h a l f b a k e r yNot just a think tank. An entire army of think.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Generally, ships carry lifeboats to save their passengers in the event of sinking. These
generally work alright for saving the passengers, but what about ship and its cargo? It
would be worth trying to save those too if possible, right?
I propose building ships with airbags around the waterline.
These would be inflated by
gas generators triggered by a signal from the bridge or automatically in the event of a hull
breach. They would surround the ship and keep it afloat until it could be taken to a port
for offloading and then dry dock for repair.
Regarding buoyant feasibility: The world's heaviest (displacement) ship is the crane ship
Pioneering Spirit [link], with a displacement of 900 gigagrams. The volume of seawater
having the same mass is almost 900,000 m^3 [link]. That's what needs to be displaced to stay
afloat. Let's assume that the entire hull is filled with water, meaning the hull provides no
buoyancy. Let's also assume the airbags are only halfway in the water, so their total volume
(above and below the waterline) is 1.8 gigaliters. The cube with this volume has side
length of only 122 meters [link], which is less than one third of the length of the ship (382
m). So, divide the cube into sixths, and stick three sixths in line on each side of the ship,
resulting in 41×61×366-meter airbag on each side of the ship. (This is almost 80,000 m^2
of envelope material per side.) Add a bit more for safety. Totally manageable.
The airbags would need to be resistant to sunlight and saltwater. Such materials are
widely used for inflatable boats [link]. It would also be nice for them to be made of a tough
enough material to avoid ripping if they collide with anything, but there should also be
electric blowers aboard to keep them inflated after the gas generators have done their job,
so small leaks won't be much of a problem.
The airbags should be divided into several compartments, or whole separate airbags, for
redundancy reasons. Also, to keep the airbags from floating up too high, each one should
have an internal truss or tensegrity structure. These will increase the mass (and the gas
generators will add mass as well) but it should be well within the capacity of any ship to
carry an appropriately sized whole-ship life raft system and still carry almost as much
cargo as without one.
Pioneering Spirit
https://en.wikipedi...ering_Spirit_(ship) Mentioned in idea [notexactly, Jul 28 2016]
Volume of 900 Gg of seawater
https://www.wolfram...density+of+seawater Mentioned in idea [notexactly, Jul 28 2016]
Dimensions of sphere and cube having volume of 1.8 Gl
https://www.wolfram...=ob&i=1800000+m%5E3 Mentioned in idea [notexactly, Jul 28 2016]
Inflatable boats
https://en.wikipedi...iki/Inflatable_boat Mentioned in idea [notexactly, Jul 28 2016]
PFDs for boats
PFDs_20for_20boats Prior art [csea, Jul 28 2016]
[link]
|
|
Cool idea. You even did math at us. Croissant! |
|
|
Auto inflate rafts are subject to periodic inspection, test and recertification if you expect the manufacturer to stand behind their product. Might be some expense involved. |
|
|
See [link] for prior art. |
|
|
People would just go around with their boats mostly underwater and the air bags inflated, like people drive for miles and miles on that little emergency spare tire. |
|
|
Anyway, this is a good idea. Better the using several
hundred ahem, "glamour" models as the silicon isn't that
buoyant, and then the mascara runs...you know how it
goes.. |
|
|
hmm, ships don't just sink. Not generally. Before the
crucial separation of sea and interior degrades, there are
often events. For example, your engine fails. That's not
going to be dangerous alone, but you've now lost the
choice about which way you're pointing and what
direction you're going in. If you're sideways and the ocean
gets angry then damage will occur, that could make you
sink. Alternatively, you might get driven on to a reef and
repeatedly slammed into it. That will make you sink. You
may prefer to have a separate craft with some
directional control or even a sea anchor to ensure you're
in a different place than what is essentially the
demolition of a large metal building. |
|
|
The major one however, is fire. All the floating in the
world isn't going to make you want to stay in a fire. You
want to be in a different place to the fire, this is steeped
in maritime tradition. The ideal location is in a pub,
talking about the fire and how you got to be in a different
place. |
|
|
^ There speaketh the voice of wisdom and eperience. |
|
| |