This Solar Powered Boat Could be the Future of Transportation

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  • čas přidán 27. 12. 2021
  • How Solar Powered Boats Could be the Future of Transportation. Go to brilliant.org/Undecided to sign up for free. And also, the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium membership. Costs for solar panel systems have been dropping at a blistering pace in the last few years and are being widely used as a clean alternative to fossil fuels. Solar panels for home work great, as well as the solar RV and even some solar powered cars ... but what about solar boats and solar yachts? Can solar power be a feasible resource to power yachts, boats and ferries?
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @UndecidedMF
    @UndecidedMF  Před 2 lety +35

    Do you think solar and battery powered ships will catch on like we've seen for electric cars? Go to brilliant.org/Undecided to sign up for free. And also, the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium membership. Also check out Why the Airship May be the Future of Transportation: czcams.com/video/_phicOPoQT8/video.html

    • @autobootpiloot
      @autobootpiloot Před 2 lety +7

      Battery powered ferry’s are being developed a lot in Europe these days. My wife is a marine engineer working at those kind of projects. Ferry’s can charge their battery’s during the night and give them just enough boost by quick charging during loading and unloading passengers and cars to get through the day.
      Solar could help during the summer months but definitely not during winter.
      For cargo ships the demand for power is way to large for battery’s. Even hydrogen or alcohol is very difficult because of the massive storage that is needed for those fuels.

    • @jeffsaffron5647
      @jeffsaffron5647 Před 2 lety +1

      no

    • @williammeek4078
      @williammeek4078 Před 2 lety +3

      I still like sails. Free solar energy that works at night. Solar plus batteries would be the backup to maintain steerage in times of no wind, but with satellite weather forecasts that should be a rare event.

    • @bloopbloop9687
      @bloopbloop9687 Před 2 lety +1

      There is also a 100 foot model, I don't know how long you've been working on this video, but it's been announced for a few weeks now

    • @chcomes
      @chcomes Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Matt! I built a 8m solar powered catamaran in 2012, in 2022 I will take it out and change/update its design and electronics. Get in touch if interested about the project. I would say solar is great for recreation yachting- it has a few issues for commercial transportation.

  • @paial
    @paial Před 2 lety +270

    Being a yacht captain and an electrical engineer, I find it "facinating", for lack of a better word, on how this "unlimited" ranges are advertised. Anyone that has piloted a boat knows that in anything but perfect weather completly flat water, the power necessary to keep a certain speed changes all the time...
    yes, you can go 2-4kn with very little power, BUT, if you face any kind of head wind, you might be going much slower on even backwards, at that original power level. Same goes for current or waves...
    (ask any amature on a Stand Up Paddle boarder how hard it is to go against even a small breeze).
    Also, peak solar output does not last for more than 2 hours a day... IF (and big IF) there are NO clouds, you will get peak solar power for 1-2 hours around noon. Depending on where you are, you might get another 2 hours on each side (morning/afternoon) of 50-70% peak power and the rest will be bellow 50% peak (if not much less). So your "unlimited" is probably true only for 4-6 hours a day...
    I'm all for electrification and renewables, don't get me wrong, but this ads are mostly misrepresentation of an over optmistic scenario.

    • @swedmiroswedmiro1352
      @swedmiroswedmiro1352 Před 2 lety +15

      Sails/wind wings seems much more plausible solution to me. The world will partly move away from the just in time production methods after this crisis and that might make sails more viable for certain goods transport.

    • @wombatillo
      @wombatillo Před 2 lety +15

      Most likely the solution is green hydrogen produced with wind and solar and then burned in internal combustion engines aboard at least the large freight ships. Hydrogen ICEs are coming fast and they will blow fuel cells out of the water. When you need 20 MW of axle power you need a massive engine. Direct solar and wind are cute but lack the power density, reliability and coverage. If you need to maneuver in bad weather or a tight shipping lane, gimmicks don't cut it.

    • @artsmith103
      @artsmith103 Před 2 lety +5

      Sailboat diesel is called the auxiliary for a reason. It is not a green paddle for typical conditions.
      Most boats already have solar for typical elec needs. The auxiliary is for when that isn't enough.

    • @steve1978ger
      @steve1978ger Před 2 lety +13

      Shouldn't be that much of a problem for a pleasure boat though. I'd gladly adjust my trip to the weather conditions, if that means I can get rid of my noisy outboard and the smelly fuel tank.

    • @TheJmac82
      @TheJmac82 Před 2 lety +27

      I don't have a yacht but I am also an electrical engineer and I am so glad someone else can see this is complete BS. I have personally always thought the future would be something more like proton exchange membranes or something similar. I live in a 100% off-grid house with 300kwh of LiFePO4 batteries and 30kw of solar, and I still have days my software kicks in and shuts high draw items down. Solar is nice, but will never replace our current reliance on fossil fuels. At best it might slow it down a bit.

  • @midhunjosey
    @midhunjosey Před 2 lety +113

    Proud to see that you featured the Aditya boat from Kerala, India. Kerala is also home to world's first fully solar powered airport, Cochin International Airport.

