- Visions18
- Visions17
- Visions16
- Visions15
- Visions14
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Construction
- Node Installations Complete!
- Six on the Seafloor!
- New Segment 7
- Defining the SIA
- PN5A Successfully Deployed!
- PN 5A – Jointing Operations
- PN 5A Installation Continues
- On Site to Install PN5A
- Transit to Node 5A
- Port Call in Portland
- PN1D is Installed!
- Burial and Inspection Completed ...
- Humpbacks Visit
- Cable Burial Node PN1C
- Milestone: PN1C is Installed
- Photos of Final Inspection of P ...
- Another RSN Node is Born!
- Cable Burial Continues at Secon ...
- Second Node Installed!
- Splicing Node PN1B into Segment ...
- Recovering End of Segment 3
- Word for the Day: Persistence
- Major Milestone: First Node Ins ...
- Primary Node 1A Powered Up on D ...
- Recovering and Testing Cable Se ...
- OOI Primary Node Installation B ...
- Cable Installation Update
- Dolphins and Puffins and Molas, ...
- Day 51: Seabed Cable Lay Comple ...
- Dynamic Positioning
- Update on Cable Installation
- Completion of Segment 1 Burial
- Leaps and Bounds at the Shore S ...
- Segment 5 Installation Complete ...
- Laying Segment 5
- Bustling Shore Station
- At-Sea Installation Phases
- Installing the Land Cable
- TE SubCom Dependable Propulsion ...
- Divers at Work
- The Day After
- Second OOI Cable Landed
- Second Cable Landing Reschedule ...
- OOI Open House in Pacific City, ...
- The Cable has Landed!
- Last Grapnel Run Before Landing ...
- Preparing for the Cable Landing ...
- Seaplow 101
- Marine Mammal Observations
- Communicating with a Fishing Ve ...
- Cable Deployment Update
- Off Pacific City, Oregon
- Finished with First Segment
- Deploying Repeaters
- Start of First Cable Segment
- Leaving Astoria
- Meeting the Cable Ship in Astor ...
- Cable Laying Vessel Underway
- Photos of OOI Cable Loading
- Northern conduit installed
- Northern Conduit drilling compl ...
- Bubble test for the Southern Co ...
- Drilling of the Northern Condui ...
- Update on Drilling
July 2013
May 2013
December 2012
October 2012
August 2012
July 2012
April 2012
March 2012
January 2012
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
March 2011
February 2011
October 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
- Visions13
- Visions12
- Visions11
- Enlighten
This full-sized Junction Box frame was sucessfully deloyed and recovered in the International District Hydrothermal Field at Axial Seamount using the ROV ROPOS during the August 2011 VISIONS '11 expedition. During the VISIONS'13 cruise two fully built out medium-power J-Boxes will be deployed here that will provide power and communications to extension cables and sensors deployed at the vent sites. The sensors will include a digital still camera, mass spectrometer, fluid and DNA samplers, bottom pressure and tilt sensor, a temperature-chlorinity probe to measure boiling fluids exiting the vents, and a short-period seismometer.
During the Enlighten '10 cruise in August 2010, RSN Engineers deployed two half-size test frames, one at Hydrate Ridge and one at Axial Seamount. Designed to hold the low- and medium-power junction boxes on the RSN secondary infrastructure, the frames had been built at APL and were deployed to test year-long effects of corrosion and biofouling on materials and coatings. A test plexiglass panel and camera dome on each frame had been coated on one-half of their exposed surfaces with a new material called ClearSignal, which is intended to prevent attachment by marine organisms.
In early August 2011, thanks to images taken by the WHOI ROV JASON of the frame deployed at Axial, Senior Ocean Engineer Skip Denny learned that the lava flows from the April 2011 eruption at Axial had stopped just short of the test frame. From the same images, Denny could see that there was little corrosion and only minor biofouling.
During the VISIONS '11 cruise (11 August to 1 September 2011) the two half-size test frames were recovered and brought to the Laboratory for analysis. Corrosion expert and RSN Principal Mechanical Engineer Colin Sandwith has conducted his initial analysis of the biofouling and reports that it appears there are hydroids growing on the frames. Hydroids are multicelled filter-feeding animals that are clear, and therefore not a problem, when they are wet. RSN Project Scientist Orest Kawka has begun his analyses of the nutrient and oxygen profiles taken in the vicinities of the test frames so that these profiles may be cross-correlated with any observed corrosion and biofouling.
Work done during VISIONS '11 also included a test deployment and recovery of a full-size frame. The goal of this test, which was successful, was to assess the latching system and frame clearances to the ROV ROPOS, which was the ROV used throughout VISIONS '11.