WO2007111590A1 - Waterjet-propelled marine vessel with simplified intake duct - Google Patents
Waterjet-propelled marine vessel with simplified intake duct Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2007111590A1 WO2007111590A1 PCT/US2006/011052 US2006011052W WO2007111590A1 WO 2007111590 A1 WO2007111590 A1 WO 2007111590A1 US 2006011052 W US2006011052 W US 2006011052W WO 2007111590 A1 WO2007111590 A1 WO 2007111590A1
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- intake duct
- waterjet
- marine vessel
- vessel
- transom
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Ceased
Links
Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B63—SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
- B63H—MARINE PROPULSION OR STEERING
- B63H11/00—Marine propulsion by water jets
- B63H11/02—Marine propulsion by water jets the propulsive medium being ambient water
- B63H11/04—Marine propulsion by water jets the propulsive medium being ambient water by means of pumps
- B63H11/08—Marine propulsion by water jets the propulsive medium being ambient water by means of pumps of rotary type
Definitions
- This invention relates to a waterjet driven marine vehicle, and more particularly the installation method of a waterjet in a marine vehicle.
- Marine waterjets have many advantages over other means of propelling a marine vessel, such as shallow draft, greater safety and higher efficiency.
- a disadvantage is the time-consuming process of installing the intake duct of the waterjet into the vessel hull.
- FIGURE IA labeled PRIOR ART
- the traditional method of installation involves the use of overlapping and bolted bottom flange 101 and transom flange 101a around the interface between a waterjet intake duct 102 and a vessel bottom protrusion 103p in a vessel bottom 103 and a transom protrusion 104p in a transom 104.
- FIGURE IB also labeled PRIOR ART
- a bottom opening 105 in bottom 103 and a transom opening 106 in transom 104 have to be laid out and cut in each vessel for each waterjet unit, making the production of the openings a labor-intensive process.
- the placement procedure, of the intake duct in the vessel hull is complicated and labor-intensive since the flanges of the intake duct of the waterjet have to be matched in two substantially perpendicular planes and be provided with sealer and fastener holes for attachment to protrusions 103p and 104p to produce the mechanical strength of the interface necessary to transmit the thrust and the steering and reversing forces generated by the waterjet, all while maintaining water-tight joints. Additionally, access to the bottom and transom bolts, especially in the undercut area (indicated by reference number 107 in FIGURE IA) below the lower intake duct wall, is limited and requires special tools. .
- a third approach involves the manufacture of a composite intake duct with flanges for installation in non-composite vessel hulls and in retro- fit applications, but again, mis is similarly complicated because of the complex geometries as described above.
- a waterjet intake duct plug is placed in the vessel mold as a method of producing the intake as part of the hull in the hull fabrication process.
- the intake duct contains an undercut in the mold shape, thus preventing release of the hull with the newly-formed intake duct.
- To accomplish release from the mold requires a permanent hull mold modification to allow retraction of the interfering mold parts, or, the removal and destruction of a sacrificial plug. Ih addition, the vessel lay-up process is considerably more complicated and time-consuming.
- a permanently modified hull mold precludes use of the same mold for non-waterjet hull production.
- the present invention simplifies the manufacture of the intake duct, producing a flanged version for dissimilar hull material vessels or retro-fit applications and allows in-place molding of the intake duct in composite vessels.
- the invention solves the common problems of the four installation approaches described above.
- the preferred material of construction is composite to avoid the weight, corrosion and cost of metallic intake ducts.
- This simplification involves the manufacture of the intake duct in a manner that avoids the undercut that prevents a straight release from the mold. It is accomplished by separating the intake duct into an upper part and a lower part that each separately have no undercut so that each part can be made in a mold that permits the straight release of the part without the need for removal of a mold component that would form an undercut.
- the hull bottom and transom openings are connected by the removal of the section directly between the two openings, thereby creating a common opening in the transom and hull bottom and eliminating the portion of the bottom opening and transom opening that are difficult to reach when bolting the separate bottom and transom flanges.
- the upper part of the intake duct forms the upper wall with the mounting provision for the intake grid and the support of the shaft tube. It has a register to receive the lower part of the intake duct to locate it in a unique, fixed position in relation to the upper part of the intake duct.
- the lower part of the intake duct forms the trailing edge of the intake opening and also forms the lower wall of the intake duct.
- the lower part of the intake duct has a mating register to mate with the upper part. In combination, the two parts also form the surface and register for mounting the j et pump section to the discharge end of the intake duct at the transom.
- the concept can be used for intake duct manufacture for applications with non-composite hulls made of metal or wood or to retro-fit existing vessels to simplify the first and second conventional approaches as described above.
