Lessons Learned: Wire Rope Hazard Causes Turbine Nacelle To Drop

441

  • A wire rope parted, causing a wind turbine nacelle to fall to deck.
  • This incident caused significant damage and loss of the nacelle.

The United States Coastguard (USCG) has published Marine Safety Alert 11-23 relating to an incident in which a wire rope parted, causing a wind turbine nacelle weighing 69 tons to fall 2.2m to deck, causing significant damage and loss of the nacelle, reports IMCA.

What happened

A vessel crane was being used to offload the 69 ton wind turbine nacelle. While hoisting, a wire rope parted, causing the load to fall to the deck. No-one was harmed, but the load landed within a metre of working personnel – there was high potential for serious injury. There was significant damage to the vessel and total loss of the cargo.

What went wrong

The USCG noted that investigation revealed that corrosion, wear, and monotonic ductile overload of the wire rope caused the failure. Further, it was concluded the wire rope was still within its permitted service life but should have been replaced prior to the incident due to the corrosion and wear.

The USCG notes that given the potential wear associated with harsh operating environments, it is imperative that vessel operators employ robust inspection and testing to ensure equipment suitability through its lifespan.

Recommendations

The US Coast Guard strongly recommends that vessels equipped with shipboard cranes:

  • Implement increased load testing frequency to verify wire rope integrity between class society mandated 5-year load tests;
  • Are provided with and utilize pressure lubricating devices as recommended by the manufacturer for routine maintenance;
  • Ensure maintenance tracking systems align with manufacturer’s recommended maintenance protocol, including the period of employment and renewal of wire ropes;
  • Consider shortened periods of employment and early renewal of crane wire ropes to prevent corrosion and fatigue induced failures;
  • Instruct and train all personnel to never position themselves under cargo suspended by any crane, even temporarily;
  • Ensure all shipboard crane operators are properly trained and cognizant of industry best practices;
  • Implement increased wire rope visual inspection frequency;
  • Degrease and remove all lubricant prior to crane wire rope visual inspections to ensure surface defects are not concealed.

Did you subscribe to our daily newsletter?

It’s Free! Click here to Subscribe!

Source: IMCA

3 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks for some other informative web site. Where else could I am getting that type of information written in such an ideal means?
    I have a undertaking that I am simply now operating on, and
    I have been on the glance out for such information. I saw similar here:
    Dobry sklep

  2. I absolutely love your blog and find the majority of your post’s to be
    just what I’m looking for. can you offer guest writers to write
    content available for you? I wouldn’t mind publishing a
    post or elaborating on some of the subjects you write about here.
    Again, awesome website! I saw similar here:
    dobry sklep and also here: sklep online

  3. Wow, amazing weblog format! How lengthy have you been running a blog for?
    you made running a blog glance easy. The entire look of your web site
    is fantastic, as neatly as the content! You can see similar: najlepszy sklep and here dobry
    sklep

Comments are closed.