Miami Diver has led the devel- opment of a unique universal steel habitat to efficiently carry out underwater repairs on almost any ship.
In July 1999. a leading cruise ship operator approached Miami Diver Inc. with a damaged lip type stern seal on one of its vessels. The 73,912-gt ship was reporting sea water ingress from the starboard side shaft seal, and the cruise operator was looking for options to prevent an untimely and expensive unscheduled dry-docking.
This was a unique situation in the underwater bonding of a liptype shaft seal had reportedly never been accomplished before. Miami Diver immediately responded and called upon the network companies based in Vancouver, B.C. Canada and Europe and its subsidiary companies to collectively come up with a feasible option for replacement of the seal underwater.
The biggest challenge in the project was that the cruise ship operator required the repairs to be accomplished without interrupting the vessel's sailing schedule.
The joint efforts resulted in the design and fabrication of a dry habitat to be installed around the starboard shaft to facilitate the replacement and bonding of damaged sealing rings in the dry. The habitat was fabricated from steel in house and was tested for fit up during the vessels port calls in Miami, Fla. On August 2, 1999, Miami Diver in conjunction with the seal manufacturer installed the habitat and successfully replaced and bonded the damaged sealing rings; all work was completed and requested by the ship operator, without interrupting the vessel's schedule.
A second opportunity presented itself in September 2000 as another cruise vessel developed a problem with the pod drive. The 137,276-gt vessel presented a new challenge in that it was fitted with pod propulsion system. Again Miami Diver and its network companies joined forces to design and fabricate a steel habitat for the replacement of the damaged lip-type seal. On November 5, 2000 the habitat was installed and all four lip seals were successfully replaced and bonded in the habitat. The repairs were completed with no interruption of the vessel's schedule.
A diver inspects a seal.
Perfect Fit The benefit to the shipping industry for underwater repairs of this nature was evident. However, the use of a steel habitat did not seem to be a feasible option for the majority of ship owners due to the lead time and expenses required to fabricate a custom habitat for each vessel. The prompted Miami Diver and its network companies to move into research and development of a new universal system capable of fitting the majority of large vessels and portable enough to be mobilized world-wide on narrow body aircraft.
Miami Diver also began to pursue a relationship with B+V Industrietechnik to support the new project and develop strong ties with the leading seal manufacturer.
Due to the two previously successful jobs with B+V Industrietechnik, the relationship developed rapidly and Miami Diver signed a service agreement in December 2000 to become an authorized underwater seal repair facility for B+V Industrietechnik.
After several meetings with the network, an agenda to design and develop a complete repair procedure and system was set forth to present to the shipping industry. The key areas for development were the habitat, bonding tools and an underwater carbon arc gouging system for removal of the rope guards and wet welding procedures for the replacement of the rope guards.
Miami Diver's European network member fabricated the special heating elements and sensors. To further the development of the bonding system Miami Diver established an exclusive working relationship with John Gentry of Triton Marine Services in the U.K.
Gentry brought a great deal of knowledge and know how as his company works with all stern seal manufacturers.
Special jigs were manufactured by Triton Marine Services to work with the heaters and to function in a wet environment with diver/technician friendly features to make it more convenient during repairs inside the habitat. The jigs were manufactured to fit a wide range of liner sizes.
The new habitat was designed to be lightweight to permit easier and faster installation along with greater mobility for faster mobilization using a wide variety of transportation options. The system for conventional shafts is designed for universal use on a full range of seal arrangement sizes. The small habitat fits seal arrangements from 480 to 670 mm - the large habitat fits arrangements from 670 to 1,000 mm - both are capable of fitting any stern configuration due to flexibility of the material. A dummy shaft and liner were also fabricated to test each new bag for fit and integrity at a depth of 30 ft. of seawater.
An underwater carbon arc system designed and developed by All-Sea Enteiprises is used for the removal of welded rope guards. The carbon arc system allows for a much faster removal and easier reinstallation due to minimal prep work or fit up work required during reinstallation once repairs are complete.
Miami Diver conducted the wet welding training and certification for network personnel at its Florida facility, while in-house wet welding procedures were developed and qualified and a training and testing system and welder qualification were put in place with Michael Pett of Hydroweld U.K. using hydroweld FS welding electrodes. The tests were witnessed by six major Classification Societies and the results were a Class "A" wet welding certification.
