SENER Presents on History of Ship Design

July 27, 2015

Photo: SENER
Photo: SENER

The COMPIT annual edition took part this year from May 11-13 in Ulrichshusen, Germany, with the participation of SENER. This event is an International Conference on Computer Applications and Information Technology in the Maritime Industries that takes place every year in Europe.

As in the previous edition Rodrigo Pérez presented a paper, which this year was about “History and Evolution of Shipbuilding Oriented CAD Tools” written by Rodrigo Perez and Carlos Gonzalez, both from SENER.

The paper traces the history of ship design since Roman times, when ship designers began to use curves for drawing frames, through the Venetian techniques (XIII-XVI centuries) reusing templates, to the most modern methods for ship design with FORAN. FORAN, a shipbuilding CAD/CAM tool developed by SENER, offers a comprehensive process for the design and construction of ships, offshore platforms and submarines, with the aid of computers. It was conceived as an advanced engineering technique for improving the design and reducing the construction period of a vessel.

This paper traces the history of this CAD system, since its organization was differentiated into two stages: design (modules from F.1 to F.7) and production (F.8 to F.22); until the recent advances in integration with Product Lifecycle Managements (PLM) tools, Virtual Reality and the near future where all the ship product information will be accessible in electronic devices, allowing paper-less design.

Logistics News

ABS Launches Eagle CRoute Containership Solution

ABS Launches Eagle CRoute Containership Solution

Justin Gress Appointed as Chief Operating Officer at HDI Global US

Justin Gress Appointed as Chief Operating Officer at HDI Global US

AD Ports to Advance Bunkering, Alternative Marine Fuels at Khalifa Port with IRH Global Trading

AD Ports to Advance Bunkering, Alternative Marine Fuels at Khalifa Port with IRH Global Trading

Is Hormuz Half-Open or Half-Closed? Tanker Rates on the Mend

Is Hormuz Half-Open or Half-Closed? Tanker Rates on the Mend

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

German regulator moves to curb Deutsche Bahn dominance on key rail routes
Maguire: 'Roi-Hormuz is half-open, but tanker prices are recovering in hope:
The largest US power grid PJM is moving to manage data center demand