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WO2006011163A9 - Panneau de chalut moule, leger, a efficacite hydrodynamique amelioree de grande vitesse et procedes d'utilisation et de fabrication - Google Patents

Panneau de chalut moule, leger, a efficacite hydrodynamique amelioree de grande vitesse et procedes d'utilisation et de fabrication

Info

Publication number
WO2006011163A9
WO2006011163A9 PCT/IS2005/000016 IS2005000016W WO2006011163A9 WO 2006011163 A9 WO2006011163 A9 WO 2006011163A9 IS 2005000016 W IS2005000016 W IS 2005000016W WO 2006011163 A9 WO2006011163 A9 WO 2006011163A9
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
trawl door
trawl
synthetic material
door
elastomer
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/IS2005/000016
Other languages
English (en)
Other versions
WO2006011163A3 (fr
WO2006011163A2 (fr
Inventor
Halldor Egill Gudnason
Gudmundur Vigfusson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
CANDIS EHF
Original Assignee
CANDIS EHF
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from IS7371A external-priority patent/IS2228B/is
Application filed by CANDIS EHF filed Critical CANDIS EHF
Priority to US11/658,479 priority Critical patent/US20080307691A1/en
Priority to EP05759016A priority patent/EP1778006A2/fr
Priority to CA002573419A priority patent/CA2573419A1/fr
Priority to NZ554796A priority patent/NZ554796A/en
Priority to RU2009125995/13A priority patent/RU2501214C2/ru
Priority to PCT/EP2005/011722 priority patent/WO2006048258A1/fr
Priority to EP05806018A priority patent/EP1819218B1/fr
Priority to DK05806018.7T priority patent/DK1819218T3/da
Priority to AT05806018T priority patent/ATE526821T1/de
Priority to RU2007120525/12A priority patent/RU2007120525A/ru
Priority to US11/666,933 priority patent/US20080271356A1/en
Publication of WO2006011163A2 publication Critical patent/WO2006011163A2/fr
Publication of WO2006011163A3 publication Critical patent/WO2006011163A3/fr
Publication of WO2006011163A9 publication Critical patent/WO2006011163A9/fr
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Priority to NO20070932A priority patent/NO20070932L/no
Priority to IS8644A priority patent/IS3015B/is
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; AVICULTURE; APICULTURE; PISCICULTURE; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K73/00Drawn nets
    • A01K73/02Trawling nets
    • A01K73/04Devices for spreading or positioning, e.g. control thereof
    • A01K73/045Devices for spreading or positioning, e.g. control thereof for lateral sheering, e.g. trawl boards

Definitions

  • the Present Invention relates generally to trawl doors, and more particularly to trawl doors having enhanced and rather high efficiency, lightness of weight in water and ease of manufacture.
  • Trawl doors of the present invention are capable of the highest modern trawling speeds while also permitting the maximum scope length of main warp without sinking the trawl system below 9 desired elevation in the water column, thereby conserving optimal trawl opening and economy and controllability of trawl fishing operations.
  • Modern trawl fisheries are complicated by an increase in operating costs due primarily to increasingly expensive fuel costs affecting both the catch of as well as the transportation to market of fish and value added fish product.
  • the increase in operating costs in combination with the tendency of regulatory authorities to impose fixed catch quotas in one form or another have combined to force trawl fishing vessel operators to increase the efficiency of their trawl systems.
  • One impact of this demand for increased efficiency of the trawl system is a demand for increased trawl door efficiency, and in particular an ever increasing need for trawl doors that are efficient at shallow depths and high speeds, as modern pelagic trawling increasingly requires economic operations at shallow depths and high speeds.
  • any particular trawl door only exhibits optimum hydrodynamic efficiency at a certain angle of attack, just as any particular airfoil only exhibits optimum aerodynamic efficiency at a certain angle of attack of its chord to the airflow, and thus varying the angle of attack of a certain trawl door in order to regulate spread and water resistance forces necessarily means the trawl doors and thus the trawling vessel must operate at a reduced level of efficiency.
  • some pelagic trawlers use two varying sizes and even different designs of trawl doors, despite the increased costs and inconvenience associated with such practice.
  • one trawl door pair is larger in size than the other trawl door pair, and thus heavier in water, and is used at deeper trawling elevations with longer lengths of towing warps, where the trawl doors are able to properly spread both towing warps and trawl.
  • it may be used with a wide body trawl at deeper depths.
  • the second door pair may be smaller in size, and thus lighter weight in water as well as having less resistance in water, and is thus able to be operated with a high opening trawl at moderate depths and at higher speeds and higher elevations in the water column, although in such case it is not able to provide optimal spread for the towing vessel due to the smaller size of the trawl door.
  • Trawl door design has evolved from otter boards and "V" shaped plates both of which have no camber at all, to modern trawl doors having camber.
  • trawl door design occurs under the premise and experimentally thus far conventionally confirmed practice of designing the trawl door to deflect or thrust "inward” the greatest volume of water possible for the least drag.
  • the premise of trawl door design in the field has been to generate the most "outwardly” directed force possible by virtue of the least energetic displacement of a given volume of water in an "inward" direction.
  • U.S. Patent 4,180,935 shows a trawl door formed from a single main deflector body having a relatively thick profile width and a range of profile shapes similar to those found in many airfoils. It is taught that in the most preferred embodiment, the profile of the main deflector has an outer side that is convex and an inner side that is both convex (in the forward approximately third of the length of the profile) as well as concave (in the rear approximately two thirds of the length of the profile).
  • This patent also teaches in particular that a profile for a main deflector and/or trawl door preferably does not have a purely concave inner surface (the natural curvature leading to the trailing edge not being counted as part of the inner surface).
  • German patent DE 562 243 describes in 1931 a cambered profile made up of a number of aerofoil sections.
  • U.S. Patent 4,640,037 shows a trawl door having inner concave and outer convex surfaces forming a cambered profile having a relatively thin width, and additionally incorporating lift enhancing slots in the leading edge of the main deflector body.
  • the main deflector body itself is formed with a cambered profile that while being extremely thin, e.g. the thickness of a single one centimeter (1 cm) plate of steel, nonetheless has greater camber for its forward portion than for its rearward portion.
  • trawl door having a thin thickness (i.e. the thickness of a single plate of sheet steel, such as one centimeter), symmetric camber both for the inner concave and outer convex surface, and at least one spoiler disposed forward of the deflector body's leading edge as all shown in U.S. 4,640,037 is widely used in trawl doors today.
