View Full Version : Crane barge


rajeshram
10-24-2009, 01:49 AM
Am designing a barge on which one or more cranes shall be loaded to lift heavy weights over the side of the barge. Can someone who has performed or seen such task performed advise me whether the following is OK-
a. The barge will be moored on spuds. My intention is to allow part of the heel (abt 3 deg) to be taken up by the vessel & part by reaction (2 deg) at the spud walls. Spud wells will be a little bit larger to allow the heel upto 3 deg.
b. In case the reaction is taken by the spuds what is the fixity considered at the base of the spuds (fixed, pinned?).

Regards,
Rajesh

Ad Hoc
10-24-2009, 02:36 AM
rajeshram

a) can the spuds take the bending and compression loads and, is the local structure of the hull/spud interface strong/stiff enough to take the loads?
b) Depends upon the grounding of the base of the spud, is it mud, sand, rock etc. But if in doubt, use worse case, simply supported ie pinned

gonzo
10-24-2009, 05:23 AM
Sea bottoms are not homogenous. The spuds will settle unevenly. You could have a levelling system to take that into account.

rajeshram
10-25-2009, 10:08 AM
I wanted to know from someone with experience on similar operations if the normal way is to -
a. Resist the heel with the spuds or
b. Allow the barge to heel freely & use spuds only to arrest drift of the barge

gonzo
10-25-2009, 11:25 AM
You don't want spud wells to allow for 3 degrees each side. That is 6 degrees of total movement. If you have three, and you raise the barge enough, it will settle until the bottom takes enough weight. There may be bottoms that are too soft for that, so you have to assess the situation. Wave action is also something to take into consideration.

View Full Version : Crane barge