Thu 19 Nov 2009 07:22

First sea trial of 'fuel-saving' device completed


New product is said to cut bunker costs by improving the water inflow towards the propeller.



Rudder specialist Becker Marine Systems has announced that the first sea trials of its 'fuel-saving' Mewis Duct® device have been completed.

The Mewis Duct® is a propulsion improvement device for full-form ships, ie tankers, bulk carriers and multi-purpose vessels.

The company developed the device after research found that the wake field of full-form vessels, such as tankers, reduces the propeller’s propulsion efficiency. The water flow velocity was found to have such an unfavorable characteristic that the propeller did not get a uniform water flow.

The Mewis Duct® consists of two strong fixed elements mounted on the vessel: a duct positioned ahead of the propeller together with an integrated fin system within. The duct straightens and accelerates the hull’s wake into the propeller and also produces a net ahead thrust. The individual placed fins have a stator effect by generating a pre-swirl in the counter direction of the propeller’s operation, recovering the rotational energy from the propeller slipstream.

Ships are propelled by combustion engines whose power output is dimensioned by the ship’s hull resistance, the propeller efficiency and the desired speed range. The Mewis Duct® is said to reduce the power requirement by improving the water inflow towards the propeller in order to achieve an higher overall propulsion efficiency.

The achievable power savings from the Mewis Duct® are strongly dependent on the propeller thrust loading. According to Becker Marine this ranges from 3% for small container vessels up to 10% for large tankers and bulk carriers.

"The duct combines very consequentially different theories of fluid dynamics. Countless calculations, dozens of tank tests and final true scale tests have proven the enormous fuel saving potential of the product," Becker Marine said.

First Installation

The first installation was carried out at China's Chengxi shipyard. The 46,000 dwt Star Instid runs with a 36sqm Becker Flap FKSR Rudder and was the first of three vessels to be equipped with the new product.

A Becker Service team member was present on site and supervised the installation for Norwegian ship owner Grieg Shipping Group AS.

Following the first sea trials, Becker Marine said the outcome of the first sea trials fully confirmed the predictions from CFD calculations and model tests. Becker Marine Systems has since then installed two further Mewis Ducts®, one of them for Grieg Shipping group and the other for Laurin Maritime. The sea trial results are due to be published soon.

About Becker Marine

Hamburg-based company Becker Marine Systems is a leading manufacturer of high performance rudders and manoeuvring solutions for a wide range of ships. Becker’s rudder systems are used in luxury yachts, super tankers, container ships, passenger ferries and large cruise vessels.

The company’s turnover reached 100 Million Euros in 2008 when over 300 rudder systems were delivered to 25 countries.

Martin Vorgod, CEO of Global Risk Management. Martin Vorgod elevated to CEO of Global Risk Management  

Vorgod, currently CCO at GRM, will officially step in as CEO on December 1, succeeding Peder Møller.

Dorthe Bendtsen, KPI OceanConnect. Dorthe Bendtsen named interim CEO of KPI OceanConnect  

Officer with background in operations and governance to steer firm through transition as it searches for permanent leadership.

Bunker Holding's executive management team, from left to right: CCO Anders Grønborg,  COO Peder Møller, CEO Keld R. Demant and CFO Michael Krabbe. Bunker Holding revamps commercial department and management team  

CCO departs; commercial activities divided into sales and operations.

Image of a bunker delivery being performed by Peninsula's Hercules 8000 tanker vessel. Peninsula extends UAE coverage into Abu Dhabi and Jebel Ali  

Supplier to provide 'full range of products' after securing bunker licences.

A screenshot taken from Peninsula's homepage on October 4, 2024. Peninsula to receive first of four tankers in Q2 2025  

Methanol-ready vessels form part of bunker supplier's fleet renewal programme.

Stephen Robinson, pictured on his appointment as Head of Bunker Strategy and Procurement at Tankers International. Stephen Robinson heads up bunker desk at Tankers International  

Former Bomin and Cockett MD appointed Head of Bunker Strategy and Procurement.

Chart showing percentage of off-spec and on-spec samples by fuel type, according to VPS. Is your vessel fully protected from the dangers of poor-quality fuel? | Steve Bee, VPS  

Commercial Director highlights issues linked to purchasing fuel and testing quality against old marine fuel standards.

Ships at the Tecon container terminal at the Port of Suape, Brazil. GDE Marine targets Suape LSMGO by year-end  

Expansion plan revealed following '100% incident-free' first month of VLSFO deliveries.

Hercules Tanker Management and Hyundai Mipo Dockyard sign bunker vessel agreement Peninsula CEO seals deal to build LNG bunker vessel  

Agreement signed through shipping company Hercules Tanker Management.

Illustration of Kotug tugboat and the logos of Auramarine and Sanmar Shipyards. Auramarine supply system chosen for landmark methanol-fuelled tugs  

Vessels to enter into service in mid-2025.


↑  Back to Top