First of AAL’s Super B-class Premium Heavy Lift Vessels Passes Key Construction Stage

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AAL Shipping

In late December, at the CSSC HuangPu WenChong Shipyard in China, the first of AAL Shipping’s next generation 32,000 deadweight (DWT) ‘Super B-Class’ fleet, the AAL LIMASSOL, was floated out into the water from dry dock and moved to pier. This milestone marks the third of four crucial stages in her construction before delivery and even the most important – steel cutting, keel laying, launching, and sea trial.

Yahaya Sanusi, Deputy Head of AAL’s Transport Engineering Department, explained, “With all major equipment installed, launching provides the perfect test of a newbuild’s water integrity and stability. Once completed, engine shafting, hatch covers, pontoons and cranes are finally adjusted. This is primarily because the vessel’s hull structure flexes into a shape closer to its normal operating mode, and, with ‘digital manufacturing’, the results are extremely good and within the required engineering tolerance levels.

“By this stage, approximately three-quarters of the work onboard has already been completed, and many of the additional work packages can be built simultaneously and later assembled on board. The AAL LIMASSOL will go for sea trial in April 2024 before her delivery to AAL in May – so she will have been on the water for over five months.”

Rangel Vassilev, Director of Newbuilding Projects at AAL’s sister company, Columbia Shipmanagement, added, “In general, any work that can be done before launching is a benefit, as after this stage, access is harder, and jobs take longer. At the yard where the six Super B-Class vessels are being built, preparing a standard container vessel for sea trial typically takes about 60 days after launching. However, the SUPER-B class is a much more complicated build. Its hatch covers, tween decks, three heavy lift cranes – featuring a 700-tonne maximum tandem lift capacity – and the all-new ‘AAL Extendable Eco-Deck System’ must all be in place and tested during this stage and honed before sea trial. The AAL LIMASSOL is also the first of her fleet, so we anticipate her equipment commissioning and mooring trials to take over 120 days.”

Sanusi concluded, “Our next step is to undertake mooring trials of the AAL LIMASSOL’s machinery and cargo handling equipment and prepare her for the final sea-trial stage. Speed, fuel consumption, and other manoeuvring characteristics will be tested at that point. This is critical for a naval architect as it will demonstrate how well the vessel performs and responds in water – especially as performance has been calculated in tank tests and using theoretical algorithms up to this point.

“We commissioned the Super B-Class with the aim of its six ships being the finest, premium multipurpose heavy lift vessels in the water. Therefore, they are unique in many ways and harness state-of-the-art design and cargo-handling technologies. For this reason, we planned a construction schedule that would allow all the time needed for every facet of the vessels to be fully tested and realised. We are delighted that everything is proceeding as planned, and our customers can expect the first part of the fleet to be operational by May ’24.”

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Ryan Finn
Ryan is the Digital Marketing and Content Creation Manager for Trade and Logistics Siam Ltd. He provides a creative flair to the team and his resourcefulness helps to bring an imaginative improvement to both literary archetypes and online content production. A writer by day and a rider by night, when he's not composing the latest logistics news update or creating compelling copy for our clients, Ryan spends his free time travelling Thailand by motorbike.