Journal is indexed in following databases:



2023 Journal Impact Factor - 0.7
2023 CiteScore - 1.4



HomePage
 




 


 

ISSN 2083-6473
ISSN 2083-6481 (electronic version)
 

 

 

Editor-in-Chief

Associate Editor
Prof. Tomasz Neumann
 

Published by
TransNav, Faculty of Navigation
Gdynia Maritime University
3, John Paul II Avenue
81-345 Gdynia, POLAND
www http://www.transnav.eu
e-mail transnav@umg.edu.pl
Spring-loaded Winch Band Brakes as Tools to Improve Safety During Mooring Operations on Ships
ABSTRACT: Some recent accident reports involving large vessels in mooring operations or breaking away from their moorings conclude that brakes of mooring winches do not render before line parts. As the potential loss of life is high, the utmost attention on-board must be paid to minimise this inherent risk. When the load on the mooring lines becomes overloaded beyond the pre-set levels, mooring winches band brakes have the safety function of rendering and allowing the line to shed this load before its potential breaking and the subsequent snap-back. As a preventive measure against breaking, the pre-set level, known as Brake Holding Capacity (BHC), must be below the Minimum Breaking Load (MBL) of the line. In this paper, the authors analyse concerns that can arise from those with conventional screw manually-applied band brakes regarding their BHC reliability. Thus, in order to improve safety, the advantages of the spring-applied band brakes with manual setting and release or with hydraulic release are highlighted. Finally, the paper shows a typical procedure using a hydraulic jack for brake testing the winch of a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) ship to fix their BHC in order to hold 60% of the MBL of the mooring line.
REFERENCES
ATSB (2006). Australian Transport Safety Bureau Marine Occurrence Investigation nº 232: “Creciente” Mooring accident report. https://www.atsb.gov.au/media/24295/mair232_001.pdf
Clark, I. C. (2009). Mooring and Anchoring Vol 1. Principles and Practice. The Nautical Institute
DMAIB (2014a) Danish Maritime Accident Investigation Board: “Pachuca” Mooring accident report. https://dmaib.com/reports/?query=Pachuca
DMAIB (2014b). Danish Maritime Accident Investigation Board: “Torm Republican” Mooring accident report. https://dmaib.com/reports/?query= Torm+Republican
ISGOTT (2006). International Safety Guide for Oil Tankers and Terminals (5th edn). Witherby & Co Ltd.
ISO (2012). ISO 3730:2012 Shipbuilding and marine structures - Mooring winches.
ISO (2017). ISO 7825:2017 Shipbuilding - Deck machinery - General requirements.
MAIB (2001). Marine Accident Investigation Branch report 1/2001: “Alfa Britannia” Mooring accident report. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/547c7162e5274a428d00010d/alfa-britannia.pdf
NTSB (2014). National Transportation Safety Board Accident NTSB/MAB-14/21: “Harbour Feature” Mooring accident report. https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/ AccidentReports/Reports/MAB1421.pdf
OCIMF (2018). Mooring Equipment Guidelines (MEG4) (4th edn). Witherby Publishing Group Ltd.
OCIMF (2019). Effective Mooring (4th edn). Witherby Publishing Group Ltd.
Schnorr Corp. (2003). Handbook for Disc Springs. https://schnorr.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Schnorr-Engineering-Design-Handbook.pdf
Søren Bøge, P. (2013). Mooring-Do it Safely. A guide to prevent accidents while mooring (Danish Maritime Authority). Seahealth Denmark.
Steamship Mutual (2015). Risk Alert: Mooring winch brake holding capacity. Steamship Mutual, London. https://www.steamshipmutual.com
UK P&I (2016). Risk Focus: Consolidated 2016. Moorings, pp. 17-26 and APPENDIX “Understanding mooring incidents”, pp. 27-34. https://www.ukpandi.com
Vervloesem, W. (2009). Mooring and Anchoring Vol. 2. Inspection and Maintenance. The Nautical Institute.
Citation note:
Iglesias-Baniela S., Pérez-Canosa J.M., Cid-Bacorelle D.: Spring-loaded Winch Band Brakes as Tools to Improve Safety During Mooring Operations on Ships. TransNav, the International Journal on Marine Navigation and Safety of Sea Transportation, Vol. 14, No. 3, doi:10.12716/1001.14.03.25, pp. 711-719, 2020

File downloaded 1452 times








Important: TransNav.eu cookie usage
The TransNav.eu website uses certain cookies. A cookie is a text-only string of information that the TransNav.EU website transfers to the cookie file of the browser on your computer. Cookies allow the TransNav.eu website to perform properly and remember your browsing history. Cookies also help a website to arrange content to match your preferred interests more quickly. Cookies alone cannot be used to identify you.
Akceptuję pliki cookies z tej strony