- the flanged version of the intake duct of the present invention simplifies installation by avoiding the need for separate matching openings in the bottom and transom while also avoiding the need to place flange bolts in a difficult-to-reach location.
- An upper part plug is used to produce a full-thickness upper part and is provided with mounting flanges. Attachment of the lower part of the intake duct produces a complete intake duct with flanges that are continuous between bottom and transom.
- Hull preparation is simplified since the bottom and transom cut-outs become a common opening with one continuous seam and not two separate openings, thereby elirnmating the holding of critical dimensions between transom and bottom openings.
- the sealing and bolting processes are necessary, they are less time-consuming than a conventional installation since the bolts are all easily accessible and not hidden by undercut 107 (see FIGURE IA) of the conventional intake duct.
- the flange runs continuously from one side of the intake to the transom and then up and over to the other side, following the contour of the opening. The installation process for dissimilar hull materials and retro-fits is made significantly simpler.
- a formed-in-place version of the intake duct avoids the flanged connections altogether by eliminating the flanges and molding the upper part of the intake duct directly into the hull.
- the mold producing the upper part is now placed in the vessel mold and produces in a single lay-up process the hull with the upper part of the intake duct in place while the vessel is releasable from the mold.
- the lower part of the intake duct is produced in a separate mold and is inserted into the upper part of the intake duct after the hull is removed from the mold, thus forming the complete intake duct.
- a shaft tube is then added to complete the installation of this embodiment. . ;
- a shell of the upper part of the intake duct with a shaft tube in place is molded on a plug.
- the shell is just thick enough to maintain the shape of the upper part.
- the shell of the upper part of the intake duct is then mated with the fully-formed lower part thereby forming the complete intake duct shape.
- This combination of the shell of the upper part and the fully-formed lower part is placed in a hull mold.
- the advantage of this method is that the intake can be pre- manufactured with the shaft tube of the jet pump in place, and the mounting surface for the jet pump can be fully inspected prior to installation.
- the intake shell Upon delivery of the intake shell to the vessel builder, it can be placed in the hull mold and, when laid-up, the intake will be an integral part of the vessel.
- All embodiments of the invention provide simplified installation of a waterjet intake duct.
- installation time is shortened and in a laid-up composite vessel, as part of the manufacture of the hull, very little time is added to the manufacturer's building process.
- An object of the present invention is the simplification of the production of a waterjet intake duct, including both part manufacture and overall assembly.
- Another object of the invention is to produce hulls with intake ducts provided as part of the hull lay-up process. Yet another obj ect is to enable pre-fabrication and inspection of intake ducts before installation.
- Another object of this invention is to provide a shaft tube as an integral part of the intake duct or as a separately installable unit.
- a further object is to provide an intake duct which is completely moldable without undercuts.
- undercut refers to the portion of a part that when produced using a mold, prevents the release from the mold without first removing a portion of the mold in order to release the part from the mold after the part is formed.
- plug refers to a mold for forming a composite part, the mold having a predominantly convex shape.
- composite part as described in this invention defines a part which is made of plastic composite material with or without reinforcing material and can be laid-up, thermoformed, injection molded, roto-molded, vacuum molded, etc.
- register refers to a recess or groove or other structure in a part which determines the position of another (second) part with a “mating register” with respect to the first part in a specific, unique way with close tolerance.
- common opening refers to the combining of the bottom opening and the transom opening of a waterjet installation by the elimination of a substantial portion of the hull structure between intake duct, bottom and transom.
- This invention is a waterjet-propelled marine vessel having a hull with a transom and a bottom, a jet pump, and an intake duct, the vessel including the following improvements.
- the transom and bottom have a common opening for intake duct installation, and the intake duct has an intake duct upper part and an intake duct lower part, whereby the intake duct upper part closes the common opening and the intake duct lower part fits into the intake duct upper part to form the intake duct.
- the intake duct upper part includes a register
- the intake duct lower part includes a mating register
- the intake duct is formed by assembling the upper part and lower part such that the register and the mating register locate the parts in relation to one another.
- the vessel bottom and transom and intake duct upper part are made of composite material.
- the intake duct upper part is a molded part having an inner upper wall and inner side walls, the walls all being free of undercuts, thereby enabling unencumbered release of the upper part from a mold.
- the intake duct upper part is formed over a mold plug and the intake duct upper part is integral with the vessel bottom and transom.
- the vessel bottom and transom and intake duct upper part are made of composite material.
- the intake duct upper part has a mounting flange about its periphery to effect the closing of the common opening and a shaft tube is integral with the intake duct upper part.
- the intake duct further includes a discharge end and a jet pump mounting surface at the discharge end to attach the jet pump.
- the intake duct further includes an intake grid and the upper part further includes a suction end having an intake duct mount for attaching the intake grid-covering the suction end.
