Unit 17 - 03 - Safety & Alarm System
Unit 17 - 03 - Safety & Alarm System
Unit 17 - 03 - Safety & Alarm System
The detector consists basically of two parallel tubes of equal size, each having a photo-electric cell at one end which generates an electric current directly proportional to the intensity of the light falling on its surface. Lenses are fitted to seal the ends of each tube but allow light to pass. Two identical beams of light from a common lamp are reflected by mirrors to pass along the tubes onto the cells which are then in electrical balance. One tube is sealed to contain clean air and is termed the reference tube. The other, the measuring tube, has connections through which samples of the crankcase vapour are drawn by an electric extractor fan. If a concentration of oil mist is present in the sample, light will be obscured before reaching the cell of the measuring tube; electrical balance between the two cells will be disturbed and an alarm will be operated. Sampling points should be fitted to each cylinder crankcase and their connections are brought to a rotating selector valve which is driven from the fan motor. This repeatedly connects each sampling point to the measuring tube in sequence. Sampling connections should not exceed 12.5 metres in length and must slope to ensure positive drainage of oil; they must avoid any loops which could fill with oil. In the event of oil mist being detected the rotator stops to indicate which sampling point is concerned. The instrument must be reset before the alarm ceases and sampling will recommence. The extractor fan is very small and after testing the samples are exhausted to atmosphere. The detector should be tested daily and the sensitivity checked. Lenses and mirrors should be cleaned periodically. In this model the total mist concentration is measured with respect to clean air. An alternative model draws samples through both reference and measuring tubes.
The valve landing must make a gas and oil tight seal when closed and a non-stick oil and heat resisting rubber ring is fitted to the disc face. An external aluminium valve cover secures the valve spring and acts as a deflector to direct any gas emitted over an arc of 120 aimed where it can do least damage. Inside the crankcase is a dome-shaped flame trap made of several layers of woven, mild steel wire gauze. This projects into the crankcase where it will become wetted with oil mist or splash from adjacent bearings. When wet with oil the gauze dissipates heat at a greater rate and becomes more effective as a flame trap. Free area of the gauze must at least be equal to the area of the open valve. The valve assembly is secured to an aperture cut in the crankcase by a number of cover studs and distance spacers; these act as guides for the valve disc. The valve spring is designed to allow the valve to open under an internal pressure of approximately 5kN/m2 and will close automatically when pressure has been relieved. Regulations demand that for engines of over 300mm bore, one crankcase relief valve of approved design is fitted to each crankcase and chain case. The combined area of the relief valves should be not less than 115 cm 2 per cubic metre of crankcase volume. The free area of each valve is to be not less than 45 cm 2. For smaller engines a reduction in the size and number of valves is allowed. These regulations also apply to the crankcase of large air compressors, etc. Crankcase doors should be robust to prevent damage or rupture before relief valve operate to relieve pressure. Valves will require little maintenance but should be tested periodically by hand; the spring should be inspected and the gauze cleaned. The class surveyor will survey the relief valves at intervals. Engineer M.A. Hamid 4
Scavenge Fires For a scavenge fire to occur there must be the three sides of the fire triangle; fuel and source of ignition. The removal of any one of these would not only extinguish a fire, but to prevent air flow through the scavenge spaces is impossible as scavenging implies air flow. However, fuel should never be present in the scavenge spaces so a clean scavenge space can never ignite. Ignition itself could occur were there to be blow past the piston or were the piston to begin to seize in the liner. It may even be possible for the piston rod gland to overheat to the point where it could cause ignition. The easiest way to avoid scavenge fires is to ensure that the scavenge spaces are maintained clean and free from oily deposits. The cleaning of the scavenge space should be part of the hours ran planned maintenance system, cleaned every 1000 hours ran. The ease of this depends, to some extent, upon the engine design, with respect to its breathing, and in particular depends on the pressure of exhaust gases still in the cylinder at the opening of the scavenge ports. However, the engineer can limit fouling of the scavenge spaces by ensuring that combustion is being carried out as cleanly and crisply as possible; there is good fuel timing, atomisation, penetration. Air fuel ratio and so on. Similarly, the lubrication of the ring pack needs to be controlled to prevent a build up of lubricating oil in the scavenge spaces. There is a possibility that oil may pass over with the scavenge air from the turbo-charger, particularly if the air filters are fouling up. Dust brought in with the air may also be a source of fuel within the scavenge