Home › Forums › Safety, Survival Courses & Medicals › Safety – ROV. › Safety Flashes?
- This topic has 19 replies, 12 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 8 months ago by misiuek.
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December 1, 2008 at 9:33 am #20723Ray ShieldsParticipant
Don’t want it to seem I am hijacking what is obviously an important thread but has there been a safety flash of any sort after this incident? If there is can someone PM it to me.
Its only a suggestion but would it be worth adding a wall aswell as a forum for the posting of safety flashes, I note there is a safety forum with very little on it.
If I have missed something let me know as all joking aside, getting home at the end of the trip in one piece has got to be the most important issue to me.
This happened years ago – about 2002 I think. And yes there was a safety flash at the time.
December 1, 2008 at 10:20 am #20724James McLauchlanParticipantIts only a suggestion but would it be worth adding a wall aswell as a forum for the posting of safety flashes, I note there is a safety forum with very little on it.
Good idea about safety flashes. We will run with the safety board/forum only unless there is a pressing need to do otherwise.
If you wish to contribute and add safety flashes, then go for it. It would be of benefit to the community I’m sure. :tup:
As you hint at earlier this is a little off topic of this thread therefore, if you wish to discuss this further, please add a thread in the safety section.
In fact to save the hassle I will split this topic off now…..
best regards
James McDecember 1, 2008 at 10:21 am #2025ronjonParticipantDon’t want it to seem I am hijacking what is obviously an important thread but has there been a safety flash of any sort after this incident? If there is can someone PM it to me.
Its only a suggestion but would it be worth adding a wall aswell as a forum for the posting of safety flashes, I note there is a safety forum with very little on it.
If I have missed something let me know as all joking aside, getting home at the end of the trip in one piece has got to be the most important issue to me.
December 1, 2008 at 10:52 am #20725Rons_ROV_LinksParticipantShould be good to publish the list of IMCA safety flashes here on ROVworld.
It would even be more handy when IMCA publishes that list through RSS than we can have an automatically updated list instead of maintaining it manually.2008 Seems to be a safe year, only 1 safety flash so far… 😕
December 1, 2008 at 11:17 am #20726deepseaconParticipantSafe year well maybe you never worked on the Saipem 7000
4 Killed and 4 Seriously injured September 2008
While this accident had nothing to do with the ROV’s it still happened within yards of the LARS.
December 1, 2008 at 1:15 pm #20727Rons_ROV_LinksParticipantYou’re right, I forgot about that Medgaz accident in September.
Normally it takes a few months before things like this appear in the safety flashes. First all research involved with these accidents have to be finished. The accident described in the SF from January ’08 happened at the beginning of September 2007.
There have been some evacuations of platforms in the North Sea this year but I don’t think that will result in safety flashes.
December 1, 2008 at 5:32 pm #20728Ewan McKenParticipantSaipem issued a Safety Bulletin based on the S7000 J-Lay Accident last month.
December 2, 2008 at 12:10 am #20729SavanteParticipantI think the owners of the geosund published their safety report online too. All terribly sad.
December 2, 2008 at 8:22 am #20730mind-when-this-was-fieldsParticipantIMCA safety flash 07/08 for the geosund:-((
Not a good one for sure……….December 3, 2008 at 5:21 pm #20731Ewan McKenParticipantNew IMCA Flash, with content relevant to ROV, today.
April 10, 2009 at 5:51 pm #20732Ewan McKenParticipantPlease do not climb inside your winch drum, spray contact cleaner, and try to dry it with a heat gun.
http://www.imca-int.com/documents/core/sel/safetyflash/2009/IMCASF04-09.pdf
Regards,
I5April 10, 2009 at 6:22 pm #20733AnonymousGuestGood idea though too put this old piece of s… on fire, wondering how much hair he lost.
April 14, 2009 at 6:44 pm #20734Rons_ROV_LinksParticipantThe pilot technician was not fully aware of the flammable nature of aerosol contact cleaner.
Must be an idiot thinking that contact cleaner isn’t flammable.
Per definition the content of an aerosol is always flammable unless the labels say anything else.A good manufacturer mounts the rotating jb on the outside so there’s no need to enter the winch drum.
April 14, 2009 at 9:12 pm #20735James McLauchlanParticipantIt’s all about training and experience, plus common dog!
We will see a lot more of this to come for sure.
April 15, 2009 at 12:21 pm #20736digitellusParticipantHe was a pilot tech according to teh report so you can almost excuse him as not knowing better i thnk? No..no you cant. However what I cant figure out is there was no supervision , nobody knew he was in there and working on his own inside a drum…wtf? The entire crew need to be sacked unless the tech took it on his own to do it off his own back? But surely somebody must have known he was doing the work? Assuming the sign was up and the isolation done?
I cannot live with loose techs who like to impress with suprises of undiscussed work. -
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