Lecture Notes Framing System
Lecture Notes Framing System
FRAMING SYSTEMS
As we have seen earlier, the shell (ships bottom and side) and deck plating of a ship has
to be stiffened internally to prevent it from collapsing. The stiffeners are welded
internally to the plating and are arranged in longitudinal and transverse directions
perpendicular to each other. Longitudinals run along the length of the ship and the
transverse frames run along the transverse section i.e; perpendicular to the fore-and-aft
centreline, horizontal along the beam and vertical along the ships side.
History
Historically, early iron and steel vessels were built with transverse framing as this was
the tried and tested configuration used for wooden ship building. The structural design
requirements used for wooden ships were copied over to iron ships, featuring very heavy
keel structures and relatively light decks. As ships got larger the limitations of thin
transversely framed decks were observed and understood, although the industry was
slow to adapt. One notable exception to this was the Great Eastern (1858) which was a
very early example of a scientifically designed ship. Isambard Kingdom Brunel, a civil
engineer, used beam theory in the structural design of this vessel which was based on a
cellular system of longitudinal framing. With a tonnage five times greater than any other
vessel of the time, this remarkable ship boasted many other innovative features and
despite her lack of commercial success, the structure performed well throughout her 31
year life.
Although the technical benefits of longitudinal framing were known in the 19th Century it
was not until the British naval architect Joseph Isherwood introduced his longitudinal
framing method in 1906, that interest was revived. His system used longitudinal
stiffeners and deep transverse web frames in the same way that modern
arrangements do. The benefit was primarily a lighter structure, which for
commercial vessels equated to increased deadweight for a given displacement,
and hence a more profitable ship. This was particularly true for oil tankers
where the increased web frame depth did not affect cargo stowage volume. The
first ship using this system, the tanker Paul Paix, was built in 1908 to Lloyds Register
class. By 1918, over 1000 ships had been built using the Isherwood framing system.
Description
The stiffening generally is provided by primary supporting and secondary supporting
members.
Primary supporting members
Primary supporting members are the big members or metaphorically speaking the big
bones having large scantlings and spaced wide apart. They provide most of the
longitudinal bending strength to the ship.
The word scantlings denotes the cross- sectional dimensions of structural
members, as distinct from their lengths. Thus an angle bar whose scantlings are
200 x 150 x 12.5 mm has one 200 mm leg and one 150 mm leg and is 12.5 mm
thick, regardless of its length. Steel plate scantlings normally refer only to the
plate thickness regardless of its length or width.
Longitudinal Girders. On the bottom a centre girder is provided which is also called as
the centreline vertical Keel. The vertical keel runs continuously from the fore peak to aft
peak. Depending on the beam of the ship at bottom there may be one or more additional
longitudinal girders provided by the side of the CVK which are also called as bottom side
girders. Up to beam of 10 m minimum one side girder is provided on either side of the
vertical keel and thereafter they are provided at a spacing of about 2.5 m. Side girders
are of smaller scantling, have same depth as centre girder but they are neither watertight
nor continuous.
On the shipside, horizontal girders known as side stringers (or stringers) are fitted. The
number of side stringer depends on the depth of the ship.
Similar to the bottom, under the deck of a ship, centreline and side girders are fitted.
Transverse Web rings The transverse web rings hold the main longitudinal girders
together and also provide the transverse strength. They are fitted at intervals of about 3
to 4 meters apart along the length of the ship, and can be divided into three parts:
Bottom transverse This is the first part at the bottom and is represented by a solid
floor or a plate floor in ships with double bottom construction. The height of the
solid floor is similar to that of the centreline girder.
Web frame The second part on the side is known as the web frame. The depth of
the side web frame is about 0.125 times the vertical distance from the tank top to
the deck above, e.g. if this vertical distance is 10 meters, the depth of the web will
be 1250 mm.
Deck transverse The third part on the deck is known as deck transverse. The
depth of the deck transverse varies depending on the span between supporting
girders or bulkheads, or between girder and side frame.
Transverse Framing
System
In the transverse framing
system, the hold frames are
fitted transversely.
The
bottom member is known
as an open floor or bracket
floor (for ships with double
bottoms), the side member
is known as the hold frame
(or main frame) and the
deck member is known as
the
deck
beam.
Longitudinal deck girders support the transverse deck beams.
The
transverse
system
therefore
consists
of
following stiffeners
Primary: Centre girder
and
other
bottom
longitudinals,
stringers,
deck girders and Web rings
Secondary:
Open
or
bracket floors, hold frames
and deck beams
Longitudinal strength in
a transversely framed ship
is provided by:
the center girder, the shell plating and inner bottom plating,
by the deck plating
by a number of large, widely spaced longitudinal members e.g; bottom longitudinals
and deck girders.
Longitudinal Framing System
In this system, all the secondary supporting members are fitted the longitudinal direction
and are known as longitudinals (bottom longitudinals, stringers or side longitudinals, and
deck longitudinals respectively). The system consists of many small, closely spaced
longitudinals supporting the plating directly and being supported in turn by a few large,
widely spaced longitudinals.
The longitudinal system therefore consists of following stiffeners
Primary: Centre girder and bottom longitudinals, stringers, deck girders and Web rings
Secondary: bottom longitudinals (secondary), stringers and deck girders
The bottom longitudinal on centerline, or center girder, is extra large and heavy,
principally to carry the loads imposed by keel-blocks during dry-docking. Very deep,
heavy transverse structures called transverse webs or web frames are constructed at
BSW Ship Co Lecture Notes4
Ordinary Frame
Web Frame
Transverse Framing