
Originally Posted by
bob10
FAR SARACEN - Anchor Handling Vessel (IMO: 9417842, MMSI ...
The far Saracen. Official description - anchor handling vessel. They use these vessels to anchor oil & gas rigs to the ocean floor. Those anchors are huge. We berthed alongside one of these ships when on an Attack class patrol boat out of Darwin, Dampier or Hedland, not sure which now. It would be only a slight exageration to say the anchor was as big as our boat. The reason I wanted to confirm what type of vessel it is was this. How come they could do it, and the Navy couldn't?;
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"They worked tirelessly looking after sick people, the elderly, infants, even special needs teenagers," said Mr Nairey."
"How come the Navy couldn't do what"?
The correct term for those vessels is A.H.T.S., "Anchor Handling Tug Supply." I was fleet engineer for P&O on them many years ago. If you are referring to an anchor they had on deck it would have belonged to an oil rig, although unless they were taking a new one to a rig the only time an anchor is on the deck is when they take it from the rig to "run the anchor". The rigs at the time used an "Admiralty" type anchor, usually of 15 tons.
Like all such anchoring systems, the weight of a long length of chain is more the "anchor" than the bit on the end.
The supply ships are equipped with many different types of rescue equipment, including a fast motor boat, or a RIB. They have scramble nets that can be deployed over the side, and usually a removable section of the bulwark along the side. The deck is close to the waterline as well, so not difficult to board from the sea.
One of the news reports were referring to the ship as a "trawler"! This one was sent from the Bass Straight where it is employed servicing the production platforms. Cheers
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