The vessel's crew immediately reacted, and they could capture a video of the top of the rudder stock through an inspection port. This determined the reason why the rudder was not responding. The rudder stock was broken at the cone, and the rudder blade had dropped approx. half a meter.
Crucial decisions had to be made fast. Should the vessel go for dry docking and be towed a much longer distance, risking losing the rudder blade at Sea, or should she go with an afloat repair solution?
The decision was to stay. A decision that turned out to be a speedy and cost-saving solution.
With assistance from a tugboat, the 294 meters long container vessel was maneuvered into the inner anchorage.
An underwater service company was assigned with the afloat disassembly task. MarineShaft has worked with this company on several projects, and we know how experienced they are with this type of emergency job. They removed the 110-ton heavy rudder in the water. For sure, this disassembly required tremendous cooperation and experience. Everything went by the book.
With the rudder blade and stock ashore and brought to a local workshop. MarineShaft got involved.
A Broken rudder stock and a damaged pintle left replacement as the only option.
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