Dispatch 7: Science and Seamanship
8th August, 2012
The DS-6 Top Float and it's Hard Hats |
Physical oceanography is a unique combination of heavy industry, fine-tolerance science, and precise seamanship. That to me is one of the most interesting aspects of this work. The Dutch and American technicians, along with JCR’s deck crew, were routinely craning over the side 1,000-meter-long moorings, anchors that weigh two tons and top buoys producing some 1,500 pounds of flotation, not to mention all the scientific instruments affixed in between and the additional flotation set near the bottom of the mooring to help keep the wire straight—then landing the entire structure on a precise bottom site predetermined by the scientists. Nothing of this could be accomplished without the ship and the equally demanding seamanship, which brings us to the remarkable displays of ship handling we’ve been seeing by Captain Chapman, who came on this ship twenty years ago as third mate.
'Watching from the aft window of the bridge, I felt like applauding, but that’s just not done; besides, it probably would have embarrassed this modest man.'
We’ve grown used to demonstrations of his skill, but several days ago we were treated to a particularly exquisite one. When I, among others, complimented him, the Captain said, “Well, it’s the machine, you know.” He was referring to the so-called Dynamic Positioning System, which we’ll get to in a moment. It’s a fine tool, but it was definitely not just the machine that drove JCR on that particular occasion, or the others. But it demonstrates the braided relationship between science and seamanship.
Hooking The Top Float |
By the nature of their work, research vessels must routinely do things conventional ships that steam from point to point need never do. She can stop in the middle of the ocean, fair weather and foul, and hold position within a few meters while the various ocean-measuring instruments are deployed and/or recovered; she can be directed to slide sideways; and she can spin around in her own length. It’s a remarkable thing to see a big ship perform such nautical anomalies. They require a specialized propulsion system. Like other ships, JCR has a conventional propeller on a single shaft driven by Diesel electric motors. But she’s additionally equipped with “thrusters” recessed in the hull to protect them from ice, one some twenty meters forward of the transom and another about an equal distance aft of the bow, that can be rotated 360 degrees to deliver thrust in any and all directions (“azimuthing,” in technical lingo). The main propeller is controlled by a conventional transmission and throttle, while a video-game style joystick on the Dynamic Positioning System console operates the thrusters.
Retrieval |
Jim, Murph & Dan, The WHOI Mooring Team |
Captain Chapman |