USA: GE Reveals New Dynamic Positioning System

GE Reveals New Dynamic Positioning System

GE’s Power Conversion business announced that they are bringing enhanced operability to the company’s Dynamic Positioning (DP) system. The latest version, being launched at OTC, is more energy-efficient, better integrated, and—most importantly—more ’mariner friendly’.

“We are giving ship control back to the mariners,” says Paul English, Marine Leader of GE Power Conversion.

Since they were introduced some 50 years ago, DP systems have become increasingly complex in their configurations and in their operation. Sensors have become more sophisticated, there are more of them, and the same level of increased complexity applies to the electrical and propulsion systems. The computer control at the heart of a ship’s positioning system is also more sophisticated, but the basic principle of DP remains the same: to hold position with a computer system that takes signals from a range of sensors to sense environment, heading, position, and attitude and issues commands to thrusters and propellers. Overall, it is in charge of the complex processes of maintaining a ship on station, a process that needs a high level of system automation so that a single operator can manage the vessel.

English says, “As the sophistication and complexity of DP systems has evolved, it has led to the risk that DP operators may have become pre occupied with managing the computer rather than on managing the primary task of controlling the ship, its position, heading and course.

With GE’s new system, we are giving DP back to the operator. We are now taking DP control out of the engineering world and putting it back into the marine world. We are turning it back into a nautical instrument. In the future, the DP operator will be able to focus on his real job, controlling the ship, and not be distracted by the task of manipulating and controlling a complex computer system.

GE Power Conversion has achieved this with a new human-machine interface, HMI. The control panel is very clean and uncluttered with very few control devices. Its 26-inch touchscreen is tiltable to suit each operator’s preference for standing or sitting in front of the screen, or moving around it. It accommodates operators of different heights and is equally visible in a whole range of lighting conditions on the bridge, especially reflections from the sun and artificial light. Screen displays in an operator selectable range of languages allow the operator to access all system functionality in his/her mother tongue.

GE Power Conversion has put considerable time and effort into improving the ergonomics of the HMI. It has made use of the great wealth of dedicated professional engineers, designers and human psychologists who study human interaction with machines at the GE Global Research, UX (User Experience) Innovation Lab to produce a HMI display with improved convenience, efficiency and effectiveness and more in accordance with the expectations of a mariner.

The new DP control system also embodies improvements to energy efficiency and sustainability. As part of GE’s ecomagination™ portfolio, the new DP system supports GE’s commitment to deliver cleaner and more-efficient sources of energy. The system includes a new “Energy Efficiency” mode , that can be used when appropriate. For example, when a supply vessel is alongside a rig, what the captain wants above all else is high accuracy positioning. But if the same supply vessel is standing by at a significant distance off the rig, GE’s new “Energy Efficiency” mode DP can be engaged resulting in a greater degree of position accuracy tolerance with substantially reduced fuel consumption. Studies have shown that fuel saving may, be as much as 10 percent or more with an associated Nox reduction of as much as 2o percent, depending on environmental factors and exact operational profile.

With all of its advantages, the new DP control is expected to be more technically and commercially competitive than ever “This is thanks to the company’s investment in careful engineering choices, and being able to create more with the same,” says English. “What we have done here is change our perspective and take a fresh look at an old problem, and we think our customers will recognize the benefits that this change in approach has produced.”

GE also stands out in its capacity to provide process control and automation, machinery, and sensors. “We have the expertise and experience to talk about a ship as a complete entity, as a coherent process,” says English. “GE provides a complete system rather than individual elements. That puts us in a better place to see the broader picture, and to optimize all the various elements in it to work together as they should.

[mappress]
GE, May 8, 2013