  • the profile of the main deflector body of this trawl door has a relatively wide profile, using widths similar to although seemingly lesser than those taught in U.S. 4,180,935 and includes a cambered profile wherein the camber defined by the curvature of the surface of outer side of the trawl door's main deflector body is convex and essentially oppositely symmetrical to the camber defined by the curvature of the surface of the inner side of the trawl door's main deflector body, which inner side is concave.
  • the main deflector body of the NETS trawl door is considered as able to most economically displace "inward" (i.e. toward the center of the trawl, as well as toward the opposing trawl door) a given volume of water per unit time for a given water flow velocity as compared to other main deflector body designs, thereby creating an opposing force that, in keeping with Newton's second law forces the traw ) door "outward” (i.e. away from the center of the trawl as well as away from the opposing trawl door).
  • wing shaped in reference to trawl doors means a trawl door construction wherein the leading edge of said "wing shaped” trawl doors takes the shape of a wide, horizontally oriented "V", much like a “delta wing” or a “swept wing”, while the profile of the trawl door's main deflector body (which may form the entire thrust creating structure of the trawl door) has symmetrical camber both defining the curvature of its inner side surface as well as defining the curvature of its outer side surface, from leading edge to trailing edge.
  • Such trawl doors known as "wing shaped" trawl doors represent the state of the art in the field. They are held by the industry to be the best shape and construction possible for a trawl door and are dominant in use in the conventional pelagic trawl fishing industry.
  • a highly efficient low-speed high-lift airfoil profile may be viewed by utilizing a software program known as "VisualFoil Version 4.1" produced and sold by Hanley Innovations/Dr. P. Hanley, Ocala, FL)".
  • a maximally efficient low-speed high-lift airfoil profile is found in the "VisualFoil Version 4.1" software where it is known by the profile name and/or code "NACA- 338117". None of the known art has suggested using this profile in any portion of known trawl doors.
  • the most efficient conventional pelagic trawl door constructions are trawl door constructions whose profiles are rather thick in width relative to the length of the chord line, such as those thick width profiled trawl doors in the known art mentioned above.
  • the relatively great thickness allows the trawl door to have a rather large volume for a given mass, thereby displacing more water for a given mass, and thus having a relatively low weight in water.
  • a difficulty presented by the known art is that the most efficient of trawl doors known in the art are rather expensive to manufacture, and thus have not gained as wide use as less expensive alternatives.
  • One of the reasons for the excessive manufacture cost of the most efficient conventional light weight in water trawl doors is that in order to make the trawl doors maximally efficient, it is necessary to make the trawl doors a certain minimum thickness, or width, in relation to their chord length, as mentioned above.
  • light weight in water trawl doors may easily be twenty to thirty centimeters or more in thickness, as opposed to approximately one centimeter in thickness for heavier weight in water trawl doors.
  • the high density foam fills out most of the void space created by the metallic ell over a steel tension bearing frame.
  • the high density foam is unusually expensive and the anufacture processes used to make such trawl doors are unusually expensive.
  • the steel shell elf is formed from numerous steel plates bent and fixedly welded into position upon a steel jmework, the interior void space of such a construction occupied by the foam.
  • the manufacture ocess employed utilizes a large amount of costly high density foam, more steel than alternatively inner trawl doors, and a great deal of manpower and machine time. Thus the high cost of such awl doors.
  • WO 01/84922 suggests the use of a trawl door having core and outer covering comprising a cast material which can be a plastic material such as e.g. slyamide and the core material can be closed cell foam.
  • the main difficulty i constructing trawl doors having the most efficient known shape for the main deflector is that lue to the rather thick width of the main deflector, much steel must be used to create a shell.
  • the hell either must form a cavity which is in open communication to the water environment to permit >ea water to enter and exit the shell so as to neutralize pressures (i.e. it is not a closed space as he shell cannot tolerate high pressure at fishing depths, or else it would be far too heavy and ,'xpensive to create), which construction employs much steel and makes the trawl doors too heavy ,o be widely useful.
  • EXTERIOR STRUCTURES OF TRAWL DOORS means those portions of a trawl door either :hat are (i) in communication with the outside or ambient environment; or (ii) only separated from :he outside or ambient environment by a coating itself insufficiently durable to withstand without :he additional support of further structure repeated impacts resultant of normal fishing operations, ⁇ xamples of such a coating including paints, lacquers, veneers, coatings, artificial skins or the like.
  • FRONT OF CENTER means more proximal to the leading edge of the profile of a particular portion of a trawl door than the trailing edge of that same particular trawl door portion's same profile.
  • RECEIVE(S) IMPACTS FRACTURE FREE means the ability of receiving collisions and other blows occurring during normal trawl fishing operations, including at the range of temperatures found in and about the surfaces of the world's seas and oceans, without incurring or developing fractures, despite possibly experiencing denting, marking, scuffing, scratching, chipping or other sculpting or ejection of material due to receiving such collisions and other blows.
  • COLLISIONS AND OTHER BLOWS OCCURRING DURING NORMAL TRAWL FISHING OPERATIONS means those collisions and other blows experienced by a trawl door during trawl fishing operations that are not so severe as to cause the fracture and/or cracking of a conventional high quality trawl door constructed of a high quality steel and/or other metal alloy, but may be sufficiently severe so as to cause the fracture and/or cracking of prior trawl doors employing synthetics in their exterior structures.
  • PROFILE means the cross sectional shape of a trawl door or of a portion of a trawl door as viewed in a plane perpendicular to the vertical dimension of the trawl door.
  • TRAWL DOOR means any of a variety of essentially rigid structures having generally rigid
  • trawl doors have the function of converting a portion of forward motion and/or energy that is imparted by th'e towing vessel into horizontally directed force for the purpose of spreading in a generally horizontal orientation a trawl net, seismic surveillance towed array complex, paravane line or the like.
  • the present invention is based upon the discovery that impact receiving and especially exterior portions of trawl doors may usefully be formed from synthetic materials capable of torming structures that withstand impacts resultant of normal trawl fishing operations without 3Xhibiting fractures.
  • Normal trawl fishing operations are those trawl fishing operations that would iot fracture a standard, well constructed high quality steel and/or other metal, alloy trawl door.
  • Trawl doors of the present invention employ synthetics that receive impacts fracture free in order .
  • the present invention in based upon the surprising discovery that a substantially more efficient trawl door may be created wherein the trawl door includes at least one and preferably two lift enhancing structures disposed forward of the leading edge of a single main deflector body, and the main deflector has a profile wherein:
  • FIG. 1 is an aspect view of the trawl door of the present invention as ' iewed from behind ind looking at the inner side surface of the trawl door of the present inventiot .
