SHIP & BOATBUILDING TECHNOLOGY
Voyager — A Technologically
Advanced Pilot Boat
The Hyundai Utopia, Korea's first LNG carrier, was loaded at Korea's Pyung-Taek LNG Terminal for g;
trials.
Hyundai Delivers
Korea's First LNG Ship
Korea's first-ever liquefied natu-
ral gas (LNG) ship was delivered in
June from Hyundai Heavy
Industries's (HHI) Ulsan yard. The
125,000-cu.-m., 900-ft. (274-m)
Moss-type ship, named Hyundai
Utopia, will be put into service by
her domestic owner, Hyundai Mer-
chant Marine Co., Ltd. (HMMC) to
transport one million tons of Indo-
nesian LNG per year.
TheHyundai Utopia, 155ft. (47.2
m) wide, 87 ft. (26.5 m) deep with a
design draft of 36 ft. (10.95 m), is the
first of three identical ships built by
HHI for Korea GAS Corporation's
(KGC) long-term LNG import plan.
The second ship (Y.K. Sovereign),
due for delivery in March 1995 to
Yukong Line Ltd., another domes-
tic owner, was launched on Decem-
ber 22 of last year. Construction of
the cargo tanks for the third ship,
scheduled for delivery to HMMC in
December 1996, commenced in
June. Hyundai Utopia was
launched in February 1993 with
sea trials completed in November of
the same year.
Cargo Containment/Handling
Hyundai Utopia has a flying pas-
sage on the tank covers, which re-
portedly gives easy access to the
compressor room and to the upper
deck for easy survey, inspection and
maintenance of the cargo piping
and the electric cable.
The cargo containment system is
of the Moss Rosenberg concept,
which consists basically of a single
wall and an insulated spherical tank
supported by a vertical skirt. Cargo
loading is performed by shore pump
facilities after the cargo tank is
cooled down. Generated vapor dur-
ing loading is returned to shore by
using high-duty, on-board compres-
sors. During a loaded voyage, gen-
erated boil-off gas is heated up and
delivered to the main boilers as fuel
gas by low-duty compressors and a
boil-off gas heater. The cargo is dis
charged by two electric motor-drive
submerged pumps with a capacity (
l,400-cu.-m. per hour on the bottoi
of each cargo tank, and supplemer
gas is received from shore durin
discharging operation to maintai
cargo tank pressure. The ship's prei
sure discharge system pressurize
one cargo tank and shifts cargo 1
the other tank, in case both pump
in a single tank fail at once.
Vessel Control
The Hyundai Utopia's Centra
ized Administration and Contri
Center (CACC), situated just belo'
the wheelhouse, is arranged on tb
accommodation deck and allows f(
centralized control of loading, dii
charging, ballasting, deballastin
and continuous monitoring and coi
trol of the cargo handling system. ]
features an integrated automatio
system; a shipboard managemei
system; a CACC console, or persoi
machine interface-style operatio
panel; communication system; ope
ating lever of the main engine, etc
and a custody transfer system.
Propulsion
Main propulsion machinery coi
sists of a marine steam turbine dri1
ing a single propeller through doub
reduction gears and two sets of mai
boilers of the gas/oil dual burnir
type. The machinery is remote'
controlled from the wheelhouse ar
CACC. Unattended operation of tl
main engine is possible.
Equipped with four independei
spherical tanks 131.2 ft. (40 m) i
diameter, the ship has a lowere
mooring deck, transom stern ar
single screw propeller driven direct
by a steam turbine. In the forwai
part, a fore peak water ballast tan]
a bowthruster room and a void a]
arranged. For more information,
Circle 35 on Reader Service Card
by Carol Fulford & Andy Smith
Voyager, the latest vessel to en-
ter service with the Dutch Pilotage
Organization, is the result of
an in-depth investigation into
long-established operating
practices by the pilots them-
selves and close cooperation
between a Dutch boat builder
and a U.K.-based naval ar-
chitect. By breaking with
tradition, an innovative and
effective pilot boat has been
developed.
Dutch pilots operate in
extremely difficult conditions.
A majority of The Nether-
lands' ports, including the
largest (Rotterdam) are at the
head of the huge tidal deltas formed
as the arterial Rhine, Maas and
Schelde rivers — and a host of
smaller tributaries — meet the
North Sea. Unprotected from the
prevailing westerlies, navigation is
made challenging not only by the
geography and meteorology, but also
by the extraordinarily heavy traffic.
To cope with these exacting con-
ditions, five pilot cutters are kept on
permanent station offshore (two oth-
ers are available in reserve), pilot
transfer being effected by small
daughter craft. Although many of
these transfer tenders have been
replaced over the last few years by
sophisticated 23-ft. (7-m) glass fi-
ber, waterjet-propelled fast RIB
look-alike boats, the operation is
still perilous, even in moderate seas.
To study better methods of opera-
tion, Loodswezen Nederland BV, the
umbrella organization of which the
600 registered pilots are sharehold-
ers, formed a project group in Octo-
ber 1990. Influenced by the success
of the latest breed of high speed
Dutch lifeboats, the group eventu-
ally concluded that many problems
would be solved by a 28-knot
The new Voyager class of pilot vessels incorpo-
rates a number of technological innovations
which will help the Dutch Pilotage Organization
handle adverse conditions encountered in the
North Sea area.
waterjet-driven vessel capable of
carrying 12 pilots. Furthermore,
the vessel would need to have good
seakeeping qualities in wind force 8
and sea state 6, be able to maintain
20 knots in 6.5-ft. (2-m) waves and
meet the requirements of the Neth-
erlands Shipping Directorate for
operations up to 30 miles off the
coast.
High speeds to get from base to
the ship quickly would obviate the
need to keep a vessel permanently
on station. Twin waterjets were
deemed able to provide that extra
level of maneuverability to facili-
tate safer boarding. The pilots' own
experience showed that once a
helmsman had perfected the art, a
waterjet-propelled boat could be
handled with greater precision than
conventionally-screwed craft.
But could such a demanding
specification be met? A preliminary
design was produced by the pilots'
own technical department and
model tank tested. As a result of
these tests the original design was
modified to give an increased length
overall of 59 ft. (18 m), a waterline
length of 49.2 ft. (15 m) while the
beam was slightly reduced. The
wheelhouse was also moved further
aft, in order to reduce vertical accel-
(Continued on page 28)
26 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News
Digital Wave Publishing