    • @BobHannent
      @BobHannent Před 2 lety +8

      There are plenty of people here saying it cannot work, and yet you have examples like Aditya where it's actually being done.
      As the old saying goes, "those who say it cannot be done, should not interrupt those doing it."

    • @BobHannent
      @BobHannent Před 2 lety +8

      @@tarstarkusz but how can that be so when people are already doing it and doing it successfully? Don't say "it cannot work" when it's already working.

    • @BobHannent
      @BobHannent Před 2 lety +2

      @@tarstarkusz and who said that long range super ferries would be a target for solar power?

    • @licencetoswill
      @licencetoswill Před 2 lety +2

      @@tarstarkusz it's working perfectly. Turanor is a large vessel and has already cirumnavigated on solar power.

    • @miorfaizulsabki6667
      @miorfaizulsabki6667 Před 2 lety +2

      how many cow can fit in aditya boat? im thingking about transporting cow from india to bangladesh in a greenway

  • @illus1ve
    @illus1ve Před 2 lety +137

    One of the other important things to note with solar / electrically powered boats, is less noise. It's a genuine problem that the shipping industry generate a lot of noise pollution which affects marine life.

    • @mickgibson370
      @mickgibson370 Před 2 lety +8

      I fish and electric motors are a lot less noise, only wind is quieter!

    • @seanleith5312
      @seanleith5312 Před 2 lety +8

      Solar powered boat? Stupidity on steroids.

    • @AnalystPrime
      @AnalystPrime Před 2 lety +23

      @@seanleith5312 “What, Sir? Would you make a ship sail against the wind and currents by lighting a bonfire under her deck? I pray you excuse me, I have no time to listen to such nonsense.” -Napoleon Bonaparte's answer to the inventor of the steam powered boat, 1803.

    • @efraim6960
      @efraim6960 Před 2 lety +2

      @@seanleith5312 Stupidity on steroids? Solar powered boats.

    • @a350fsx7
      @a350fsx7 Před 2 lety +5

      Big problem for whales and dolphins and their communications! They can't communicate when there's noise pollution!

  • @willdarling1
    @willdarling1 Před 2 lety +31

    Jamie Mantzel has been making his own for a while.
    Ultimately, I'm picturing a hydrofoil with enough solar to keep it above minimum 'foil' speed, and just enough battery to boost it up and out of the water a few times.

  • @cchavezjr7
    @cchavezjr7 Před 2 lety +22

    One thing not mentioned is that many ships have been electric for a long time. Nuclear vessels in military are electric motor run and many large vessels also use their diesel engines to drive generators that run electric motors so electricity never really did go away.

    • @Ron-dx9wq
      @Ron-dx9wq Před 25 dny

      Nuclear vessels in the military drive steam turbines, not electric motors.

  • @nakfan
    @nakfan Před 2 lety +79

    A great episode 👍 Yes, I believe electric ferries will catch on sooner than we think. In Denmark we already have a couple of interesting projects and Norway is going full in on electric and hybrid ships.

    • @suzanneschreiner5145
      @suzanneschreiner5145 Před 2 lety +3

      Would be great if Matt could do a video on the the projects in Denmark and Norway.

    • @esecallum
      @esecallum Před 2 lety

      their speeed is only 4 knots. so useless

    • @marcof.3056
      @marcof.3056 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Embassy_of_Jupiter Actually it works exactly the opposite way. The amount of power you need to move a ship through the water depends (mostly) on the length of the waterline in relation to the size of the ship. The longer it is, the less power you need to go at the same speed. So if you want to double the size of a ship, you basically make it twice as long and you need way less than twice the power. That’s the reason why ships are getting bigger and bigger. It just makes them more efficient. And of course the space for solar panels still doubles if you make the ship twice as long, why it works even better the bigger you make the ships.

    • @Joesolo13
      @Joesolo13 Před 2 lety

      @@esecallum There's plenty of electric ferries that are far faster, and in places like New York, there's a lot of relatively short ferry trips they could charge during

  • @FinnRenard
    @FinnRenard Před 2 lety +8

    I live in a town with ferry services to another country. Last year, all ships were converted to electricity.

    • @artsmith103
      @artsmith103 Před 2 lety +1

      When they travel short distance from port to port it isn't much risk. They are charging in port via typical grid supply: nuclear, coal, nat gas.

  • @jfh400
    @jfh400 Před 2 lety +6

    A solar powered yacht seems like a great place to ride out a zombie apocalypse.

    • @aussie2uGA
      @aussie2uGA Před 2 lety

      Yea and no. One thing I worry about is the lack of speed. These electric and solar boats are generally slow cruisers, not able to quickly get up and out of a potentially dangerous situation or encounter. I’d check the option box for “Tesla Plaid boost motors with super capacitors” the moment it’s offered.

    • @MrMagnus
      @MrMagnus Před 2 lety +1

      @@aussie2uGA the top spec SY60 does 20 knots with 2x 340kW motors

  • @lucasatilano8008
    @lucasatilano8008 Před 2 lety +19

    My uncle has an electric mono haul sailboat where weight isn’t an issue. It’s great, so much better than a Diesel engine, no oil changes or noise and the whole transformation from a 15hp diesel to a similar 15kw electric conversion was only about $5000, cheaper than replacing the diesel

    • @kschleic9053
      @kschleic9053 Před 2 lety

      Batteries in the keel make complete sense.