- the intake duct lower part is a molded composite part, and the assembled intake duct is a molded integral part of the vessel hull.
- FIGURE IA is a perspective view of a conventional (PRIOR ART) waterjet intake duct installation.
- FIGURE IB is a perspective view of the bottom and transom openings in the vessel of FIGURE IA.
- FIGURE 2 A is a perspective view of a common bottom and transom opening in a vessel hull.
- FIGURE 2B is a perspective view of one embodiment of the intake duct of the present invention installed over the common opening of the vessel hull of FIGURE 2A.
- FIGURE 3 A is an exploded end elevation view of one embodiment of the inventive intake duct.
- FIGURE 3B is a bottom view of the intake duct of FIGURE 3A.
- FIGURE 3C is a side elevation section view of the intake duct of FIGURE 3A.
- FIGURE 4 A is an end elevation view of the intake duct lower part.
- FIGURE 4B is an side elevation section view of the intake duct lower part of FIGURE 4 A.
- FIGURE 4C is a plan view of the intake duct lower part of FIGURE 4A.
- FIGURE 5 A is an end elevation view of an assembled intake duct.
- FIGURE 5B is a bottom view of the assembled intake duct of FIGURE 5A.
- FIGURE 5C is a side elevation partial section view of the assembled intake duct of FIGURE 5A.
- FIGURE 6 is a perspective view of a vessel mold with an intake duct upper part plug in place.
- FIGURE 7 is a perspective view of a vessel mold with an intake duct upper part shell and intake duct lower part assembled therewith, the mold ready to be laid up to form the vessel.
- FIGURE 2A is a perspective view of a marine vessel 200 with a hull 202 including a common opening 201, portions of which are in a vessel bottom protrusion 203p of a vessel bottom 203 and a vessel transom protrusion 205 ⁇ of a transom 205.
- FIGURE 2B is also a perspective view of vessel 200 with hull 202, further showing an intake duct upper part 1 placed over common opening 201 as seen in FIGURE 2 A.
- a mounting flange 25, including a transom mounting flange 25a and a bottom mounting flange 25b, is a part of intake duct upper part 1.
- flange 25 The purpose of flange 25 is to enable the fastening and searing of intake duct upper part 1 to transom protrusion 205p and vessel bottom protrusion 203p.
- Transom protrusion 205p serves to reinforce transom 205 and to provide a mating surface for transom mounting flange 25 a.
- Vessel bottom protrusion 203p reinforces bottom 203 and provides a mating surface for bottom mounting flange 25b.
- a set of fasteners 211 secure intake duct upper part 1 to transom 205 and bottom 203. Fasteners 211 are easily accessible during installation of intake duct upper part 1.
- FIGURE 3 A shows intake duct upper part 1 in end view with, in exploded view, an intake duct lower part 10.
- FIGURE 3B shows intake duct upper part 1 in bottom view
- FIGURE 3C shows intake duct upper part 1 in side elevation section.
- two registers 2 are located in a pair of inner side walls 4 and a pair of mating registers 11 are located on intake duct lower part 10.
- Intake duct upper part 1 also includes an upper wall 3.
- FIGURES 3A-3C show a shaft tube 5 with a strut 7 (not visible in FIGURE 3B).
- Shaft tube 5 accommodates a drive shaft (not shown) of a jet pump 31 (shown in FIGURE 5C) and a shaft tube fairing 6 to streamline shaft tube 5 in the stream of water flowing through an intake duct 20 (shown assembled in FIGURES 5 A-5C).
- FIGURES 3B and 3 C show an intake grid recess 8 formed to accommodate an intake grid 33 (shown in FIGURES 5B and 5C).
- FIGURE 4A shows an end view of intake duct lower part 10 with mating registers 11.
- FIGURE 4B shows a side section of intake duct lower part 10
- FIGURE 4C shows a plan view of intake duct lower part 10.
- Intake duct lower part 10 has a lower wall 12 which has a concave shape that fairs into an intake opening trailing edge 14 of an intake duct suction end 27 (see FIGURE 5C).
- the side opposite lower wall 12 fairs into an intake bottom 15.
- the pair of inner side walls 4 are fiat and tapered outwardly in a downward direction to ensure unencumbered release from a mold.
- Intake duct lower part 10 has no undercuts and can be molded with uncomplicated tooling.
- intake duct 20 is formed when intake duct upper part 1 and intake duct lower part 10 are joined along registers 2 and mating registers 11. Side surfaces 13 and inner side walls 4 constitute mating surfaces when intake duct 20 is assembled.
- Upper wall 3 and inner side walls 4 form the inner shape of intake duct upper part 1 of intake duct 20.
- Upper wall 3 is curved and intersects with registers 2 and connects with inner side walls 4, creating an inverted U-shaped form.
