The South Riding RV Travels

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January 07th - Galveston TX - Ocean Star Oil Rig Museum Museums

On the quayside is the Offshore Energy Centre, a museum of the offshore oil industry housed in the old drilling rig Ocean Star. It claims to be the only such museum, but I've seen two more like it since then.
As you enter past the signs which pronounce how safety conscious the industry is, you pass this bubble which is the rig's equivalent of a lifeboat. It doesn't look very efficient as a boat despite the propeller. Inside is a double ring of seats with seatbelts which looked to be pretty necessary!
Inside the museum are lots of models of the different types of oil rigs. This is a model of the Ocean Star itself. The legs sit on a mat on the sea floor (the black area) which helps to spread the load. The aquarium behind shows what it would look like under sea.
Fixed rigs are used in shallow water. For drilling in deeper water, they use rigs mounted on ships which float on the sea rather than stand on the sea bottom.
The oil industry has spawned all sorts of special purpose ships. This is a model of a pipeline-laying barge. The pipe sections are welded as they are laid on the sea bed.
Keeping the rigs supplied requires a class of boat called tenders. They have a large flat deck behind the superstructure which can be used to hold 30 ft sections of drill pipe and other stores.
The 'Mighty Servants' are one of the most unique sorts of ship. These partially submerge under the drilling rig and then blow the ballast tanks to lift the rig out of the water. They carry truly enormous loads. The ships weigh 29,000 tons and the rigs can weigh another 10,000 tons plus. Mighty Servant 2 sank when it hit an uncharted submerged rock in the far east.
This is a model of the top bit of the Devil's Tower. This is the worlds tallest spar platform. It is the production platform for an oilfield in 5,600ft of water off the continental shelf in the Gulf of Mexico.
They have a Hall of Fame of people who have made significant contributions to the offshore oil industry. These were the only two names I recognised. One can understand why one was so much in tune with the oil industry and the other is the most famous firefighter of all time, although I didn't think he looked much like John Wayne.
The industry is the largest source of employment for divers but as the drilling takes place in deeper and deeper water there is more demand for the use of remote control robots to perform as much as possible.
Outside the 'buildings' the platform is dominated by the drilling tower or derrick. This is tall enough for three lengths of drill pipe to be assembled before being added to the active drilling pipe.
The brightest piece of equipment is a cement pump used to line the hole once it has been drilled.
There are many pieces of equipment used in the oilfield but this is one of the best known. It is called a 'Christmas tree' and is the main valve assembly at the surface of the well. The undersea equivalents are similar but have motorised valves rather than the wheel valves in this surface version.