First BCP propellers

The inherent flexibility, redundancy and better manoeuvrability offered by twin screw operations when compared to single screw solutions have increasingly been accepted across the shipping industry, states Berg. A single engine driving a single propeller achieves maximum efficiency at a fixed level in the design condition.  At lower power, whether working in combination with fixed pitch or controllable pitch propellers, engine working pressure decreases and engine efficiency is lost.

Greater flexibility can be achieved by operating two smaller engines driving two propellers because, at lower speeds, the ship’s Master has the option to operate on one engine alone, working at its optimum efficiency.  Furthermore, the greater propulsion area covered by two smaller propellers is reckoned to equate to about a 10% efficiency gain when compared to a single screw solution.  

The concept of feathering one of two propellers at lower speeds, so that the other can run at higher output, closer to optimum efficiency, is not new. Developed as a more efficient alternative to locking or clutching out an unneeded shaft line, ‘feathering’ sees the propeller blades rotated through 90 degrees so that they are in parallel to flow.  As per Berg, putting a propeller in the feathered position during an emergency or at low speed minimises drag, with consequent fuel savings. However, feathering techniques to date have featured a complex and often cumbersome mechanical solution, or hubs that cannot offer astern pitch due to their internal mechanical limits. Thus the attractions of feathered hubs have been limited to ships operating within complicated mission profiles.  

Berg says that its new BCP design offers the capability to feather propeller blades within its standard hydraulic hub.  The result is an expansion in the propeller’s operating pitch range. A patent application on this aspect of the design is currently pending.

The Dingheng-built tankers will be constructed to Germanischer Lloyd Ice Class E3, and will feature two 3600mm diameter, BCP950 propellers apiece, driven by 1600kW engines at 136.1rpm. Meanwhile, the US-built ferry will be built to Lloyd’s Register Ice Class 1D, and will incorporate larger 2600mm, BCP760 propellers, driven by 2240kW engines operating at 277.7rpm.   

Berg Propulsion said that the feathering option is now available across its complete range of BCP hubs.

Berg Propulsion is to deliver the first examples of the newly launched Berg Controllable Pitch Propeller (BCP) with feathering capability, with separate orders for installations on board two chemical tankers under construction at the Dingheng (Jiangsu) Shipbuilding Co, in China, and an 85.5m long ferry being built at Eastern Shipbuilding Group, of Panama City, Florida.

Share
Print

Customer service

Do you have any questions? Please feel free to contact us.

Customer service

Do you have any questions? Please feel free to contact us.

Customer service

Do you have any questions? Please feel free to contact us.

Customer service

Do you have any questions? Please feel free to contact us.

Customer service

Do you have any questions? Please feel free to contact us.

Nach oben