Shaft recovery
The shaft was removed from the vessel and transported to a workshop in Suez, Egypt where it was set up in a lathe and checked for concentricity. The 250mm long bearing area was pre-machined down to 158.5 mm diameter and the surface fine sand blasted to prepare it for metal spraying.
Once the surface was perfectly clean the adjoining areas were masked off and the bearing area metal sprayed to provide a 3mm deposit depth of Sulzer Metco SM8447 wire material. This material is a moderately hard, self bonding coating for hard bearing and wear resistant applications and was applied using an arc spraying technique.
The shaft was then remachined under Metalock supervision and to prevent the sharp cutting tool damaging the outer edges of the sprayed material, turning was carried out from the centre of the bearing area outwards, left and right.
The options facing the vessel’s operator were a new shaft, or machining the existing shaft to accept a smaller specially made bearing. Both could have taken weeks, time that the operators did not have.
Having used the Metalock Engineering Group before, there was no hesitation in contracting them to carry out the thermal spraying work. In the words of an operator spokesman, “We opted for the quickest route to recover the shaft and get the vessel back into service. Although we have used Metalock before, it has not been for this type of work, but we are very satisfied with the result”.