    • @artsmith103
      @artsmith103 Před 2 lety

      You must not sail. The diesel is backup for energy and navigation emergencies. Removing the diesel on a real sailboat is ignorant. If this boat is used occasionally during nice weather it doesn't matter what auxiliary it has.

    • @ElliottParkinson
      @ElliottParkinson Před 2 lety +1

      @@artsmith103 I sail. Diesel is only a backup or seen as required because electrcity solutions weren't ready yet this is no longer the case. Electricity solutions are now outperforming diesel counterparts in like for like use cases

    • @artsmith103
      @artsmith103 Před 2 lety

      @@ElliottParkinson There is no way to store the equivalent of 10 gal of diesel in jerry cans on the rail. There is no equivalent to being on the hook in less than sunny weather and taking the dinghy to shore to fill a couple jerry cans with diesel. The practical cruiser is about 40'. Barely enough room for 2-4 300W panels. 2 panels is typical minimum to power fridge, electronics, RO water and such for 2 people. 1-2 additional panels is not enough to power the boat in adverse situations which usually includes clouds and darkness.
      For example, 300W panel for 3 peak equivalent hours per day is almost 1kWh. That is equal to ~1 cup of diesel! Typical fuel rate is 6 miles per gallon. So that is less than 1/2 mile per day per panel. That's plenty in and out of marina, useless in open water.

    • @ElliottParkinson
      @ElliottParkinson Před 2 lety

      @@artsmith103 indeed, useless in open water. But if you sail, you can easily store enough to cruise out of a river to get to the sea and back. Then switch to sails, and even improve performance by motorsailing direct from the panels. Especially with a catamaran. When not motorsailing, you can regenerate batteries with hydrogenerators. With such a setup, diesel isnt required.
      It works best with smaller boats. 23ft to 34ft catamarans. Im thinking prout rangers, heavenly twins or catalac 8-9m.
      It doesnt work for all setups of course. But there are cases where it works.

  • @in4theride75
    @in4theride75 Před 2 lety +11

    Short answer: no.
    Long answer: it could largely mitigate boat emission but not eliminate them. The energy requirement for commercial boats FAR surpass the surface area needed to supply the energy required via solar cells only.

    • @cryptobo1768
      @cryptobo1768 Před 2 lety

      No true. Look at Silent Yachts.

    • @joeray3983
      @joeray3983 Před 2 lety

      Electricity has a long way to go for any kind of shipping.

    • @eyeballengineering7007
      @eyeballengineering7007 Před 2 lety

      @@scootalong4254 if they didn't have to do 30 knots for $ reasons, they could do about 10 knots with solar power. We need to rethink our shipping. The largest 3 container ships create as much sulfur dioxide as the entire United States's vehicles.

    • @snarkylive
      @snarkylive Před 2 lety

      @@scootalong4254 Many of them are hybrids that run electric motors.

  • @slewisgreen
    @slewisgreen Před 2 lety

    Happy New Year, buddy...always wonderful videos...thank you

  • @siongyuen980
    @siongyuen980 Před 9 měsíci

    Just love your sincere explanation on the topics and the pace of speech delivery is excellent.

  • @RyuuKageDesu
    @RyuuKageDesu Před 2 lety +3

    I always look forward to more information about solar tech, on land or sea.

  • @craigcottam
    @craigcottam Před 2 lety +16

    No mention of keeping the solar panels clean in a marine environment? I can't imagine salt deposits on the panels would be good for either performance or durability.

    • @viasevenvai
      @viasevenvai Před 2 lety +1

      It's recommended to clean the panels around noon time so that you can see what you're doing.

    • @alecmeden9842
      @alecmeden9842 Před 2 lety +3

      I’d imagine you could just hose it down at dock like you would any yacht. Always should do that anyway just to remove salt spray from windows, etc.

    • @licencetoswill
      @licencetoswill Před 2 lety +2

      almost every sailing yacht has solar panels on the coach house, they're easy to keep clean.

    • @phillipborbon2059
      @phillipborbon2059 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I live on a boat with panels, its clean and no deposits. I rarely clean my panels.

    • @my1vice
      @my1vice Před 9 měsíci +2

      I've criss- crossed the Pacific a few times with solar panels on my sailboat. It's no problem.

  • @wanderingfirbolg6738
    @wanderingfirbolg6738 Před 2 lety +2

    In Geneva, Switzerland, we already have two solar/electric ferries... although we still use a large amount of diesel small ferries. We also have a fast charging battery powered bus line.

  • @barrybegley5379
    @barrybegley5379 Před 2 lety

    GREAT Show Matt. As always, informative and inspirational. Greetings from Ontario, Canada.

  • @dewiz9596
    @dewiz9596 Před 2 lety +3

    One thing about boats is that they are not limited to their footprint for solar panels. With panels that swing out from a position above the center, the area for a solar collection could easily be tripled, not to mention that they could even be used for wind assist. . .

