Naval Architecture
Naval Architecture
Naval Architecture
Transversally stiffened
This structure is now virtually obsolete and may not be used on hulls greater than 120m
in length
The hull requires a plate floor every 3.05m and a frame every 1m. Hence there are 3
frames for every plate floor. The two frames are attached to the floor angle iron
transverse.
For the aft framing of the aft peak tank or the for'd framing of the for'd collision bulkhead
the maximum framing pitch is 0.61m. Also for the for'd 0.2l of the ship the maximum
spacing of the frame is 700mm (this helps to prevent damage due to slamming).
Cast construction
Welded construction
Engine Seating
Flat Bed Plate
There are transverse plate floors at each frame. The thickness of the engine seating is
governed by the power, weight,and length of th eunit
This method has proved unreliable and the more modern practice is to weld lugs on the
bedplate and have brackets and fitted chocks
Bedplate location
The holding down arrangement should be arranged to be above any bilge water level to
allow for easy access and inspection
Where the thrust is taken in the gearbox casing it is necessary then to have the mounts for
the casing as close as possible to the centreline of the shaft so as to ensure little or no
bending moment on the casing. The mountings should be suitably extended in a similar
fashion to the thrust block arrangement shown above
Anchoring equipment
The anchoring equipment fitted to the majority of vessels consists of two matched units,
offering a degree of redundancy.
These units consists of an anchor, chain (or for smaller vessels wire), a gypsum or chain
lifter wheel, brake, lift motor and various chain stopper arrangements.
When not in he use the chain is stowed in a chain locker, systems fitted with wire are
stowed on a drum in the same way as winches.
Chain locker
A false bottom is fitted to the chain locker consisting of a perforated plate. This allows
water and mud to be removed from the space. The end of the chain is attached to the hull
by a quick release mechanism known as the 'bitter end'.
The strength of the 'Bitter End' fixing arrangement for a moderately large vessel is in the
region of 6 Н tons, this will not be sufficient to prevent a run away unbraked chain. The
arrangement must be easily accessible.
The proof load for the windlass (the load the windlass must withstand without being
pulled from the deck) is given by;
This will prove that it is strong enough. It must also be as strong as the braking load on
the cable.
The windlass must be capable of pulling the anchor from a depth of 25% of the total
cable carried, i.e. 50% of the length of chain on one side
Motive force
May be steam, electrical, hydraulic or even engine driven although the latter is rare. A
gear box arrangement, heavy tooth pitch on final drive, are fitted
Brake
Generally consists of ferodo lined half cylinder steel bands which are joined by a pivot
point at the rear. The bands are closed and opened by the action of a threaded brake
wheel spindle acting on the fixings at the front of the band ends
Hawser
The chain is led overboard by a strengthened and reinforced pipe called a Hawser
One of the reasons for bow flare is to allow the anchor and chain to lie well clear of the
hull when in use, preventing damage.
Chain stopper
Chain
End pull will cause the link to collapse in. This repeated many times will lead to fatigue
failure. Hence, stud linked chain is insisted upon
Here a stud is welded on one side in the link to brace it against deformation. An
alternative to this albeit in limited use is shown below.
Chain sizing
Each vessel is given an equipment number which is calculated with use of a formula and
tkaens into account the vessels size, underwater area and sail area. From this a 'look-up'
table may be used to give an appropriate size of cable. The diameter of the chain may be
read from this table and differs depending on the grade of steel. This grade of steel varies
from U1 ( mild steel), U2 (Special Steel) to U3 (extra special steel).
The size of cable that is to be used is found by the use of a formula which is
where
D = Displacement
B = beam
h = Freeboard + height of deckhouses over B/4 wide
A = Transverse area including deckhouses over B/4 wide
Connecting chain and components
To join two sections of chain a 'kenter' (don't quote me on the name) shackle is used. This
consists of two half sections and removable bridge all held together by a tapered pin. This
arrangement works remarkably well and can be found on all sizes of chain.
