Towing device with a two-piece fairlead
09926047 ยท 2018-03-27
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B63B21/66
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A towing device intended to equip the deck of a ship (10) and comprising a winch (16), a cable (14) and a fairlead (20), the cable (14) circulating in the fairlead (20) under the action of the winch (16), the fairlead (20) comprising a frame (21) and at least one first and one second sectors, the sectors making it possible to guide the cable (14) in a channel formed in each of the sectors. The device comprises an articulation with a degree of freedom allowing the rotation of the second sector relative to the frame (21) about an axis contained in a plane comprising a first direction in which the cable can extend in the first sector, characterized in that the first sector is secured to the frame (21) and is interposed between the winch (16) and the second sector.
Claims
1. A towing device configured to equip a deck of a ship, the towing device comprising: a winch; a cable; a fairlead configured to circulate the cable in the fairlead under an action of the winch, the fairlead comprising a frame and first and second sectors, the first and second sectors having a channel configured to guide the cable; and an articulation configured to allow the second sector to rotate relative to the frame about an axis contained in a plane comprising a direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector, wherein the first sector is secured to the frame between the winch and the second sector, the first sector comprises a first bottom bearing surface having a first end, the second sector comprises a second bottom bearing surface having a second end, and the cable is configured to come to rest on said first and second bearing surfaces in direct physical contact with said first and second bearing surfaces, and said first and second ends form surfaces extending substantially parallel to each other and are separated by a joining plane (P) extending substantially at right angles to the axis.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface have semicircular sections, and the axis cuts the joining plane (P) at a point located on a first shaped curve and a second shaped curve formed by centers of the semicircular sections of the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein said second bottom bearing surface is a single piece.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the channel of the second sector has a flared form in the plane comprising the axis and the direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector, the channel of the second sector widening in the direction from the second sector to the first sector.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein the channels of said first and second sectors are laterally open.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the channels of said first and second sectors are open toward the bottom of the fairlead.
7. The device of claim 1, further comprising: a wire-guiding device configured to pass the cable, the wire-guiding device being interposed between the fairlead and the winch, wherein the winch comprises a reel having a drum delimited by first and second flanges, the channel of the first sector having a lateral opening extending substantially in alignment with the first flange, the lateral opening being oriented in a direction moving away from the second flange.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the axis is contained in a first plane comprising a direction in which the cable can extend in the first sector.
9. The device of claim 1, wherein the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface have circular sections and the axis cuts the joining plane (P) at a point located on a first shaped curve and a second shaped curve formed by centers of the circular sections of the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface.
10. A towing device configured to equip a deck of a ship comprising: a winch; a cable; a fairlead configured to circulate the cable in the fairlead under an action of the winch, the fairlead comprising a frame and first and one second sectors, the first and second sectors having a channel configured to guide the cable; and an articulation configured to allow the second sector to rotate relative to the frame about an axis contained in a plane comprising a direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector, wherein the first sector is secured to the frame between the winch and the second sector, the first sector comprising a first bottom bearing surface having a first end, the second sector comprises a second bottom bearing surface having a second end, said cable is configured to rest on said first and second bearing surfaces, and said first end and said second end form surfaces extending substantially in a joining plane (P), the joining plane (P) extending substantially at right angles to the axis, the axis being inclined relative to a vertical direction at a right angle to a plane of the device configured to be parallel to the deck of the ship.
11. The towing device of claim 10, wherein the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface have semicircular sections, and the axis cuts the joining plane (P) at a point located on a first shaped curve and a second shaped curve formed by centers of the semicircular sections of the first and second bottom bearing surfaces.
12. The towing device of claim 10, wherein the second bottom bearing surface is a single piece.
13. The towing device of claim 10, wherein the channel of the second sector has a flared form in the plane comprising the axis and the direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector, the channel of the second sector widening in the direction from the second sector to the first sector.
14. The towing device of claim 10, further comprising: a wire-guiding device configured to pass the cable, the wire-guiding device being interposed between the fairlead and the winch, wherein the winch comprises a reel having a drum delimited by first and second flanges, the channel of the first sector having a lateral opening extending substantially in the alignment with the first flange, the lateral opening being oriented in a direction moving away from the second flange.