    • @wombatillo
      @wombatillo Před 2 lety

      Suezmax ships have engines around 10-20 MW and the entire deck covered with the most efficient solar panels will gather 2.4 MW during direct noon sunlight near the equator. Morning, evening, night, overcast, rain, etc. will severely reduce this generation. The solar panels would also complicate loading and unloading and increase the maintenance on the ship. The same problem with wind sails (kite-like sails or Magnus rotors or whatever) are similar. Having significant added complexity and a fidgety gizmo reducing the fuel consumption by 10-15% might very well not be worth it. They tested out Magnus rotors on a ferry between Finland and Sweden and it just wasn't worth it. The machinery costs millions, requires maintenance and only occasionally reduces the fuel consumption. Woop-tee-doo. It's not worth it. It would be much easier filling up tanks with high pressure green-produced hydrogen and running large internal combustion engines on the hydrogen, come rain, sleet or sunshine.

  • @yeroca
    @yeroca Před 2 lety +9

    Interesting video!
    One small correction.. you rated the batteries in kW (power) instead of kWh (energy capacity).

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 Před 2 lety +2

      and the fact that he compared a solar cat to a monohull in terms of pricing, and assumed that pricing was comparable across manufacturers in similar sized boats. Neither of those are reasonable to do.

  • @tech2044
    @tech2044 Před 2 lety

    Merry Christmas and happy new year! Keep up the great work!

  • @guntherfriedrich2050
    @guntherfriedrich2050 Před 2 lety

    Thx for your summary. Really interesting!!

  • @GordLamb
    @GordLamb Před 2 lety +3

    Oh how I wish I had the money to convert my 46' ketch to electric, ditching my Perkins 4.236M diesel main engine. At today's prices, the lithium ion cells would cost me around $50,000 to get me sufficient range. I don't motor often, so I don't spend much in diesel, so it's a tough sell. :(
    On the other hand, that large battery bank would supply my hotel loads for weeks - heating/air conditioning, cooking, electronics... one day.

    • @BernardLS
      @BernardLS Před 2 lety

      For a similar reason I drive a fourteen year old Ford Focus rather than a Tesla. Elon has enough money already so he does not need my grand children's inheritance. The fuel to feed the Focus is E85, so I do care about the planet whatever the Green Meanies say. _GO BOOMERS!!_

  • @MayankJairaj
    @MayankJairaj Před 2 lety +8

    This reminds me of your old video on structural batteries, they could be used here for weight reduction

    • @cerealtech4138
      @cerealtech4138 Před 2 lety +2

      I think we have to come up with new battery technology... Structural batteries Is Indeed a more efficent way to distribute weight, but immagine having to replace a structural part, because you had a single faulty cell... We need better batteries

    • @davidsimoneta8513
      @davidsimoneta8513 Před 2 lety +1

      In boats weight isn't such an issue... Solar boats with LiFePo4- batteries are already today a viable alternative to diesel for local passenger and freigh transportation.

    • @MayankJairaj
      @MayankJairaj Před 2 lety

      @@cerealtech4138 oh yes I didn't think about that, but I guess people must've figured out Lego like structures by then?

    • @MayankJairaj
      @MayankJairaj Před 2 lety

      @@davidsimoneta8513 does it not matter that much? I thought replacing engines and fuel combo on the small and medium sized boats must have been better but now I remember Zack's electric hummer (JerryRigEverything) the weight difference wasn't that significant

    • @davidsimoneta8513
      @davidsimoneta8513 Před 2 lety

      @@MayankJairaj
      The influence of drag and gravity on the vehicle behaviour are very different in water and on a street...😉

  • @johnstanley4740
    @johnstanley4740 Před 2 lety +2

    Spend enough time at sea and you'll find yourself in a dire situation where sustained speed is needed: running from weather or getting caught n trying to maintain heading, assisting other's emergency, towing, etc.. batteries deplete at the worst times so a backup diesel is a must

    • @storm4710
      @storm4710 Před 2 lety

      All Silent Yachts have a backup diesel generator

  • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665

    There are dozens of these vessels at work on European lakes rivers and soon in Venice ... There are also sight seeing boats, tenders commute boats.
    In Scandinavia most of their electric comes from Hydro and wind and geothermal.
    Silent yatch's can also use a kite sail to assist in passage making and in lower light conditions.

  • @katanaridingremy
    @katanaridingremy Před 2 lety +18

    I've been following Azure and Silent for well over a year as I love the idea of these boats. They are so much better for the environment and at the time, living in Hampton Va I would see boats out on the water every day and none of them were using this gear tech, though there are a lot of sail boats. Great video as always!

    • @jamesfrankland4436
      @jamesfrankland4436 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you know anything about sailboat's? They are a wonderful thing and in some ways better than a solar boat.
      However, the sailing community is split on replacing the combustion engine with electric motors. There's many who have already made the change and are very happy with it.
      So I asked you these questions to show you how strong some people are against change. In fact it will surprise you to know just how evil the thoughts of some are as to why their against change. Just know the bottom line is about money.
      Blessings and keep on enjoying the water in your own way. I love VA...
      P.S. just trying to spark a conversation on the topic of the video even if it's a different aspect of the topic. Will you participate?

