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Scandinavian installations for escape slide

26 Oct 2011
The Zodiac MES ESS on the Älvsnabben 4.

The Zodiac MES ESS on the Älvsnabben 4.

Swedish commuter ferry operator Stirsöbolage has become the first Scandinavian company to benefit from the new Zodiac MES ESS automatic escape slide.

This follows the installation of three 3.4m slides aboard the Älvsnabben 4 during a routine refit at the Swede Ship yard in Gőteborg. The Zodiac slides and accompanying reversible 100 person life rafts have the benefit of being able to be launched from the boat’s bridge at the touch of a button and without any crew input. This feature is recognised as being particularly valuable for vessels with small crews as it is faster and leaves them free to attend to other duties in an emergency.

The Älvsnabben 4 operates as a commuter ferry around Gőteborg and possesses a reinforced hull that enables it to work in ice during winter months. The 31m aluminium boat was built in Norway in 1994 and can carry 200 passengers as well as 40 bicycles. The installation of the Zodiac MES ESS slides has increased available deck space by permitting the removal of the eight 25-person life rafts in favour of the three more compact and more efficient slide and life raft containers. The operator also benefits from a cost saving by removing the need to service eight life rafts in favour of the three slides. The significance of these benefits prompted the operating company to place an order for an identical installation to be made on the sister vessel, the Älvsnabben 5.

The new slide was primarily developed by Zodiac SOLAS to meet the demand for greater safety and efficiency on vessels with limited crews. However, in an emergency, the benefits of automatic slide and liferaft deployment can be appreciated by crews of any size as it enables them to attend to a wider range of passenger safety tasks. The slide and liferaft are launched and inflated automatically by the ship’s Master on the bridge simply by pressing a button on the system’s control box. This automatically launches the unit over the ship’s side where the slide and raft will inflate. A pair of self-tensioning electric winches will then pull-in bowsing lines to make the escape system secure and ready for use. The only human intervention necessary is for the removal of a locking pin to open the gate and permit access to the slide. It has also been designed so that it can be accessed and used independently by disabled and wheelchair-bound passengers who would otherwise require assistance to escape.

The entire system is vacuum-packed and stored inside a square container that is carried on a deployment cradle. When the launch button is pressed the container lashings are automatically released, and a mechanism pushes the container overboard. Inflation of the slide and raft is immediate and the automatic tightening of the bowsing lines ensures that the system is ready for use in barely a minute. The system will continue to function if the ship has a list of up to 20 degrees to port or starboard and if the vessel sinks, hydrostatic release units will enable the slide and raft to inflate and float free.

Images for this article - click to enlarge

The Zodiac MES ESS on the Älvsnabben 4.

Unless otherwise stated, all images copyright © Mercator Media 2012. This does not exclude the owner's assertion of copyright over the material.




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