During docking the anchor chain is lowered from the chain locker to the dock bottom and
laid out for inspection.
This allows the inspecion of the chain for broken or lost chain studs. A random set of
links are measured from each shackle length ( Shackle refers to a standard length-
nominally 27.5m, of chain joined to other shackle lengths by a splitable link). There is an
allowable wear limit allowed nominally 12%. The link showed below has wear in excess
of this and the shackle length required replacement.
Anchor designs
All of the anchors shown below are of the 'flipper' type. Regulations allows these to be
smaller than standard types
Below is an anchor of typical design seen in many small to medium sized tankers
Below is a high grip anchor typical of that used for four mointing mooring of vessels
required to fix their positions accurately
This anchor weighs about 20 tonnes without attachments. The chain link in comparison
the anchor size probably indicates this came from a jack up barge. For vessels the holding
comes not only from the anchor but the weight and lay of the anchor chain
Again the chain link in comparison the anchor size probably indicates this came from a
jack up barge
Freeboard
Freeboard is the distance between the waterline and the freeboard deck at mid length. The
freeboard deck is the uppermost continuous deck which has means of closing all
openings. Rules allow different freeboards for different ships in relation to their
construction and cargo they carry. There are two types of ship;
For type A ships cargo tanks must only have small openings which can be effectively
sealed
Type B ships must have sufficient bulkheads and sealing arrangements for openings, but
such openings e.g. hatches can be large
The freeboard allowed will be smaller for the type A ship compared to the type B ship of
similar length because of the type of cargo carried and means of access for water. Type B
ships classed as B-60 may have their freeboard reduced by 60% of that required for a
normal B-100 ship provided that its method of construction approaches that of the type A
ship. This type exists with OBO's.
Stern Frame
A stern frame may be cast or fabricated and its shape is influenced by the type of rudder
being used and the profile of the stern. Sternframes also differ between twin and single
screw ships, the single screw sternframe having a boss for the propeller shaft. Adequate
clearance is essential between propeller blade tips and sternframe in order to minimise
the risk of vibration. As blades rotate water immediately ahead of the blades is
compressed and at the blade tips this compression can be transmitted to the hull in the
form of a series of pulses which set up vibration. Adequate clearance is necessary or
alternatively constant clearance, this being provided with ducted propellers such as the
Kort nozzle. A rotating propeller exerts a varying force on the sternframe boss and this
can result in the transmission of vibration. Rigid construction is necessary to avoid this.
The stern post, of substantial section, is carried up inside the hull and opened into a palm
end which connects to a floor plate, This stern post is often referred to as the vibration
post as its aim is to impart rigidity and so minimise the risk of vibration. Side plating is
generally provided with a Rabbet or recess in order that the plating may be fitted flush.
The after most keel plate which connects with this region the structure od the ship serves
no useful purpose and it is known as the 'deadwood'. This may be removed without ill
effect on stability or performance and some sternframes are designed such that the
deadwood is not present.
Asymmetric hull
Another design involves the use of design. The water is directed in the same direction as
the blade rotation and hence the shock loading occurring when the blade hits relatively
still water is removed
An overlap can be arranged to reduce the pressure fluctuations and change the forcing
frequency
Bulkheads
There are three basic types of bulkhead, watertight, non watertight and tank.
The stern tube must be enclosed in a watertight compartment formed by the stern frame
and the after peak bulkhead which may terminate at the first continuous deck above the
waterline. The engineroom must be contained between two watertight bulkheads one of
which may be the after peak bulkhead.
Each main hold watertight bulkhead must extend to the uppermost continuous deck
unless the freeboard is measured from the second deck in which case the bulkhead can
extend to the second deck.
A water tight bulkhead is formed from plates attached to the shell, deck and tank top by
means of welding. The bulkheads are designed to withstand a full head water pressure
and because of this the thickness of the plating at the bottom of the bulkhead may be
greater than that at the top. Vertical stiffeners are positioned 760mm apart except were
corrugated bulkheads are used.