  • FIG. 2 is a view of one of the deflector bodies shown in FIG. 1, where he tensile load >earing structure incorporated within one of the deflector bodies of the trawl ⁇ oor of the present nvention is described in more detail.
  • FIG. 3 is a plan view of the profile of the main deflector body of the tr iwl door of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is an aspect view of a modification to the trawl door shown in F G. 1.
  • FIG. 5 is a plan view of the profile of a trawl door shown in FIG. 1 and also showing a modification to the door shown in FIG. 1.
  • the synthetic material comprises preferably a polyamide (nylon) coml ined with an elastomer in such a ratio as to provide a material that withstand impacts fract jre-free.
  • Polyamides or Nylons
  • Polyamides are known polyco ⁇ densates of for example aliphatic dicarboxylic cids containing 4-12 carbon atoms with aliphatic diamines containing 4-12 carbon atoms and/or la ⁇ tarns containing 4- 12 carbon atoms.
  • polyamides examples include polyhexamethylene adipamide (nylon 6,6), polyhexamethylene azelamide (nylon 6,9), polyhexamethylene sebacamide (nylon 6,10), I olyhexamethylene lauramide (nylon 6,12), polytetramethylene adipamide (nylon 4,6), olycaprolactam (nylon 6) and polylaurinolactam (nylon 12).
  • the diamines and/or dicarfaoxylic cids can also be aromatic. ' i
  • Polyamides can also be built up of two or more dicarboxy ⁇ c acids and ⁇ 'or two or more liamines, or of two or more lactams, while they can also consist of mixtures of two or more (olyamides.
  • the polyamide is IMylon-6 shown in Formula (I), obtainable .by polymerization of :aprolactam.
  • polyamide and elastomer form a copolymer, e.g. a block :opolymer with alternating blocks of polyamide segments
  • Y is an alkylene group and m is an integer greater than one
  • residues of elastomeric polymers such as e.g. polyethers, hydrocarbons, polyesters, polysiloxanes or combinations thereof.
  • Nylon copolymers and processes for their productions are disclosed Jn 1 e.g. U.S. patent No. 4,617,355; U.S. patent No. 4,590,243, and patent application WO 94/17124. ⁇
  • Suitable elastomers include polyolefin elastomer or plastomer, especially a polyolefin elastomer or plastomer made using a single-site catalyst system (for example,, a homogeneously branched ethylene polymer such as a substantially linear ethylene interpolymer or a homogeneously branched linear ethylene interpolymer).
  • a single-site catalyst system for example, a homogeneously branched ethylene polymer such as a substantially linear ethylene interpolymer or a homogeneously branched linear ethylene interpolymer.
  • suitable polyolefins include, for example, polyethylene (ethylene homopolymer), ethylene/alpha-olefin interpolymers, alpha-olefin homopolymers, such as polypropylene(propylene homopolymer), alpha-olefin interpolymers, such as interpolymers of polypropylene and an alpha- olefin having at least 4 carbon atoms.
  • polyethylene ethylene homopolymer
  • alpha-olefin interpolymers such as polypropylene(propylene homopolymer)
  • alpha-olefin interpolymers such as interpolymers of polypropylene and an alpha- olefin having at least 4 carbon atoms.
  • polyolefins include, for example, but are not limited to,, substantially linear ethylene polymers, homogeneously branched linear ethylene polymers, heterogeneously branched linear ethylene (including linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE), ultra or very low density polyethylene (ULDPE or VLDPE) medium density polyethylene (MDPE) and high density iolyethylene (HDPE)), high pressure low density polyethylene (LDPE), ethylerie/acrylic acid (EAA) :opolymers, ethylene/methacrylic acid (EMAA) copolymers, ethylene/acrylic acid (EAA) ionomers, ithylene/methacrylic acid (EMAA) ionomers, ethylene/vinyl acetate (EVA) copolymers, ithylene/vinyl alcohol (EVOH) copolymers, polypropylene homopolymers and copolymers, ⁇ thylene/propylene polymers, ethylene/styrene interpoly
  • ⁇ thylene/ethyl acrylate (EEA) copolymers ethylene/methyl acrylate (EMA), a ⁇ d jthylene/methmethyl acrylate (EMMA) copolymers), polybutylene (PB), ethylene carbon monoxide nterpolymer (e.g., ethylene/carbon monoxide (ECO), copolymer, ethylene/acrylic acid/carbon monoxide (EAACO) terpolymer, ethylene/methacrylic acid/carbon monoxide (EMAACO) terpolymer, 2thylene/vinyl acetate/carbon monoxide (EVACO) terpolymer and sty rene/ carbon monoxide (SCO), chlorinated polyethylene and mixtures thereof.
  • ECO ethylene/carbon monoxide
  • EAACO ethylene/acrylic acid/carbon monoxide
  • EAACO ethylene/methacrylic acid/carbon monoxide
  • EVACO 2thylene/vinyl a
  • nylon block copolymers There are numerous methods of preparing nylon block copolymers.
  • One general procedure involves the use of prepolymerized elastomeric polymers (polymers which provide elastomeric segments in nylon block copolymers) and lactam monomer wherein the elastomeric polymer is prepared so as to have a lactam initiator group from which additional lactam monomer polymerizes to form polyamide segments.
  • the lactam initiator group may be an acyl lactam group which is a known initiator of lactam polymerization.
  • Lewis acid catalysts are bromomagnesium Ia eta mate, magnesium bislactamate, magnesium acetyl acetonate, magnesium salts of organic carboxylic acids such as i magnesium stearate, magnesium chloride, calcium ethoxide, calcium lactamate, calcium acetyl acetonate, barium lactamate, barium chloride, barium acetyl acetonate, zinc chloride, zinc acetyl acetonate, zinc lactamate, cadmium chloride, cadmium acetyl acetonate, cadmium lactamate, boron acetyl acetonate, aluminium trilactamate, aluminium chloride, chloroaluminium dilactamate, lactam aluminium chloride, tin II chloride, tin II ethoxide, tin II acetyl acetonate, titaniumtrichloride, titanium
  • Lewis acid use is made of magnesium bislactamates such as caprolactamate and/or pyrrolidonate.
  • trawl door 1 of the present invention is a "V" iaped trawl door, as evident to those ordinarily skilled in the art.
  • a starboarcl side trawl door is iown but, as also evident to those ordinarily skilled in the art, there will be alcorresponding port de trawl door.
  • Each door includes main deflector body 2 formed by upper deflector body portion and lower deflector body portion 4.