15. The towing device of claim 10, in which the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface have circular sections and in which the axis cuts the joining plane (P) at a point located on a first shaped curve and a second shaped curve formed by centers of the circular sections of the first bottom bearing surface and, respectively, of the second bottom bearing surface.
16. A towing device configured to equip a deck of a ship, the towing device comprising: a winch having a reel comprising a drum delimited by first and second flanges; a cable; a fairlead configured to circulate the cable in the fairlead under an action of the winch, the fairlead comprising at least one sector, the at least one sector having a channel configured to guide the cable; and a wire-guiding device configured to pass the cable, the wire-guiding device being interposed between the fairlead and the winch, wherein the channel of the at least one sector comprises a lateral opening extending substantially in the alignment with the first flange, and the lateral opening is oriented in a direction moving away from the second flange.
17. The towing device of claim 16, wherein the fairlead comprises a frame, and the at least one sector includes first and one second sectors, the first and second sectors having a channel configured to guide the cable, and the towing device further comprises: an articulation configured to allow the second sector to rotate relative to the frame about an axis contained in a plane comprising a direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector; and a wire-guiding device configured to pass the cable, the wire-guiding device being interposed between the fairlead and the winch, wherein the winch comprises a reel having a drum delimited by first and second flanges, the channel of the first sector having a lateral opening extending substantially in the alignment with the first flange, the lateral opening being oriented in a direction moving away from the second flange.
18. The towing device of claim 17, wherein the first sector is secured to the frame between the winch and the second sector, the first sector comprises a first bottom bearing surface having a first end, the second sector comprises a second bottom bearing surface having a second end, said cable can rest on said first and second bearing surfaces and said first end and said second end form surfaces extend substantially in a joining plane (P), the joining plane being substantially at right angles to the axis.
19. A towing device configured to equip a deck of a ship, the towing device comprising: a winch; a cable; a fairlead configured to circulate the fairlead under an action of the winch, the fairlead comprising a frame and first and second sectors, the first and second sectors having a channel configured to guide the cable; and an articulation configure to allow the second sector to rotate relative to the frame about an axis contained in a plane comprising a direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector, wherein the first sector is secured to the frame between the winch and the second sector, the first sector comprises a first bottom bearing surface having a first end, the second sector comprises a second bottom bearing surface having a second end, said cable configured to bear on said first and second bearing surfaces, the first and second ends forming surfaces extending substantially in a joining plane (P), the joining plane extending substantially at right angles to the axis, the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface having circular sections and in which the axis cuts the joining plane (P) at a point located on a first shaped curve and a second shaped curve formed by centers of the circular sections of the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface.
20. The towing device of claim 19, wherein the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface have semicircular sections, and the axis cuts the joining plane (P) at a point located on a first shaped curve and a second shaped curve formed by the centers of the semicircular sections of the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface.
21. A towing device configured to equip a deck of a ship, the towing device comprising: a winch; a cable; a fairlead configured to circulate the cable under an action of the winch, the fairlead comprising a frame and first and second sectors, the first and second sectors having a channel configured to guide the cable; and an articulation configured to allow the second sector to rotate relative to the frame about an axis contained in a plane comprising a direction in which the cable can extend in the second sector, wherein the first sector is secured to the frame between the winch and the second sector, the first sector having a first bottom bearing surface having a first end, the second sector comprises a second bottom bearing surface having a second end, said cable being able to rest on said first and second bearing surfaces, and the first end and the second end form surfaces extending substantially in a joining plane (P), the joining plane (P) being substantially at right angles to the axis, each of the first bottom bearing surface and the second bottom bearing surface forming shaped curves along the sectors the first sector and the second sector.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be better understood and other advantages will become apparent on reading the detailed description of an embodiment given by way of example, the description being illustrated by the attached drawing in which:
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(12) In the interests of clarity, the same elements will bear the same references in the different figures.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) The invention is described in relation to the towing of a sonar by a surface vessel. It is clearly understood that the invention can be implemented for other towed elements.