Watertight bulkheads must be tested with a hose at a pressure of 200 Kn/m2 . The test
being carried out from the side on which the stiffeners are fitted and the bulkhead must
remain watertight.
Water tight bulkheads which are penetrated by pipes, cables etc. must be provided with
suitable glands which prevent the passage of water.
To allow the passage for personnel water tight doors are fitted , openings must be cut
only were essential and they should be as small as possible. 1.4m high, 0.7m wide being
the usual. Doors should be of mild steel or cast steel, and they may be arranged to close
vertically or horizontally.
The closing action must be positive i.e. it must not rely on gravity. Hinged water tight
doors may be allowed in passenger ships and in watertight bulkheads above decks which
are placed 2.2m or more above the waterline. Similar doors may be fitted in weather
decks openings in cargo ships.
Hinged water tight doors consist of a heavy section door which when closed seals on a
resilient packing mounted in channel bar welded to the door frame.
The door is held firmly in the door frame when closed by the dogging arrangements
shown which allow the doors to be opened from either side.Normally six of these dogs
are spread equally around the periphery.
In the event of fire or flooding, operation of switches from bridge/fire control area sends
a signal to an oil diverter valve. Oil from a pressurised hydraulic system is sent to a ram
moving the door.
The door may also be operated locally by a manual diverter valve. In addition, in the
event of loss of system pressure the door may be operated by a local manual hand pump
remote door position indicators are fitted as well as were appropriate alarms to indicate
operation.
Bulkhead definitions
Class A
Class B
o Prevent passage of flame for first half hour of standard fire test
o Insulated so average exposed side temperature does not rise more than
139oC above original and no single point rises more than 225oC above
originalThe time the bulkhead complies with this governs its class
B-15 15Min
B-0 0Min
o Constructed of non-combustible material and all materials entering the
construction are similarly non-combustible except where permitted
Class C
Main vertical zones Divided by Class A bulkheads and not exceeding 40m in length
Ship Nomenclature
Load Line Length(m)- taken as 96 per cent of the total length on a waterline at 85 per
cent of the least moulded depth measured from the top of the keel, or as the length from
the fore side of the stern to the axis of the rudder stock on that waterline, if that is greater.
In ships designed with a rake of keel, the waterline on which this length is measured is to
be parallel to the designed waterline. The length is to be measured in metres.
The ship�s Draught D is the vertical distance from the waterline to that point of the hull
which is deepest in the water The foremost draught DF and aft most draught DA are
normally the same when the ship is in the loaded condition.
The Scantling Draught is the ships design draught and is equal to the Summer Load
Line draught.
Displacement
This is the equivalent mass of sea water (sg = 1.025) displaced by the hull. It is therefore
equal to the Total weight of the vessel
Deadweight
Lightweight
Lightweight is the displacement of a ship in tonnes without cargo, fuel, lubricating oil,
ballast water, fresh water and feedwater in tanks, consumable stores, and passengers and
crew and their effects.
Thus
DISPLACEMENT = DEADWEIGHT + LIGHTWEIGHT
This is a volume measurement where one Register Ton is equivalent to 2.83 m3 and
express the total moulded internal size of the vessel and are used for the calculation of
harbour and canal dues. It can be found on the International Tonnage Certificate each
vessel must hold
After body The portion of the hull abaft the midship section.
Entrance The immersed portion of the hull forward of the section of greatest immersed
area (not necessarily amidships) or forward of the parallel midbody.
Run The immersed portion of the hull aft of the section of greatest immersed area or aft
of the parallel midbody.
