1 / 15

M/V Crown Princess Heeling Accident Overview

This presentation provides an overview of the heeling accident that occurred on M/V Crown Princess, including the accident location, summary, safety issues, and staff contributions. It also includes an animation video of the incident.

ksecrist
Download Presentation

M/V Crown Princess Heeling Accident Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. M/V Crown PrincessHeeling Accident Accident Overview Board Meeting, January 10, 2008

  2. Presentation Outline • Ship and accident location • Accident summary • Animation video • Safety issues • Staff • Parties

  3. M/V Crown Princess • Length: 947 ft • Breadth: 118 ft • Speed: 21.5 kt • Built: Italy, 2006 • Flag: Bermuda Princess Cruises • Propulsion: diesel electric, twin screw • Tonnage: 113,561 • Passengers: 3285 • Crew: 1260

  4. Accident Location

  5. Accident Summary • 10-day round trip from New York to Caribbean • 1430 - Captain takes conn, pilot away • 1501 - Autopilot engaged • 1503 - Heading fluctuations, rudder limit alarms • 1507 – 1513 - Autopilot adjustments

  6. Accident Summary • 10-day round trip from New York to Caribbean • 1430 - Captain takes conn, pilot away • 1501 - Autopilot engaged • 1503 - Heading fluctuations, rudder limit alarms • 1507 – 1513 - Autopilot adjustments

  7. Accident Summary (cont’d) • 1513 - 60 degree port turn starts • 1518 - Captain turns over conn to second officer • 1522 - Port turn completed, heading fluctuations resume • 1522 - Captain & staff captain leave bridge • 1524 - Second officer notices high turn rate, shifts to manual steering

  8. Accident Summary (cont’d) • 1525 - Senior officers return to bridge • 1525 - Maximum heel angle • 1527 - Ship back to even keel • 1836 - Ship alongside pier

  9. Animation - Preview

  10. Exclusions • Propulsion and steering • Wind and sea conditions • Crew fatigue • Illegal drugs or alcohol impairment

  11. Safety Issues • Actions of second officer • Actions of captain and staff captain • Training in use of integrated navigation systems • Reporting of heeling incidents • Emergency response

  12. Staff Contributing • Dennis Crider • Doug Brazy • Dennis Grossi • Jim Cash • Kristin Poland • John O’Callaghan • Alice Park • Christy Spangler • Mitch Garber • Tom Jacky • Tom Roth-Roffy • Liam LaRue • Brian Curtis • Barry Strauch • Charlotte Cox • Mariette Burer

  13. Parties to Investigation • U.S. Coast Guard • Princess Cruises • SAM Electronics Flag state representative • Bermuda Maritime Administration

  14. Staff Presentations • Engineering factors • INS, shallow water effects, heel angle estimate, VDR • Vessel dynamics • Sideslip, rudder lag • Human factors • Crew actions, INS training • Monitoring of heeling accidents • Survival factors • Injuries and emergency response • Passenger accountability

More Related