Now, when it comes to practice the speed always cannot be restricted to bare minimum, owing to certain conditions such as the tides, wind effects, tugs erratic pull, engine failures etc. A good marine fender system can save the day in such exigencies.
Ideally a marine fender system should be cost effective, with low maintenance cost and high durability. The material should be locally available should a case of replacement arise.
While berthing, the navigator of the ship has to consider the amount of berthing energy involved. It is actually a product of various variants such as mass of the vessel or displacement, it’s approach velocity, the added mass co-efficient ( which is the mass of the water that is moving along with the vessel and is suddenly stopped at the point of contact), the eccentricity factor which is the rotational movement generated by a reaction force when the bow or stern comes in contact with the marine fenders at the berth, the berthing configuration factor which is the amount of energy absorbed by the cushion effect of the water between the quay wall of the berth and the approaching vessel, and the softness factor which is the energy absorbed by the deformation of the ship's hull and the shore marine fender.
Abnormal energy is the energy that exceeds the normal berthing energy when berthing is done in abnormal conditions such as inclement weather, during human or technical error or an ominous combination of all three.
To neutralize this kinetic force imparted by the ship on the pier or berth, some work must be done by the quay wall and the shore structure upon the hull of the ship.
The reactive force of the dock installations increases dramatically, immediately after the impact of the ship’s hull upon it. As a result both the hull and the dock structure deflect according to their respective stiffness.
Herein the marine fender, which is fitted in their interface, becomes active. It deflects and reduces the berthing energy drastically without causing permanent damage to the hull of the vessel or concrete of the berth. Naturally fenders should have high force absorption capacity without exerting a reactive force upon the quay.