Maritime Questions › Vetting — RISQ Hatch & Lifting
Vetting — RISQ Hatch & Lifting Practice Questions
6 questions — multiple choice, sourced from real maritime incident reports and MCA oral exam syllabi. Browse all topics →
1. RISQ's hatch cover guidance (Q9.13) explicitly warns that sealing tape and high-expansion foam around hatch cover edges "can accelerate corrosion and give a false sense of security," can be "washed away by heavy seas," and may "prevent water draining from cross joints." Why does RightShip's guidance call this out as a specific risk, rather than treating it as a harmless temporary fix?
A. Tape/foam can visually appear to solve a weathertightness problem while actually doing two things wrong at once — masking a defect that still needs proper repair, and actively trapping moisture against the seal/coaming in a way that accelerates the underlying corrosion it was meant to cover up — so the "fix" can leave the vessel in worse condition than if nothing had been done
B. Tape and foam are explicitly approved permanent repair methods for hatch cover weathertightness under all classification society rules
C. Sealing tape and foam have no effect on corrosion rate; the only stated concern is cosmetic appearance
D. This warning applies only to vessels under 500GT and has no relevance to larger bulk carriers
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2. RISQ Q9.10 checks hatch cover panels for misalignment, with guidance noting that "non-central permanent set" of the compressed rubber seal "may indicate misalignment of panel" — i.e. the deflection pattern on the rubber itself is diagnostic. Why is reading the compression pattern on the seal a more reliable misalignment check than simply looking at whether the panel appears level by eye?
A. Visual inspection of panel alignment is always more accurate than checking the rubber seal's compression pattern
B. Seal compression patterns are purely cosmetic and have no diagnostic relationship to panel alignment
C. Misalignment can only be detected using specialised laser measurement equipment, not visual or tactile inspection of the seal
D. The rubber seal physically records where and how much compression force it has actually experienced over time — a panel can look visually level while still being subtly misaligned in a way that loads one side of the seal more than the other, and the resulting off-centre compression mark is direct physical evidence of that loading pattern, which a visual "does it look straight" check cannot reveal
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3. RISQ Q9.17 requires lifting appliances to undergo thorough examination by a competent person at least every 12 months, with five-yearly load testing where SWL exceeds one tonne (and some flag states requiring a four-yearly test). Why does the regulation distinguish between "thorough examination" (annual) and "load testing" (less frequent), rather than load-testing every appliance every year?
A. The frequency difference exists purely for cost reasons, with no technical basis for the distinction
B. Load testing is performed annually and thorough examination is the less frequent five-yearly check
C. A thorough examination (detailed visual/dimensional inspection for cracks, wear, corrosion, deformation) can detect most developing defects without physically stressing the appliance, while load testing itself imposes wear and potential damage risk on the equipment being tested — so the less frequent load test is reserved for periodically verifying the appliance still meets its rated capacity under genuine load, while the more frequent examination catches problems in between without that additional risk
D. Load testing and thorough examination check for completely unrelated things, with no overlap in what either method can detect
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