Alleima is a Swedish steelmaker that makes products out of advanced stainless steel and special alloys. The company, formerly Sandvik Materials Technology, was officially spun out of Sandvik in 2022 and has more than 900 active alloy recipes. The company typically makes seamless steel tubes for the energy, chemical and aerospace industries, precision strip steel for white goods and even ultra-fine wires for medical and micro-electronic devices.
The company recently found itself facing a unique challenge: the crumbling remains of a nearly 400-year-old ship. On August 10, 1628, the Vasa cast off from below Tre Kronor castle in Stockholm and left the harbor. She was a mighty ship with three masts that could carry ten sails, measuring 52 meters from tip to keel and 69 meters long, it weighed 1,200 tons. The Vasa was hit with a mighty gust from the gods that caused her to capsize. Water poured in through open gun ports, the Vasa sank to the floor of the sea, and at least 30 of the 150 or so people aboard perished.
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About 333 years later, divers found the Vasa. On April 24, 1961, more than 14,000 loose pieces of wood were pulled from the sea and the ship was salvaged, but it has taken a considerable effort to preserve it.
Now on display at the Vasa Museum in Stockholm, the ship is incredibly fragile. Chemical degradation of the wood has caused the old oak hull to lose much of its strength. So, the museum reached out to Alleima to make an inner steel skeleton, a truss built out of tubes to stabilize the hull.
According to the museum, saving the Vasa has been the biggest challenge facing the ship since the salvage. The skeleton will be made out of a high-alloyed SAF 2507 stainless steel material. The inner steel skeleton will reach from the keel to the upper deck and support the loads from the deck and deck beams. However, the inner steel support must be strong and light, and Alleima will use a design that prevents the project from drilling too many holes in the hull. Because the material is so strong, the skeleton will require less of it, and the steel's high corrosion resistance allows it to come into direct contact with the ship without being affected by acid given off by the wood.
The project should be completed by 2028, which lines up with the ship's 400th anniversary.
This isn't Alleima's first voyage with the Vasa. In 2011, then owned by Sandvik, the company replaced more than 5,000 rusty bolts with a specially developed, high-alloy part. The bolts made the ship more stable and shed some eight tons from the ship's overall weight, about the weight of a yellow school bus.
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Alema is a Swedish steelmaker that makes
products out of advanced stainless steel and
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special alloys.
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The company, formerly Sandvik Materials
Technology, was officially spun out of Sandvik
00:11.829 --> 00:17.149
in 2022 and has more than 900 active alloy
recipes.
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The company typically makes seamless steel
tubes for the energy,
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chemical, and aerospace industries, Precision
strip steel for white goods,
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and even ultrafine wires for medical and
microelectronic devices.
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But the company recently found itself facing a
unique challenge.
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The crumbling remains of a nearly 400 year old
ship on August 10th,
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1628, the Vasa cast off from below Trey Cronor
Castle in Stockholm
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and left the harbor.
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She was a mighty ship with 3 masts that could
carry 10 sails measuring 52 m from tip to
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keel, 69 m long and weighed 1200 tons.
The vassa was hit with a
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mighty gust from the gods that caused her to
capsize.
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Water poured through the open ports.
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The vasa sank to the floor of the sea, and at
least 30 of the 150 or so board perished.
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About 333 years later, divers found the Vasa.
01:23.769 --> 01:30.690
On April 24, 1961, more than 14,000 loose
pieces of wood were pulled from
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the sea, and the ship was salvaged, but it has
taken a huge effort to preserve it.
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Now on display at the Wassa Museum in Stockholm,
the ship is incredibly fragile.
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Chemical degradation of the wood has caused the
old oak hull to lose much of its strength,
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so the museum reached out to Alema to make an
inner.
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Steel skeleton, a truss built out of tubes to
stabilize the hull.
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According to the museum, saving the Vasa has
been the biggest challenge facing the ship
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since its salvage.
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The skeleton will be made out of a high alloy
SAF 2507 stainless steel material.
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The inner steel skeleton will reach from the
keel to the upper deck and support the loads
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from the deck and deck beams.
However, the inner steel support must be.
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Strong and light, and Alema will use a design
that prevents the project from drilling too
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many holes in the hull.
02:27.274 --> 02:31.423
Because the material is so strong, the skeleton
will require less of it,
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and the steel's high corrosion resistance
allows it to come into direct contact with the
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ship without being affected by acid given off
by the wood.
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The project should be completed by 2028, which
lines up with the ship's
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400th anniversary.
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And this isn't Alema's first voyage with the
Vasa in 2011,
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then owned by Sandvik, the company replaced
more than 5000 rusty bolts with a specially
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developed high alloy part.
The bolts made the ship more stable and also
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shed some 8 tons from the ship's overall weight,
about the equivalent of a yellow school
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bus.
I'm David Bainty, and this is manufacturing now.