A 35-meter coastal analysis vessel constructed by Holland Shipyards Group’s shipyard in Hardinxveld-Giessendam, Netherlands, has been fitted with a single high-lift Barke flap rudder and piston-type steering gear system from Damen Marine Components (DMC).
The analysis vessel, the R/V Prinsesse has been constructed for the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research. The state-of-the-art ship will undertake all kinds of duties. These will vary from knowledge assortment and fish inventory sampling to the deploying and retrieval of ROVs, buoys, ocean landers, autonomous ocean gliders, AUVs and different tools.
DMC’s Barke flap rudders are particularly designed for ships engaged in actions equivalent to analysis that require glorious maneuverability, low noise and vibration ranges, and first-rate gas financial system. Their progressively rotating flaps generate excessive elevate forces at giant rudder angles and low drag at small rudder angles, delivering the required efficiency in all conditions. The enclosed linkage system additionally offers overload safety and prevents any materials current within the surrounding water from getting into the rudder meeting.
DMC’s piston-type steering gear programs are a perfect match for the Barke flap rudders. They are extremely dependable and, with a number of choices relating to rudder inventory connections, rudder angles and cylinders, the set up course of is each environment friendly and economical with regards to the area required.
DMC’s gross sales and advertising director Wim Knoester commented, “We are confident that the combination of our Barkeflap rudder and piston-type steering system will serve the IMR’s latest research vessel well for many years into the future. It has been, as always, a pleasure to be continuing our cooperation with Holland Shipyards Group that dates back to its formation over 40 years ago.”
Jules Custers of Holland Shipyards Group added, “We have every confidence in the quality and performance of the equipment designed, built and delivered by Damen Marine Components. They will contribute to what is a first-class research vessel capable of fulfilling a wide range of roles.”
The two organizations have already got one other undertaking underway, with DMC contracted to construct 5 of its Optima nozzles for 2 newbuild, 3,600 DWT inland waterway cargo vessels and three newbuild 3,800 DWT MPP coasters.