# 24 6 Common Mooring Methods Used For Ships
Each vessel has been designed with mooring arrangements such that ropes and wires of recommended strength can help it moor safely alongside a berth, floating platform, buoy or jetty. Fundamentally a vessel has to be positioned alongside a jetty or a berth, between mooring buoys, to a mooring buoy, to another ship or barge and then made fast using her own anchors, mooring lines or shorelines.
Some very common methods of
mooring are Mediterranean mooring, Baltic mooring, Running mooring,
Standing mooring, Spider mooring buoys, Single-point or single buoy mooring,
Conventional or multi buoy mooring, Ship to Ship Mooring
While Moored alongside a fixed or floating jetty or a sea berth
there are various forces acting on the vessel such as wind, current, tide, wave
action, swell, surging induced due to passing ships and trim of the vessel.
The spring, breast and head lines prevent the vessel’s movement
against the action of these forces. The directional effect of these need not be
unidirectional. It can be multi-directional or at various angles to the vessel.
The resultant direction of
these forces often changes with changes in direction of onshore/offshore winds
or tidal streams, currents upriver and down streams. Thus a combination of
breast ropes, head ropes and spring ropes is the best method to counter these
forces and keep the vessel safely alongside.
Often mixed moorings are observed as some terminals based on
local conditions and experiences require vessels to use more lines than they
are designed for. Thus the method in which wires in conjunction with soft ropes
with different SWL and construction are used as well is termed Mixed mooring.
The simplified resultant of these forces would tend to move a
vessel in the transverse or longitudinal direction with respect to the jetty.
Thus spring lines prevent the longitudinal motion and the breast lines check
the transverse motion.
It is always preferred to
avoid mixed moorings due to variable loads and elasticity of various kinds of
ropes and wires which lead to different strains or weights on the lines. This
can result in excessive loads on some lines than others and eventually part
them putting the vessel in danger. However, for safety reasons or in a
desperate situation shipmasters or pilots may have to resort to mixed moorings.
Vessels sometimes also
use the seaward anchor in conjunction with mooring lines to haul the vessel out
of the jetty while casting off or while making fast the vessel alongside use
the seaward anchor to assist the control of the rate of lateral movement
towards the berth. This manoeuvre can be carried out with or without the
assistance of tugs.
Ship to Ship transfer operation
involves mooring alongside two different or same sized ships for cargo
transfer. During this operation, either one of the ships is at anchor or both
are underway.
The mooring arrangement depends on the size of the ships. A
vessel either at anchor or stopped and maintaining a constant heading is
approached by the manoeuvring ship at an angle of approach as smaller as practicable.
The region of approach is usually abaft the beam of the constant heading ship.
During the approach as the
manoeuvring ship comes closer, it steers a course parallel to the heading or
course of the other ship and reduces the horizontal distance between ships to
less than 100 metres. Once this state is achieved the manoeuvring ship uses
engine and rudder movements and reduces this distance further until the fenders
touch each other.
The two ships thus then make parallel contact and the lines are
passed respectively as per the mooring plan. As a common practice during the
approach, the wind and sea are preferred to be from ahead or at very small
angles to the bow.
The basic principle of the buoy is to keep the position of the
vessel with respect to the buoy steady and at the same time allowing vessels to
swing to wind and sea..
Often a tug is provided at the aft to keep the ship at a fixed
angle and distance from the buoy. The buoy is fixed by positioning it in the
centre of four anchors connected to it. The ship is made fast to the buoy with
the help of a single chain or two which is secured onboard to the bow stopper.
In general, while approaching Single point or single buoy
moorings weather is a major criteria in determining whether to berth the vessel
or not. Calm seas with low swell and wind force below 15kts are considered
favourable to make an approach. Presence of strong tidal current limits the
interval for berthing and unberthing.
The headway approach has to be slow often less than while at the
same time approaching at a smaller angle to the buoy and then gradually hauling
in the buoy messenger rope and pulling the vessel slowly towards the buoy using
engine kicks at short intervals to control and maintain headway along with
mooring winches to haul in the vessel when she nears about 150-200 meters from
the buoy.
For unberthing the chain is
released from the bow stopper and a short kick on the engines going astern
swings the bow to starboard for right-handed propellers thus clearing the
vessel of the buoy. Tug’s assistance can also be sued to pull the vessel astern
and clear it of the buoy. Know more about single
point mooring here.
Conventional buoy or multi buoy mooring: In this method, the bow of the ship is secured using both her anchors whereas the stern is secured to buoy around it. In the approach firstly vessel approaches the final berthing position from forward at an angle of 90 degrees to her final direction of berthing.
The starboard anchor is then let go first at a pre-decided spot
while the ship is making headway. The required amount of cable is paid and the
astern propulsion too operated simultaneously to stop the vessel. Once the
vessel is stopped in the water port anchor is let go and thus vessel positions
her stern along the centerline bifurcating the buoys.
For aligning the vessel along this centerline port cable is paid
out and starboard cable heaved in with astern propulsion. The helm and engines
are to be carefully used during this manoeuvre to ensure the stern is swinging
clear of any of the buoys.
During unberthing, the
anchor cables are heaved in to move the vessel forward and the weight is taken
on windward lines while casting off other lines to prevent swinging of the
stern into the other buoys. This manoeuvre requires skill and efficient
operation of the ship’s crew as well as of the mooring equipment as often
weight of the lines can be immense.
Mediterranean mooring: For
this type of mooring, a pre-calculated position is determined and approached
using engine movements. The bow initially is made to cant towards the berth and
the starboard anchor is let go in that position.
After this, the engines are run astern and the port anchor is
let go at the designated spot. The vessel falls astern and swings to starboard.
Thus vessel is held by both the anchors as it approaches the quay. Stern lines
are then passed. Moorings are kept tight by using the anchor cables.
The positioning of the vessel is such that mooring is completed
with around four shackles on each anchor. Often tide is used to control the
drift of the vessel towards the quay while positioning it by heaving or paying
out on one of the anchors. Read
more on mediterranean mooring here.
Running Mooring: This
manoeuvre takes a relatively short duration compared to the Mediterranean
mooring and offers more control of the vessel. The vessel’s starboard anchor is
let go at a position approximately four to five shackles from the final
position of the bow and around 9 shackles paid out while moving ahead on
engines.
Then as she falls astern with the tide the port anchor is let go
and the starboard anchor is heaved onto five shackles. This method restricts
the swinging room and reduces the load on the windlass.
Standing Mooring: This
is practised during crosswinds. As the vessel is stopped the port anchor is let
go and with the tide around 9 shackles are paid out. The starboard anchor is
let go and simultaneously port anchor heaved on.
Thus the port anchor is
kept on 4 shackles being generally the flood anchor and starboard on five as it
is the ebb anchor. This vessel takes longer duration and provides less control
over the vessel. The load on the windlass is more as compared to running moor.
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