Offshore cranes have lifting capacities ranging up to 900mt

Paul Boughton

Huisman's new series of large offshore cranes include cranes with lifting capacities ranging up to 900mt and have been developed to meet the increasing demands of the offshore construction and subsea market.

The new offshore crane series have been based on the successful 200/400mt Offshore Mast Crane of which 15 pieces have been sold so far. The series include the following new cranes; a 300mt/600mt AHC Subsea Crane and a 450mt/900mt AHC Subsea Crane.
 
The main hoist of the new cranes will be outfitted with either a 300mt or 450mt traction winch. A storage winch will be placed in the hold of the vessel to keep the center of gravity as low as possible. This winch can either store 200mt, 400mt or 600mt of wire rope. The wire rope can be reeved into two falls to achieve the maximum capacity.

Heave compensation on the main hoist is achieved by using a combined active and passive system. The passive part allows for a significant increase in the weather window since it reduces the dynamic loading on the crane during splash zone lifts up to 50 per cent.

Further, it includes built-in redundancy since the passive system is fail-safe. The active part allows for an excellent active heave compensation performance at a low power consumption. This type of AHC system also largely mitigates the wear and tear on the wire rope compared to traditional AHC systems since there is no drum crushing or wire rope cut-ins on the winch and the number of sheaves is minimised. All sheaves have a diameter ratio of 25 compared to the wire rope.

The first order was received from the VARD (former STX OSV) shipyard in Norway. The 900 metric ton AHC subsea crane will be installed on a 161m offshore subsea construction vessel (OSCV) for the Norwegian Owner DOF Subsea. The second crane, a 600 metric ton AHC subsea crane, will be installed on a new 160m DP3 Heavy Construction and Flexible Pipelay Vessel for Subsea 7. The vessel will be built by the Korean shipyard Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd. (HHI).

For more information, visit www.huismanequipment.com

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