Wednesday, March 13, 2019

An Account of The Voyage Of The Icebreaker USCG Polar Star (It's bad)

Very, very bad.
From gCaptain:

United States’ Only Heavy Icebreaker Returns Home from Casualty-Ridden Antarctic Deployment
The United States’ only heavy icebreaker, the USCGC Polar Star, returned to its homeport of Seattle on Monday following a 105-day casualty-ridden deployment to Antarctica in support of Operation Deep Freeze.

Operation Deep Freeze is an annual joint military service mission in support of the National Science Foundation, the lead agency for the United States Antarctic Program. This year marks the 63rd iteration of the annual operation.

The Polar Star crew departed Seattle on November 27th for 11,200-nautical-miles trip to Antarctica. Upon arrival in McMurdo Sound, the Polar Star broke through 16.5 nautical miles of ice, six to ten feet thick, in order to clear a channel to the ice pier at McMurdo Station, the United States’ main logistics hub in Antarctica.

On Jan. 30, the Polar Star escorted the U.S. Navy’s Military Sealift Command-contracted container ship Ocean Giant through the channel, allowing for the offload of 499 containers with 10 million pounds of goods to resupply McMurdo Station, Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station and other U.S. field camps for the next year.

The deployment was not without its difficulties. As in years past, getting the 43-year-old Polar Star to Antarctica was accomplished despite a series of engineering casualties on board the ship.

During the transit to Antarctica, one of the ship’s electrical systems began to smoke, causing damage to wiring in an electrical switchboard, and one of the ship’s two evaporators used to make drinkable water failed. The electrical switchboard was repaired by the crew, and the ship’s evaporator was repaired after parts were received during a port call in Wellington, New Zealand.

At one point during ice operations, the cutter’s centerline shaft seal ruptured, allowing water to flood into the ship. Ice breaking operations ceased so Coast Guard and Navy Divers could enter the water to apply a patch so Polar Star’s engineers could repair the seal from inside the ship. The engineers had to don dry suits and diver’s gloves to enter the 30-degree water of the still slowly flooding bilge to make repairs.

The Polar Star also experienced ship-wide power outages while breaking ice in McMurdo Sound, forcing the shut down the ship’s power plant for nine hours and a rebooting the electrical system in order to remedy the outages.

On Feb. 10, the crew spent nearly two hours extinguishing a fire in the ship’s incinerator room while the ship was approximately 650-nautical-miles north of McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. The fire damaged the incinerator and some electrical wiring in the room was damaged by fire fighting water. There were no personnel injuries or damage to equipment outside the space. Repairs to the incinerator are scheduled for Polar Star’s upcoming inport maintenance period...MORE