spaces. The liner/ring interface should be well maintained. Use good quality piston rings and renew them and the cylinder liner in good time. A scavenge fire may be caused by the ignition of unburned oil and carbon which has been blown from the engine cylinder into the scavenge spaces. This may include unburned fuel or cylinder lubricating oil and may be due to incorrect combustion caused by a defective injector, faulty fuel pump timing, incorrect fuel condition, lack of scavenge air, partially choke exhaust, low compression, afterburning, by operating the engine at overload conditions, or due to defective piston rings, badly worn cylinder liner, or by wrongly timed or excessive cylinder lubrication. The oil will build up in scavenge spaces where it will become carbonised by further heating and will then reach a condition in which it can burn in the presence of air. It may be ignited by hot gases and burning particles from blowpast of piston rings. A scavenge fire will manifest itself as a drop in power and irregular running of the engine. There will also be a rise in the exhaust and jacket temperatures local to the fire area, high local temperature in scavenge trunk surging of turbocharger, sparks and smoke emitted form scavenge drains and a smell of smoke/hot paint will be apparent. Automatic alarm systems are available, many of which are wires, the resistance of which alter with changes in temperature, the corresponding change in current flow activating an alarm. Scavenge fires are capable of generating conditions favourable to a crankcase explosion because they put heat into the top plate of the crankcase. That is one reason why the fire should be extinguished as soon as is reasonably possible. When a fire occurs, the watch-keeper should, apart from raising the alarm, reduce speed (checking with the bridge first), shut the fuel off, inform the Chief Engineer, and slightly increase the cylinder lubrication oil to the affected unit to prevent, if possible, seizure and wear. A minor fire may shortly burn out and conditions will gradually return to normal. The affected units should be run on reduced power until inspection of the scavenge trunking and overhaul of the cylinder and piston can be carried out at the earliest safe opportunity. Should a fire persist, if there is a risk of fire extending or if the scavenge trunk is adjacent to the crankcase with risk of a hot spot developing, the engine must be stopped, normal cooling maintained and it may be advisable to engage turning gear to prevent seizure. Without turning it is possible that the localised overheating of a piston or piston rod may lead to distortion and subsequent problems. The cylinder lubricators should be exercised and the turning gear should be operated, the ammeter for the turning gear should be observed during the running period, any excessive load, stop the turning gear and investigate. The tie bolts are generally shielded by the tubes form the extreme temperatures. Otherwise they may stretch and relax their grip on the structure. In any case it is prudent t check the tension of these bolts after a large scavenge fire. Engineer M.A. Hamid
Maintenance consists of cleaning and inspection at the same intervals as cylinder overhaul. The valve and seat should be examined and reground if necessary, the spring checked for its free length against an unused spare with no warping. After assembly the valve should be set and pressure tested. Lifting of a safety valve relieves the dangerous pressure in the cylinder and also warns of incorrect conditions. The reasons for this must be ascertained and corrective action taken. The high temperature gas and flame expelled may damage the safety valve seat. Valves may lift manoeuvring or slow running for a number of reasons. Ignition may be violent if engine speed is too slow, if a fuel injector has leaked during priming, or a fuel pump setting is too high or incorrectly timed. Should starting air be used as a brake when stopping an engine for reversal or during a crash stop, high compression pressures at about top dead centre may cause safety valves to lift momentarily. Valves lifting during running may indicate an overload or timing faults including the camshaft drive. Safety valve area is only designed to relieve excess gas pressure and may be insufficient to prevent damage in the event of cooling water or oil leaking into the cylinder. Before starting an engine for the first time it should always be turned slowly with indicator cocks open to expel any leakage. When testing the engine after maintenance, personnel must stand well clear of the cylinder safety valves, personnel have been seriously burnt by flame from a lifting safety valve.
Monitoring Systems While the practices evolved over the three generations for direct drive engines and for two generations for mediumspeed engines betray substantial differences in important detail, there are basic principles common to both. The operators of either require to achieve: 1. 2. 3. 4. Reliability: there should not be unplanned stops. Long periods between overhauls. Optimum performance to meet the designed duty. Minimum annual cost in fuel, attention and parts.
To achieve these objectives it is obvious, though it should not be taken for granted, that the ships engineering officers and engine room staff must not only be competent but well versed in the characteristics of the engine in question.
