NAOE 2103 - Ship Design: Lecture - 1
NAOE 2103 - Ship Design: Lecture - 1
NAOE 2103 - Ship Design: Lecture - 1
Lecture – 1
Lecture Material :
Chapter 2 (Practical Ship Design, D.G.M Watson)
&
Chapter 1 (Elements of Ship Design, R. Munro-Smith)
Setting objectives in broad terms – Designer’s perspective
a. Length:
• A constraint on length may be set by the dimensions of
canal locks or docks or the need to be able to turn the
ship in a narrow waterway.
• In either case the necessity of the limit set should be
thoroughly questioned if it appears likely to limit the
ship’s length to less than that which would be desirable
if there was no such constraint.
• If the limit is set by a dock or canal, question whether
the use of these is essential or so desirable that this
limit must be accepted, or whether rerouting could
avoid the canal, or the choice of another port avoid the
constraint set by the dock.
• A limit set by turning ability can be considerably eased
by fitting a high-performance maneuvering device such
as a bow thruster.
b. Breadth:
• A limit on breadth is usually set by canal or dock lock
gates breadth.
• The outreach of other shore-based cargo-handling
devices such as grain elevators or coal hoists can limit
the desirable distance of the offshore hatch side from
the dockside and thereby limit the breadth of the ship.
c. Draft:
• A draft limit is usually set by the depth of water at low
tides in the ports (or their approaches) to which the
ship is intended to trade.
• For very large tankers the depth of the ocean itself
must be considered.
d. Air draft:
• The last of the dimensional constraints is that of air draft.
• This is the vertical distance from the waterline to the
highest point of the ship’s structure and denotes the
ship’s ability to pass under a bridge spanning the seaway
which forms part of the projected route.
• Where necessary, air drafts can be greatly reduced by
equipping the ship with folding or telescopic masts and
funnels.
• Other measures which can be taken to reduce the effect
of an air draft limit are to arrange that transit under the
bridge at low tide and or to load or ballast the ship to the
deepest permissible mean draft.
Merchant ship requirements and transportation studies