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(15) The antennas 12 and 13 are mechanically moored and electrically and/or optically connected to the cable 14 in an appropriate manner. Conventionally, the receiving antenna 13 is formed from a linear antenna of tubular form identical to those that are found in passive sonars, hence its name of flute, while the emitting antenna 12 is incorporated in a bulky structure that has a form resembling that of a fish. The receiving flute is generally arranged at the rear, at the end of the cable 14, the fish being positioned on the part of the cable 14 closest to the ship 10. During an underwater acoustic mission, the antenna 12 emits sound waves into the water and the receiving antenna 13 picks up any echoes originating from targets on which the sound waves from the antenna 12 are reflected.
(16) The receiving antenna 13 is generally moored permanently to the cable 14 whereas the fish 12, for its part, is moored removably. To this end, the cable 14 comprises a mooring zone 15 for the fish 12, in which zone means are located for mechanically securing the fish 12 and for electrically and/or optically connecting it to the cable 14.
(17) The launching of the antennas 12 and 13 into the water and the removal thereof from the water is done by means of a winch 16 arranged on a deck 17 of the ship 10. As can be seen in
(18) A fairlead 20 makes it possible to guide the cable 14 downstream of the reel 18. The fairlead 20 constitutes the last guiding element for the cable 14 before its descent into the water. During the towing, the inclination of the cable 14 can vary relative to the longitudinal axis of the ship 10. The variations of inclination are notably due to the changes of heading and of speed of the ship and also to the sea conditions. One of the functions of the fairlead 20 is to guarantee for the cable 14 and for the linear antenna that their respective bending radii do not exceed a predefined lower limit. The cable 14 comprises, for example, a core formed from electrical and/or optical conductors making it possible to transmit energy and information between equipment items of the sonar situated onboard the ship 10 and the antennas 12 and 13. The core of the cable 14 is generally covered by a bundle of metal wires ensuring the mechanical strength of the cable 14, notably its pulling strength. Below the lower bending limit, there is a risk of permanent deformation or breakage of the components of the cable 14. The same applies for the linear antenna.
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(20) According to the invention, the fairlead 20 comprises a first sector (or first segment) 23, called fixed sector (or fixed segment) hereinbelow in the patent application, and a second sector (or second segment) 24, called pivoting sector (or pivoting segment), making it possible to guide the cable 14 from upstream to downstream of the fairlead 20. These sectors can be seen in
(21) The change of direction lies between 45 and 90 in
(22) According to the invention, the pivoting sector 24 is articulated relative to the ship 10 in order to allow a certain amplitude of change of direction of the cable 14 when the ship 10 changes heading. Such an articulation allows for a good guidance of the cable 14 all along the length of the fairlead 20, in particular on the side of the marine environment, and makes it possible to limit the stresses in the cable and the antenna when they are being guided along the fairlead, in particular in the case of a change of heading of the ship 10.
(23) More specifically, the fairlead 20 comprises an articulation 27 with a degree of freedom in rotation about an axis 28, allowing the rotation of the pivoting sector 24 relative to the frame 21. The fixed sector 23 is secured to the frame 21. An articulation having a degree of freedom in rotation is also called pivot link. In the embodiment of the figures, the articulation 27 links the sector 24 and the frame 21. The frame 21 can be fixed onto the ship 10, for example onto a deck of the ship such as the rear platform 19 or onto a wire guide allowing for the correct stowing of the cable 14 on the reel 18. The axis 28 is contained, in the nonlimiting embodiment of the figures, in a first plane 29 comprising a first main direction in which the cable can extend in the fixed sector 23. The first plane 29 is the plane of
(24) The axis 28 is also contained in a second plane 30 comprising a second main direction in which the cable 14 can extend in the pivoting sector 24. This second main direction is the main direction in which the second sector 23 is intended to guide the cable 14 at a point of the sector 24. It is also the direction in which the axis of the cable 14 which is guided within this sector passes, at the corresponding point of the sector 24 when the loads exerted on the cable on either side of the fairlead are situated in a plane. The pivoting sector 24 is then in its position of equilibrium.
