Collaborating to Make ROVs Small and User-friendly
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Collaborating to Make ROVs Small and User-friendly

Putting together a highly specified remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV) is a complex business, requiring fluid integration of components and software from several different manufacturers. Getting it all to work together takes a high level of collaboration between professionals, located around the world. When VideoRay was designing a subsea vehicle so compact it could be checked in as luggage at the airport, it teamed up with Nortek to keep the size down, while keeping the positioning accuracy high.

A case in point is the deployment of Nortek’s DVL1000 Doppler Velocity Log on the Defender models now being produced by Pennsylvania-based VideoRay - a world leader in inspection-class ROVs. Nortek collaborated with both VideoRay and Vermont’s Greensea Systems (which supplied the OPENSEA operational software platform, inertial navigation, and an autonomous control system for the ROV) to create a versatile, powerful and extremely compact vehicle.

Customised MSS Systems of ROVs

The Defender is part of VideoRay’s new Mission Specialist Series (MSS) of ROVs. Its size and software set-up means it can be operated by one person, while still being capable of replacing larger, more costly vehicles in doing many tasks. Weighing just 18kg, the Defender is highly manoeuvrable and powerful, and comes equipped with multibeam sonar. Despite its size, it’s also a “workhorse” ROV, capable of lifting a payload of 10-12kg routinely, and potentially up to 23kg in some configurations.

VideoRay’s objective with the MSS ROVs is to tailor each system to the sensors, tools, depth rating, and thrust needed for the specific job at hand, rather than adding complexity by retrofitting accessories to a standard ROV. This means MSS systems can be customised to meet the requirements of a wide range of uses, encompassing the offshore hydrocarbons industry, aquaculture, academic research, defence, the nuclear industry, and more.

“We build vehicles that are small, packed with features and have lots of power. The Defender has six degrees of freedom control. It can pitch, it can lift heavy loads and it’s very fast,” says Andy Goldstein, vice president of engineering and R&D at VideoRay.

That made Nortek’s DVL1000 a good choice of underwater positioning and navigational equipment (speed sensor array) for the Defender, given its niche as one of the world’s smallest commercially available Doppler Velocity Log providing this level of accuracy, with a weight in air around 1.3kg and measuring 158mm in height.

Close Cooperation

To do that, VideoRay and Nortek worked together closely to build the DVL directly into the ROV’s frame and install the cabling to communicate with Greensea’s software hub.

Meanwhile, Greensea and Nortek collaborated to ensure that data from the DVL could be integrated with information from the other sensors on board to provide a cohesive overall picture of the location, speed and heading within Greensea’s OPENSEA platform, which is well-known across the industry.

The DVL1000 has been adopted by leaders in the subsea market, due to its state-of-the-art technology and high accuracy – a strong point in its favour for this deployment.

CTO Marcus Kolb from VideoRay with his son Austin and Colin Riggs, director of product Development at Greensea, at a VideoRay, Greensea, and Nortek technology event in Vermont.

Colin Riggs, director of product development at Greensea, notes that the DVL1000’s ability to hold its position, even when shifting focus from the sea bottom to a vertical surface such as a wall or ship hull, has been impressive. “The MSS does incredibly well with high degrees of pitch (i.e. at steep angles from the horizontal), which I didn’t expect would be possible. This vehicle can hold steadily at 60 or 70 degrees pitch, and a lot of that is due to the Nortek DVL,” he says.

The Defender’s ability to comfortably lift well over half its own weight is another reason why it needs the precise positioning that the DVL1000, in tandem with other sensors on board, can offer. For example, one potential use for the Defender is in subsea mine clearance. To do that, the ROV needs to be able to carry a sizeable payload of explosives and then position itself accurately to drop the explosives in the right place before retreating. There is little room for error in such sensitive assignments.

Attractive Size, Weight, Power and Cost

Riggs continued saying Nortek’s DVLs offer a blend of features that give a good overall “SWaP-C” – size, weight, power, and cost. “Our software is already integrated with Nortek, so it was really just turning on the switch. It was a seamless process,” Riggs reports.

It remains to be seen what this teamwork will yield in the future, as the companies collaborate to hone the overall package for users.

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