A Submerged Observation Unit For A Fish Tank
20220408700 · 2022-12-29
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02A40/81
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
A01K61/60
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to a submerged observation unit (6) for a fish tank, wherein the observation unit (6) is suspended in a node cable (5) from a hoist winch (3) of a surface buoy (2). The node cable (5) is torsion-resistant, wherein the node cable (5) is at its upper end wound on the hoist winch (3) having a horizontal drum axis. The observation unit (6) is arranged to be motorized and to azimuthally rotate about a vertical axis. The surface buoy (2) is arranged to be motorized and to move along a main span (10) of a surface cable (1), wherein the main span (10) is arranged to be spanned across a float ring (9) of the fish tank.
Claims
1. An observation system for a fish cage, said observation system comprising a submerged observation unit, a node cable, a hoist winch, a surface buoy, a main span and a surface cable, wherein the observation unit is suspended in the node cable from the hoist winch of the surface buoy, wherein the hoist winch is arranged to azimuthally rotate about a vertical axis and the node cable is torsion-resistant, and wherein the node cable is at its upper end wound on the hoist winch having a horizontal drum axis, wherein the observation unit is arranged to be motorized and to azimuthally rotate about a vertical axis, and wherein the surface buoy is arranged to be motorized and to move along the main span of the surface cable, wherein the main span is arranged to span across a float ring of the fish cage.
2. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein the the hoist winch is motorized and mounted on a bearing with a vertical axis provided in the surface buoy and wherein a housing of the observation unit is tightly sealed at a lower end of the node cable.
3. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein and the hoist winch is immobilized and a housing of the observation unit is mounted on a bearing having a vertical axis at a lower end of the node cable.
4. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein the main span of the surface cable is stretched between a first and a second point on a float ring by means of a first, elastic stag line attached to the float ring in the first point and provided with a first shackle at a first end of the main span, and a second, elastic stag line attached to the float ring in the second point and provided with a second shackle at a second end of the main span.
5. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 4, wherein the surface cable in addition to the main span also comprises a continuous extension portion at a cable end extending beyond a second end of the main span and the second shackle and back to and into the surface buoy.
6. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 5, wherein the continuous extension portion is stretched to a third point on the float ring between the first and the second point such that a third, elastic stag line is attached to the float ring in the first point and provided with a third shackle at approximately midpoint of the extension portion, such that the entire surface cable comprising the main span and the extension portion is stretched within the fish tank.
7. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein the surface buoy comprises a set of motorized drive wheels arranged to engage with the main span of the surface cable and wherein the drive wheels are arranged to move the surface buoy along the main span to a desired position on the main span.
8. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 7, wherein at least one of the drive wheels is arranged to be movable with respect to the other drive wheel and to be detachable from the main span.
9. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein the surface buoy is provided with at least one guide track arranged to guide the main span towards the drive wheels and to achieve directional stability of the surface buoy with respect to the main span.
10. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein the observation unit comprises at least one of the following optical units provided in or at the housing: a camera arranged to record images of fish, an ultrasonic probe arranged to record images of fish or determine position of fish, a laser arranged to perform at least one of the following: detect and determine position of fish, detect and determine position of organisms on fish, and hydrological measuring instruments such as a salinity gauge, an oxygen saturation gauge, acoustical sensors or biological sensors.
11. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 10, wherein the at least one optical unit is controllable in the vertical plane and in the horizontal plane.
12. An observation system for a fish cage according to claim 1, wherein there is a signal/electrical swivel between a second end of the surface cable and the an upper end of the node cable, arranged for signal/current transmission in a signal/electrical swivel in the hoist winch.
Description
SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
[0024]
[0030] The surface cable 1 is so denoted since it is arranged to float or approximately float at sea surface in the tank 9. Accordingly, the cable experiences a weak buoyant force, or is neutral in water or is exposed to a weak, negatively-directed buoyant force. In
[0031] A substantial advantage of the invention is that the surface buoy 2 and the cable 1 have limited exposure to ice building since they are positioned at sea surface and the surface buoy 2 is arranged so that it may be moved back and forth along the main span 10 of the surface cable 1 that doesn't extend through the air between the first and the second attachment points of the tank (float ring) 9. In the same context, the surface buoy 2 floats at the surface and it is mainly the longitudinal forces (and drift forces) that may be taken up by the attachments at each end of the tank 9. In consequence, the surface cable 1 (with zero or very small weight when in water) is only exposed to large tensional forces at the attachment points, the first and the second points in the ring 9.
