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Posted By: Pomp Ships on legs - 31st Jan 2008 5:46am
Originally Posted by bbc - Ships on legs
Rising from stormy seas, the giant turbine towers of an offshore wind farm seem almost miraculous to the untrained eye. But how do you put them there?

Most boats do not have legs. But a jack-up barge has six, protruding high into the air when the ship is in transit.

Extending to a length of 48m from the bottom of the ship, and penetrating up to 5m into the sea bed, the "legs" of these ships provide a stable "ground" in a place where there is only roiling water.

As the legs push down, the ship is lifted above the waves. Purpose-built at a Chinese shipyard, the £60m jack-up barge MPIO Resolution is an extraordinary piece of engineering in itself.

With a solid platform achieved, the windmill is fixed into place using a crane from the ship.

These procedures are becoming more common as the drive goes on to increase wind power.

If government targets are to be met, the UK could have as many as 7,000 offshore wind turbines by 2020. In the process, it would increase the amount of energy produced by that means about 60-fold.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/7206780.stm

Thats a lot of wind turbines!
Posted By: MattLFC Re: Ships on legs - 31st Jan 2008 5:53am
I saw this yesterday, pretty crazy, impressive piece of engineering imho!

smile
Posted By: MrPhil Re: Ships on legs - 31st Jan 2008 8:24am
Worked on a similar ship around 99-2000 in my apprenticeship, each leg weighes around 30tonnes iirc.

Amazing considering how rough the seas can be. Credit to the designer and makers of this ship.
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