Application
This unit involves the skills and knowledge required to conduct new construction, alteration, change of class or use surveys on domestic commercial vessels according to Marine Safety (Domestic Commercial Vessel) National Law. It includes survey planning, carrying out a survey and providing a survey report.
This unit applies to people working in the maritime industry as a domestic commercial vessel marine surveyor and may form part of accreditation requirements for surveyors under Australian legislation.
No licensing, legislative or certification requirements apply to this unit at the time of publication.
Elements and Performance Criteria
Elements describe the essential outcomes. | Performance criteria describe the performance needed to demonstrate achievement of the element. | ||
1 | Plan and prepare for survey task | 1.1 | Relevant standards for vessel hull and superstructure are accurately identified and accessed to support survey task |
1.2 | Vessel survey regime is identified and relevant regulatory requirements, organisational requirements and procedures for survey scope are accessed and reviewed | ||
1.3 | Vessel survey regime is confirmed against regulatory and organisational requirements | ||
1.4 | Survey scope and depth is confirmed against relevant regulatory and organisational requirements | ||
1.5 | Survey purpose, objectives and variations are identified with relevant personnel | ||
1.6 | Operational limits, certificate of operations and previous certificates of survey are reviewed to identify and take into consideration any special conditions, equivalent solutions, specific areas of operations and other regulatory limitations, exceptions or conditions that may impact on survey task | ||
1.7 | Survey equipment and tools to carry out survey are accurately identified, selected and checked prior to survey task | ||
2 | Confirm features of vessel and approved plans | 2.1 | Types of hull machinery and systems common to domestic commercial vessels are accurately identified and regulatory or additional standards are accessed and reviewed for use in survey |
2.2 | Common materials used in hull construction and superstructure are identified and regulatory or additional standards are accessed and reviewed for use in survey | ||
2.3 | Set of approved plans is obtained and read prior to start of survey | ||
3 | Conduct non periodic vessel surveys | 3.1 | Type of survey is determined and full preparations are made to ensure successful completion of survey |
3.2 | Vessel survey is carried out according to scope of survey, regulatory requirements and approved plans | ||
3.3 | Changes to operational equipment or equivalent solutions are identified and examined for fitness both in or out of water as required by survey schedule | ||
3.4 | Non conformance to approved plans or regulatory requirements are identified and appropriate follow-up action is carried out | ||
3.5 | Vessel plans and supporting survey documentation are altered according to organisational and regulatory practices to ensure they reflect ‘as-built’ vessel | ||
3.6 | Vessel systems are surveyed to ensure they meet statutory requirements | ||
4 | Report and act on non-compliance | 4.1 | Non-compliance is detected, recorded and reported according to regulatory and organisational requirements |
4.2 | Specialist support services are identified and sourced as appropriate | ||
4.3 | Risks arising from detected non-compliance are reported and communicated to relevant personnel | ||
4.4 | Relevant provisions of legislation appropriate to level of risk detected are identified and followed | ||
4.5 | Appropriate reports and documentation relating to survey are developed and managed according to organisational and regulatory requirements |
Evidence of Performance
Evidence required to demonstrate competence in this unit must be relevant to and satisfy all of the requirements of the elements and performance criteria. A range of surveys should be conducted on domestic commercial vessels in at least three or more contexts and include: |
analysing and evaluating available data and observations to form logical conclusions applying relevant work health and safety/occupational health and safety (WHS/OHS) requirements and work practices carrying out engineering measurements and applying metric and imperial conversions communicating effectively verbally and in writing developing and using research techniques to identify gaps in knowledge and to recognise professional development opportunities developing effective planning documents disseminating and clarifying technical information identifying strengths, weaknesses and failure modes of common marine construction materials implementing WHS/OHS principles and protection of the marine environment interpreting engineering drawings and diagrams interpreting relevant legislation, regulations, codes of practice, standards and rules managing risks providing customer service providing high quality reports reading and interpreting vessel plans recognising own professional limitations undertaking research and analysis using relevant reference material using computers working independently and unsupervised writing technical reports. |
Evidence of Knowledge
Evidence required to demonstrate competence in this unit must be relevant to and satisfy all of the requirements of the elements, performance criteria and range of conditions and include knowledge of: |
acoustic and thermal insulation principles and practices awareness of working stresses in vessel under load or in a seaway basic principles of stability, procedures for incline experiments, simple roll test, stable and unstable equilibrium commercial vessel classifications and survey requirements for various areas of operations compatibility and durability of construction materials composite production methods, quality assurance and secondary bonding techniques damage propagation caused by defects, poor engineering practice and/or transmission of dynamic forces domestic commercial vessel systems, installation and maintenance documentation and checklists: construction drawings defect list historical records National Standard for the Administration of Marine Safety (NSAMS) Section 4 procedural forms safety management systems stability book standard operating procedures vessel files elementary ergonomic design principals and methods for reducing harm to crew in a seaway environmental controls and regulations forms, causes and prevention of corrosion in a marine environment galvanic series of common metals used in boat building hull forms and vessel types implications of poor ventilation practice insurance, liability and professional indemnity interaction of vessel structures, mechanical systems and appropriate installation practices maintaining watertight integrity marine craft construction: methods, materials and vessel anatomy terminology and definitions marine-grade adhesives, mechanical fasteners, sealants and caulking materials marine protective coatings, fairing compounds and finishes principles of sheathing repair techniques and maintenance procedures for common marine craft construction materials report writing formats safe working practices and risk assessment procedures suitable structural support for out-of-water vessels to prevent topple, sag, hog and/or damage from local stress concentrations vessel construction and repair principles and practices, and the National Standard for Commercial Vessels (NSCV) welding techniques, procedures and standards WHS/OHS legislation, policies and procedures. |
Assessment Conditions
Assessors must satisfy National Vocational Education and Training Regulator (NVR)/Australian Quality Training Framework (AQTF) assessor requirements.
