HMS Nottingham, a Type 42 Royal Navy frigate back
in service following a one-year refit at Devonport, has the first complete
installation of PSM’s shipboard monitoring system. Furthermore, PSM
Instrumentation has also received orders from the Royal Navy for five more
of these tank-gauging systems on Type 42s.
The equipment measures the content of fuel oil
tanks. For trim stability the ships’ fuel tanks are maintained full,
achieved by replacing fuel with seawater as it is used. Several tanks are
linked and a seawater header tank exerts a pressure on the whole
“chain” ensuring that oil, followed by seawater, is pushed from one
tank to the next. The actual fuel level in the tank is determined by
differential SG principle.
A PSM sensor is installed in the base of each tank,
and the shallow depth and small specific gravity differential demanded an
instrument with high sensitivity. Moreover the arduous installed
conditions and shock immunity called for an extremely rugged device.
Access
to tanks is not possible in service so reliability, long-term stability
and routine maintenance intervals of four years minimum were design
briefs. The transmitter output is fed into a PSM acquisition and display
system which processes the information, based on tank tables and the grade
of oil in use, to provide a volume display at repeater indicators all over
the ship, each connected to a two-wire RS485 data highway.