Blimey... the entire rig has toppled off its pontoon and is now, presumably, sitting on the bottom.biffvernon wrote: But back to Rita, here's a strange before and after pic found on
Bad hair day for somebody at Lloyds...
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Interesting...... I had assumed it had toppled over and we were looking at the underside?skeptik wrote:Blimey... the entire rig has toppled off its pontoon and is now, presumably, sitting on the bottom.
I dont know... but if thats the underside of the pontoon where are the anchor cables? Or their attachment points? - which I imagine must be fairly solid and heftyDamianB wrote:Interesting...... I had assumed it had toppled over and we were looking at the underside?skeptik wrote:Blimey... the entire rig has toppled off its pontoon and is now, presumably, sitting on the bottom.
Yes. If you look carefully at the cutaway illustration compared to the photograph you can see that the pontoon is normally under the surface and held in position by anchor cables attached to its underside, on the end of each spar. The height of the rig above the water surface is adjusted by the air/water ratio in the pontoon.fishertrop wrote:Does that pantoon provide the bouyency for the whole platform?
If so, it might sit below the water-line with the weight of the platform on it but float on the surface if the platform-body got swept away.....
Hurricanes' damage to oil rigs unprecedented
?You may think that 13 is not significant amount, but this is 10 percent of the contracted fleet out of service for various lengths of time or in some cases permanently,? Marsh said.
Meanwhile, 9 of 12 pipelines that move gas and oil onshore remain shut down or operate at less than 100 percent capacity, according to the latest report by the Association of Oil Pipelines.
Refineries in the hardest-hit area of Beaumont and Port Arthur, Texas, plus Lake Charles, La., still are not operating, costing about 1.7 million barrels a day of refined products, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.