means for rapidly drawing seawater into the hull through an intake opening located within the mooring recess so as to reduce the downward hydrostatic pressure acting on the upper part of the mooring element as it comes into engagement with the mooring recess.
- 18. A vessel according to claim 17 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater into the hull provides a flow rate sufficient to produce a substantial net positive buoyancy condition of the combined anchoring lines and mooring element as the mooring element engages the submerged bottom portion of the hull.
- 19. A vessel according to claim 17 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater from the mooring recess into the hull includes a pump, a first conduit connecting an inlet of the pump to an intake opening within the mooring recess and a second conduit connecting an outlet of the pump to at least one discharge opening remote from the mooring recess.
- 20. A vessel according to claim 19 wherein the pump also functions as a bow thruster pump, and the at least one discharge opening comprises two underwater openings on opposite sides of the hull near the bow of the vessel.
- 21. A vessel according to claim 17 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater from the mooring recess into the hull comprises a hermetic chamber inside the hull, the chamber having a valve opening to the mooring recess in the bottom of the hull and means for creating a vacuum in the chamber.
- 22. A vessel according to claim 21 wherein the vacuum creating means comprises a steam supply line, a vent line, and a cold water supply line, with respective valves for opening the steam supply and vent lines until substantially all air in the chamber has been replaced by steam, and a valve for opening the cold water supply line to condense the steam after the first two valves have been shut.
- 23. A vessel according to claim 17 wherein the means for rapidly drawing seawater from the mooring recess comprises an empty hold in the hull and a valve opening to the mooring recess to permit water to drain into the hold.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/019,401 filed on Feb. 16, 1993,now U.S. Pat. No. 5,305,703, which was a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/998,986 filed on Dec. 31, 1992 and now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (17)
Continuations (1)
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Date |
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19401 |
Feb 1993 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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998986 |
Dec 1992 |
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