It Is Like Sinking Practice

From Horozontal to Vertical on open water

RV FLIP (FLoating Instrument Platform) is an open ocean research vessel owned by the Office of Naval Research and operated by the Marine Physical Laboratory of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.The ship is a 355 feet (108 meters) long vessel designed to partially flood and pitch backward 90 degrees, resulting in only the front 55 feet (17 meters) of the vessel pointing up out of the water, with bulkheads becoming decks. When flipped, most of the buoyancy for the platform is provided by water at depths below the influence of surface waves, hence FLIP is a stable platform mostly immune to wave action, like a spar buoy. At the end of a mission, compressed air is pumped into the ballast tanks in the flooded section and the vessel returns to its horizontal position so it can be towed to a new location.The ship is frequently mistaken for a capsized ocean transport ship.

FLIP is designed to study wave height, acoustic signals, water temperature and density, and for the collection of meteorological data. Because of the potential interference with the acoustic instruments, FLIP has no engines or other means of propulsion. It must be towed to open water, where it drifts freely or is anchored. In tow, FLIP can reach speeds of 7รขโ‚ฌโ€œ10 knots.

FLIP weighs 700 long tons (711 tonnes) and carries a crew of five, plus up to eleven scientists. It is capable of operating independently during month-long missions without resupply,being able to operate worldwide but the normal area is the west coast of the United States. The vessel operates out of a home base at the Scripps Nimitz Marine Facility in San Diego, California.

Not something I would likely want to do. But good on them for making it work.

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2 Responses to It Is Like Sinking Practice

  1. Phssthpok says:

    I worked at the factory that built that ship for nigh 15 years (though I started there three decades after it was launched).

    I remember seeing several ‘era’ photographs of the ship in the various production offices during my time there.

  2. NotClauswitz says:

    I remember reading about these (or this) ship(s) back in Junior High School and thought it was pretty cool. Yeh, it’s 50 years old! Back then I drew a picture of one that had a revolving turret/gun that rotated along the ballast line (or whatever you call it) and stayed above the water, able to fire on a gimbal mount… I think it had a clam-shell helicopter deck and an underwater submarine-lock too, of course. ๐Ÿ™‚

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