(25) The sectors 23, 24 are arranged such that the planes 29, 30 coincide, when the pivoting sector 24 is in a position of equilibrium. The second sector 24 occupies the position of equilibrium represented in
(26) The second plane 30 can be inclined relative to the first plane 29, notably when the ship 10 alters its heading. The inclination of the plane 30 is obtained when the articulation 27 pivots. The pivoting sector 24 pivots about the articulation 27 as a function of the direction of the loads exerted on the cable 14, on either side of its position of equilibrium. In
(27) According to the invention, the fixed sector 23 is interposed between the pivoting sector 24 and the winch 16. The fixed sector 23 guides the cable 14 in the plane 29. The fixed sector 23 therefore makes it possible to control the direction of the cable 14 where it leaves the fairlead 20 on the winch 16 side. For the turns to be well wound onto the reel contiguously, it is necessary to minimize and control the angle that the cable 14 forms with a plane at right angles to the axis of the reel on leaving the fairlead on the winch 16 side. The invention makes it possible, for example, to guarantee that this angle is zero by simply positioning the fixed sector 23 such that the plane 29 is at right angles to the axis of rotation of the reel 18, in the case where the fairlead is secured to the wire guide. The device according to the invention is therefore compact, there is no need to provide a significant distance between the reel and the fairlead to reduce any lateral clearance angle of the cable on leaving the fairlead on the winch side or to provide a complex wire-guiding device slaved to the angle formed by the pivoting sector about the axis 28, relative to its position of equilibrium. The device according to the invention makes it possible to easily manage the position of the cable 14 between the fairlead 20 and the winch 16 and thus avoid the problems of poor winding of the turns of the cable 14 on the reel 18 while being compact. The fixed segment 23 also makes it possible to limit the sharp angles which could damage the cable 14 on leaving the fairlead 20 on the winch side which also contributes to the compactness of the device.
(28) The channels 25, 26 extend all along the sectors 23, 24 in the first and second main directions. They are open laterally, that is to say that they are open along axes 31, 32 at right angles to the respective planes 29, 30. In other words, they are open along axes 31, 32 at right angles to the first plane 29 when the pivoting sector is in its position of equilibrium. The plane 30 oscillates about the axis 28 with the pivoting sector 24. The first plane 29 is a vertical plane. The vertical and horizontal directions are defined relative to a plinth 201 of the frame 1 defining a plane intended to be parallel to the plane of the platform 19, that is to say to the deck of the ship, when the frame 21 is placed on this platform.
(29) The channel 25 has a section in the form of a C that is open, that is to say emerging, laterally. The channel 26 is, here, a groove formed in a profiled body 33 referenced in
(30) In the example represented in the figures, the fixed sector 23 comprises a first bottom bearing surface 37 which can be seen in
(31) The first and the second bottom bearing surfaces 37, 38 have, in the planes 29 and 30, a first and a second curvatures centered toward the underside of the fairlead 20. These are the curvatures of the shaped curves formed by the bottoms of the first and the second bottom bearing surfaces 37, 38 along the sectors 23, 24 in the planes 29 and 30. The bottoms of the bottom bearing surfaces 37, 38 are the points of these surfaces occupying the lowest positions, in the vertical plane, when the pivoting sector is in its position of equilibrium. The bottoms of the surfaces 37, 38 are in the respective planes 29, 30.
(32) The bottom bearing surfaces 37, 38 are dimensioned such that their curvatures, in the planes 29 and 30 have, at all points, radii of curvature at least equal to the minimum acceptable radius of curvature for the cable. The two segments 23, 24 are configured and positioned relative to one another such that the bottom bearing surface formed by the first and the second bottom bearing surfaces have a curvature of radius at least equal to the minimum acceptable radius of curvature, at least when the pivoting sector 24 is located in its position of equilibrium. The fairlead 20 thus limits the minimum curvature of the cable to a predetermined minimum value and makes it possible to avoid the sharp angles which could damage the cable on leaving the fairlead. The curvatures are not necessarily circular arcs. The bottom surface of the fixed part could, as a variant, have a flat curvature, that is to say have a bottom extending in a straight line. The radius of curvature of the bottom surface is then infinite.
