DocumentCode
429764
Title
Missing of the ROV Kaiko vehicle - problem on the secondary cable
Author
Hashimoto, Kikuo ; Watanabe, Masayuki ; Tashiro, Shozo ; Momma, Hiroyasu
Author_Institution
Marine Technol. Center Res. Support Dept., Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Sci. & Technol., Yokosuka, Japan
Volume
2
fYear
2004
fDate
9-12 Nov. 2004
Firstpage
807
Abstract
Kaiko has been the only full ocean depth survey system in the world since 1995. The Kaiko system comprises a launcher, the vehicle, primary cable, secondary cable, on board equipment and the R/V Kairei as a mother ship. In May 2003, the secondary cable of the Kaiko snapped during the 296th dive at a depth of 4675 m in the Nankai Trough, 130 km southeast off Cape Muroto on Shikoku Island, and the vehicle has been missing. The secondary cable of the Kaiko is an electro-optical cable, and its tension member is made of aramid fiber. It was found that the secondary cable snapped against a tension less than 400 kgf, which was far below the designed breaking strength of 3 tonf. The aramid tension members were investigated and found to have weakened by bending under extremely high hydrostatic pressure, and local fatigue of the tension members occurred at the cable termination near the vehicle.
Keywords
electro-optical devices; marine accidents; remotely operated vehicles; submarine cables; underwater vehicles; 4675 m; AD 1995 to 2003 05 29; Kaiko launcher/primary cable; Kaiko secondary cable problem; Nankai Trough; R/V Kairei mother ship; ROV Kaiko vehicle; aramid tension member failure; deep ocean survey system; electro-optical cable; hydrostatic pressure; remotely operated vehicle; Accidents; Cable shielding; Conductors; Grounding; Marine technology; Marine vehicles; Oceans; Optical fiber cables; Optical fiber devices; Remotely operated vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS '04. MTTS/IEEE TECHNO-OCEAN '04
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8669-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.2004.1405555
Filename
1405555
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