SeaCrest: Building for Domestic and Foreign Customers

by Alan Haig-Brown
A 3-D rendering of Seacrest’s new dive-support vessel.

Seacrest’s Managing Director Tavipol Hemangkorn receives guest in a board room decorated with models of large crew boats, ASD tugs and a range of other vessels that his firm has built. Located just outside the mouth of the Chaophraya River at Samutprakarn, Thailand, the yard’s three marine ways can launch vessels directly into the deeper waters of the Gulf of Thailand. They can accommodate vessels up to a 22-meter beam and up to 2500 metric tons. Outside the company offices an older steel buoy tender is in for general repairs while next to it a spanking new aluminum crew boat awaits delivery to her owners.

Managing Director Khun Tavipol with the new vessel in the building hall.
Managing Director Khun Tavipol with the new vessel in the building hall.

Inside one of Seacrest’s weather-protected double building halls the hull and superstructure of a sleek 52 by 7.8-meter dive boat is taking shape. When completed later this year, it will have accommodation for a crew of 24 who will crew the ship and support the 18 passengers. A pair of Cummins KTA50-M2 diesels, each rated for 1875 HP at 1950 RPM, power the vessel in a medium continuous duty rating. The engines turn conventional propellers through ZF gears to give a design speed of 20 knots.

This is a sophisticated vessel, as dive boats require compressors and other equipment to support the divers as well as the comfort level suitable for tourists. In a fabrication shop, Khum Tavipol points out the efficiency of the piping work that involved minimal welds and virtually no wastage of pipe.

A profile line drawing of the dive support vessel.
A profile line drawing of the dive support vessel.

Such precise engineering and fabrication is the result of Seacrest’s elaborate and extensive design room where a dozen or more designers and draftsmen work at computers. The total vessel design, as well as each individual component, is represented in three-dimensional renderings. Project Manager Steve Tyler, explains that this allows precise representation of details, such as engine room piping, to be drawn and set in place prior to fabrication.

In operation since 1988, Seacrest Marine continues to add to its impressive list of international and domestic customers. As Managing Director Khun Tavipol says, with a smile, “Some Thai customers go to Singapore for their boats, but some Singapore customers are now coming to Thailand and Seacrest.”

Managing Director Tavipol Hemangkorn on right, also Australian Project Mamager with design coordinator Khun Ah (standing) and draftsman Khun Chai at computer.
Managing Director Tavipol Hemangkorn on right, also Australian Project Manager with design coordinator Khun Ah (standing) and draftsman Khun Chai at computer.


 

Photos by Haig-Brown/Cummins, renderings by Seacrest
For further information:
 
Tavipol Hemangkorn
Managing Director
Seacrest Marine Co. Ltd.
98 Moo 2 Taiban Road,
Tumbol Taiban,
Ampur Muang
Samutprakarn 10280
Thailand
Phone: (66) 2703 3015
Mobile: (66) 81 820 6671
E-mail: seacrest@csloxingo.com
Web: www.seacrest.co.th
 
Jennifer McQuilken
Marketing Communications, Marine and Oil & Gas
Cummins Inc.
4400 Leeds Ave. Suite 300
Charleston, SC 29405
E-mail: Jennifer.McQuilken@Cummins.com
Phone: +1 843-696-9534 (call or text)

Alan Haig-Brown
A. Haig-Brown & Assoc. Ltd.
Bangkok, Thailand
Phone: 66 (0)8 5347 6206
E-mail: alan@haig-brown.com
web: www.haigbrown.com

 

Alan Haig-Brown

Alan Haig-Brown

Over 30 years as an author for global commercial marine and fishing publications backed with hands-on experience on commercial fishing boats and coastal freighters makes Alan Haig-Brown uniquely qualified to provide vessel reference articles for Cummins Marine. You can find him in shipyards around the world, and on his own website, www.haig-brown.com.

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