Mighty Servant 2

MV Mighty Servant 2 with USS Samuel B. Roberts aboard from Dubai to Newport, Rhode Island in 1988.
History
Name: MV Mighty Servant 2
Owner: Dockwise Shipping B.V.
Operator: Dockwise Shipping B.V.
Port of registry:  Netherlands Antilles
Builder:
Yard number: 10073
Completed: 1983
Out of service: 2 November 1999
Identification:
Fate: scrapped 2000
General characteristics
Type: Semi-submersible, heavy-lift ship
Tonnage:
Length:
  • 190.03 m (623.5 ft)
  • 174.70 m (573.2 ft) b.p.
Beam: 40 m (130 ft)
Draught:
  • 8.77 m (28.8 ft) (sailing)
  • 26 m (85 ft) (submerged)
  • 4 m (13 ft) (minimum)
Depth: 12 m (39 ft)
Depth of hold: 50 m × 16 m × 7.5 m (164 ft × 52 ft × 25 ft)
Deck clearance:
  • 50 m × 150 m (160 ft × 490 ft)
  • load: 19 to 40 t (19 to 39 long tons; 21 to 44 short tons) per m²
Speed: 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Endurance: 59 days
Crew: 20
Notes: [1]

Mighty Servant 2 was a 29,000-ton semi-submersible, heavy-lift ship operated by Dockwise. The ship drew worldwide attention in 1988 for transporting the mine-damaged USS Samuel B. Roberts from Dubai to Newport, Rhode Island.

The ship was built in 1983 by Oshima Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. in Ōshima, Japan, for Dutch shipping firm Wijsmuller Transport, which merged in 1993 with Dock Express Shipping to become Breda-based offshore heavy lifting group Dockwise Shipping B.V. The vessel capsized in 1999 and was scrapped in 2000.

Service

Mighty Servant 2 was capable of carrying the heaviest semi-submersible drilling units, harsh-environment deep-water jack-up rigs and large floating production tension-leg platforms, semi-submersibles and spars with drafts of up to 14 metres.[2] Most of the ship's cargoes were oil platforms and related gear. When loading its mammoth burdens, the ship took thousands of tons of water into ballast tanks, submerging its cargo deck underwater. The cargo would be floated into position, whereupon Mighty Servant 2 would slowly pump out its ballast, lifting the deck up to sailing position.

USS Samuel B. Roberts

Her most famous job[3][4][5] was the July 1988 haulage of the U.S. Navy's USS Samuel B. Roberts from Dubai to Newport, Rhode Island after the guided missile frigate struck a mine in the Persian Gulf on 14 April 1988. The 125-meter frigate barely fit on Mighty Servant 2's cargo deck; holes had to be cut to accommodate the frigate's sonar dome and stabilizing fins. The loading, which was supervised by divers and underwater video monitors, took about 12 hours, with gaps measured in mere centimetres. About 20 of the frigate's 200-man crew remained aboard during the 8,100-mile, 30-day voyage. The USS Fahrion escorted the USS Samuel B. Roberts from Dubai through the Straits of Hormuz. The job received worldwide media coverage.[6][7]

Sister ships

Mighty Servant 2 had two sister ships, Mighty Servant 1, built in 1983, and Mighty Servant 3, built in 1984. Both were built for Wijsmuller Transport.

On 6 December 2006, Mighty Servant 3 sank in 62 metres (203 ft) of water near the port of Luanda, Angola, while offloading the drilling platform Aleutian Key. There were no casualties. In August 2009, Dockwise Shipping reported it had been returned to service.[8]

Incidents and accidents

1999 capsizing

Mighty Servant 2 capsized on 2 November 1999 near the Indonesian island of Singkep (0°29′S 104°12′E / 0.48°S 104.2°E / -0.48; 104.2Coordinates: 0°29′S 104°12′E / 0.48°S 104.2°E / -0.48; 104.2). The ship was en route from Singapore to Cabinda, Angola, bearing the North Nemba Topsides 8,790-ton offshore production module. The vessel tipped onto its side in 35 metres (115 ft) of water in reportedly calm seas. A hydrographic survey of the area later discovered an unmarked single isolated pinnacle of granite directly on the ship's course. Five crew members died, including two Dutch and two Filipino men. Mighty Servant 2 was declared a total loss.[9] In 2000, the wreck was renamed T 2, transported to Alang, India, and scrapped.[10]

See also

References

  1. "Mighty Servant 1". Dockwise. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
  2. "Exceptional Transport Management". Dockwise. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
  3. "Mighty Servant 2". Accidental Database. The Korean Ship and Offshore Research Institute. November 22, 1999. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  4. "Heavy lift ships". Kenya Engineer. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  5. "Joint Sea Based Logistics". UK Armed Forces Commentary. May 30, 2011. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  6. "Hitching a ride". Adelaide, Australia. The Advertiser/Sunday Mail. August 1, 1988.
  7. "Piggy back frigate". Toronto, Canada. The Financial Post. June 29, 1988. p. 3.
  8. "The Mighty Servant 3 Rejoins Dockwise Fleet". Dockwise. 7 August 2009. Retrieved 22 November 2010.
  9. "Maritime Casualties 1999 And Before". The Cargo Letter. 2007. Retrieved 22 November 2010.
  10. "2006 Nightmare M/V Mighty Servant 3". The Cargo Letter. 2007. Retrieved 22 November 2010.
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