They are ready to go... the operation is due to begin Monday morning...
Here is how they are going to do it...
http://www.youtube.com/v/71AuW7kHQsY
http://physicscentral.com/explore/plus/costa-concordia.cfm
QuoteScience of a Shipwreck: Costa Concordia
Nearly one year ago, disaster struck off the coast of Italy. The Costa Concordia cruise ship hit a rock close to the Italian shore, ripping open 160 feet of the ship's steel. Thirty people died in the disaster, and dozens more were injured. Although the remaining passengers were rescued, other significant threats linger.
One year later, the steel behemoth still sits partially submerged just off the coast. Salvage efforts in the past have used a variety of destructive methods, but the Costa Concordia presents several unique challenges. It's the largest capsized passenger ship in history, and it ran aground in a protected marine environment.
Explosives could dislodge the ship, or operators could slice the ship into pieces with gigantic chain saws. Both of these options, however, could easily devastate the surrounding environment and tourist industry. Instead, the Italian government selected an expensive two-step process that's never been done on this scale: parbuckling and re-floating.
Physics of Parbuckling
Salvage operators have already secured the massive ship in place, and they plan to rotate it off of its side. The ship won't simply float once it's turned on its side, however; water has flooded much of the ship's interior, reducing its buoyancy.
Instead, the salvage team is building an underwater platform that the ship will rest upon after the rotation. Once the ship has been righted, a small fraction of it will peek above the surface while it sits atop the artificial support.
Rotating such a large amount of submerged steel will prove quite difficult, and the team must strike a balance between having enough force to rotate and using excessive force that might damage the ship. Using strong cables, the team plans to slowly roll the ship off of its side over the course of a couple days.
"They have to be very careful that they don't place the hull under high stresses," said Jeff Stettler, a salvage expert and retired Commander in the U.S. Navy who is not working on the Costa Concordia wreck removal.
Partially to help rotate the ship, operators will attach sponsons — large, box-like structures — to the side of the ship that's above water. These sponsons will eventually help re-float the ship, but they also act like a cantilever, adding weight and making the rotation easier, according to Stettler.
Cantilevers are beams that are only supported on one end, and naval experts have used this cantilevering effect before to salvage ships. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in the 1940's, the U.S. military parbuckled the capsized USS Oklahoma in a very similar fashion. Operators attached cables to structures fitted onto the ship before rotating it back to an upright position, as seen below.
(http://physicscentral.com/explore/plus/images/USS-Oklahoma.jpg)
No one's parbuckled a passenger ship as large as the Costa Concordia, however.
"It'll be very interesting to see how smoothly it goes," said Stettler.
Floating Once Again
Once engineers rotate the ship back to its seaworthy stance, they have to give it enough buoyancy to float again. For a ship to float, the buoyant force of the seawater must equal the gravitational force pushing the ship downward – its weight.
According to Archimedes' principle, the buoyant force equals the weight of water displaced by a floating object. Before the disaster, the Costa Concordia's enormous volume displaced enough water to counteract its massive weight. Now, however, water has inundated much of the ship's interior — water that the ship no longer displaces.
In short, the ship has lost buoyancy. To restore some of that buoyancy, divers and engineers have likely patched the interior as best as they can. But the ship will need significant help from the outside as well. That's the secondary and more important purpose of the box-like sponsons fixed to the side of the ship.
After righting the ship, the salvage team will attach sponsons to the other side of the ship, giving it a symmetric bulge. Although the sponsons will initially fill with seawater, engineers will use hydraulic pumps to fill the sponsons with air.
Once filled with air, the sponsons will displace more water, providing external buoyancy; this external buoyancy will balance out the buoyancy lost to the flooded parts of the ship. Once the ship's floating again, the team will tow the wreckage to a shipyard and scrap the ship for its metal.
This re-floating should be more straightforward than the parbuckling, according to Stettler.
"Once upright and on that platform, it's just a matter of time to get enough buoyancy," said Stettler.
The salvage team hopes to finish the parbuckling, re-floating, and towing of the Costa Concordia in the summer of 2013. Hundreds of millions of dollars are being poured into the project, and hundreds of workers have been working around the clock for months.
Stettler warns that salvages and wreck removals never go exactly according to plan. Nonetheless, he's cautiously optimistic about the endeavor, citing the project operators' expertise, careful design and modern technology.
"I'm pretty confident it'll happen," Stettler said.
By the way, one of the biggest salvage companies that handling this project is from our own local company, Crowley which owns Titan Salvage as a subsidiary of the parent company.
Go Titan Salvage! Always do things that no salvage companies has never done before. These guys have done the impossible.
-Josh
Hard to believe that in this day in age, we still have large ships running aground, and entire amusement parks catching on fire (Seaside Heights, NJ). What is this 1912? I better get my polio shot.
Photo Gallery... 8)
http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke/photo-gallery-salvaging-the-costa-concordia-fotostrecke-101346.html
Friday, September 13th, 2013, 11:41:22 AM
IT EN
The Parbuckling Project
Concordia wreck removal project informative website
Titan Salvage http://www.titansalvage.com/
Looks like it has moved a few feet... 8)
Quote from: BridgeTroll on September 16, 2013, 09:31:19 AM
Looks like it has moved a few feet... 8)
Smart Engineering!
Looks like they have it righted now.
