SandCounter
Mechanical
- Apr 24, 2006
- 253
I considered inquiring in the Marine Engineering sub-forum, but the piping sub-forum sees more interaction.
I am working a project that requires portable machinery installed on the weather deck of a ship. The machinery processes water and returns the water to the ship. The unit will be moved between vessels with each vessel having pre-installed connections from the vessel system for connecting to the processing unit. Nonmetallic, flexible hoses between the portable unit and the water connections on the ship would be the most convenient method for plumbing this portable machinery temporarily over multiple installs on multiple vessels.
I have had a regulator point out that U.S. CFR 56.60-25 prohibits flexible hoses longer than of 30 inches.
There is no increased chance of down flooding, nor is there any notable environment concerns related to a failure that would result in a spill, and likelihood of injury can be easily mitigated both mechanically and operationally. I have seen nonmetallic flexible hoses used in other water applications on the deck of marine vessels, e.g. dredges.
If someone has experience in nonflexible hoses on the deck of a marine vessel, I would like to ask if you could point me in the right direction of an exception to this rule that you might have used to satisfy regulators.
Thanks in advance for the help.
I am working a project that requires portable machinery installed on the weather deck of a ship. The machinery processes water and returns the water to the ship. The unit will be moved between vessels with each vessel having pre-installed connections from the vessel system for connecting to the processing unit. Nonmetallic, flexible hoses between the portable unit and the water connections on the ship would be the most convenient method for plumbing this portable machinery temporarily over multiple installs on multiple vessels.
I have had a regulator point out that U.S. CFR 56.60-25 prohibits flexible hoses longer than of 30 inches.
There is no increased chance of down flooding, nor is there any notable environment concerns related to a failure that would result in a spill, and likelihood of injury can be easily mitigated both mechanically and operationally. I have seen nonmetallic flexible hoses used in other water applications on the deck of marine vessels, e.g. dredges.
If someone has experience in nonflexible hoses on the deck of a marine vessel, I would like to ask if you could point me in the right direction of an exception to this rule that you might have used to satisfy regulators.
Thanks in advance for the help.