Tag Archives: el faro

Gotcha!

El Faro’s VDR seen in the sand at a depth of 15,000 feet off the Bahamas. Photo credit NTSB

El Faro’s VDR seen in the sand at a depth of 15,000 feet off the Bahamas. Photo credit NTSB

From NTSB:

At about 1 a.m. EDT the team aboard the research vessel Atlantis located the El Faro’s mast where the VDR was mounted. After examining numerous images provided by undersea search equipment, the team positively identified the VDR.

“Finding an object about the size of a basketball almost three miles under the surface of the sea is a remarkable achievement,” said NTSB Chairman Christopher A. Hart. “It would not have been possible without the information gained during the first survey of the wreckage and the equipment and support provided by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Coast Guard, the U.S. Navy, the University of Rhode Island, and the many other partners involved in this effort.”

They found it about 450m from the main wreck.

el faro map

However, they say it will take another expedition to retrieve it.

“Now that we have been able to see just how the VDR is oriented relative to the mast structure, it’s clear that we’re going to need specialized deep-water salvage recovery equipment in order to bring it up,” said Brian Curtis, Acting Director of the NTSB Office of Marine Safety. “Extracting a recorder capsule attached to a four-ton mast under 15,000 feet of water presents formidable challenges, but we’re going to do everything that is technically feasible to get that recorder into our lab.”

More on S-VDRs

Looks like they have it covered

usns apache

151021-N-RZ218-043 ATLANTIC OCEAN (Oct. 21, 2015) USNS Apache (T-ATF 172) sailing to search for the missing U.S. flagged merchant vessel El Faro on Oct. 21. Apache departed Norfolk, Virginia, on Oct. 19 to begin searching for wreckage from the missing cargo ship, which is believed to have sunk off the coast of Crooked Island in the Bahamas. The ship is equipped with several pieces of underwater search equipment, including a voyage data recorder locator, side-scan sonar and an underwater remote operated vehicle. The Navy’s mission will be to first locate the ship and, if possible, to retrieve the voyage data recorder – commonly known as a black box. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John Kotara/Released)

More here

Navy deploying deep water search team for El Faro

With the loss of the container ship El Faro, the worst U.S. merchant marine disaster since 1983 when the bulk carrier SS Marine Electric was lost, the Navy is prepping USNS Apache (T-ATF-172) at Little Creek to head to sea off Crooked Island to begin an underwater search.

Equipped with deep-ocean ROV’s capable of searching at depths of up to 20,000 feet, Apache is certainly capable.

“The initial search area is 100 square miles, and we estimate water depth to be 15,000 feet across the expected search area,” Naval Sea Systems Command spokesman Chris Johnson told USNI News on Thursday. “We estimate we will remain in the area until mid-November.”

Perhaps Apache will stumble across the lost USS Cyclops (AC-4) while they are at it.

The 19,000-ton collier disappeared along that same part of the globe back in 1917 and has remained one of the great unsolved mysteries of the sea. (Although the safe money has always been that Cyclops made it as far as the Virginia Capes.)

USS Cyclops, anchored in the Hudson River, off New York City, probably during the 1911 naval review in New York City. Library of Congress, LC-B2- 2335-8

USS Cyclops, anchored in the Hudson River, off New York City, probably during the 1911 naval review in New York City. Library of Congress, LC-B2- 2335-8

33 Mariners, O hear from heaven our sailor’s cry

With the end of the search for the professional mariners of the El Faro, I think of the words of William Whiting

el faro