(33) Advantageously, the first bottom bearing surface 37 and the second bottom bearing surface 38 are substantially contiguous. In other words, they are contiguous to within a functional play, notably when the pivoting segment 24 occupies the position of equilibrium. The functional play is the space separating the two bearing surfaces so as to allow the first pivoting segment to pivot about the axis 28. In other words, the zone of separation between the fixed part and the pivoting part is substantially reduced to a plane P1, called joining plane.
(34) The first bottom bearing surface 37 comprises a first end 39 and the second bottom bearing surface 38 comprises a second end 40 substantially contiguous to the first end 39. These ends 39, 40 comprise surfaces which extend substantially, that is to say to within the functional play, in the joining plane P. In other words, the first and second ends 39, 40 extend substantially along surfaces contiguous in two substantially parallel planes separated by a distance corresponding to the functional play notably when the pivoting segment is in the position of equilibrium.
(35) Advantageously, as represented in
(36) The first bottom bearing surface 37 and the second bottom bearing surface 38 have semicircular sections in planes at right angles to the main directions that they define, notably in planes parallel to the joining plane P at the first and second ends 39, 40. The circular sections preferably form at least one half-circle. The bottom bearing surfaces 37, 38 thus each delimit a shaped furrow with semicircular section extending all along the sector 23, 24 concerned. Since the bottoms of the surfaces 37, 38 are situated in the planes 29, 30, they form a substantially continuous shaped surface when the pivoting segment 24 is in its position of equilibrium.
(37) The semicircular sections have a substantially fixed radius over most of the sectors concerned 23, 24, not including the chamfering in the entry and exit zones of the sectors concerned when the ends of the sectors are chamfered and except for the entry and exit zones of the fairlead when they widen in planes parallel to the joining plane P. Chamfering the ends of the segments makes it possible to avoid any risk of damage to the cable. The constant radius makes it possible to avoid the formation of a step between the two bearing surfaces when the pivoting segment is in its position of equilibrium.
(38) The centers of the semicircular sections of the first bottom bearing surface 37 and of the second bottom bearing surface 38 follow a first shaped curve 41 along the fixed segment 23 and, respectively, a second shaped curve 42 along the pivoting segment 24. These curves have, at each point of the corresponding segment, a radius equal to the sum of the radius of the corresponding bottom bearing surface and of the radius of the semicircular section. These shaped curves 41, 42 extend over all of the segments 23, 24 except over any chamfered end zones.
(39) Advantageously, as can be seen in
(40) In the embodiment of the figures, the second bottom bearing surface 38 is advantageously of a single piece. It can be formed from a single piece or a set of parts secured to one another. This feature, by limiting the number of parts moving relative to one another, makes it possible to obtain a reliable and inexpensive device. As a variant, the second bottom bearing surface 38 is formed from a plurality of mutually mobile bottom bearing surfaces. They are for example articulated by means of articulations with a degree of freedom in rotation about axes substantially at right angles to the second plane 30.
(41) Advantageously, as can be seen in
(42) Advantageously, the pivoting sector 24 comprises a second top bearing surface 44 against which the cable can bear. The second top bearing surface 44 can be substantially planar. Preferably, as can be seen in
(43) The semicircular sections of the bottom and top bearing surfaces are centered toward the interior of the channels 25, 26.
(44) Advantageously, as represented in
(45) For example, in
(46) The second bottom 38 and top 44 bearing surfaces of the pivoting segment 24 are linked or separated on each side by walls 45, 46 referenced in
(47) In an unclaimed embodiment, different from the prior art, the fairlead has no sector secured to the frame. It comprises a pivoting sector linked to the frame by means of an articulation with a degree of freedom allowing the rotation of the sector relative to the frame about an axis contained in a plane comprising a first direction in which the cable can extend in this sector.