  • each body portion 3 and 4 Disposed forward of each body portion 3 and 4 is a Jift enhancing arrangement including pper forward leading slat 6 and upper forward trailing slat 7, as well as I owe ri forward leading slat and lower forward trailing slat 9.
  • the slats may be formed, made and arranged in any fashion s know in the art.
  • Trawl door 1 of the present invention includes conventional tow point connection hardware icluding towing warp connector 10 as well as upper and lower trawl net bridle connection rings 11 ind 12, respectively.
  • Towing warp connector 10 is attached to center tension bearing plate 14, which .ommunicates tensional loads to upper and lower bridle connection rings 11 and 12, respectively, hat are located on upper and lower tension bearing plates 13 and 15, respectively, through a load ind tension transmitting and carrying structure that is partially enclosed within upper and lower
  • I ieflector bodies 3 and 4 respectively (see FIG. 2), as is described more fully below.
  • Slats 5 preferably fit into slots (not shown) that are cut partially into tension bearing jlates 13, 14 and 15, so as to act as "female ends” to the "male end” of any particular spoiler.
  • the slots have a shape that accommodates the profile of any particular slat where it passes
  • slats are kept in position by the ⁇ emainder of the structure of the trawl door 1 of the present invention, which prevents the tension searing plates 13, 14 and 15 from moving away from one another. Additionally, slats 5 may be welded into place, such as by spot welding.
  • upper deflector lower load bearing end-plate 61 Located between upper deflector body 3 and center tension bearing plate 14 is upper deflector lower load bearing end-plate 61, while located between upper deflector body 3 and upper tension bearing plate 13 is upper deflector upper load bearing end-plate 62.
  • lower deflector upper load i jearing end-plate 64 located between lower deflector body 4 and lower 1 tension bearing slate 15 is lower deflector lower load bearing end-plate 65.
  • Bolts 26 permanently attach load searing end-plates 61, 62, 64 and 65 to tension bearing plates 13 14 and 15, Jand may have their Dolt heads welded into position after being thoroughly threaded into place.
  • One or more of a series of weight plates 69 are optionally attached to [the lower surface of ower tension bearing plate 15, where either one or more weight plates 69 may permanently be attached, or may temporarily be attached and include a variety quantities, sizes (especially differing in thickness) and/or a variety of masses so as to permit selectively adjusting the mass of weight at the bottom of trawl door 1 and thus the ballast aiding to maintain a vertical orientation of trawl door 1 during field operations.
  • FIG. I 1 a deflector body of the present invention and/or deflector bodies of the
  • I present invention as represented by upper deflector body portion 3 are preferably formed with
  • I hollow internal load bearing members 20 e.g. tubes having walls 21 and extending from the upper surface 22 of the deflector body to the lower surface 23 of the deflector; body.
  • Flanges 17 are permanently affixed to the distal ends of hollow internal load bearing members 20 and include threaded holes 18. Flanges 17 are sunk into the synthetic portion of the deflector body so that exterior surfaces 19 of flanges 17 are seated flush with (e.g. are co-planar with) the upper and lower surfaces 22 and 23 of the deflector body.
  • Plugs seal otherwise open ends of hollow internal load bearing members 20 proximal flanges 17, while not extending beyond flanges i 17, so that hollow internal load bearing members 20 are closed to the ambient and/or external i environment, thereby prohibiting entry of seawater into hollow internal load bearing members 20, thereby also generating increased trawl door buoyancy, as well as constant trawl door buoyancy at varying water depths.
  • the load bearing members 20 and proximal flanges 17 are preferably made from a strong and rigid material, e.g. stainless steel or a suitable metal alloy that can be selected by the skilled person.
  • flanges 17 disposed at the lower surface 23 of deflector body 3 are preferably permanently attached to upper deflector lower load bearing end-plate 61 by means of threaded bolts (not shown) being screwed and/or threaded into threaded holes 18.
  • the threaded bolts (not shown) have a bolt head that is sunk into flanges 17 (such as by being sunk into an enlarged portion at the external end of threaded holes 18) so as not to 1 protrude beyond I ne level of the exterior surface of upper deflector lower load bearing end-platie 61, and are fixedly
  • flanges 17 i isposed at upper surface 22 of deflector body 3 are likewise attached to upper deflector upper Dad bearing end-plate 62.
  • towing forces generated by the propeller of the towing vessel are transmitted hrough the towing warps, to: towing warp connector 10, then along central tension bearing plate 14, then simultaneously both to upper deflector lower load bearing end-plate 61 as well as to lower
  • Jeflector upper load bearing end plate 64 then ' i through flanges 17 both that are disposed at the lower surface 23 of upper deflector body 3 as well as flanges 17 that are disposed at the upper surface of lower deflector body 4, then along hollow internal load bearing tubes 20 that are located within both lower and upper deflector bodies 3 and 4, then , through flanges 17 that are disposed both at the upper surface 22 of upper deflector body 3 as well as flanges 17 that are disposed at the lower surface of lower deflector body 4, then simultaneously to upper deflector upper load bearing end-plate 62 as well as to lower deflector lower load bearing end-plate 65, then simultaneously both to upper tension bearing plate 13 as well as to lower tension bearing plate 15 connecting to upper and lower bridle connection rings 11 and 12, respectively, which either pull on the trawl's upper and lower starboard bridle, respectively, or on the upper and lower leg, respectively of a "Vee" bridle rig, for example. It is understood that bolts[
  • a tension bearing frame and/or a load bearing frame 25 (see FIG. 1) is formed by the complex of interconnected towing warp connector 10; tension bearing plates 13, 14 and 15; load bearing end-plates 61, 62, 64 and 65; hollow internal tubes 20 having flanges 17 with bolts threaded into threaded bolt holes 18 and passing through and interconnectinglflanges 17 to load bearing end plates 61, 62, 64 and 65 and thus to tension bearing plates 13, 14 and 15, towing warp connector 10 and bridle connection rings 11 and 12. '
  • tension towing upon the trawl net may mainly transmit directly from towing warp connector 10, through central tension bearing plate 14 to a single bridle connection ring located along the aft portion of central tension bearing plate 14, and not shown.
  • tension and other load forces are still transmitted along the remainder of the tension bearing frame, however such loads primarily originate from water resistance, impacts with the trawling vessel during field operations, as well as from stabilizer lines that may connect to upper and lower bridle rings 11 and 12, respectively.
  • Presently preferred embodiments of the invention make use of nylon-elastomer copolymers made with reaction injection molding technology.
