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Rescued from the deep

A sailor from Sheean makes his way up the escape tower into the safety of rescue vehicle Remora during Ex Black Carillon.
A sailor from Sheean makes his way up the escape tower into the safety of rescue vehicle Remora during Ex Black Carillon.
Australian Submarine Rescue Vehicle Remora.
Australian Submarine Rescue Vehicle Remora.
The RAN successfully carried out a rescue from a ‘disabled submarine’ at depths of 100m in Exercise Black Carillon last month.

Black Carillon, carried out in waters west of Perth, demonstrated the navy’s ability to rescue submariners from a disabled boat.

It was the first recorded instance of a dynamic positioning mothership supporting a submersible submarine rescue vehicle, transferring personnel to the surface. The last personnel transfer using the Australian Submarine Rescue Vehicle (ASRV) was in 1998 at a depth of 40m, with the mothership four-point moored.

Black Carillon is designed to test Navy personnel and Navy equipment under emergency conditions associated with a real life scenario.

HMAS Sheean played the role of a disabled submarine. Sheean lay on the seabed in a safe bottoming area approximately 100 metres down.

The ASRV Remora, coupled with HMAS Sheean and transferred four personnel from the submarine to Remora. Remora then transported the ‘rescued’ four to the surface.

Named after the sucking fish, Remora is a 16.5 tonne remotely operated rescue vehicle built about a diving bell. It has room for six survivors and the operator.

Representing the leading edge of submarine rescue technology, Remora is capable of operations at depths in excess of 500 metres in a current of three knots and can mate to a sunken submarine lying at angles of up to 60 degrees.

Remora is maintained ready to deploy within 12 hours of an alert being raised and can be anywhere in Australia within 36 hours. It can also be deployed onboard a ship within a further 24 hours.

 

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