Vancouver Shipyards Moves 457-Foot Ferry
To Launching Position On Film Of Water
The 3,500-ton ferry, Queen of Alberni, is shown being positioned on launching
ways by using the Aero-Caster System, developed by Aero-Go, Inc.
In February, shipbuilders and
drill-rig manufacturers from
several countries gathered at
Vancouver Shipyards, North Van-
couver, British Columbia, Can-
ada, to watch a 7,000,000-pound
ship transferred to launching
position on a film of water
5/1000 of an inch thick. It was
the heaviest weight ever to be
moved by the newly developed
fluid-film method. A week later,
the ferry was launched.
The vessel is a trailer ferry,
457 feet long and 89 feet in beam,
one of three of the same hull size
constructed for the British Co-
lumbia Government Ferry Sys-
tem. The almost completed ferry
weighed 3,500 tons when it slid
along its smooth, level concrete
pad to launching position. Pulling
power was supplied by a con-
verted log skidder exerting ap-
proximately 7,000 pounds of force
or about one pound of force for
every 1,000 pounds of ship's
weight. So frictionless is this
transfer system that precautions
must be taken to hold ships' hulls
against forces exerted by sudden
gusts of wind.
The transfer operation and the
launching mark the culmination
of a $4.5-million expansion pro-
gram for Vancouver Shipyards
from its planning stage in 1974.
The yard's fluid-film transfer op-
eration takes place on smooth con-
crete runways forming a grid in
the construction area. The system
recently developed by Aero-Go,
Inc. of Seattle, Wash., is designed
to move large units by use of a
series of 40-ton-capacity, 4-foot-
diameter waterfilm bearings. The
bearings are essentially inflatable
"doughnuts" manufactured of
flexible nylon-neoprene and hypa-
lon materials. When inflated with
water at a pressure of 50 pounds
per square inch, each bearing
lifts 40 tons. The total thrust
exerted by all the bearings raises
the load approximately two inches.
At this point, water seeps from
a contained supply in the center
of the "doughnuts" onto the level
concrete runway. The ship's hull,
mounted in its wooden cradle, is
now free-floating on a paper-thin
film of water, and is ready to be
transferred.
The ferry hull was constructed
in seven different sections or mod-
ules, each of which was trans-
ferred to join the others by
means of the fluid film system.
President of Vancouver Ship-
yards, Allen Fowlis, expressed
satisfaction with the new ship-
yard arrangements: "The fluid-
film transfer system and our
side-launching facility make it
possible to compete effectively
with shipbuilders anywhere in
the Pacific Northwest," he said.
"In two years we have doubled
our shipbuilding facilities, as well
as adding a capacity to build
ships up to 500 feet in length and
100 feet in beam."
He commented in particular on
the flexibility of the construction
system. "We have avoided com-
mitting ourselves to a more rigid
system such as graving dock and
end-launching facilities," Mr.
Fowlis said. "What we have now
is something close to an assembly-
line system. We can build ships'
modules under cover, move them
into desired positions around one
another, past one another, or
joined to one another."
Aero-Caster waterfilm load module used
by Vancouver Shipyards is 4 feet square,
3 inches thick, and weighs 170 pounds.
One of the Aero-Casters in position and
under water pressure is shown between
concrete runway and ship cradle.
He said that if supply prob-
lems delayed the construction of
one vessel, it could be moved
aside to make way for other con-
struction. The resulting savings
in time and money are substan-
tial, and efficiency is substantially
improved.
The vessel is among the largest
double-ended ferries in the world
and is the largest vessel ever con-
structed by Vancouver Shipyards.
Its engines develop 11,000 shp
and will provide a service speed
of 20 knots. It has a passenger
capacity of 350 and can carry
either 58 forty-foot trailers or
145 automobiles. Soon to be com-
missioned by the provincial gov-
ernment, the ferry will go into
service between Vancouver and
Vancouver Island.
The Aero-CasterĀ® System is
the exclusive development of
Aero-Go, Inc., 5800 Corson Ave-
nue South, Seattle, Wash. 98108,
with international sales of both
water- and air-inflatable handling
products. Floating heavy loads on
fluid-film systems so nearly elim-
inates the friction under them
that only a gentle one-pound push
for every 1,000 pounds of load
weight is needed to move them in
any direction and speed desired.
To move varying section sizes
and weights, the proper number
of Aero-Casters are used. They
are positioned under loads in rec-
tangular arrangements for load
balancing. The lift capacity of a
fluid-film system is unlimited.
Flow control valves at each Aero-
Caster automatically gage the
water flow needed by the caster
to lift the load weight above it.
Once the Aero-Casters are in
position, there is no need to man-
ually adjust pressures to move a
hull unit as its weight changes
during completion.
Todd Shipyards Corporation's
Seattle yard was the first ship-
yard in the world to use an Aero-
Caster transfer system to build
vessels in the 1,000-ton range.
Their Aero-Caster system pro-
vides the capability of easily
transferring ship subassemblies
from rail and wheel bogies onto
waterfilm. It also includes a
waterfilm turntable for 90-degree
rotation of ship assemblies weigh-
ing up to 500 tons. Todd has had
as many as four 228-foot-long by
44-foot-wide ships side-by-side at
one time parallel to their side-
launchways moved into position
on waterfilm.
Since December 1974, Brown &
Root, Inc. in Houston, Texas, has
been using an Aero-Go waterfilm
pallet system to move offshore
oil-drilling platform decks. Weigh-
ing up to 2,000 tons, steel decks
are floated from inside their fab-
rication building on air film and
throughout their outside yard and
onto barges on waterfilm. Move
distance is approximately 500
feet. Deck sizes are typically 60
feet high by 72 feet wide by 163
feet long. Two fluid-film pallets
are inserted in recessed feet un-
der each of the deck's eight co-
lumnar legs.
Several foreign yards are using
Aero-Go systems to move heavy
equipment within shops and to
position engines. At Sasebo Heavy
Industries, Japan, Aero-Casters
are inverted atop pedestals to
float steel deck-plate assemblies
above them to join them for
welding. Aboard ship, air film is
used to install prefabricated cab-
ins and auxiliary equipment.
Aero-Go introduced the Aero-
Caster air-film device in 1967 and
the waterfilm Aero-Caster in 1971.
Systems are now in use in hun-
dreds of diverse industries world-
wide, ranging from total in-plant
air-film production-conveying
lines to the shock-free movement
of 1,000-pound sensitive elec-
tronics.
April 1, 1976 23
Digital Wave Publishing