  • Materials for such processing are available from Br ⁇ ggeman Chemical KG (Heilbronn, Germany) sold under the 'trade name NYRIM®.
  • NYRIM ® the Nylon and elastomer phases are chemically bounded.
  • the chemically bounded but incompatible Nylon and elastomer blocks make a semi-crystalline material.
  • the Nylon-6 properties are complemented with toughness and resilience from the elastomer blocks.
  • NYRIM ® polymers are typically processed via RIM (Reaction
  • RIM processing is the preferred method to manufacture large, complex or thick parts.
  • NYRIM is formulated with elastomer contents from i7% (NYRIM 700) up tp 40% (NYRIM 4000).
  • a synthetic material that is poured into the hot mold while in a fluid and/or liquid state is a nylon-precursor combined with an elastomer as well as a catalyst and/or polymerization additive(s) used for anionic polymerization of a lactame into Nylon.
  • one i preferably pours AP-Caprolactam and an elastomer and a catalyst into the mold.
  • this mixture After pouring and j when the temperatures of the mixture and the mold temperature are sufficiently hot this mixture reacts anionically to form a polymer that is a cast polymer, and when using caprolactam as a raw material this cast polymer is either a cast nylon or a cast "NYRIM".
  • the polymerization of the raw materials causes the liquids to solidify into a polymer, and the anionic polymerization of the lactame into the Nylon results in a solid synthetic material for synthetic portions of the trawl door that receive impact fracture free.
  • the polymer that is being formed is in a solid state because it is formed by a reaction occurring at a temperature that is lower than the melting point of the polymer.
  • the solidified polymeric Nyloh be mixed with an lastomer
  • Lactames that can be used for anionic polymerisation are, for exampl ⁇ : caprolactam, aurinolactam, and mixtures of these two. ⁇
  • the elastomer content of the nylon-elastomer mixture is iri the range of 5-40%.
  • the elastomer is up to twenty percent (20%) of the weight of the mixture naking up the synthetic material including about 15% or about 20%, with fro'm sixteen percent 16%) to eighteen percent (18%) being preferred, and most preferred being sixteen and seven enths percent (16.7%), with eleven and one tenths percent (11.1%) as well useful.
  • the elastomer is up to twenty percent (20%) of the weight of the mixture naking up the synthetic material including about 15% or about 20%, with fro'm sixteen percent 16%) to eighteen percent (18%) being preferred, and most preferred being sixteen and seven enths percent (16.7%), with eleven and one tenths percent (11.1%) as well useful.
  • polystyrene resin may substitute the Nylon, depending upon experimental verification of the suitability of any particular Dolymeric substance.
  • the polymerization be a cast polymerization.
  • hollow internal load bearing tubes 20' having flanges 17 with threaded holes 18, already arranged, disposed and fixedly positioned within the hot mold so i that after pouring in the fluid synthetic material capable of forming a Nylon chemically mixed with i an elastomer, the synthetic material solidifies around and permanently encloses and incorporates
  • a portion of the trawl poor may be machined (including sculpted and/or carved) from a block of the solidified synthetic material. Automated carving using computer controlled machining equipment is preferred.
  • a block of the solid synthetic material may be made by molding, even with void ispaces inside of it to accommodate structure, any portion of frame 25, electronics or other tools, or to create void space for buoyancy. Then, the block may be machined into the desired shape of a portion of the trawl door, such as into the shape of one of the deflector's for use in the trawl door ,Of the present invention.
  • the present invention provides for: !
  • I a fabricating a portion of the trawl door by a process which includes the steps of: i i) forming a mold cavity that is shaped generally to form at least a portion of the traw) door; I ii) situating into the mold cavity that is shaped generally! to form a least a portion of the trawl door a liquid synthetic material capable of solidifying to form a solid synthetic material capable of receiving im'pacts fracture free; and ! iii) curing the liquid synthetic material in the mold cavity to form the solid synthetic material forming at least a synthetic portio ⁇ lof the trawl door which receives impacts fracture free; i b. fabricating a portion of the trawl door by a process which includes the steps of:
  • I trawl door which receives impacts fracture free i c. fabricating a portion of the trawl door by a process which includes the steps of: i) placing at least a portion of a load bearing frame (25) !in a predetermined position in a mold cavity that is shaped generally to form at least a portion of the traw) door; ' ii) situating into the mold cavity containing the at least a' portion of the load bearing frame a liquid synthetic material capable of solidifying to form a solid synthetic material having polymeric material mi>fed with elastomeric material in a certain ratio; and i Hi) curing the liquid synthetic material in the mold cavityjto form the solid synthetic material having the polymeric material mixed with the elastomeric material, the ratio of the polymeric and elastomeric materials providing solid synthetic material for at least a synthetic portion of the trawl door which receives impacts fracture free; i d.
  • fabricating a portion of the trawi door by a process which includes the steps of: i) situating into a mold cavity a liquid synthetic material capable of solidifying to form a solid synthetic material having polymeric material mixed with elastomeric material in a certain ratio; I ii) curing the liquid synthetic material in the mold cavity to form the solid synthetic material having the polymeric material mixe'd with the
  • elastomeric material the ratio of the polymeric and elastomeric materials providing solid synthetic material for at least a synthetic portion of the trawl door which receives impacts fracture free; > iii) machining the solid synthetic material at least generally into a desired
  • the present invention additionally provides for an improved method for producing the trawl door of the present invention wherein the step described in the above
  • solidifying to form the solid synthetic material having the polymeric material mixed with the elastomeric material includes the further step of selecting as the liquid synthetic material a material capable of solidifying to form solid synthetic material having as the pplymeric material at least a polyamide, and preferably Nylon-6.
  • a material capable of solidifying to form solid synthetic material having as the pplymeric material at least a polyamide, and preferably Nylon-6.
  • Other polyamides, such as the abqve mentioned may as well be used.
  • Particularly preferred are mixtures of polymeric material (preferably polyamides)
  • the present invention additionally provides for an improved method for producing the trawl door of the present invention wherein the step described in the above mentioned method of pouring into the mold cavity containing the portion of the load bearing frame
  • I iquid synthetic material capable of solidifying to form the solid synthetic material having the polymeric material mixed with the elastomeric material includes the further step of selecting as the liquid synthetic material a material capable of solidifying to form solid synthetic material having as the polymeric material at least a polyamide, and preferably Nylon-6.
  • Other polyamides may as well be used such as described above, and mixtures forming copolymers with elastomers, as described in detail above.
  • the interior i side of the mold corresponding to the convex outer side of the trawl door is made so as to
  • At least the convex outer side of the trawl door's deflector(s) may as well be coated with a very low friction substance, including a low friction coating, Teflon or other material.