    • @robinabraham2843
      @robinabraham2843 Před 2 lety

      @@jamesfrankland4436 interesting this topic

    • @jamesfrankland4436
      @jamesfrankland4436 Před 2 lety

      @@robinabraham2843 yes it is indeed.
      So tell me, what would you like to add to the subject? Are you just getting into the topic or do you have knowledge of it that you would talk about?
      I know some stuff but this topic I've found is wide and deep and it's not a one size fits all kinda topic. This I think is the biggest reason it's such an interesting topic.
      Your welcome to engage me on this topic and see where it takes us and how much we can learn from one another.
      Blessings to you...

    • @robinabraham2843
      @robinabraham2843 Před 2 lety

      @@jamesfrankland4436 joining .

    • @jamesfrankland4436
      @jamesfrankland4436 Před 2 lety

      @@robinabraham2843 joining what Robin?

  • @stevebez9556
    @stevebez9556 Před 2 lety +6

    Ship running costs is by far the biggest bug bear of ownership and operation … this is genuinely a game changer … and once competition hots up and prices drop these ships will make diesel alternatives obsolete in no time. I imagine electric yacht conversion will be a pretty lucrative business now.

    • @aussie2uGA
      @aussie2uGA Před 2 lety

      Correct. I don’t think the majority of people realize just how big of an issue the running costs of a diesel boat are.

    • @michiganengineer8621
      @michiganengineer8621 Před 2 lety

      @@aussie2uGA Gale Force Twins just did a video on how much it costs to maintain their boat. Now, it's a 2005 Intrepid with the original twin 250hp Yamaha's on it but it does give an idea on how much operating a boat can cost.

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Před rokem

    Great video, Matt.

  • @itsokswallow
    @itsokswallow Před rokem

    You are an educational champion you're infectious thank you so much for quality Instruction and excellent presentation

  • @chiranthanmr
    @chiranthanmr Před 2 lety +10

    Amazing how India adopts technologies so early

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Před rokem +1

      That’s what happens when you have 1,326,000,000 people

  • @vitaly6312
    @vitaly6312 Před 2 lety +4

    I definitely have thought that out of most applications, things like smaller vessels could benefit from this very quickly, especially since house boats and personal boats are generally docked for a long time in between trips. Things like ferries could also benefit as long as they are charged for the time they are docked between trips and their trips aren’t very long.
    The range is obviously an issue here for some.
    Where we go wrong is long haul cargo

    • @GeckoHiker
      @GeckoHiker Před 2 lety

      Perhaps long haul cardo shipments could be reduced. I don't see a need for consumer goods to be shipped across oceans if nations ensured that most consumer products were produced more locally.

  • @anthonyperks2201
    @anthonyperks2201 Před 2 lety +2

    One of your best episodes. The savings for the ferries highlighted in India is pretty breathtaking.

  • @PedroScursel
    @PedroScursel Před 2 lety

    amazing video! I'm live in Santos - SP Brazil and here we have the biggest port of Latin America, so this video in special, I loved! I'm web developer but I thought to migrate to Engineering for work with electric boats in a close future.
    I love the Energy Observer project and h2 electrolysis is my dream, even more when you go to the h2 storage discussions. H2 Hydride Storage will be the future!
    thanks again, your work is amazing!
    Regards from Brasil :D
    (sorry for language errors, trying to only use grammar corrector)

  • @DeathToMockingBirds
    @DeathToMockingBirds Před 2 lety +6

    Awesome! I hope it becomes the norm, given how polluting boat fuel is.

    • @killuazoldyck1352
      @killuazoldyck1352 Před 2 lety +2

      boats run on diesel or petrol just like land vehicles, only massive ships run on oil. Modern ships clean there emissions before releasing them, so they are cleaner than most land vehicles. Older ship can be bad, but they are being quickly phased out due to running costs.

  • @xellzor
    @xellzor Před 2 lety +33

    That's an interesting topic for sure. Electric propulsion already makes perfect sense for quite wide marine applications. However there are to big challenges to overcome for people who already want it. Extremely limited choice of electric propulsion systems to choose from. Making a system from scratch few can do, especially for commercial use where lots of strict regulations exist. Laws... So many places still have quite outdated laws that won't easily let people use electric for any commercial use.
    I'm in Japan, i'm building 30ft catamaran and i wanted to use electric, as from my calculation of use electric would be cheaper and much easier too (solar is just extra). Not to mention i hate smell of diesel or noisy petrol outboards. However i don't think i will be able to do so. Importing propulsion system from US and all regulations in place is a hurdle that is currently quite difficult to overcome. No real local solution. I can't build my own system from scratch either, not enough knowledge and i would not be able to pass safety regulations with self build system.

    • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665
      @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665 Před 2 lety

      I seem to have lost my answer to you i will wait to see if it re emerges from the electronic labyrinth. But theres a lot of options out there on U-tube ... and a lot of the components are built in your part of the world. Just kitted up in the USA and Europe.

