At the end of 2014,
through our sister company,
Lankhorst, we at
CASAR received an interesting
request to fit the ropes
on a 40-ton AHC articulating
crane of the Dutch manufacturer,
Langendijk Equipment. The crane
is installed on the supply ship
Wildebeest, which serves oilrigs
of the Edison Chouest Offshore
company (ECO).
It lifts and lowers loads weighing
up to 40 t, to a depth of up to
3,000 m. In consideration of the
required safety factor 5, the rope
has to have a minimum breaking
force of 200 tons. The wires
used to produce the CASAR
Eurolift have a nominal strength
of 2,160 N/mm² and thus
exceed the required minimum
breaking force. It is fitted with a
40-strand hoist rope that is extremely
resistant to rotation. The
rope core and the outer strands
are compacted, which gives the
outer strands a greater bearing
surface on the rope core. In turn,
this reduces the compression on
the point of contact and thus also
the risk of inner wire breakages.
The tailor-made deep sea crane
is fitted with the so-called AHC can get bigger in every layer and ultimately
lead to the formation of a rift in the upper layers,
into which a whole strand can be drawn.