Deck Cargoes: Causes of Losses
Deck Cargoes: Causes of Losses
Deck Cargoes: Causes of Losses
Deck Cargoes
The phrase ‘deck cargoes’ refers to items and/or commodities carried on the weather deck
and/or hatch covers of a ship and thereon exposed to sun, wind, rain, snow, ice and sea, so
that the packaging must be fully resistant to, or the commodities themselves not be denatured
by such exposure.
Deck cargoes, because of their very location and the means by which they are secured, will
be subjected to velocity and acceleration stresses greater, in most instances, than cargo
stowed below decks.
The stowage, lashing and securing of cargoes, therefore, require special attention as to
method and to detail if unnecessary risks are to be avoided.
Causes of losses
Losses of large vehicles, rail cars, cased machinery, steel pipes, structural steelwork,
packaged timber, freight containers, hazardous chemicals, boats, launches, etc. due to:
2) as to ensure that the ship will retain adequate stability at all stages of the voyage having
regard in particular to:
3) as not to impair the weathertight or watertight integrity of any part of the ship or its fittings
or appliances, and as to ensure the proper protection of ventilators and air pipes;
4) that its height above the deck or any other part of the ship on which it stands will not
interfere with the navigation or working of the ship;
5) that it will not interfere with or obstruct access to the ship’s steering arrangements,
including emergency steering arrangements;
6) that it will not interfere with or obstruct safe and efficient access by the crew to or between
their quarters and any machinery space or another part of the ship used in the working of the
ship, and will not, in particular, obstruct any opening giving access to those positions or
impede it’s being readily secured weathertight.”
Dunnage
If all deck cargo items could be structurally welded to the weather-deck using components of
acceptable strength this would remove the necessity to consider coefficients of friction
between the base of the cargo and the deck or dunnage on which it rests.
Spread the load
Point-loading and uneven distribution of cargo weight can, and frequently does, cause
unnecessary damage to decks and hatch-covers. Unless the weather-deck has been specially
strengthened, it is unlikely to have a maximum permissible weight-loading of more than 3
tonnes/m2. Similarly, unless hatch-covers have been specially strengthened, it is unlikely
they will have a maximum permissible weight-loading of more than 1.8 tonnes/m2. The
ship’s capacity plan and/or general
arrangement plan should always be consulted. If the information is not there, try the ship’s
stability booklet. In the event that specific values are not available onboard the ship, allow no
more than 2.5 tonnes/m2 for weather-deck areas; and no more than 0.75 tonnes/m2 for hatch-
covers in small vessels; 1.30 tonnes/m2 in vessels over 100m in length. (The word tonnes
used later in this article means tonnes force.)
The adverse effects of point-loading are not always fully appreciated. On the one hand, a 6-
tonne machine with a flat-bed area of 3m2 will exert a down-load of 2 tonnes/m2.