Aux 2 Unit 16 Stress on hull Q8 Answer

  1. With reference to stresses and strain in vessels, describe, with the aid of a sketch, EACH of the following:
    (a) panting;(2)
    (b) pounding;(2)
    (c) racking;(2)
    (d) hogging;(2)
    (e) sagging;(2)

(a) Panting (2 marks)

  • Panting is the in-and-out flexing (“breathing”) of the bow plating caused by cyclic variations in water pressure as the vessel pitches in heavy seas.
  • It occurs mainly in the forward parts of the hull near the bow, where wave pressure alternately increases and decreases as the ship meets head seas.

(b) Pounding (2 marks)

  • Pounding is the slamming impact of the ship’s forefoot or bottom plating onto the sea surface when the vessel lifts clear on a wave crest and falls heavily into a trough.
  • It produces severe shock loads and vibration on the bottom shell plating, forepeak floors, and framing.

(c) Racking (2 marks)

  • Racking is the transverse distortion of the hull structure due to side-to-side movement when rolling in a seaway.
  • The ship’s rectangular cross-section tends to deform into a parallelogram, placing shear stress on the side frames, deck beams, and bulkheads.

(d) Hogging (2 marks)

  • Hogging occurs when the vessel’s midship region is supported by a wave crest while the bow and stern are unsupported in troughs.
  • The hull bends upward amidships, placing the deck in tension and the bottom in compression.

(e) Sagging (2 marks)

  • Sagging occurs when the bow and stern are supported by wave crests while the midship region is in a trough.
  • The hull bends downward amidships, placing the deck in compression and the bottom in tension.