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Hi John,
Ive been thinking much along the same lines for my some-day dream boat (60+foot sailing cat). I'd ultimately like to have redundancy in all systems with maybe 4 props; one in each hull and twin drop down props in the deck. While it initally may sound stupid, I'd envisaged having many systems tied together. I was thinking hi speed hydraulics for reliability, with many tie-ins. here would be diesel generators (x1 or x2) with battery banks, and an option to either have the diesels direct drive the hydraulics or charge batteries, or both. There would then be electric motors to drive hydraulics on demand also. The two props in the hulls would be hydraulic drive, while the two in the deck would probably just be some form of standalone outboard (also diesel). Further to all this, many other items on the boat would also be hydraulic driven; compressor for refrigeration, whinches, anchor whicn etc and could all be driven by either the diesel motor running the hydraulic pumps, or the electric motors running the same pumps. The props in the water would also be able to function as generators, and there would be other options for generating electricity (wind generators, solar etc). this would give numerous options for drive, and with 2 of everything you would have plenty of redundancy. The beauty of electric drive is power on demand; no need to start motors, stalling etc... the power is there straight away. This is a huge plus in emergency situations, and is just nice in having silent drive for day sailing. The downside to all this is efficiency. By running multiple systems like this your efficiency gets down pretty low. From my point of view though, I am hoping to run a pretty minimalist scheme of things electrically; no tv, dvd, minimal refrigeration, minimal nav, LED nav lights, no microwave etc etc, so the electric is mainly for propulsion. With a boat used mainly as a sailing boat, I would hope that I can keep propulsion usage low enough that it could be recovered by means of solar and wind generation meaning that diesel was only there as a backup. In a cruising mentality, you may be happy to wait another week rather than burn some diesel. I'm trying to see the longer view here, but may be completely wrong. While some very large capacity ships have gone to diesel over electric, most of the stuff available is still diesel direct drive. For the most part the diesel over electric stuff is running exotic propulsion systems anyway (not normal props) There are some inboard style electric motors available on ebay in australia in the last year, i think the name is thiele? they advertise up to 44hp, and sell controllers etc to suit. they have the necessary components to use the prop to drive the motor as a generator also. a bit of hunting around should get some useful information. Im far from the buying stage myself, maybe in 10 years or so Shaun "Heikki" wrote in message ... John C. wrote: Run it as a generator and use it to charge an oversized bank of batteries. With an electric motor you will gain variable speed and direction without have an engineering nightmare. I have been speculating about a diesel-electric propulsion for a smallish sailboat. Does anyone have links to, or experience with, small electric motors that are suitable for continuous use - most of my googling finds bow thrusters and other extra machinery. I am thinking of a fairly small engine, say 5-10 Hp, to be used mostly in manouvering in and out of marinas, and occasionally coming home from a calm sea. Would it make sense to mount the whole engine on the transom-hung rudder? That way it could turn with the rudder, and give good steering in both directions. When not in use, it could be lifted out of the water, so I could use a decent size of propeller for it. Would anyone care to shoot the idea down before I get too attached to it. The whole project is on a dreaming level, I won't be building anything for the next many years. But I still want to design it as if I was going to build it some day soon... Regards Heikki (Copenhagen, Denmark) |
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