    • @monochromATL
      @monochromATL Před 2 lety +1

      Good luck with the project! I hope you will be able to somehow finish it successfuly in the end.

    • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665
      @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665 Před 2 lety

      Take a look at the two conversions here czcams.com/video/lq6EqAVS4uE/video.html
      With aircraft more small motors and props tend to be more efficient than a larger single motor and prop.
      Theres a few Wharrams and other cats already running hybrid systems.
      Look up the Heart of Gold lifeboat conversion.
      And Sea Japan ...
      Lighter and better insulated boats tend to make the better E power conversions as do multihulls.

    • @GuyIncognito764
      @GuyIncognito764 Před 2 lety +4

      I have a sailboat with electric aux. Let me recommend you consider an electric motor in each hull and a single diesel Genset and shared big battery. When the battery tech improves in 10 years, just upgrade. The electric motors are good for the life of the boat.

    • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665
      @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665 Před 2 lety +2

      @@GuyIncognito764
      Thats how i would do it 👍🏼 brushless motors driving shafts and efficient props. As large a battery pack as i could afford to build and solar. Batteries perhapse salvaged from a crash damaged. Nissan leaf, prius Or Similar .
      The electric motors are virtually maintainance free as long as they are kept dry or protected and dont overheat ..
      Then a remotely mounted fuel efficient generator or a DIY APU slave motor powering ultra high output alternators...
      Twin motors in a cat. or trimaran will make manouvring much easier and give you an element of redundancy.
      Conventional sails are also expensive to maintain and operate so consider alternatives.

  • @SteveRowe
    @SteveRowe Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks, Matt. I love your vids. When you are doing a comparison between two things, can you please put them both on screen at the same time? Especially with numbers, I have trouble being able to compare when they aren't being shown at the same time. Example from this vid was the cost of operating the solar ferry versus the cost of the diesel counterpart. Thanks!

  • @JayendrenSubramoney
    @JayendrenSubramoney Před 2 lety +2

    Brilliant Episode! This kind of technology will make it viable for more people to live on oceans; potentially even having floating ocean cities. Huge potential here!

  • @offgridmgtowhomestead2520

    Everything works great when the sun is out. When it isnt, you dont make enough power to do anything. I have over 15kw of solar on my homestead, and I am making less than 50 watts right now because of cloud cover.
    Use it where it makes sense

  • @Bobucles
    @Bobucles Před 2 lety +6

    The incredibly low cost of maintenance has a more interesting use, for establishing semi permanent boats in the ocean. A diesel engine always needs to return to shore for fuel and maintenance. A solar powered isle can just sit out there, maybe for years at a time. Low range may become a thing of the past if an electric boat can just dock at a deep sea solar depot, recharge/swap its batteries and continue sailing.

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před 2 lety +1

      So your idea is to put more unneeded stuff in the ocean for the very few projects that will be able to utilize it.

  • @someotherdude
    @someotherdude Před rokem

    Love this channel! Think of building a 30' catamaran with very thin but deep pontoons. Now think of wandering the Amazon Basin for months or years- you could have solar powered AC and refrigeration and endless power for trolling speed, along with built in shade.

  • @MatyasLemberTutorials
    @MatyasLemberTutorials Před 2 lety

    Great video Matt! There is a new electric ferry in New Zealand too. 'NEWZEROLAND' has a video showing it.

  • @derekthehalfabee7942
    @derekthehalfabee7942 Před 2 lety +3

    For solar panel powered vehicles, cost is not the biggest hurdle, at least not the panel cost. Panel efficiency is. There is only so much available space for solar panels on a vehicle which means they will be woefully underpowered with current technology. Should one of the future solar panel techs pan out and double the efficiency then solar powered boats will become far more practical. The other thing that would help is the cost of batteries, and capacity to some degree, which will certainly see some significant gains in the future.

    • @Phazaar
      @Phazaar Před 2 lety

      Honestly, being able to fit 34kW on a single 60ft vessel is more than adequate. Greater efficiency would be nice, but it's by no means necessary.

  • @The_Andy_H
    @The_Andy_H Před 2 lety +8

    Container ships will always have to get unloaded by cranes above the ship though, unless containers will move themselves or the ship unloads itself. So for container ships to be powered by solar it's gonna be a long way I'd imagine. Maybe indirectly by the port that is powered by green energy.
    Or maybe the roof can fold up and get out of the way?

    • @ChrisBigBad
      @ChrisBigBad Před 2 lety

      They need to be picking up stuff from the ship anyway. So a big company could invest into standardized modules, which can be grabbed and moved by container-cranes. maybe they will fold out or something over the next few containers into each direction. just stack em somewhere until the boat is full, then pop em on top. a person can connect them to the ship's power while the boat is going off on full batteries. stinky diesel generators can add extra power in case there is not enough sunshine. I think it's just an engineering (and will) question.

    • @The_Andy_H
      @The_Andy_H Před 2 lety +3

      @@ChrisBigBad it's really hard to move from one standard to the other, because where do you start? That's why Windows XP is still being used for some military applications.
      The port has to change with the new system as well, and the port will only do that if a profitable amount of ships is using that system.
      And ships will only use that system if every port they go to can work with it.
      The company managing this must be owning ports across the world and maybe own its own fleet.

