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"Load and Global Response of Ships" gives an introductory
background to naval architecture statistics and strength of
materials. Each subject is treated in detail; starting from the
first principle. The aim of this title was to derive and present
the necessary theoretical framework for predicting the extreme
loads and the corresponding hull girder stresses that a ship may be
subjected to during its operational lifetime.
Although some account is given to reliability analysis, the
present treatment has to be supplemented with methods for detailed
stress evaluation and for structural strength assessment before a
complete structural reliability analysis can be carried out.
The classification societies have issued rules and regulations for
a proper structural analysis of a ship and selection of the
scantlings. Previously, those rules rather explicitly gave formulae
for the thickness of the hull plantings, the size of the stiffeners
etc. Such empirical rules must necessarily be rather conservative
in order to apply to a large variety of ships. With the advent of
powerful computers, the rules have changed. Today, the naval
architect can perform the structural analysis using mainly rational
methods based on first principles. The classification society may
then specify proper safety factors against local global failure
modes, taking into account the consequences of failure and the
analysis procedure used. A cruder method of analysis then
necessitates a larger safety factor. Therefore the effort made by
the experienced naval architect to perform a detailed structural
analysis will be returned not just by a rational structural
arrangement but also often in lower weight of the ship and thus a
higher payload throughout the operational lifetime of the ship.
This analysis has attempted to make explicit one way in which
designers limit the design space by creating rules to which they
expect users to adhere. It is also an attempt to encourage
designers to reconsider the 'rules of use' that they have used in
their designs, so as to reconceptualise potential usage. This can
help design behaviour where rule use is not blindly followed.
By making these rules visible, it is possible to expose the
limitations of current technology, and development design solutions
that do not restrict use to the 'normal' case of action. Rules are
useful to designers because they are simplifications of activity.
Rules encode the normal case, and these are simplistic
representations of work that are, in many cases, accurate enough
for the purpose of design. However, encoding behaviour in rules has
dangers in that they do not encompass the whole range of behaviours
that can be performed. Using examples, this title shows that being
able to break rules means that people are able to engage in a
richer more flexible set of actions (and therefore more appropriate
to contingency) than when they are constrained to a limited range.
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