
- With reference to longitudinal stresses in a vessel’s hull:
(a) state the cause of the stress;
(b) state the areas where the stress is a maximum;
(c) describe the structure that resists the stress.
(a) Cause of Longitudinal Stress (3 marks)
- Longitudinal stresses arise because the vessel acts as a beam supported by buoyancy and loaded by its own weight and cargo.
- When the distribution of buoyancy and weight along the vessel’s length is unequal, a bending moment is produced in the hull.
- This causes the ship to either:
- Hog – when the midship region is lifted by buoyancy (wave crest amidships).
- Sag – when the bow and stern are lifted while the midship is unsupported (wave trough amidships).
- These bending moments create longitudinal tensile and compressive stresses along the hull girder.
(Explanation of unequal buoyancy/weight + hogging/sagging = 3 marks)
(b) Areas Where the Stress Is Maximum (3 marks)
- In hogging:
- The deck plating amidships is in tension, while the bottom shell plating is in compression.
- In sagging:
- The deck plating amidships is in compression, while the bottom shell plating is in tension.
- Therefore, maximum longitudinal stresses occur at the extreme fibres of the hull girder — i.e. the deck and bottom plating amidships.
(Identification of tension/compression zones = 3 marks)
(c) Structure That Resists the Stress (4 marks)
The hull is designed to act as a longitudinal girder, and the following structures resist the bending stresses:
- Deck plating and deck girders – resist tensile or compressive stresses at the upper part of the hull during hogging/sagging.
- Keel and bottom shell plating – resist opposite stresses to the deck (compression in hogging, tension in sagging).
- Longitudinal frames, stringers, and girders – connect the deck and bottom structures, providing continuity and stiffness along the vessel’s length.
- Longitudinal bulkheads – contribute to the longitudinal strength, particularly in tankers and larger vessels.
(Each point with function explained = 1 mark each = 4 marks)