    • @ChrisBigBad
      @ChrisBigBad Před 2 lety

      @@The_Andy_H Yes, I understand and agree. Which is why I imagined the solar-cells to fold closed into a normal shipping-container. those can be perfectly handled by the ports as it is. you just need to take them off the top of the ship (if you need to get at the stuff below), store them somewhere with the other containers and put them back on the top at the end and unfold them again. zero change for the port - totally transparent. no?

    • @larph7270
      @larph7270 Před 2 lety +2

      I was gonna comment 'fingers crossed for scaling up to include container ships' until I saw the 100x energy density difference. I think that might be the bigger issue to start with ?

    • @JerryB507
      @JerryB507 Před 2 lety +1

      @@The_Andy_H, It's not just the military. There is a good number of legacy equipment that the original manufacturers no longer support and rely on XP and a few still use Win'98. Until a part fails that I cannot source a replacement for, I'm not upgrading to the latest and greatest.

  • @scientificapproach6578
    @scientificapproach6578 Před 2 lety +1

    If you are able to tilt up the solar panels on either side you will be able to get more direct sunlight to produce more electricity.
    Tilting the panel can also provide a little wind power when the wind is blowing in the right direction adding speed and range.

  • @ajediknight
    @ajediknight Před rokem

    A note on mass vs range- Sufficient solar can be applied to move the boat without touching the batteries. Dense enough solar collection would allow it to move in sunlight while recharging the batteries. A current yacht company allows for 18 hours of 5 knot cruising speed per 24 hour period. They supplemented this with a kite sail to allow a cruise speed of 8 knots while recharging. Not perfect yet, but getting close. Alternatively, a solar sailboat gets the best of all worlds. High cruise speed under sail with all onboard electrics being solar, with an electric drive motor for moving under power.

  • @stormfire962imastarcitizen5

    Thank you for making this video since the information you provided is truly fascinating and informative.
    But here's an idea that I noticed in one of your videos which involved wind powered cargo ships apparently didn't think about trying to combine both this solar power technology with their wind powered technology to power the cargo ship.
    Because I have noticed over time we as human beings have made one critical mistake and that is is that we're trying to find one piece of technology to do it all. When it would be better to take different technologies combined them together to formulate a more affective clean efficient way of not only generating power but increasing comfort across the planet.
    Because when you think about it they were experiments done with hydroponic gardens and nothing more was done with them. It said that the technology of hydroponic gardens hasn't been applied into cities across the planet because if they were we could probably solve the world food shortage problem as well as generate incredible amounts of good jobs and possibly make living far more comfortable than what it is today for the average person including poor people.
    We need to start thinking about taking all these different technologies and pulling them together to build a better life for everyone and I for see that it would eliminate poverty once and for all if people will wake up and think about it.

    • @idib1739
      @idib1739 Před 2 lety +4

      indeed precisely, This fallacy of progressivism where the the newest has to be 'better' than the old one is not helping humanity at all. and i don't think it's by accident... An Ipad is not a superior technology to a pen & paper or vice versa. it's all about the context in which they'll be used.

    • @wizardpickle
      @wizardpickle Před 2 lety +2

      The silent yachts are actually offered with an option to include a sky sail - a kite sail that can be deployed to harness the wind for added speed, in exchange for the additional cost of the sail + a little storage space.

    • @markBalentine123567
      @markBalentine123567 Před 2 lety

      too much money $$$ would be lost by food companies drug companies i love to be all about this but they will never adopt these ideas MAINSTREAM.

    • @danmckeever599
      @danmckeever599 Před 2 lety

      Cargo ships need to have overhead access for loading/unloading containers, so what would you do with the solar panels?, now a car carrier ship which has a closed deck on top, maybe, but a container type cargo ship, nope.

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@danmckeever599 That. There's a significant tradeoff between deck space used and propulsion. You could well end up with a ship that can move *itself* through the water but not carry a viable amount of cargo at the same time.

  • @marcschaeffer1584
    @marcschaeffer1584 Před 2 lety +5

    I would just like to remind everyone that wind is concentrated solar energy from miles and miles of "collection pads" (surface aria of the earth)
    Put the solar panels up the mast and you will increase your eficiency.
    Increase eficiency even more by replacing the solar panels with a lightweight fabric...

    • @TheKribu
      @TheKribu Před 2 lety

      Except that wind is generated by delta of solar energy in those collection pads. If adjacent pads receive the same amount of energy there will be no wind.

