A 'drydock' is a narrow basin or vessel that can be flooded to allow a load to be floated in, then drained to allow that load to come to rest on a dry platform. Drydocks are used for the construction, maintenance, and repair of ships, boats, and other watercraft.
History
Antiquity
According to the ancient Greek author
Athenaeus of Naucratis, the drydock was invented in
Ptolemaic Egypt, some time after the death of
Ptolemy IV Philopator (reigned 221-204 BC):
Since Athenaeus recorded the event 400 years later (around 200 AD), there is sufficient reason to believe that drydocks had been known throughout classical antiquity.
China
In
China drydocks appeared no later than 1070 AD. It was mentioned by the
Song Dynasty scientist and statesman
Shen Kuo (
1031–
1095) in his ''
Dream Pool Essays'' of 1088. He wrote (
Wade-Giles spelling):
Renaissance Europe

Floating Dock. Woodcut from Venice (1560)
In Europe, the first drydock, and the oldest surviving drydock, was commissioned by
Henry VII of England at
HMNB Portsmouth in
1495 (see
The Tudors and the Royal Navy).
Possibly the earliest description of a floating dock comes from a small Italian book printed in Venice in 1560, called ''Descrittione dell'artifitiosa machina''.
[1] In the booklet, an unknown author asks for the privilege of using a new method for the salvaging of a grounded ship and then proceeds to describe and illustrate his approach. The included woodcut shows a ship flanked by two large floating trestles, forming a roof above the vessel. The ship is pulled in an upright position by a number of ropes hanging down from the roof.
Modern times
Northrop Grumman Newport News Shipbuilding's Dry Dock 12 is the largest drydock in USA.
The
Saint-Nazaire's
Chantiers de l'Atlantique owns one of the biggest one in the world : 3937 feet x 196.850 feet.
Harland and Wolff Heavy Industries in
Belfast, is currently the largest in the world.
Types
Graving Dock
The classic form of drydock, properly known as graving dock, is a narrow basin, usually made of earthen berms and concrete, closed by gates or by a
caisson, into which a vessel may be floated and the water pumped out, leaving the vessel supported on blocks. The keel blocks as well as the bilge block are placed on the floor of the dock in accordance with the "docking plan" of the ship.
Some fine-tuning of the ship's position is done by
scuba divers while there is still some water left to manoeuvre it about. It is extremely important that supporting blocks conform to the structural members so that the ship is not damaged when its weight is supported by the blocks. Some
ASW warships have protruding
sonar domes, requiring that the hull of the ship be supported several meters from the bottom of the drydock.
Once the remainder of the water is pumped out, the ship can be freely inspected or serviced. When work on the ship is finished, water is allowed to reenter the dry dock and the ship is carefully refloated.
Modern graving docks are box-shaped, to accommodate the newer, boxier ship designs, whereas old drydocks are often shaped like the ships that are planned to be docked there. This shaping was advantageous because such a dock was easier to build, it was easier to side (support) the ships, and less water had to be pumped away.
Drydocks that are used for building Navy vessels may occasionally be built with a roof. This is done to prevent
spy satellites from taking pictures of the drydock and any ships or submarines that may be in it. During
World War II covered drydocks were frequently used by
submarine fleets to protect them from enemy air raids, however their effectiveness in that role diminished after the Second World War. Today covered drydocks are usually used only when servicing or repairing a fleet
ballistic missile submarine. Another advantage of covered drydocks is that one can work independent of the weather. This can save considerable time.
Floating Drydock
A floating drydock is a sort of pontoon for dry docking ships that has
floodable buoyancy chambers and a "U" shaped cross-section. The walls are used to give the drydock stability when the floor is below the water level. When
valves are opened the chambers are filled with water, the dry dock floats lower in the water, allowing a ship to be moved into position inside. When the water is pumped out of the chambers, the drydock rises and the deck is cleared of water, allowing work to proceed on the ship's hull.
Shipyards operate floating drydocks, among other means of hauling or docking vessels. The advantage of floating drydocks is that they can be moved all over the world and also can be sold second-hand. During
World War II, the
U.S. Navy used such (floating) drydocks extensively to provide maintenance in remote locations. One of these, the 850-foot
AFDB-3, saw action in
Guam, was mothballed near
Norfolk, Virginia, and was eventually towed to
Portland, Maine, to become part of
Bath Iron Works' repair facilities.
★
Photos of USS ''Samuel B. Roberts'' on blocks in AFDB-3 in 1988

Modern floating drydock
Other ways of drydocking ships
Apart from graving docks and floating drydocks, ships can also be drydocked and launched by:
★ Mobile boatlift (also called Travelift, for vessels up to 1000 metric tons)
[1]
★
Slipway,
patent slip — For repair of smaller boats and the newbuilding launch of larger vessels
★
Marine railway — For repair of larger ships up to about 3000 tons ship weight
★
Shiplift — For repair as well as for newbuilding. From 800 to 25000 ton shipweight
Uses other than for ships
Some drydocks are used during the construction of bridges, dams, and other large objects. For example, the drydock on the artificial island of
Neeltje-Jans was used for the construction of the
Oosterscheldekering, a large dam in the
Netherlands that consists of 62 concrete pillars weighing 18,000 tonnes each. The pillars were constructed in a drydock and towed to their final place on the seabed.
Curiosity - Abraham Lincoln patented his floating drydock on May 22, 1849, patent #6469. He was the first U.S. President to receive a patent.
Footnotes
1. George Sarton, Floating Docks in the Sixteenth Century, ''Isis'', Vol. 36, No. 3/4. (Oct., 1946), pp. 153-154 (153)
See also
★
Drydocks in science fiction
★
Semi-submersible
★
St. Nazaire Raid — an attack on a drydock during
WW2.