Assessment must satisfy the National Vocational Education and Training Regulator (NVR)/Australian Quality Training Framework (AQTF) standards.
Assessment processes and techniques must be appropriate to the language, literacy and numeracy requirements of the work being performed and the needs of the candidate.
Assessment must occur in workplace operational situations or where these are not available, in simulated workplace operational situations or an industry-approved marine operations site that replicates workplace conditions, where a range of surveys on domestic commercial vessels can be conducted.
Resources for assessment include access to:
relevant documentation including workplace procedures, regulations, codes of practice and operation manuals
tools, equipment and personal protective equipment currently used in industry to conduct surveys on domestic commercial vessels.
Performance should be demonstrated consistently over time and in a suitable range of contexts.
Foundation Skills
Foundation skills essential to performance are explicit in the performance criteria of this unit of competency. |
Range Statement
Range is restricted to essential operating conditions and any other variables essential to the work environment. | |
Relevant standards include one or more of the following: | Australian Standards class rules and instructions manufacture guidelines Marine Orders National Standard for the Administration of Marine Safety (NSAMS) Section 4 NSCV safety data sheets/material safety data sheets (SDS/MSDS) safety of life at sea (SOLAS) uniform Shipping Laws (USL) Code work health and safety/occupational health and safety (WHS/OHS) |
Survey regime must include: | class of vessel survey depth and level of vessel |
Relevant regulatory requirements include one or more of the following: | Australian/New Zealand Standards (AS/NZS), in particular: AS/NZS ISO 9001: 2008 Quality Management Systems – requirements Marine Safety (Domestic Commercial Vessel) National Law NSAMS Section 4 NSCV: Part B – General Requirements Part C – Vessel Construction Part E – Operational Practices |
Survey scope and depth include one or more of the following: | condition initial modification/further building repair/damage |
Survey equipment and tools include one or more of the following: | communication equipment draft survey hydrometer drill entry authority hammer/welder’s hammer meat piercing thermometer mirror non-destructive evaluation (NDE) tools personal protective equipment such as respirators, gloves, overalls, boots, hearing protection, goggles, masks plastic sampling bags pocket calculator recording equipment: camera dictaphone lap top computer notebook sampling equipment: silver nitrate test kit for chlorides test kit equipment thermometers water-detecting paste scraper screwdriver small mallet sounding tapes storage equipment/facilities tape measure/measuring wheel |
Types of hull include one or more of the following: | box catamaran foils non water displacement shallow draft single wave piercing |
Domestic commercial vessels must include: | vessels defined as commercial vessels in Marine Safety (Domestic Commercial Vessel) National Law |
Materials include one or more of the following: | aluminium cement composite fibreglass steel timber |
Survey schedule includes one or more of the following: | change of class survey damage/repair or condition surveys equivalent solution or deemed-to-satisfy surveys in-water out-of-water |
Follow-up action includes one of the following: | engineering delegate approval of non conformance securing authoritative approval |
Specialist support services include one or more of the following: | analytical laboratories electrical gas fitting/inspection naval architects NDE services noise pressure vessel testing |
Appropriate reports and documentation include one or more of the following: | certificate of operation certificate of survey statements of compliance survey report |
Sectors
Not applicable.
Competency Field
M – Marine Surveying