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Reg, G4FGQ wrote:
"The captain is pacing up and down the bridge waiting impatiently for a radio message, cursing the poor fellow at the cable terminal 500 miles away on the Scottish rocky Atlantic coast, who is sweating blood twiddling knobs trying to balance the wideband, 0.05 to 50 Hz reflection-coefficient bridge to within plus or minus 0.1 miles along the artificial line and---." O.K., plus or minus 25 miles isn`t close enough to find a sunsea cable fault. I`ve found broken pipelines offshore by placing an audio tone on the pipe and grounding the second tone generator connection. The diver uses a search coil to locate the tone on the pipeline and follows it out the pipe until it drops off precipitously at the break in the pipe. This works like gangbusters. A cable is not necessary to communicate with a repeater on the ocean floor. Acoustic (ultrasonic) communications work well at sea. Equip your repeaters with acoustic communications gear and you can find them and talk to them and get them to reporrt to you and to execute your orders even if the cable is cut on both of their sides. The company I served for 26 years found oil and gas in waters of ever increasing depth. They then produced, transported, refined, and distrubited the oil and gas and produvcts derived from the oil and gas. This was one of the company`s many lines of business. We also were in banking, insurance, farming, real estate, and manufacturing many things including tractors, automotive parts. nuclear war ships, liquified natural gas tankers, packaging, plastics, and at one time electronics parts and systems. In the deeper waters it became very expensive to install offshore platforms so we switched to subsurface production and control facilities on the ocean floor. We used acoustic location , status, measuring, monitoring, and control facilities. This was before global positioning systems (GPS) and every bucket of sea water looked very much like any other. That required the acoustic locating equipment. It amounted to a transponder that when interrogated, responded with its reply that could be homed in upon. We would travel by helicopter or boat to a location near the equipment for data and control. We then dunked our transducer and used it to guide us to our gear. Once we were stationed just over our gear we demanded a status report. If adjustment were needed, it was so ordered and when executed we got an updated status report indicating the successful operation. 30 years ago when this operation was initiated, the available acoustic equipment was nearly all designed for deep water as found in the ocean depths. This is because it had been developed for the defense department to keep track of Soviet submarines etc. We were initiating monitiring and control using acoustics in water only a few hundred feet deep in the Gulf of Mexico. So we had to pay for developing shallow-water acoustic equipment. Fortunately this shallow-water equipment worked well in the Gulf of Mexico, as expected. GPS obviates the homing in on your equipment. You can locate exactly over your equipment with very few problems. Battery power can be installed for data acquisition and control on the ocean floor even though the repeaters are powered from shore. The acoustic equipment could be located at each repeater. Web found batteries could last for about 5 years on the ocen bottom. Ours had no opportunity for recharging. We found the battery was going to perish from age in 5 years even though it is kept cool by its site and a large enough battery is used to handle the discharge demanded of the battery. You could dunk a transducer near a repeater and interrogate for almost any type and number of data points. You can now make the box smart and program it to do all sorts of things. It could be designed to perform various diagonistics on demand and to automatically store a variety of information. We traveled to the acquisition and control point. This might be avoided by long-range acoustic communications as a "PlanB" just in case the offshore point was hard to reach. Weather in the Gulf of Mexico is usualy so good that you don`t have to wait too long to make a trip out into the gulf. In the North Sea and the Atlantic I think the weather is less good. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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