Maintaining
the Oceanic Remote Chemical Analyzer (ORCA) buoys requires semi-regular field
days for UW Field Engineers. Today,
Gretchen Thuesen and Rachel Vander Giessen head out to install a solar panel on
the Dabob Bay buoy. They spend the days
leading up to the field day getting supplies, instruments and electronics
ready, lining up an appropriate vehicle and checking the tides and wind
forecasts. This morning they do one last
wind check then meet at the Ocean Science Building to load the truck before
catching an early ferry to Bremerton.
From there they drive to Belfair where the M/V Mackinaw is stored at the
Pacific Northwest Salmon Center.
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Hitching the M/V Mackinaw and trailer to the truck and saying good morning to PNWSC staff |
The trailer is hitched to the truck and the
engineers head north, towing the 20’ boat over the Hood Canal Bridge to
Quilcene where they’ll carefully launch it in the narrow marina and motor out
to the buoy.
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The boat and buoy have to be lined up just right for transferring the heavy solar panel |
Maneuvering
heavy equipment from the boat to the buoy is difficult and time consuming… calm
winds help by allowing the boat to be tied up on the correct side of the buoy
regardless of wind direction. The solar
panel and frame housing is large and heavy and has to be carefully laid out on
the boat so that it can be transferred to the buoy without incurring
damage. Rachel holds it in place on the
buoy platform while Gretchen secures it with U-bolts.
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Gretchen preps hardware and tools for the solar
panel installation |
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Dabob buoy with a newly installed solar panel |
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Eventually, we get the hardware installed and all of the electronics wired up. Now Dabob is equipped with two 75 W solar panel that will recharge the battery bank, supplying predictable power to the oceanographic instrument system.
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