Deadrise The departure of the bottom from a transverse horizontal line measured from
the baseline at the molded breadth line. Deadrise is also called rise of floor or rise of
bottom. Deadrise is an indicator of the ship�s form; fullbodied ships, such as cargo
ships and tankers, have little or no deadrise, while fine-lined ships have much greater
deadrise along with a large bilge radius. Where there is rise of floor, the line of the
bottom commonly intersects the baseline some distance from the centerline, producing a
small horizontal portion of the bottom on each side of the keel. The horizontal region of
the bottom is called flat of keel, or flat of bottom. While any section of the ship can have
deadrise, tabulated deadrise is normally taken at the midships section.
Chine The line or knuckle formed by the intersection of two relatively flat hull surfaces,
continuous over a significant length of the hull. In hard chines, the intersection forms a
sharp angle; in soft chines, the connection is rounded.
Bilge radius The outline of the midships section of very full ships is very nearly a
rectangle with its lower corners rounded. The lower corners are called the bilges and the
shape is often circular. The radius of the circular arc is called the bilge radius or turn of
the bilge. The turn of the bilge may be described as hard or easy depending on the radius
of curvature. If the shape of the bilge follows some curve other than a circle, the radius of
curvature of the bilge will increase as it approaches the straight plating of the side and
bottom. Small, high-speed or planing hulls often do not have a rounded bilge. In these
craft, the side and bottom are joined in a chine.
Tumblehome The inward fall of side plating from the vertical as it extends upward
towards the deck edge. Tumblehome is measured horizontally from the molded breadth
line at the deck edge. Tumblehome was a usual feature in sailing ships and many ships
built before 1940. Because it is more expensive to construct a hull with tumblehome, this
feature is not usually incorporated in modern merchant ship design, unless required by
operating conditions or service (tugs and icebreaking vessels, for example). Destroyers
and other high-speed combatants are often built with some tumblehome in their mid and
after sections to save topside weight.
Flare The outward curvature of the hull surface above the waterline, i.e., the opposite of
tumblehome. Flared sections cause a commensurately larger increase in local buoyancy
than unflared sections when immersed. Flaring bows are often fitted to help keep the
forward decks dry and to prevent "nose-diving" in head seas.
Camber The convex upwards curve of a deck. Also called round up, round down, or
round of beam. In section, the camber shape may be parabolic or consist of several
straight line segments. Camber is usually given as the height of the deck on the centerline
amidships above a horizontal line connecting port and starboard deck edges. Standard
camber is about one-fiftieth of the beam. Camber diminishes towards the ends of the ship
as the beam decreases. The principal use of camber is to ensure good drainage in calm
seas or in port, although camber does slightly increase righting arms at large angles of
inclination (after the deck edge is immersed). Not all ships have cambered decks; ships
with cambered weather decks and flat internal decks are not uncommon.
Sheer The rise of a deck above the horizontal measured as the height of the deck above a
line parallel to the baseline tangent to the deck at its lowest point. In older ships, the deck
side line often followed a parabolic profile and sheer was given as its value at the forward
and after perpendiculars. Standard sheer was given by: where sheer is measured in inches
and L is the length between perpendiculars in feet. Actual sheer often varied considerably
from
sheer forward = 0.2L + 20
sheer aft = 0.1L + 10
these standard values; the deck side profile was not always parabolic, the lowest point of
the upper deck was usually at about 0.6L, and the values of sheer forward and aft were
varied to suit the particular design. Many modern ships are built without sheer; in some,
the decks are flat for some distance fore and aft of midships and then rise in a straight line
towards the ends. Sheer increases the height of the weather decks above water,
particularly at the bow, and helps keep the vessel from shipping water as she moves
through rough seas as well as improving sea keeping by adding bouyancy Ford and Aft.
Rake A departure from the vertical or horizontal of any conspicuous line in profile,
defined by a rake angle or by the distance between the profile line and a reference line at
a convenient point. Rake of stem, for example, can be expressed as the angle between
the stem bar and a vertical line for ships with straight stems. For curved stems, a number
of ordinates measured from the forward perpendicular are required to define the stem
shape. Ships designed so that the keel is not parallel to the baseline and DWL when
floating at their designed drafts are said to have raked keels, or to have drag by the keel.