Every manufacturer will provide facilities and recommendations for taking such observations of the engines behaviour as he considered helpful in maintaining its full efficiency. See, for instance, the figure above which shows typically for a medium-speed engine the measuring points for data logging, automation and protection. He will also provide for guidance a schedule of maintenance attention recommending intervals at which all necessary servicing work is undertaken. This will be based on his general experience with similar designs of engine, perhaps on long experience of large numbers of engines of the same type, but it will inevitably be pessimistic, so that operators can form a judgement in safety about the ideal intervals for their own machinery. This will be influenced by the owners own views, by the operating conditions in which the engine must work, and by the vessels trading pattern: no owner wishes to take his vessel off hire when it is most busy. As the trend against 24-hour manning continues, more reliance is inevitably placed on condition monitoring plus alarms to replace the eyes and ears of the watch keeping engineers, and on data logging to achieve the continuous monitoring of the engines behaviour. The crucial alarms which are invariably provided are for low lubricating oil pressure, low cooling water level, high cooling water temperature, but many others can be added if required. Some, particularly those listed above, are backed up by a shut down capability, although such protection must involve a trade off between damaging the machinery and hazarding the vessel. It must be said, however, that notwithstanding the inevitability not to mention the ingenuity, and in several cases the noteworthy dependability of data logging condition monitoring installations the absence of skilled ears and eyes in the engine room is on occasion sorely missed. Fortunately most engine builders have accepted the challenge of unmanned operation, and have assiduously studied the evidence of operators experience (and of failures) to learn the lessons necessary to improve reliability and time between overhaul (TBO). Particularly with the significant inroads into marine service made by medium-and high-speed engines, engines have been introduced which in other environments are normally unmanned and all but devoid of instrumentation. They depend in such cases almost totally on the hours elapsed recommendations of the manufacturer for carrying out servicing, plus one or two crucial alarms. The kind of engine used as auxiliary power in coasters, for instance, may have not even any provision for such things as cylinder readings. Every reputable maker endeavours to put his designs on the market in a state which represents the optimum compromise between all his design objectives and the constraints of material and component capability. In older times one might draw conclusions from, say, the exhaust temperature achieved in Engine A versus other. Such comparisons today may have to be tempered to recognise that one maker may have adopted a different scavenge ratio, or a different valve material, or even just a different arrangement of instrumentation. That is not to discourage the right to an explanation, but the ultimate criterion is still the reliability, and the annual cost as demonstrated by experience. To replace the human operator, who would normally carry out the role of monitoring any operation, automatic monitoring systems must be introduced. Monitoring systems vary in both size and complexity, ranging from a simple make-break switch operated by pressure to activate an alarm, to a sophisticated sequential scanning system. Engineer M.A. Hamid
Alarm Systems
Within the rules and regulations are features which must be included into the design of control equipment, in particular the alarm system. Alarm systems are associated with control and safety systems and are normally an integral part of the monitoring system. The design must allow the alarm system to function independently of any control or safety systems, where practical, so that the alarm system will still function if there is a fault in these other systems. Any alarm system must have an automatic change over to a stand-by power supply in the event of a main power supply failure. It must be self-monitoring for faults within the alarm system itself, such as a broken wire or sensor failure. Any internal system fault should cause the alarm system to give an alarm. The alarm system fitted must advise duty personnel quickly of any fault condition. The presence of any unrectified faults should be indicated at all times. If a vessel is being operated in the UMS mode, then audible and visual indication of machinery alarms must be relayed to the engineers accommodation so that the engineering staff are aware that a fault has occurred. If any machinery alarm has not been acknowledged in the control room within a predetermined time the engineers general alarm should sound automatically. A ledger must be maintained and kept up to date concerning the testing and maintenance of all alarms; also, it should be part of the planned maintenance system. The class surveyor will inspect the ledger during visits to the vessel.
Any indication of a machinery fault should also be relayed to the bridge, so that they are aware of the fault, know that it is being attended to, and when it is cleared. Visual alarms are colour coded to give an indication of priority level. They can be steady state lamps or flashing lamps, depending on their application. An audible alarm silence button should not extinguish any visual alarm.
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Typical systems with power reduction protection on a main propulsion diesel engine are: a) b) c) d) e) f) g) high scavenge air temperature; high oil mist level in crankcase; low piston cooling pressure or flow; high piston cooling outlet temperature; low cylinder cooling pressure or flow; high cylinder cooling temperature; high exhaust gas temperature on a cylinder, or high exhaust gas temperature deviation from average exhaust temperature.
