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by jmoorebeek
1178 days ago
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I agree, the roll moments are a huge design challenge! We're looking at multiple avenues to bring those loads down to the deck:
- The double wide container already has a longer lever arm to provide righting moment
- We plan to incorporate load spreaders (similar to a crane) which can further extend the footprint to the adjacent container stacks
- We are designing in tethers which automatically drop down to the deck level and get lashed down by a deckhand during installation, which provide additional tension support. Bailey has written a routing software which we use to send virtual ships on crossings (for instance Trans Pacific), incorporating historical weather data. Even with no change in route or vessel speed, we can see benefits. |
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Yikes. Containers are stacked as high as they can be to not crush the containers below. Applying additional downward force is going to cause cascading failures.
You've also just limited your deployment to routes that have double-stack container cranes, which AFAIK aren't that widely deployed.
Have you guys actually talked to anyone in the shipping industry or visited a cargo shipyard yet?