Engineering and Project Management
 

Ballast Water Management Systems

Ballast water is essential for maintaining the stability and structural integrity of ships during voyages. However, the discharge of untreated ballast water poses significant environmental risks by introducing invasive aquatic species to new ecosystems. To mitigate these risks, international regulations, such as the IMO Ballast Water Management Convention, mandate the …

Bespoke Designs

Offshore drilling equipment skids are modular, self-contained platforms or frames designed to house and transport specific drilling equipment and systems. These skids are essential in offshore drilling operations, as they enable the deployment, operation, and maintenance of various drilling tools and machinery in challenging marine environments. Equipment skids facilitate the …

Local Equipment Rooms

Local Equipment Rooms (LERs) are dedicated, climate-controlled spaces within offshore platforms designed to house critical control, monitoring, and instrumentation equipment. These specialized rooms serve as centralized control points for platform operations, containing: Distributed control systems (DCS) Programmable logic controllers (PLCs) Control panels Communication equipment Safety systems Data logging devices Both …

Drilling Solutions

The maritime industry stands at a critical juncture in addressing its environmental impact, with green ship engineering emerging as a pivotal solution to reduce carbon emissions and minimize ecological disruption. Current and upcoming technological innovations are transforming traditional shipping practices, presenting multi-faceted approaches to sustainable maritime transportation. Emerging technologies show …

Intelligent Simulation

Intelligent process simulation is a cutting-edge technology revolutionizing industrial operations by combining advanced modeling tools, real-time data, and artificial intelligence. This technology allows engineers and decision-makers to create dynamic, digital representations of industrial processes, enabling enhanced design, analysis, and optimization. At its core, intelligent process simulation replicates physical processes and …

On Data Analysis

We are facing a new industrial revolution, where machines and sensors can connect to your IT infrastructure to provide more profound insight into your business and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).

With the advent of this new paradigm, systems and monitoring applications are producing enormous amounts of actionable data allowing for cost optimization, prediction of future events, behavior classification, quality control, and a number of other functionalities.

 

The connection of sensors from remote locations to your local or remote IT infrastructure can be undertaken in a seamless manner through a low cost, energy efficient, and secure Internet of Things (IoT) network. Business intelligence overviews can be generated, alerts programmed and additional functionality plugged in and actioned based upon the received and analyzed data. Moreover, Machine learning (ML) models can be generated allowing for prediction on most valuable operational parameters. Find out how we can help by downloading our data analysis brochure.

Finite Element Analysis Benchmarking

We are in the process of integrating a new FEA software package into our workflow, and we are currently running a batch of example tests, some of them based upon classic textbook problems, some of them based upon benchmarking guidelines from recognized analysis packages (ie, Abaqus, etc).

The basic idea behind this approach is if a classical solution can be emulated using FEA then it can constitute a good verification of the accuracy of the FEA software package, as well as our analysis skills.

This approach is not without fault, however, as most classical textbook cases are simplified problems configured in a specific manner which facilitates manual calculation and solving, and which in some cases can be counterintuitive to model in a FEA simulation, specially in what pertains to boundary conditions.

 

Join us in this process, feel free to download our current brochure and request copies of the benchmarking tests, or the open source FEA package we are currently integrating, and feel free to participate by suggesting new benchmarks or case studies. Besides these files we can also grant access to our remote simulation and analysis environment, as well as our remote postprocessing tool, based upon Paraview Glance.

Bulk Loading Filters

Bulk loading filters, also called rock catchers or de-rockers, are used to keep oversized lumps of material from entering the bulk loading system onboard ships or drilling rigs, potentially resulting in damage to equipment or piping. The bulk loading filter is fitted with a heavy duty mesh (mesh hole size of 10 mm), located inside the package, which crushes oversized material or traps it into a small collection area for removal.

The package is fitted with Weco Wing quick connection couplings (fig. 200 or equivalent, other options can be identically accommodated) as well as pressure indicators located upstream and downstream from the mesh, allowing for easy visual identification of the operational condition of the filter. The package is also fitted with a pneumatic air connection (ball valve and check valve) which can be used to clean the interior.

 

The bulk loading filter package has been designed accounting for design pressures of up to 16 bar, and minimum design temperatures of -20ºC. Its introduction into the bulk loading system will impose a minimal head loss which can increase as the filter gets clogged, hence the importance of keeping regular readings of the local pressure indicators to ensure the package is operating in optimum working conditions. The size of the collecting mesh can be adjusted to other mesh hole sizes as preferred by the customer.

Besides bulk loading filters, we can design and supply other types of equipment such as bulk tanks or cyclone dust collectors.

Supply of Steam Heater Skid

From a project delivered earlier this year including the design and production of a low pressure steam skid compliant with Class requirements, to be installed onboard a series of gas tankers as part of a ballast water management system. The skid uses low pressure steam on the hot side of the heat exchanger to increase temperature of fluid on the cold side. Steam pressure and flow can be adjusted by the flow control valve, through the combined action of cascaded controllers based upon the readings of transmitters located on both circuits.

Steam Heater Skid

 

The skid uses low pressure steam on the hot side of the heat exchanger to increase temperature of fluid on the cold side. Steam pressure and flow can be adjusted by the flow control valve, through the combined action of cascaded controllers based upon the readings of transmitters located on both circuits.