It is very important that the correct operation of all Main Engine slow down and shut down devices are tested, on at the least a monthly basis, also be included in the Critical Equipment list. Thus preventing spurious shut downs in enclosed waters. A recent grounding occurred due to a defective oil mist detector. Machinery shut down With the shut down safety system the machinery is protected from critical conditions by shutting off the fuel supply or power supply thereby stopping the machinery. In some cases a shut down will follow a reduction of power if the prevailing conditions continue to develop into a critical situation or if no remedial action is taken after a certain time period. Consider the scenario of the diesel engine with a high-high jacket water temperature. If, after the reduction in power decreases the speed of the engine to 45 rev/min, the temperatures stay high-high, then after 3 minutes an engine shut down will be triggered, stopping the engine. The electrical power supply to electric motor driven circulating pumps may be isolated if, for example, a shaft bearing fails, which may increase the electric load on the motor. An overload trip will isolate the power. This type of safety system with its associated alarm is known as a second stage protection device, and it must be independent for the first stage device. Bilge level detection system An alarm system must be fitted to provide warning when the contents of the machinery space bilge wells has reached a predetermined level. This level must be low enough for the contents of the bilges not to overflow onto the tank tops. Bilge water moving over the tank tops is particularly dangerous for several reasons. 1. It can be a fire hazard, especially if there is oil in the bilge water. A local fire could rapidly spread through the machinery space. 2. There is danger of free surface effect on the stability of the vessel. 3. There is possibility water damage to electrical cables and motors, from splashing. Accumulation in the bilge wells must be detectable at all angles of heel and trim of the vessel. Ships of 2000 tonnes gross or more must be fitted with two independent detection systems so that each branch bilge is provided with a level detector. Some ships are fitted with automatic pumping for bilges. Before the bilge level reaches the alarm level a float controlled will activate the bilge pump, open the required valves and activate the bilge pump. the system must be designed to avoid causing pollution or masking an actual leak situation.
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Fire detection alarm systems The fire detector indicator and alarm system must be situated in such a position that fire in the machinery spaces will not make it inoperative. Commonly it is sited on the bridge or in a special fire control centre. The system panel normally gives local audio-visual alarm and indicates the source of the fire alarm. If the local warning alarm is not acknowledged within a certain time it will initiate the main audible fire alarm, which must be capable of being hears on the bridge, in the fire control station, and in the accommodation and the machinery spaces. Particularly fire detector loops or individual detectors are capable or being temporarily isolated, and the status of loops must be indicated on the panel. If a detector is advertently left off, the alarm system must reactivate the detector automatically after a certain time period, usually 30 minutes. The alarm system must be self monitoring and any power or system failure, such as short circuits or broken wires, should raise an alarm with a different tone to that of the main fire alarm. Fall safe policies Any control system should be designed to fail safe. This means that if the control system has a failure, then the controlled equipment must fail to a condition so as not to cause an unsafe situation to arise, such as mechanical or thermal overloads of machinery. Depending on the particular use of the equipment the failure mode can be different, for example a pneumatically operated valve can be arranged to: a) open on air failure (OAF); b) close on air failure (CAF); or to c) fail fixed, i.e. the valve remains in the position it was in at the time of the air failure. According to the Rules of Lloyds Register, failure of the actuator power should not permit a valve to move to an unsafe condition. A good example of fail safe operation is with a controllable pitch propeller system. The response firstly depends on the type of hub fitted, which can be either a spring loaded type or an all hydraulic type. With the spring loaded type the hub is fitted with a spring so that in the event of a hydraulic failure the propeller blades will fail to the ahead position. The vessel will be able to maintain its navigation speed, but reduced to about 75% of maximum, as the water pressure acting on the propeller blades can overcome the spring pressure above this power level. With the all hydraulic hub type the response is dependent on the speed of the vessel through the water. Generally speaking, the blades will move to the zero pitch position to get under way again the blades will have to be jacked, using a manually operated hydraulic pump, and locked in the ahead position. If the main engine is reversible the vessel can operate as if with a conventional fixed pitch propeller. For any fail safe device it is important to establish what is should do in a failure mode and then test the device to ensure it operates correctly.
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