New Dry Dock of Indian Navy: Why They Are Essential For Any Naval Force
The need for a large dry-dock was realised by the Indian Navy with the induction of Aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, for its maintenance and upkeep as required for keeping it at sea. The ships and submarines undergo a highly advanced maintenance plan which is contemporary and hi-tech
by Milind Kulshreshtha
Indian Navy boasts of being in the group of few of the largest navies in the world and operates hundreds of small and large warships and submarines. Endeavour is to maintain most part of this naval asset at sea 24/7, round the year for protecting the 7,516.6 km Indian coastline and for various other Power projection roles around the globe. Technically warship and a submarine are very complex types of machinery, which require highly talented manpower to operate and maintain them at the combat readiness level at all times, a mammoth task keeping in mind India’s huge area of interest to be protected even during the peacetime.
Mumbai Dry Dock
The dry-dock at Naval Dockyard, Mumbai is the latest asset in India’s pride as a seafaring nation. It was nearly a decade long effort to create this unique structure. The need for a large dry-dock was realised by the Indian Navy with the induction of Aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, for its maintenance and upkeep as required for keeping it at sea. The dry-dock construction was a mammoth challenge since it is surrounded by sea on all three sides, with dock basin jutting out 300m into the sea. This required cofferdam construction to undertake the work on dry-dock area. It is understood that the dock floor is about one and half meter thick concrete and huge amount of steel and concrete was used for its construction. It is a modern dry-dock with high automation, and can be dewatered in less than three hours and filled back within just one and a half hours. Overall, the dry-dock measures about 280m in length are 45m wide and 17 m deep, enough to meet the forthcoming requirement of dry-docking INS Vikramaditya and the indigenously built Vikrant. This dry-dock surely is a pride of the Indian Navy for times to come.
What Are Dry-Docks?
Dry-docking of a ship is a highly planned activity and the process involves taking a vessel to a dry dock basin, locking shut the caisson gates, and draining out the water in the basin using high power water pumps, so that the submerged portions of the hull can be cleaned, inspected and repaired. Every sea going vessel has to mandatorily undertake this dry-docking procedure for preventative maintenance or for any urgent underwater repairs, as required. The steps involved in this are:-
Maintenance of Ships & Submarines
The ships and submarines undergo a highly advanced maintenance plan which is contemporary and hi-tech. The maxim of Float, Move and Fight is a no mean task for a seafaring warship due to challenging sea environment which is equally harsh to men and metal. Very stringent maintenance schedules are followed by these warships and submarines be it as on-board upkeep or a well-defined sequential pattern of Short Refits (SR) and Long Refits (LR). These are primarily designed around machinery overhauling and repair routines as specified by respective OEMs. These also include SAMs, SSMs, Gas Turbines or Steam Boilers and such large highly complex systems and failure of any of these critical systems while ships and submarines are at sea, is seen as highly significant Organisational flaw. As per Naval SOPs in place, any incident of major machinery failures results in a thorough investigation as part of Technical Board of Inquiry for the Root Cause Analysis.
It may be interesting to note here that each and every machinery fitted on-board has a maintenance schedule, i.e. from a small motor to the Ship’s propellers and the large steel hull. The hull of the ship and various appendages like underwater valves & glands, sonar domes, etc. are critical parts of ship and these have a fixed overhauling maintenance schedule prescribed by the OEMs or, as and when some failures call for the underwater repairs. The record of all repairs and overhauls are meticulously maintained as sacrosanct documentation on-board and put up for Inspection by Headquarters regularly. Each logbook and repair sheets of equipment give its life story and manpower on-board is personally attached with these parameters and ensure that the peak performance is achieved by all systems on-board. For the inaccessible equipment and ship’s hull which remain submerged in water always, special maintenance is undertaken on a regular basis through dry-dock facilities.
Floating Dry-Docks
Interestingly, there is a unique type of dry-dock with the Indian Navy, called Floating Dry-docks Navy (FDN). These specialised docks are used for ship’s dry-docking while in the sea itself, using the concept of a pontoon. These FDN can be towed by ships, to places as required. Whenever a ship has to be dry-docked into them, FDN valves are opened and the chambers filled with water, causing the dry dock to float lower in the water. The FDN becomes submerged and this allows a ship to be moved into position inside. When the water is pumped out of the chambers, the dry dock rises and the ship is lifted out of the water on the rising deck, allowing underwater work to be undertaken.
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