6 Common Mooring Methods Used For Ships
6 Common Mooring Methods Used For Ships
6 Common Mooring Methods Used For Ships
For Ships
Each vessel has been designed with mooring arrangements such that ropes and wires
of recommended strength can help it moor safely alongside a berth, floating platform,
buoy or a jetty. Fundamentally a vessel has to be positioned alongside a jetty or a berth,
between mooring buoys, to a mooring buoy, to another ship or barge and then made
fast using her own anchors, mooring lines or shore lines.
While Moored alongside a fixed or floating jetty or a sea berth there are various forces action on
the vessel such as wind, current, tide, wave action, swell, surging induced due to passing ships
and trim of the vessel. The spring, breast and head lines prevent vessel’s movement against the
action of these forces. The directional effect of these need not be unidirectional. It can be multi-
directional or at various angles to the vessel. The resultant direction of these forces often
changes with change in direction of onshore/offshore winds or tidal streams, currents upriver
and down streams. Thus a combination of breast ropes, head ropes and spring ropes is the
best method to counter these forces and keep the vessel safely alongside.
Often mixed moorings are observed as some terminal based on local conditions and
experiences require vessels to use more lines than they are designed for . Thus the
method in which wires in conjunction with soft ropes with different SWL and construction
are used as well is termed as Mixed mooring. The simplified resultant of these forces
would tend to move a vessel in transverse or longitudinal direction with respect to the
jetty. Thus spring lines prevent the longitudinal motion and the breast lines check the
transverse motion.
It is always preferred to avoid mixed moorings due to variable loads and elasticity of
various kind of ropes and wires which lead to different strain or weight on the lines. This
can result in excessive loads on some lines than others and eventually part them
putting the vessel in danger. However, for safety reasons or in a desperate situation
shipmasters or pilots may have to resort to mixed moorings.
Vessels sometimes also use the seaward anchor in conjunction with mooring
lines to haul the vessel out of jetty while casting off or while making fast the
vessel alongside use the seaward anchor to assist the control of the rate of
lateral movement towards the berth. This manoeuvre can be carried out with or
without the assistance of tugs.
Standing Mooring : This is practiced during cross winds. As the vessel is stopped the
port anchor is let go and with the tide around 9 shackles are paid out. The starboard
anchor is let go and simultaneously port anchor heaved on. Thus the port anchor is kept
on 4 shackles being generally the flood anchor and starboard on five as it is the ebb
anchor. This vessel takes longer duration and provides less control over the vessel .
The load on windlass is more as compared to running moor.