  • 20 is unable to rotate i relative to the complex of hollow internal load bearing tubes 20 forming a portion of the tension and/or load bearing frame 25 (see FIG. 2) encapsulated within the synthetic portion of the deflector body.
  • a great variety of structures may be employed for the tension and/or load bearing frame encapsulated within the synthetic portion of a deflector body, so long as the shape of the encapsulated tension and/or load bearing frame 25 prevents its rotation or movement within and i relative to the synthetic portion of the deflector body.
  • the trawl door shown in FIG. 1 is a "V" door
  • FIG. 3 shows to scale or essentially to scale a preferred profile 27 of a main deflector body of a trawl door 1 of the present invention, as used in the instant example of the trawl door of the t present invention to form the profiles of upper and lower deflector bodies 3 and 4, respectively.
  • the complete shape and teachings of the profile 27 shown in FIG. 3 are the same as the profile for that maximally efficient low-speed high-lift airfoil profile having its profile kno'wn by the name I nd/or code "NACA-338117" as found in the "VisualFoil Version 4.1" by Ha ⁇ le'y Innovations (Ocala lorida, USA).
  • I nd/or code “NACA-338117”
  • profile 27 includes convex outer side 28, concave inner side 29, railing edge 30 and leading edge 31. Trailing edge 30 is the most aft portion of any deflector
  • leading idge 31 is the most forward portion of any deflector body of the present inveption as disposed in
  • the widest point of the profile 27 is approximately seventeen percent to eighteen percent (17% to 18%) of the length of the profiles chord, and is at
  • the widest point of the profile is located at a point ) along the profiles
  • a lift enhancing arrangement 5 disposed forward of the leading edge 31 of a main 1 deflector body or any deflector body of the present invention.
  • a lift enhancing arrangement 5 disposed forward of the leading edge 31 of a main 1 deflector body or any deflector body of the present invention.
  • at least one slat is employed with any main deflector body of the present invention having the profile taught hereinabove. None of the known art has suggested using slats in combination with a deflector body having a profile similar to the shape of the profile taught herein as most preferred for the shape of the profile of any main deflector body for use in a trawl door of the present
  • the upper forward leading slat 6 has a profile generally the same as the
  • the leading edge 6a of the slat 6 is spaced from the leading edge 31 by the same distance as the leading edge 6a is spaced from the widest point of the profile 27.
  • the length jof the slat 6 is such that it is above the top surface of the profile 27 and because of the differences in profile as between the slat 6 and the portion of the profile between its leading edge and the top of the profile 27, a slot is formed along the length of the leading edge 31. The slot diminishes in area as one moves from the leading edge 31 along the profile 27 and this formation channels water flowing
  • his slat 7 is located in the slot formed by the spoiler 6 and has a leading edge 7a in line with the ⁇ ading edges 6a and 37 as well as a profile which is generally the same as th'e profile of the outer ide 28 at an area defined as rearward of the leading edge 31 but forward of ⁇ he widest point of he profile 27.
  • the slat 7 thus divides the slot along the leading edge 31 into 'two which enhances he energisation ofthe boundary layer.
  • the slat 7 is shorter than the slat 6 being about 50% of he length of the slat 6 and so does not extend above the top surface of the profile 27.
  • Fig 5 also shows a modification which maybe made to the trawl door as shown in Fig 1.
  • his modification comprises the provision of a trailing edge lift enhancing structure in the form of i )ne or more trailing edge slats 51 and 52 located under the profile 27 which form inner and outer i railing edge slots 53,54.
  • the trailing edge slat or slats 51,52 are generaWy flat and extend along
  • the slat 51 is approximately half the length of the slat52 and their trailing edges 51a,51b are generally aligned with the trailing edge 32 of the profile 27. These slats maintain the boundary ayer effects of the water on the concave inner side 29 of the profile which also enhances the performance of the profile 27.
  • each body portion of the trawl door will be provided with the i leading edge slat arrangement shown in Fig 5 and may be also provided with the trailing edge slat arrangement if desired. What is done for one trawl door is done to the other in order to generate stable conditions.
  • the spoilers themselves may have profiles similar to that ⁇ profile shown in FIG. i 3 and 5 and may also be formed from a synthetic material that upon solidification forms a structure that receives impacts fracture free.
  • the trawl door of the present invention provides for a new and useful method for varying the spreading force capable of
  • trawl door 1 of the present invention has a lower trawl door portion 71 and an upper trawl door portion 72, whether it is a "V" door qr otherwise, and whether or not it has a central tension bearing plate or like hardware, or otherwise.
  • lower trawl door portion 71 is defined as including all structures taught and shown herein for trawl door 1 of the present invention that both include central tension bearing plate 14 and also are situated below central tension bearing plate 14, excepting towing warp connector 10, bridle connection ring 12 and weight plates 69, and may be of varying sizes and surface area.
  • upper trawl door portion 72 includes all structures as taught and shown herein for trawl door 1 of the present invention that both include central tension bearing plate' 14 and also are situated above central tension bearing plate 14, excepting towing warp connector 10 and bridle connection ring 11, and also may be of varying sizes and surface area.
  • both lower and upper trawl door portions 71 and 72, respectively, would i correspond to the general shape and structure of the entire trawl door, and may be of varying sizes so as to provide varying amounts of surface area.
  • trawl door extension pieces 81 are usefully temporarily attached to the top and bottom ends of trawl door 1, so as to increase the size of trawl door 1, and thus increase the amount of spreading force it is capable of generating.
  • upper trawl door extension piece 83 is formed in a fashion essentially i identical to upper trawl door portion 72, and includes upper trawl door extension piece deflector ody 52, extension slats 87 and upper trawl door extension piece lower plate! ⁇ 5 that is essentially
  • Upper rawl door extension piece lower plate 85 attaches flush to the exterior surface of upper tension tearing plate 13 by means of bolts 90. Concavities are formed in the lower surface of upper trawl loor extension piece lower plate 85 that receive the heads of bolts 26 and other protrusions that nay be disposed on the exterior surface of upper tension bearing plate 13 so'as to permit a flush, ;table face-to-face meeting of the exterior surface of upper trawl door extension piece lower plate 35 with the exterior surface of upper tension bearing plate 13.
