Collision between US John S McCain and Alnic MC

On August 21, 2017, the US Navy destroyer John S McCain was overtaking the Liberian-flagged tanker Alnic MC while both vessels were transiting the westbound lane in the Middle Channel passage of the Singapore Strait Traffic Separation Scheme. The destroyer crew had a perceived loss of steering, and, while the crew attempted to regain control of the vessel, the John S McCain unintentionally turned to port into the path of the Alnic MC. At 0524, the vessels collided.

How Helm Order Monitor’s alert would have exposed the silent hand-over of steering

1 | Verified event sequence

Local timeBridge actionHidden
05:20:32 – 48Port-shaft thrust transferred from helm console to lee-helm consoleShip’s software unganged the two throttles
05:20:39Steering mode—without audible alarm—switches from backup-manual (helm) to computer-assist (lee-helm); steering authority follows the switchBridge team remains unaware
05:20:39Rudders, last ordered 3° starboard, return to because the lee-helm wheel is centredHelmsman and OOD think the rudders have failed
05:21 – 05:22Helm wheel turned repeatedly; rudders stay fixed. Destroyer drifts 13.3° to port toward Alnic MCCrew still believes centre console has steering
05:22:20Port engine reduced to 44 rpm; starboard remains 87 rpm → faster port swingThrottles now asymmetric
05:23:58Alnic MC’s bow strikes McCain10 fatalities; > USD 100 m damage

2 | HOM alert that would have appeared

Meaning for the crew: “Your wheel is live, but the rudder isn’t moving—check which console actually has steering.”

3 | Timeline with HOM active

TimeHOM cueLikely crew action
05:20:41NO RESPONSE bannerOOD checks steering source, sees lee-helm holds control
05:20:45Steering returned to helm or emergency override pressedRudders begin answering wheel
05:21 – 05:22No further “NO RESPONSE” alertsConfirms rudder feedback restored; drift arrested
OutcomeShip maintains 230° track, passes tanker safelyCollision avoided

4 | Why this single alert works

  • Plain-language directive—no technical jargon.
  • IMO “caution” colour/tone—visible, not panic-inducing.
  • Advisory-only—never freezes controls or demands ACK.
  • Logged to VDR—gives investigators the exact second steering stopped responding.

5 | Benefit summary

  • Reaction window gained: ≈ 2 minutes between first wheel input and impact.
  • Hydrodynamic margin: Correcting rudder at 0.5 nm would keep CPA > 0.3 nm.
  • Cost avoidance: Ten lives and > USD 100 m in repairs.

Take-home message

The McCain crew thought they were hand-steering from the centre console when steering had silently migrated elsewhere. Helm Order Monitor’s “NO RESPONSE: CONFIRM MANUAL CONTROL” banner would have revealed that mismatch within seconds, giving the watch team time to regain control and steer clear of Alnic MC.

Wrong helm

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Helm Order Monitor delivers real-time voice, stress, and rudder monitoring—detecting confusion, fatigue, and miscommunication before they lead to incidents.

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