MDLU
Marine/Ocean
- Aug 10, 2022
- 7
Dear all,
- Our research team is looking to deploy an underwater towed probe (measure conductivity, temperature, depth for climate change research) in the Arctic (the towing boat in a previous mission, - Probe is towed from the boat with a ~300m fishing line (at depths 0-100m).
- The line operates for continuous 12-hour-long daily missions over several months.
- Probe design highly dependent on fishing line: Power Pro 150lb is by far the best line we could find on the market for our design
- The line is a braid of Honeywell Spectra fibers (very well tested, - The Power Pro 150lb is 0.56mm in diameter (keeping diameter around this value is important)
- Arctic water temperature is around -2C and the air temperature ~-15C. Line operates mostly underwater (-2C) but if towed from the boat, first few meters of the line will be exposed to air (-15C).
POTENTIAL PROBLEM AND POTENTIAL SOLUTION
- When I asked Power Pro about icing problems (they have a line for ice operations but too weak/small for us)
they say: "small water drops can get trapped between fibers and freezing creates small sharp particles that cut the fibers when the line bends under tension".
That's why the coated with PTFE the other line.
- We couldn't find any ice resistant line with the strength we need (>150lb breaking tension) and the PowerPro person suggested we look into PTFE coating the line to prevent water entering between fibers
QUESTIONS FOR YOU Before we consider coating the PowerPro 150lb with PTFE as a solution:
- Have you heard of such icing problem before (is it a real problem we could encounter?) and are you aware of any solutions that other marine engineers use?
- Suggestions for unconventional solutions we could try (maybe keep entire cable completely underwater all the time)?
- Are you aware of fishing lines in our design range (breaking strength and line diameter) that can resist to icing conditions?
Thank you,
Dr. Matteo Di Luca
- Our research team is looking to deploy an underwater towed probe (measure conductivity, temperature, depth for climate change research) in the Arctic (the towing boat in a previous mission, - Probe is towed from the boat with a ~300m fishing line (at depths 0-100m).
- The line operates for continuous 12-hour-long daily missions over several months.
- Probe design highly dependent on fishing line: Power Pro 150lb is by far the best line we could find on the market for our design
- The line is a braid of Honeywell Spectra fibers (very well tested, - The Power Pro 150lb is 0.56mm in diameter (keeping diameter around this value is important)
- Arctic water temperature is around -2C and the air temperature ~-15C. Line operates mostly underwater (-2C) but if towed from the boat, first few meters of the line will be exposed to air (-15C).
POTENTIAL PROBLEM AND POTENTIAL SOLUTION
- When I asked Power Pro about icing problems (they have a line for ice operations but too weak/small for us)
they say: "small water drops can get trapped between fibers and freezing creates small sharp particles that cut the fibers when the line bends under tension".
That's why the coated with PTFE the other line.
- We couldn't find any ice resistant line with the strength we need (>150lb breaking tension) and the PowerPro person suggested we look into PTFE coating the line to prevent water entering between fibers
QUESTIONS FOR YOU Before we consider coating the PowerPro 150lb with PTFE as a solution:
- Have you heard of such icing problem before (is it a real problem we could encounter?) and are you aware of any solutions that other marine engineers use?
- Suggestions for unconventional solutions we could try (maybe keep entire cable completely underwater all the time)?
- Are you aware of fishing lines in our design range (breaking strength and line diameter) that can resist to icing conditions?
Thank you,
Dr. Matteo Di Luca