“Where is the MRU installed on a boat?”
“Loads are normally lowered over the ship side and are suspended from the tip of the crane, and you can’t install an MRU there. Instead, it’s installed inside the vessel, in a more central position. When the boat rolls, the tip of the crane will move up and down. The job of the MRU is to calculate roll and pitch, then calculate the resulting heave. And not from the position of the MRU itself, but out on the tip of the crane.”
“Yes, because the MRU is actually positioned in the part of the boat where there is least motion?”
“Yes, It’s quite a challenge to measure motion when the sensor is not physically located on the crane tip. We need to know the distance from the MRU to the tip of the crane. Once we have this, the system can calculate the rest.”
“Are there other scenarios where an MRU is essential?”
“People who chart the seabed often use MRUs, mostly for the same reasons I have just described. The water surface is hardly ever flat, so the boat will always be heaving, up and down, and the echosounder will therefore describe the seabed in a wave shape, if you cannot compensate for the motion of the boat.”
“Our last question is, what’s inside that small canister?”
“There are two components. One is an accelerometer which measures acceleration in one direction, for example for heave, vertically up and down. The other component is known as the gyro and is an angle gauge or protractor. Both are absolutely essential to produce an accurate result. There are three of each component in an MRU, one for each direction of motion - forwards, backwards, sideways and vertically.”