  • Upper trawl door extension piece 33 also includes upper extension plate 93, which serves the function both of upper deflector upper oad bearing end-plate 62 as well as the function, as far as providing a retention structure for
  • lower trawl door extension piece 84 is formed in a fashion essentially identical to lower trawl door portion 71, and includes lower trawl door extension piece deflector body 53, extension spoilers 88 and lower trawl door extension piece upper plate 87 that is essentially identical in form to center tension bearing plate 14 while performing the function both of lower tension bearing plate 15 as well as of lower deflector upper load bearing end-plate 64.
  • Lower trawl door extension piece 84 is formed in a fashion essentially identical to lower trawl door portion 71, and includes lower trawl door extension piece deflector body 53, extension spoilers 88 and lower trawl door extension piece upper plate 87 that is essentially identical in form to center tension bearing plate 14 while performing the function both of lower tension bearing plate 15 as well as of lower deflector upper load bearing end-plate 64.
  • 1 trawl door extension piece upper plate 87 attaches flush to the exterior surface either of lower tension bearing plate 15 or of a weight plate 69 by means of bolts 90. Concavities are formed in the exterior surface of lower trawl door extension piece upper plate 87 that receive the heads of bolts 26 and other protrusions that may be disposed on the exterior surface of lower tension bearing plate 15 so as to permit a flush, stable face-to-face meeting of the exterior surface of lower trawl door extension piece upper plate 87 with the exterior surface of lower tension bearing plate 15.
  • Lower trawl door extension piece 84 also includes lower extension plate 94, which serves the function both of lower deflector lower load bearing end-plate 65 as 1 well as the function of, as far as providing a retention structure for extension spoilers 88, of lower tension bearing plate 15. '
  • the upper and lower trawl door extension pieces 83, 85 may be formed with greater void spaces within their synthetic structures so as to create more buoyancy, and may be formed with a lesser quantity of hollow internal load bearing tubes 20, which may also lesser strengths and wall thicknesses, i and/or of greater diameters so as to create more void spaces and buoyancy. .
  • trawl door i of the present invention includes a swept back leading edge, like a Delta wing, which is known as "wing shaped", in the trawl door industry
  • the trawl door of the present invention may have a leading edge that only lies in one plane and is intended to be used with the trawl door's leading ledge perpendicular or generally perpendicular to the water flow.
  • the upper and lower trawl door extension pieces 83 and 85 also would have leading edges designed to be fished perpendicular or generally perpendicular to the oncoming water flow.
  • trawl door extension pieces 83 and 85 may themselves have leading edges that are designed to be fished perpendicular or generally perpendicular to th ⁇ j oncoming water
  • variable lift trawl door of the present invention also known as an
  • center tension bearing plate 14 I provided on center tension bearing plate 14, and thus additional hardware may be predisposed on center tension bearing plate 14 to receive towing warp connector 10.
  • trawl doors of the present invention may
  • one or more trawl door extension piece may be added to the center portion of the trawl door, such as by dividing center tension bearing plate 14 into two or three layers, separating the layers, and adding in between them either trawl door extension pieces 83, 85, or by adding just one trawl door extension piece.
  • the trawl door extension pieces may be formed so as to telescope out from the remainder of the body of the trawl door, which such embodiment is most useful with trawl doors having deflector bodies and no spoilers.
  • Various alternative constructions of and uses for the trawl door extension pieces so as to nake up the variable spreading force trawl doors of the present invention must be readily ipparent to those ordinarily skilled in the art upon reading the present disclosure.
  • the present invention permits manufacture of a trawl door having a rnain deflector
  • I Mylon chemically mixed with an elastomer (i.e. as a copolymer, e.g. a block or random copolymer,
  • the impact oearing structures and especially exterior impact bearing structures and/or surfaces of trawl doors of the present invention, as well as for any tensile load bearing synthetic structures.
  • the relative amounts of the Nylon and the elastomer may be adjusted experimentally, and should at least preclude formation of fractures on at least any portions of the trawl doors' exterior and/or impact bearing structures formed by the solid synthetic material.
  • a mass 1 , ratio of 16.6% (sixteen and six tenths percent) by mass of an elastomer to a Nylon is preferred, with a mass ratio of from at least five percent to eighteen percent (5% to 18%) of the elastomer by mass relative to the Nylon being presently useful.
  • NYRIM is preferred.
  • NYRIM 1500 is presently preferred for trawl doors of the present invention.
  • Another synthetic substance possibly useful for the synthetic portions of trawl doors of the present invention is sold under the trade name "STAR-RIM”.
  • Both "NYRIM” and “STAR-RIM” are products of Bruggemann Chemical Company. Information on “NYRIM”, how to use it, how to blend it, its properties and the like are provided by Bruggemann Chemical Co. and found on the company's internet websites www.NYRIM.com, and www.rimnylon.com.
  • NYRIM and STAR-RIM are processed via RIM (Reaction Injection Molding) processing or casting.
  • NYRIM can also be rotomolded. This may be done at low atmospheric pressures.
  • AP-Caprolactam special grade of caprolactam that contains very low water content
  • polymerization additives are used or anionic polymerization of caprolactam into (centrifugal) cast Nylon 6.
  • a trawl door including at least one (1) spoiler disposed forward of the leading edge of at least a single main deflector body; and a main deflector body having a cambered profile wherein the camber defined by the curvature of the main deflector's outer side from the leading edge to the trailing edge of the main
  • I deflector body is greater than the camber defined by the main curvature of the main deflector's
  • a trawl door having at least one and preferably two slats disposed forward of (more proximal the oncoming water flow) a single main deflector body, and wherein said main deflector body has a profile wherein: j (i) the outer side exhibits greater camber than the inner side; ( (ii) the widest point of the profile is greatest at a point front of center of profile;
  • I shows surprisingly improved outward thrust for a given resistance, while concurrently being j capable of operating at the higher speeds of modern high speed trawlers, such as six to seven knots, while maintaining high efficiency, a result not obtainable with known trawl doors.
  • the synthetic material that receives impacts fracture free be a thermoplastic that is capable of being poured into a mold, such as a hot mold.
  • either the entire trawl door is molded at one time, or portions of the trawl door are i molded and then attached together, such as by being fixed to a metallic frame.
  • connection hardware 10, 11 and 12 be conventional metallic hardware that 5 attached to a tension and/or load bearing metallic frame that itself is situated within the mold in uch a way that the thermoplastic is poured around and about such connection hardware ncorporating tension bearing metallic frame, and subsequently solidifies around the structure of he frame.
  • the frame should be shaped so as to distribute over a maximal area of the synthetic
  • molds in the shape of a portion of the trawl door for use in nanufacturing trawl doors of the present invention such as in the shape of aldeflector body of the
  • I xawl door may leave imperfections and/or flaws upon the surface of the portion of the trawJ door
  • a mold is referred to as having che shape of a portion of trawl door 1, it is intended to include molds having generally a shape of a portion of the trawl door of the present invention.