- This form can be produced on a moid (not shown) allowing a release from this mold in an upward direction U or in a sideways direction S without hindrance, since no undercut is present and no part of the mold interferes with the departure of intake duct upper part 1 in an upward or sideways direction.
- FIGURE 3C with shaft tube 5 installed, the release from a mold is only in sideways direction S..
- When upper part 1 and lower part 10 are permanently joined together by suitable adhesive or fasteners (not shown), they form intake duct 20.
- duct flange 21 around a discharge end 26 of intake duct 20.
- Flange 21 includes lower flange portion 21a and upper flange portion 21b.
- a set of flange bolt holes 23 provide for the fastening of jet pump 31 to intake duct 20 at duct flange 21 ..
- a vessel mold 50 is provided with a plug 51 to allow the integral forming of intake duct upper part.1 with the vessel hull (not shown) as part of the fabrication process of a composite vessel.
- Intake duct lower part 10 and shaft tube 5 are installed to complete the intake duct (not shown in mold 50 of FIGURE 6).
- FIGURES 6 and 7 appear to be very similar but contain important differences, as follows. When the hull is removed from mold 50 and plug 51 in direction U in FIGURE 6, the hull has formed in it only intake duct upper part 1.
- a protrusion 52 on plug 51 provides for a socket for placement of a shaft tube (not shown).
- Intake duct lower part 10 and a shaft tube are installed to complete the installation.
- Plug 51 remains in mold 50 when the hull is removed from mold 50.
- shell Is with shaft tube 5 installed becomes part of the hull and is removed from mold 50 with the hull.
- intake duct lower part 10 are also integral with the hull upon removal from mold 50.
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Ocean & Marine Engineering (AREA)
- Structures Of Non-Positive Displacement Pumps (AREA)
- Rear-View Mirror Devices That Are Mounted On The Exterior Of The Vehicle (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (4)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| DE112006003822T DE112006003822T5 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2006-03-28 | Waterjet propelled vessel with simplified inlet channel |
| TR2008/09186T TR200809186T1 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2006-03-28 | Water jet-driven watercraft and the method for forming / inserting the inlet channel of this watercraft |
| PCT/US2006/011052 WO2007111590A1 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2006-03-28 | Waterjet-propelled marine vessel with simplified intake duct |
| AU2006340898A AU2006340898A1 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2006-03-28 | Waterjet-propelled marine vessel and method for forming/installing intake duct thereof |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US2006/011052 WO2007111590A1 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2006-03-28 | Waterjet-propelled marine vessel with simplified intake duct |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| WO2007111590A1 true WO2007111590A1 (en) | 2007-10-04 |
Family
ID=38541420
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US2006/011052 Ceased WO2007111590A1 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2006-03-28 | Waterjet-propelled marine vessel with simplified intake duct |
Country Status (4)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| AU (1) | AU2006340898A1 (en) |
| DE (1) | DE112006003822T5 (en) |
| TR (1) | TR200809186T1 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2007111590A1 (en) |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JP2014031059A (en) * | 2012-08-02 | 2014-02-20 | Ishigaki Co Ltd | Suction casing of water-jet propulsion unit |
Citations (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3823683A (en) * | 1970-10-20 | 1974-07-16 | Ua Eng Ltd | Propulsion devices |
| US3840319A (en) * | 1973-03-28 | 1974-10-08 | Berkeley Pump Co | Mold insert |
| US4276035A (en) * | 1976-07-05 | 1981-06-30 | Yamaha Hatsudoki Kabushiki Kaisha | Duct systems for water jet propulsion boats |
-
2006
- 2006-03-28 WO PCT/US2006/011052 patent/WO2007111590A1/en not_active Ceased
- 2006-03-28 TR TR2008/09186T patent/TR200809186T1/en unknown
- 2006-03-28 DE DE112006003822T patent/DE112006003822T5/en not_active Ceased
- 2006-03-28 AU AU2006340898A patent/AU2006340898A1/en not_active Abandoned
Patent Citations (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3823683A (en) * | 1970-10-20 | 1974-07-16 | Ua Eng Ltd | Propulsion devices |
| US3840319A (en) * | 1973-03-28 | 1974-10-08 | Berkeley Pump Co | Mold insert |
| US4276035A (en) * | 1976-07-05 | 1981-06-30 | Yamaha Hatsudoki Kabushiki Kaisha | Duct systems for water jet propulsion boats |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JP2014031059A (en) * | 2012-08-02 | 2014-02-20 | Ishigaki Co Ltd | Suction casing of water-jet propulsion unit |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| AU2006340898A1 (en) | 2007-10-04 |
| DE112006003822T5 (en) | 2009-02-19 |
| TR200809186T1 (en) | 2009-05-21 |
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