Thiel wrote: * | September 29th, 2017, 8:25 am |
It depends on what restrictions and requirements the ship has to live up to. Sevmorput is designed to carry LASH barges around the high Arctic. And she was designed in the Soviet Union. That has some fairly major effects on the design.
The forward superstructure is a result of the LASH barges. They're loaded and discharged over the stern so she can't carry any cargo forward of the superstructure. Being built in the Soviet Union also meant the economic calculus looked very different. Being essentially state owned meant she didn't have to make any money as long as the entire supply chain she's part of generated a net plus.
The new Mega container carriers are restricted by the need to maximize their cargo capacity, air draught restrictions, depth restrictions and
sight line regulations as well as structural limitations.
So instead of trying to shoehorn any given feature in you should establish what your requirements are.
Point taken. I said I didn't want to get married to a specific design before drawing, and here I am getting married to a specific design.
I suppose the idea for forward pilotage came partially from a lot of near-future cargo ship designs in concept art having this feature. It would seem to offer maximum forward visibility and maximum cargo capacity, but if the tradeoff is severe structural complications such as the bending moments you mentioned, I'll probably avoid that. Here are some of the designs I saw with the forward pilotage:
http://cs-001.123.is/9f252ce7-7a35-4501 ... 4b3_MS.jpg
http://www.marinemec.com/ugc-1/fullnews ... banner.jpg
- What kind of cargo does it carry
- What routes does it serve
- Air draught restrictions
- Draught restrictions
- Length restrictions
- Maneuvering requirements
- Legislative requirements
- Survivability requirements
- Collision bulkheads
- Flooding resistance
- Stability
- Back-up power
- Safety requirements
- Shielding
- Containment
- Training/Manning
I'm envisioning a standardized range of large container vessels in different sizes (e.g. from 3,000 to 20,000+ TEU) sharing a common hull shape/design and as much parts commonality as is feasible. Ideally, I'd like the hull base to be adaptable for non-container (e.g. bulk-carrying or RORO) variants, but I can scratch that idea if it's not doable for some reason or another. In the case of my AU or a US AU, the crew would consist of merchant mariners, and the reactor(s) would be operated by a special class of nuclear-trained mariners (i.e. "Merchant Nukes"), who would attend Nuclear Power School with a similar legal status to DOE civilians, albeit with a slightly different pipeline tailored to their specific job. I'd imagine the powerplant itself having the same survivability requirements and features as e.g.
Sevmorput,
Otto Hahn,
Savannah, etc. (which you outline below).
Being a nuclear ship I'd expect there to be some pretty severe survivability requirements. The Sevmorput's reactor is designed to survive a small plane crash for example.
Putting the reactor is the front is probably not advised since that's where you usually hit things. I'd also expect it to have a very large auxiliary powerplant in order to maintain power for cooling in case of a scram, pumping capacity in case of a leak and maybe even back-up propulsion so you don't end up drifting onto a rock somewhere.
Oh and large cofferdams around the reactor space in case someone rams you.
Fair enough. I'll go ahead and scrap the front-placed reactor idea along with the bow pilotage. I've been looking at a number of proposals for cargo ships, and a particular one known as the "Quantum 9000" caught my eye as a potential design inspiration. The actual proposal features considerable space amidships under the superstructure to house massive C-type LNG tanks, and it looks like that space could be adapted for a reactor plant with an auxiliary generator and all the survivability features you describe.
Q9000 Image:
Note that I'm speaking in in terms of the general layout, not literally this specific ship.