idratherbefishing
Mechanical
- May 5, 2008
- 19
A client of mine bought a submarine that was used for diving in and around the waters of Bermuda. The sub has been in-active for over 15 years and as such most of the electronics, pneumatic valves, and surface hatches have deteriorated over time.
The problem is this.
Due to vandalism the sub's main hatch was left open during a tropical storm and the vessel sank.
We have made initial dives on the sub to check all windows and main visible structure to make sure that this is intact. We have also constructed form work inside the sub and sleeved one 4" Sch 40 PVC pipe and one 2" sch 40 PVC pipe through the main opening. We have then sealed both the openings with concrete.
The dry weight of the sub is 106 tons, it is mainly constructed of a 2" steel tube that is 52' long with 4' radius lexan hemispheres on either end. It is currently sitting in 20' of salt water on a silt surface so about 3% of the sub is submerged into the silt.
We then used a 100 gal/min centrifugal pump to remove about 80% of the water from internal of the sub, allowing air back in through the 2" line.
From speaking to various other people, some are recommending that I ignore the mass of the sub in my calculations. I feel that I need to included it. The goal is to get the sub to the surface and to make it secure so that it cannot sink again.
My other question is based on the "suction" that the silt bottom will have on the sub, and how best to proceed on calculating for the size of lift bags required to offset the suction.
Any and all comments are welcome as we are trying to derive the best plan forward.
We have considered using a barge to lift the sub, currently we do not have a crane that can lift that mass, nor is it in the client’s current economic ability.
The problem is this.
Due to vandalism the sub's main hatch was left open during a tropical storm and the vessel sank.
We have made initial dives on the sub to check all windows and main visible structure to make sure that this is intact. We have also constructed form work inside the sub and sleeved one 4" Sch 40 PVC pipe and one 2" sch 40 PVC pipe through the main opening. We have then sealed both the openings with concrete.
The dry weight of the sub is 106 tons, it is mainly constructed of a 2" steel tube that is 52' long with 4' radius lexan hemispheres on either end. It is currently sitting in 20' of salt water on a silt surface so about 3% of the sub is submerged into the silt.
We then used a 100 gal/min centrifugal pump to remove about 80% of the water from internal of the sub, allowing air back in through the 2" line.
From speaking to various other people, some are recommending that I ignore the mass of the sub in my calculations. I feel that I need to included it. The goal is to get the sub to the surface and to make it secure so that it cannot sink again.
My other question is based on the "suction" that the silt bottom will have on the sub, and how best to proceed on calculating for the size of lift bags required to offset the suction.
Any and all comments are welcome as we are trying to derive the best plan forward.
We have considered using a barge to lift the sub, currently we do not have a crane that can lift that mass, nor is it in the client’s current economic ability.