A timelapse for those not glued to the drama... :)
http://www.youtube.com/v/_91A9FzxQ78
Another...wide angle and two different perspectives... :)
http://www.youtube.com/v/MbAZs2flOPQ
(http://wpmedia.news.nationalpost.com/2013/09/costa-concordia-day.jpg?w=940)
(http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/ptPeCdDPAGexKg_f1afJFQ--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9ZmlsbDtoPTQyMTtweG9mZj01MDtweW9mZj0wO3E9ODU7dz03NDk-/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/afp.com/photo_1379407540810-6-HD.jpg)
(http://images.brisbanetimes.com.au/2013/09/17/4754564/rb_lead4_costa-20130917141729202491-620x349.jpg)
(http://cdn2.spiegel.de/images/image-545421-galleryV9-lkih.jpg)
It will begin its journey to Genoa on July 21st...
http://www.youtube.com/v/JepIPOIP53Y
What and engineering feat! Old concepts, but executed on a huge scale. Wouldn't you love to see the work flow chart on that effort?
I bet they have one just down the road at Crowley... yes a Jacksonville based company is leading the way with this effort...
http://www.titansalvage.com/About-Us/About-Our-Parent-Company
QuoteAbout Our Parent Company
Crowley Maritime Corporation provides diversified marine, transportation and logistics services in domestic and international markets through six operating lines of business: Puerto Rico/Caribbean liner services; Latin America liner services; logistics; marine contract services and petroleum distribution; petroleum services (deep sea transportation) and marine technical services.
Amazing! I had all but forgotten about this wreck, thanks for the update and posting the videos!
Really cool.
http://www.youtube.com/v/TvCMGMEHkNA
http://news.yahoo.com/italys-giant-cruise-wreck-begins-final-voyage-043305693.html
QuoteCosta Concordia wreck leaves Giglio on final voyage
Giglio Island (Italy) (AFP) - Italy's once-luxurious Costa Concordia cruise liner embarked on its last voyage on Wednesday, as tug boats began towing it from island wreck site to scrapyard grave in one of the biggest salvage operations in maritime history.
Sunshine streamed down on the Mediterranean bay where hundreds of onlookers watched as the final cable attaching ship to shore was cut, finally severing ties between the island of Giglio and the ship two and a half years after its capsize claimed 32 lives.
"We've done it! She's off!" shouted salvage specialists in hard hats who popped champagne bottles and sprayed the crowd, while tourists cheered and church bells rang out as the ship was pulled away.
"Today, Giglio is once again ours," a local man, visibly relieved to see the back of the Concordia, told AFP.
The rusting liner, roughly twice the size of the Titanic and now hoisted afloat by massive air chambers, will be tugged to the port of Genoa in northwest Italy, where it will be dismantled and scrapped.
The massive operation -- including a 17-man crew aboard the Concordia, a dozen accompanying vessels, and two giant tug boats pulling the wreckage at a speed of just two knots (3.7 kilometres, 2.3 miles) per hour -- is expected to reach Genoa in four days, weather permitting.
"This is a big day for Giglio but we'll only be able to relax once it reaches Genoa", Nick Sloane, the South African salvage master in charge of the operation, said.
Franklin Fitzgerald, 35, an industrial diver from Texas, called his work on the Concordia "one of the proudest moments of my career. It's a very happy day for all of us," he told AFP.
- 'We can finally go our way' -
On the evening of January 13, 2012, the 4,229 passengers from 70 countries were settling into the first night of their cruise when their luxury liner struck a rocky outcrop off Giglio.
The biggest Italian passenger ship ever built -- the length of three football fields -- the Concordia boasted four swimming pools, tennis courts, 13 bars, a cinema and a casino.
The crash tore a massive gash in its hull and it veered sharply as the water poured in, eventually keeling over and sparking a panicky evacuation and, ultimately, dozens of deaths.
Surviving passengers who returned to the Tuscan island of Giglio for the final farewell, said they are ready to put the nightmarish experience behind them.
- A billion-euro operation -
"We hope that what we've kept inside us will depart when the boat departs. And that as it goes on its way, we can finally go on ours," Anne Decre of the French Survivors' Collective told AFP, clutching the hand of friend Nicole Servel whose husband died in the disaster.
In what ship owner Costa Crociere estimates is a billion-euro salvage operation -- excluding the cost of its ultimate disposal -- the Costa Concordia is being towed by Dutch- and Vanuatu-flagged boats, while the flotilla carries divers, engineers, a medical team and environmental experts with it.
Sensors attached to the sides of the ship will monitor for possible cracks in the crippled hull, while underwater cameras will watch for debris washing out of the vessel amid fears toxic waste could spill into the sea.
Objects floating free such as suitcases, clothes and furniture will be caught in a huge net while infrared sensors will be used to detect possible oil leaks at night.
- One man still missing -
Sloane, whose 20-year career as salvage master has taken him to six continents and two warzones, has called the Costa Concordia the "biggest challenge" and said he is ready to "wave goodbye to Giglio".
At a press conference here on Wednesday, Italian Environment Minister Gian Luca Galletti hailed Sloane as "our champion".
Italian emergency services chief Franco Gabrielli said despite the excitement, people's reactions should be "measured and sober" in light of the disaster.
"We must keep in mind the reason we are all here."
The body of Indian waiter Russel Rebello is still missing and there will be a search for his remains when the ship is dismantled.
The ship's captain Francesco Schettino, dubbed Italy's "most hated man", is on trial for manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning the ship before all the passengers had been evacuated -- even though he has claimed that he fell into a lifeboat.
He found himself in hot water again on Tuesday after photographs emerged of him partying even as the final preparations were being made for the towing.
Four other crew members and an executive from the Costa Crociere, the biggest cruise operator in Europe and part of the US giant Carnival, have already plea-bargained and been convicted on lesser charges.
Track its progress live! 8)
http://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais/home/centerx:10.64694/centery:42.49031/zoom:8/mmsi:247359600