[0032] One embodiment of the invention is shown in
[0033] It is well-known to suspend an observation unit 6 in a cable that isn't torsion-resistant and provide the observation unit 6 with thrusters in order to rotate it in desired direction. This process is unstable, difficult to control, complex to set up and frequently results in an undesired swinging rotational movement about the vertical axis.
[0034] There are at least two different ways to make the observation unit 6 turnable about its vertical axis: up at the hoist winch 3 or down at the housing (shown in
[0035] In an alternative embodiment shown in
[0036] In one embodiment (shown in
[0037] In one embodiment, the second shackle 45 is arranged to be movable along the surface cable 1 such that the length of the main span 10 may be adjusted to a desired length depending on whether the structure that the main span 10 spans across is circular or rectangular. The main span 10 of the surface cable 1 then stretches as a chord up to a diameter of a circular tank or as a desired line across a rectangular tank.
[0038] In one embodiment, a first end 13 of the surface cable 1 will extend beyond the first shackle 44 and be introduced into and connected in the control pod 7 of the tank ring 9, see
[0039] Still with reference to
[0040] In a system of this kind it is possible that the surface buoy 2 is fixedly attached to the second end 11 of the surface cable 1 and receives energy and signals via the same surface cable 1 from the control pod 7 while said buoy 2 moves along the same cable 1.
[0041] The length of the section of the surface cable 1 we denote “the first end” may be adjusted to a desired length between the control pod 7 and the first shackle 44 by an operator at the tank such that a suitable length constitutes the extension section 12 and the buoy 2 may freely move along the entire main span 10. Accordingly, the first and the second shackles 44, 45 are in one embodiment slideable along the surface cable 1 to delimit the main span 10 and arranged, once their position on the surface cable 1 is determined, to be secured.
[0042] In one embodiment, the continuous extension portion 12 is stretched to a third point on the float ring 9 between the first and the second point such that a third, elastic stag line 43 is attached to the float ring 9 in the first point and provided with a third shackle 46 at approximately midpoint of the extension portion 12, such that the entire surface cable 1 comprising the main span 10 and the extension portion 12 is stretched within the fish tank, see
[0043] In this embodiment, a single surface cable 1 is required that is stretched within the tank: the same cable that stretches the chord constituting the main span 10 that the surface buoy 2 moves along, and the surface buoy 2 has galvanic and optical contact via second end 11 of the surface cable. In addition, battery operation or similar vulnerable solutions aren't required to ensure energy supply and optical or electrical signal transmission may be done from the surface buoy.
[0044] The presented observation unit 6 is easy to move to a different fish tank. There is no need to permanently mount equipment on the tank edges. Instead, the first, the second and the third stag lines 41-43 are attached to the tank edge in desired positions. The control pod 7 is kept on deck and the surface buoy 2 is launched, preferably by means of a crane, and engaged with the drive wheels 41, 42 on the main span 10. All forces from the surface cable 1 and the surface buoy 2 are transferred via shackles 44-46 that are elastically connected to the tank edge. This makes the equipment much easier to move between sites and it becomes possible to fine-tune buoy position in the tank only by means of shackles and stag lines. Moreover, the ice build-up doesn't pose any problems since most part of the surface buoy 2 is submerged. This is also true for the winch 3, node cable 5 and the observation unit 6, whereas the surface cable 1 is stretched along the sea surface.
[0045] In an embodiment of the invention, it is provided, from the other end 11 of the surface cable 1 and into the housing of the buoy 2, an energy and signal connection between the control pod 7 and the motorized wheels (shown in
[0046] Accordingly and once again with reference to
[0052] With respect to
[0053] In an embodiment, at least one of the drive wheels 21, 22 is arranged to be movable with respect to the other drive wheel 21, 22 and to be detachable from the main span 10.
[0054] In an embodiment, the surface buoy 2 is provided with at least one guide track 24 (also shown in
[0055] In an embodiment of
[0065] In an embodiment, the at least one optical unit 65, 66 is controllable in the vertical plane and in the horizontal plane.
[0066] With such equipment installed in the observation unit 6 it is possible to control the observation unit to a desired position in the tank, and to a desired depth at this position, and to direct the sensors in desired direction so as to obtain full access to the entire volume of the tank from the obtained desired position.