Cut-up When a keel departs from a straight line at a sharp bend, or knuckle, the sloping
portion is called a cut-up. This is seen on some high speed craft and on Ice breakers
allowing them to ride up on to the ice
Deadwood Portions of the immersed hull with significant longitudinal and vertical
dimensions, but without appreciable transverse dimensions. Deadwood is included in a
hull design principally to increase lateral resistance or enhance directional stability
without significantly increasing drag when moving ahead. Sailing craft require deadwood
to be able to work to windward efficiently.
Skegs or fins are fitted on barges to give directional stability. Deadwood aft is
detrimental to speed and quick maneuverability and is minimized by use of cut-up sterns
and by arched keels or sluice keels (with athwartships apertures) in tugs and workboats.
Appendages Portions of the vessel that extend beyond the main hull outline or molded
surface. Positive appendages, such as rudders, shafts, bosses, bilge keels, sonar domes,
etc., increase the underwater volume, while negative appendages, such as bow thruster
tunnels and other recesses, decrease the underwater volume. Shell plating, lying outside
the molded surface, is normally the largest single appendage, and often accounts for one-
half to two-thirds of the total appendage volume. Appendages generally account for 0.2
to 2 percent of total immersed hull volume, depending on ship size, service, and
configuration.
Hull Surfaces Hull surfaces are either warped, consisting of smoothly faired, complex
three-dimensional curves, developed, consisting of portions of cylinders or cones, or flat.
Hydroconic hulls are built up of connected flat plates rather than plates rolled to complex
curves. Hydroconic construction lowers production costs and may simplify fitting patches
to a casualty.
The part of the hull which effects the speed and fuel consumed is the area under the
water. Thus Length Overall (LOA) is not relevant. Instead the length between
perpendiculars (LPP and Length at waterline (LWL) are used. For LPP the aftermost
perpendicular is usually taken as passing through the rudder stock. An accepted method
of calculation is
The draught is taken as the design draught. This draught depends on the trading of the
vessel and may be between the summer loadline draught and ballast draught
The Load Line Mark shall consist of a ring 300 millimeters (12 inches) in outside
diameter and 25 millimeters (1 inch) wide which is intersected by a horizontal line 450
millimeters (18 inches) in length and 25 millimeters (1 inch) in breadth, the upper edge of
which passes through the centre of the ring. The centre of the ring shall be placed
amidships and at a distance equal to the assigned summer freeboard measured vertically
below the upper edge of the deck line
Deck Mark
The deck line is a horizontal line 300 millimeters (12 inches) in length and 25 millimeters
(1 inch) in breadth. It shall be marked amidships on each side of the ship, and its upper
edge shall normally pass through the point where the continuation outwards of the upper
surface of the freeboard deck intersects the outer surface of the shell. The location of the
reference point and the identification of the freeboard deck is indicated on the
International Load Line Certificate (1966). Lines to be used with the Load Line Mark
Loadline Mark
The lines which indicate the load line shall be horizontal lines 230 millimeters (9 inches)
in length and 25 millimeters (1 inch) in breadth which extend forward of, unless
expressly provided otherwise, and at right angles to, a vertical line 25 millimeters (1 inch)
in breadth marked at a distance 540 millimeters (21 inches) forward of the centre of the
ring . Aft of thevertical mark refers to loading in freshwater only. For'd refers to loading
in sea water only
The loadline mark consists of the following marks
o The Summer Load Line indicated by the upper edge of the line which
passes through the centre of the ring and also by a line marked S.
o The Winter Load Line indicated by the upper edge of a line marked W.
o The Winter North Atlantic Load Line indicated by the upper edge of a line
marked WNA.
o The Tropical Load Line indicated by the upper edge of a line marked T.
o The Fresh Water Load Line in summer indicated by the upper edge of a
line marked F.
o The Tropical Fresh Water Load Line indicated by the upper edge of a line
marked TF