During the development of the equipment, materials and procedures, Miami Diver and the other network companies sent personnel to B+V Industrietechnik facility in Germany for training and certification in overhaul of Simplex-Seals by bonding.
On September 2, 2001, the new system was installed and tested on the 137,276-gt cruise vessel fitted with a pod propulsion system. A habitat was specially designed for the azipod propulsion system for the test using the same methodology as the conventional shaft habitat.
The tests were conducted as a precautionary operations by the cruise ship operator to ensure the capabilities of the new habitat and to established a time frame for installation, bonding of new seals, and removal Circle 31 on Reader Service Card www.maritimereporterinfo.com
time for ABB’s PTI/PTO system is ? ve years at management system, along with electrically powered machin- current fuel prices (far less for new fuels). Michael D. Chris- ery and an optimized hull and cargo design, the company’s two tensen, VP Global Sales, Dry Cargo Vessels at ABB, is seeing newbuild self-discha
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level of need, there has been FY22 U.S. federal dredging market compiled in Septem- a steady climb,” Gerhardt said. “On average the hopper ber 2023 by Michael Gerhardt, senior director of govern- dredging market, which has ? uctuated between $300 mil- ment affairs at Mike Hooks, LLC, 52 Jones Act dredg-
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and in the nearby East Australian Exercise Area. Austra- tion, as well as partners in academia and industry, were stake- lia’s Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Michael Noonan, noted that holders in these exercises. AW 22 was designed to help implement the Navy’s RAS-AI One of the important lessons learned during
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. rector of business development. SUNY Maritime’s New Operations Managers Murdaugh Kruger Alfultis to Retire at Two Ohio River Ports Rear Admiral Michael Alfultis will re- Ports of Indiana has ? lled two key tire in 2024 after nearly a decade as pres- leadership roles at its Ohio River ident of SUNY
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operate vada, the Paci? c Islands, and 148 Tribal Nations) EPA and on the rivers despite record low water conditions. It’s a USACE work together on BU. Michael Brogan, with the credit to the Corps’ proactive work to identify dredging Region 9 press of? ce, said “(EPA’s) top focus continues to needs and
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conductivity, a tendency to lack of grain structure found in wrought material. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author gratefully acknowledges the contributions of Michael May, Decisive Testing; Mike Gomper (Clint Precision Manufactur- ing); Reed Jackson (RJ Machine); Rob Klidy, Manager, Scripps Institution of Oceanography/UC
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means of quickly “? ghting back”. Maritime Cybersecurity, October 2022. The U.S. Coast Guard recently released the Maritime Cy- 2 Chris C. Demchak and Michael L. Thomas, War on the Rocks, October 15, bersecurity Assessment & Annex Guide (MCAAG) to help 2021, Can’t Sail Away From Cyber Attacks:‘Sea-Hacking’
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in 1831 to light up inven- needed to break through ice or against strong headwinds. However, despite these bene? ts, there are some key areas tor Michael Faraday’s smile. If only he could see how far that at- where conventional shaft generators fall short. This is where traction to magnets has come
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midship manifold. Future-Fuel-Ready Courage Majestic Fast Ferry Adds Enters Service on the Rhine Vessel Trio Copyright: Covestro Deutschland AG, Michael Rennertz Image courtesy Incat Crowther Following a successful initial loading operation and maid- en voyage on the river Rhine, Covestro and HGK Shipping
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GOVERNMENT SHIPBUILDING Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Michael Gilday to Huntington Ingalls Industries Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Miss., shipyard in January 2023 and toured several ships, including the ? rst Flight III guided missile destroyer, Jack H. Lucas (DDG 125). HII Ingalls Shipbuild
Surface Navy Association 35th Annual Sym- than it has in decades. The Navy wants two Virginia-class subs posium in Washington, Chief of Naval Operations Michael per year, but industry is only delivering at a rate of 1.2 a year. 18 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News • February 2023 MR #2 (18-33).indd
Transportation) saw the com- and Manhattan. A builder has yet to be announced. missioning of its third newbuild, Dorothy Day, in late 2022, joining SSG Michael H. Ollis, and Sandy Ground, Arthur Imperatore was delivered to NY Waterway from Yank Marine in 2022. which joined the ? eet earlier in the year
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