myname_earl
Chemical
- Aug 31, 2022
- 51
Is there a solid way to determine if a vessel is out of service?
There is politicking in management right now as a vessel went over its 10-year internal interval by 34 days and maybe we could consider it out of service for stints like during two, 20-day TARs so we'd "gain" 40 days thus still having 6 days to remove from service again and complete the internal inspection. We didn't inspect it during these TARs and I'm going to assume the worst case is that they were flushed out but not thoroughly cleaned and not air-gapped.
Has anyone heard of this being valid or tried? I hate stretching gray areas and definitions but if this strategy is common, maybe it's worth considering.
There is politicking in management right now as a vessel went over its 10-year internal interval by 34 days and maybe we could consider it out of service for stints like during two, 20-day TARs so we'd "gain" 40 days thus still having 6 days to remove from service again and complete the internal inspection. We didn't inspect it during these TARs and I'm going to assume the worst case is that they were flushed out but not thoroughly cleaned and not air-gapped.
Has anyone heard of this being valid or tried? I hate stretching gray areas and definitions but if this strategy is common, maybe it's worth considering.