TANKER TECHNOLOGY
VISION
Touted for safety-f double hull tankers nonetheless present technical challenges on many fronts
By David Tinsley, technical editor
and longitudinals.
Adoption of the Apple Slot system would mean
about 25 percent fewer structural members
compared with a conventional double-hulled
VLCC of two million barrels or 280,000 dwt car-
rying capacity.
Approved by leading classification societies,
the simplified structural design thereby offers
savings in materials and workhour levels, facil-
itating higher levels of factory automation. In
addition, by challenging the axiom that stiffen-
ers are necessary, through the use of alterna-
tive compensatory measures, the designers
have addressed the problem of stress concen-
trations at the stiffener/longitudinal connec-
tions associated with conventional arrange-
ments.
Danish shipbuilder Odense has already used
a slot method for the connections between lon-
gitudinals and the transverse structure in AP
Moller's E-type, 300,000-dwt, double-hulled
crude carriers. The overall design of the Eleo
Maersk series is widely acknowledged as repre-
sentative of an important advance in VLCC
technology.
Symmetrical T-beams used as the longitudi-
nal elements were slotted through the trans-
verse members in both the inner and outer
hulls, without the need for collars, as typically
used in VLCC construction. Longitudinals
were cut and fabricated by the yard to toler-
ances of plus or minus .9 mm in conjunction
with the new form of structural connection,
achieving high build precision and improve-
ments in the quality of welding.
The method results in less welding than
would have been entailed in the conven-
tional approach to a double-hull
VLCC, and enabled robotization
to be applied to critical weld-
ings to the benefit of con-
sistency and accura-
cy-
The preci-
sion engi-
neer-
ing principles applied to the Eleo Maersk class,
commissioned into AP Moller's Maersk Tankers
division between 1993 and 1995, meant that
the number of components in the structure was
20 percent fewer than other designs, with resul-
tant savings in fitting and welding. The design
and build method, along with the adoption of
heavier scantlings in certain areas of the bot-
tom structure, is said to have made for a
fatigue-resistant hull.
Three Suezmax crude carriers ordered by
Samsung Heavy Industries by Nordic American
Tanker Shipping for duty with the BP Shipping
fleet will be repositories for the U.K. operator's
latest thinking in shipmanagement techniques,
as expressed in shipboard monitoring, mainte-
nance and communication systems. The layout
of the 150,000-dwt class is of added interest for
the embodiment of a simple but innovative
method of improved bunker tank protection.
The IMO legislation adopted internationally
in 1992 that imposed double hulls on the tanker
industry only requires a double bottom and
double sides in way of the cargo sec-
tion. BP, though, was concerned
with the pollution hazard that
could be presented if the fuel oil
tanks in the aftship
were to be
breached in a
collision. It
has
Double hull tankers inherently have greater
structural complexity, and thus increased steel
input, welding and coating requirements, rela-
tive to their single-hulled predecessors.
Although the concept is not new, having been
employed in product tankers, OBO carriers and
membrane-type LNG carriers built prior to the
legislation initiatives of the 1990s, the adoption
of such configurations for large oil tankers is a
steep change for operators, designers and ship-
yards.
Long in the forefront in the application of
shipyard automation techniques — one mile-
stone having been its commissioning of a weld-
ing robot at the start of the 1980s — Hitachi
Zosen has developed a comprehensive system
based on computer integrated manufacturing
principles, for the production of crude carriers
and other vessel types.
Defined by Hitachi as computer integrated
management (CIM), the arrangements applied
at its showcase Ariake yard break new ground
by integrating product information, melding
computer aided engineering (CAE), CAD, CAM,
factory automation (FA) and production plan-
ning and management into a comprehensive
production management system.
The new, integrated system links with the
company's in-house developed Hicadec-H and
Hicadec-P CAD systems for hull and piping
design. Among its many attributes, it enables
users to determine hull structure interaction,
block weights and centers of gravity, assembly
sequences for blocks, shop floor planning and
workhour estimates. Through its simulation
capabilities, CIM facilitates calculations
regarding optimum arrangements for lifting
and turning blocks.
CIM should progressively enhance productivi-
ty across a broad front, enabling Hitachi to
retain the kind of competitiveness which has
recently enabled the company to land consecu-
tive contracts from Golden Ocean Group of
Taiwan, Bermuda and the U.K. for a series of
310,000-dwt, double hull tankers. The VLCCs
are due to be handed over in 1998 and 1999.
Innovative thinking spurred by the need to
retain market competitiveness is encapsulated
in Kawasaki Heavy Industries' Apple Slot
design concept. The new structural
design approach dispenses with con-
ventional stiffeners in the trans-
verse webs, through the use of
apple-shaped slots at the
connections between webs
Germany's Lindenau built this environ-
mentally friendly double-hulled tanker.
The general arrangement drawings of
the ship can be found on page 41.
38
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