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Giant underwater claw lifting device - video
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1 Attachment(s)
I'm curios as to which rigs they are recovering.
The Occidental Piper Alpha is a grave and i wouldn't be surprised to find that the Deepwater Horizon as been registered the same.
Having a topside on the seabed is never a good idea, they usually decommission by cutting them off at the surface and loading them onto barges.
The only scrap topsides i can think of on the seabed would be in the Caspian sea or perhaps off the coast of Africa. This is a post id love to hear more about.
ahh OK got it
Versabar - Engineering Solutions - VB 10,000
As a salvage vessel of the future i think it might end up spending a lot of time moth balled and costing a fortune to support.
The LR5 Royal Navy submarine rescue sub was a planned recovery system which cost a fortune and is use could be counted on the fingers of two hands. We sold it to Oz.
https://www.james-fisher.com/service...ne-rescue/lr5/
Attachment 32666
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Looks like what they needed for the Glomar Explorer
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glomar_Explorer
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Interesting.
Transocean and Infermer were the two companies who operated the first salvage vessel i worked on Deepsea worker an old Sedco drill ship (337 ?).
Salvaging tin from torpedoed/sunken liberty ships from the war Autolycus and Namur. The salvage work also covered vessels such as the John Barry, HMS Edinburgh and survey of Lusitania.