  • the conventional metallic tow point hardware may be bolted to the finished main deflector body, or other substantial portion of the molded trawl door, wherein the tensile bearing structure is formed from the synthetic. The positioning of the conventional tow points
  • connection hardware may be calculated and oriented using any of a variety ofi methods widely known to those skilled in the art.
  • electronic or mechanical hardware including lcontrols and power driven actuator for changing the orientation of the towing warp connector 10 relative to the i remainder of trawl door 1, may be enclosed inside the synthetic structure of the trawl door.
  • electrical, mechanical or other hardware may be placed into a desired location within the hot mold prior to the pouring of the synthetic, thus becoming encapsulated by the synthetic, and being permanently contained within the synthetic structure of the trawl door.
  • hollow cavities or cavities filled with a light foam may be formed into the synthetic structures of the trawl door of the present invention by, for example, placing a foam i block within the hot mold prior to pouring in the synthetic mixture. Or an empty hollow container of a certain shape may be placed within the hot mold prior to the pouring in of the synthetic nixture.
  • void spaces may be created by rotomolding or by use of lost core echnology in RIM.
  • a trawl door (i) formed from a synthetic material comprising a polymeric material mixed vith an elastomeric materia) in such a ratio of the polymeric material to the elastomeric material :hat solid synthetic portions of the trawl door receive impacts fracture free, whereby trawl door iurability, lightness of weight in water and longevity are improved.
  • the present invention further provides for a trawl door as described above wherein those synthetic portions of the trawl door that receive impacts fracture free include i 3xterior structures of the trawl door.
  • the present invention provides for a trawl door as described above
  • polymeric material used to form synthetic portions of the trawl door includes a Nylon.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Husbandry (AREA)
  • Biodiversity & Conservation Biology (AREA)
  • Securing Of Glass Panes Or The Like (AREA)
  • Holders For Sensitive Materials And Originals (AREA)

Abstract

La présente invention a trait à un panneau de chalut ayant une efficacité plutôt élevée améliorée, une légèreté dans l'eau et facile à fabriquer. Le panneau de chalut comporte de préférence au moins une latte et de préférence deux lattes disposées à l'avant du bord d'attaque d'un unique corps de déflecteur principal, et le déflecteur principal présente un profil dans lequel: (I) la surface extérieure dudit corps principal de déflecteur présente une cambrure plus importante que la surface intérieure dudit corps de déflecteur principal; (II) la partie la plus épaisse du profil dudit corps principal de déflecteur est située à l'avant du centre; et (III) la surface extérieure est convexe et la surface intérieure est concave. Dans un mode de réalisation le panneau de chalut de l'invention comporte au moins une portion synthétique, de préférence un mélange de polyamide et d'un élastomère, et selon lequel le matériau synthétique formant ladite au moins une portion synthétique du panneau de chalut subit des impacts sans aucune fracture.
PCT/IS2005/000016 2004-07-26 2005-07-18 Panneau de chalut moule, leger, a efficacite hydrodynamique amelioree de grande vitesse et procedes d'utilisation et de fabrication Ceased WO2006011163A2 (fr)

Priority Applications (13)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/658,479 US20080307691A1 (en) 2004-07-26 2005-07-18 High Speed, Increased Hydrodynamic Efficiency, Light-Weight Molded Trawl Door and Methods for Use and Manufacture
EP05759016A EP1778006A2 (fr) 2004-07-26 2005-07-18 Panneau de chalut moule, leger, a efficacite hydrodynamique amelioree de grande vitesse et procedes d'utilisation et de fabrication
CA002573419A CA2573419A1 (fr) 2004-07-26 2005-07-18 Panneau de chalut moule, leger, a efficacite hydrodynamique amelioree de grande vitesse et procedes d'utilisation et de fabrication
RU2007120525/12A RU2007120525A (ru) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 Конструкция разноглубинной траловой доски повышенной эффективности, получаемая с использованием универсально доступных материалов и способов
DK05806018.7T DK1819218T3 (da) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 Pelagisk trawlskovlskonstruktion og fremgangsmåde
US11/666,933 US20080271356A1 (en) 2004-10-27 2005-11-01 Higher Efficiency Pelagic Trawl Door Construction Employing Universally Available Materials and Method
RU2009125995/13A RU2501214C2 (ru) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 Конструкция разноглубинной траловой доски повышенной эффективности, получаемая с использованием универсально доступных материалов и способов
PCT/EP2005/011722 WO2006048258A1 (fr) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 Construction de panneaux de chalut pelagique d'efficacite superieure au moyen de materiaux universellement disponibles et procedes associes
EP05806018A EP1819218B1 (fr) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 Construction de panneaux de chalut pelagique et procede
NZ554796A NZ554796A (en) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 A pelagic trawl door constructed in a V configuration with an aspect ration of at least 2:1
AT05806018T ATE526821T1 (de) 2004-11-04 2005-11-01 Pelagische scherbrettkonstruktion und verfahren
NO20070932A NO20070932L (no) 2004-07-26 2007-02-19 Høy hastighet, øket hydrodynamisk effektivitet, lett-vekt støpt tråldør og fremgangsmåter for bruk og fremstilling
IS8644A IS3015B (is) 2004-11-04 2007-05-14 Toghleri sem nær yfir efri og neðri toghleraeiningar sem hvor hefur mótstæða framanverða og aftanverða brúnir

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IS7371A IS2228B (is) 2004-07-26 2004-07-26 Toghleri með lága þyngd og minna togviðnám og aðferðir til að framleiða hann
IS7371 2004-07-26
US59853204P 2004-08-02 2004-08-02
US60/598,532 2004-08-02
IS7514 2004-10-20
IS7514 2004-10-20

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WO2006011163A2 WO2006011163A2 (fr) 2006-02-02
WO2006011163A3 WO2006011163A3 (fr) 2006-03-23
WO2006011163A9 true WO2006011163A9 (fr) 2006-05-11

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US (1) US20080307691A1 (fr)
EP (2) EP1778006A2 (fr)
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WO (1) WO2006011163A2 (fr)

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EP1778006A2 (fr) 2007-05-02
WO2006011163A3 (fr) 2006-03-23
EP2238831A1 (fr) 2010-10-13
CA2573419A1 (fr) 2006-02-02
US20080307691A1 (en) 2008-12-18
WO2006011163A2 (fr) 2006-02-02

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