Lurking back in the mind of every naval architect is the fear of hearing that one of their creations has suffered an accident. Other than crew injuries, inevitable given the thousands of person / sea miles that people have experienced on ships and boats I have designed, this has not happened to me until now.
(Photo: Portland Press Herald)
Story: http://www.pressherald.com/2014/12/...haven-after-trucks-on-board-get-knocked-over/
and:
http://www.workingwaterfront.com/articles/Rough-waters-tip-cement-truck-on-Island-Transporter/16195
It could have been a lot worse. No one was injured and the vessel made it back to port with little damage. Still, it is the first time I know of that one of my vessels had its stability altered, its operations compromised, and required a Coast Guard response due to wind and wave action. I am pleased with how it handled this very severe loading condition.
There are lessons here for us. This vessel has been in service for a long time by operators familiar with the waters. The bay is deep without shoals that can suddenly create much larger and steeper waves. The vessel is operated from a very high helm station from which the run and pattern of the seas can be seen clearly for a long distance. They still got caught by a much larger and steeper wave than they expected, one big enough to tip these trucks on their sides. If it happened to them, it could happen to any of us steering and anticipating from the low viewpoints of our sailboats.
I’ve noticed that I am more careful and cautious about waves than most sailors. That probably has something to do with having seen a 105 foot schooner swept bow to stern and nearly completely immersed by a freak sea. Having been a investigator of sailing vessel accidents and studied wave dynamics also makes it hard for me to maintain the complacency of many sailors in large seas. At all times, when the tops of the waves are breaking the horizon line, you need to keep in mind how a wave twice as high and steeper than the average would affect your craft. Such waves are not common but, if vessel and crew are not prepared for the encounter, you are rolling the dice.
The presence of shoals raises the ante. You can go over a shallow spot where waves are not breaking but one of these large waves can then break heavily. Anytime you are experiencing ocean swells and the water depth is less than twice the average wave height, there is a fairly significant risk.
Remember the wave illusion when you are trying to decide whether to go out. If buoy or weather reports say that there are eight foot seas, you may well think, No problem. I was out in eight foot seas just last week.. If you are basing that on what observed, you weren’t, you were out in four foot seas. Waves generally look twice as high as they actually are, even to me who has studied them closely. I know a rigorous way to measure wave height but just making your best guess and dividing by two works quite well.
For a discussion of why waves look big, see this archived post:
http://forums.sbo.sailboatowners.com/showthread.php?t=147144&#post973854
Be careful out there.

(Photo: Portland Press Herald)
Story: http://www.pressherald.com/2014/12/...haven-after-trucks-on-board-get-knocked-over/
and:
http://www.workingwaterfront.com/articles/Rough-waters-tip-cement-truck-on-Island-Transporter/16195
It could have been a lot worse. No one was injured and the vessel made it back to port with little damage. Still, it is the first time I know of that one of my vessels had its stability altered, its operations compromised, and required a Coast Guard response due to wind and wave action. I am pleased with how it handled this very severe loading condition.
There are lessons here for us. This vessel has been in service for a long time by operators familiar with the waters. The bay is deep without shoals that can suddenly create much larger and steeper waves. The vessel is operated from a very high helm station from which the run and pattern of the seas can be seen clearly for a long distance. They still got caught by a much larger and steeper wave than they expected, one big enough to tip these trucks on their sides. If it happened to them, it could happen to any of us steering and anticipating from the low viewpoints of our sailboats.
I’ve noticed that I am more careful and cautious about waves than most sailors. That probably has something to do with having seen a 105 foot schooner swept bow to stern and nearly completely immersed by a freak sea. Having been a investigator of sailing vessel accidents and studied wave dynamics also makes it hard for me to maintain the complacency of many sailors in large seas. At all times, when the tops of the waves are breaking the horizon line, you need to keep in mind how a wave twice as high and steeper than the average would affect your craft. Such waves are not common but, if vessel and crew are not prepared for the encounter, you are rolling the dice.
The presence of shoals raises the ante. You can go over a shallow spot where waves are not breaking but one of these large waves can then break heavily. Anytime you are experiencing ocean swells and the water depth is less than twice the average wave height, there is a fairly significant risk.
Remember the wave illusion when you are trying to decide whether to go out. If buoy or weather reports say that there are eight foot seas, you may well think, No problem. I was out in eight foot seas just last week.. If you are basing that on what observed, you weren’t, you were out in four foot seas. Waves generally look twice as high as they actually are, even to me who has studied them closely. I know a rigorous way to measure wave height but just making your best guess and dividing by two works quite well.
For a discussion of why waves look big, see this archived post:
http://forums.sbo.sailboatowners.com/showthread.php?t=147144&#post973854
Be careful out there.
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