    • @marcschaeffer1584
      @marcschaeffer1584 Před 2 lety

      @@TheKribu well I guess it's a good thing the sun only hits one half of the earth at a time lol

    • @marcschaeffer1584
      @marcschaeffer1584 Před 2 lety

      @@TheKribu "hah! I disproved wind!" Lol

  • @grosvenorclub
    @grosvenorclub Před rokem

    In many of these solar solutions you need a diesel generator for back up ! The solar panels on my yacht will power the radios , auto pilot , etc and top up the house batteries for evening use IF there is a good amount of sun during the day . They will not propel the boat or start the motor or operate the anchor winch except for a very short time in little wind . Recently a yacht north of us had taken out their diesel and installed an electric motor plus extra batteries . It was dismasted about 300k miles offshore . The batteries soon depleted and they ended up getting towed in . A simple diesel with a few spare cans of fuel would have done the job

  • @comeasyouare4545
    @comeasyouare4545 Před 2 lety

    I liked the wave boat. As the boat bobs up, and down . Horizonal fins on either side of the boat are moved up, and down by the wave action propelling the boat forward. It only works in waves. This action can also be harnessed to generate power for batteries for use in calm waters, along with solar.

  • @robertfoertsch
    @robertfoertsch Před 2 lety +3

    Excellent Analysis, Deployed Worldwide Through My Deep Learning AI Research Library …Thank You Matt

  • @stephen_101
    @stephen_101 Před 2 lety +14

    An equivalent catamaran to the Silent 80 is more like the Sunreef 80 Power, which is in the €4 million range and upwards.
    The monohulls really aren't comparable when you take into account total living area and speed capabilities.

    • @SacGeoTV
      @SacGeoTV Před 2 lety +2

      Agreed ⚡️🥂

    • @TheTokkie
      @TheTokkie Před 2 lety +2

      A monohull is faster than a catamaran if they are both heavily loaded. That's why monohulls will always be the standard for transportation. As batteries have very low power density, a fully electric monohull is much better than a catamaran in that regard. But you indeed do not have the same form of living space

    • @asdfdfggfd
      @asdfdfggfd Před 2 lety

      @@TheTokkie And the monohull wont pitch poll and kill the entire crew.

    • @killuazoldyck1352
      @killuazoldyck1352 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheTokkie if you put the same weight on a cat and a mono, the cat would be less impaired. Cats are just better in every way, anyone that sails knows that!

    • @TheTokkie
      @TheTokkie Před 2 lety +1

      @@killuazoldyck1352 that's simply incorrect. At light weight, a catamaran is faster but at heavy weight the tacamaran has much more drag than the monohull. I'm a naval engineer btw.

  • @dave200204
    @dave200204 Před 2 lety +2

    I've seen one couple on another CZcams channel with an electric sail boat. They recently installed an electric motor that can regenerate electric power for them when they are sailing using the wind power. They also have a solar array and batteries. I think that converting boats over from ICE to electric will be more of an incremental transfer. Most boats sail for years and unless there is a real need to convert your already working system then a lot of ICE powered boats will stick around.

  • @johnprogno7703
    @johnprogno7703 Před rokem +1

    There are already people running boats on 100% solar power in not so perfect northern conditions, so it is even better in more southern sunnier tropical conditions, it is definitely the future of boating.

  • @SF-li9kh
    @SF-li9kh Před 2 lety +5

    I'm surprised to see India did this. Even I didn't know inspite of being from here. We usually are all talk and no action, but hats off to the company that made that boat.

    • @chiranthanmr
      @chiranthanmr Před 2 lety

      All talk and no action? It's the only developing country thats able to compete with developed countries in the space race. India also has the largest solar array. You need to learn more about your country. The world has been in awe for a while about how fast India is with technology.

  • @98Zai
    @98Zai Před 2 lety +8

    A self sailing catamaran powered by the sun, effectively a seafront home with ever changing views that just goes and goes and goes without a single drop of effort on my part.. would be the perfect dream home. It's just too bad that I'm not a sea person.

    • @yuidesu5625
      @yuidesu5625 Před rokem

      everchanging views as in: todays water is 0.00001% more blue than yesterday water?

    • @98Zai
      @98Zai Před rokem

      ​@@yuidesu5625 Sure. Also coastlines. I don't think I would sail the open sea much.

    • @Ron-dx9wq
      @Ron-dx9wq Před 25 dny

      You do realise that sails are solar powered?

    • @98Zai
      @98Zai Před 25 dny

      ​@@Ron-dx9wq Yes and they're also powered by hydrogen, fission or even the big bang depending on how many steps you want to take. Why do you want to take extra steps?

    • @Ron-dx9wq
      @Ron-dx9wq Před 25 dny

      @98Zai Extra steps?! A rag on a stick compared to solar panels, batteries, motors and electrical cables carrying welding current - none of which will be happy with even a drop of saltwater. People forget that the entire world was discovered and settled before electricity even existed.

  • @cdgonepotatoes4219
    @cdgonepotatoes4219 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Recreational boats and lake ferries are definitely the best application of solar power in vehicles. Low power, they soak in the Sun all the time, they don't have on-board high power devices that require power beside the engine and don't go fast. The low noise definitely aids the enjoyment and if you're dead in the water you can always row or simply sit around for a while and you'll get power back.
    I'm highly skeptical for anything else. The cost is hardly worth what can only be an auxiliary power system.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 Před 2 lety +1

    Ferries are a good place to start for solar/battery power. They travel more in protected waters, so they don't need the added "oomph" of diesel in adverse weather. Their runs are shorter and they have the option of recharging when docked. I note that Japan has a number of ferries, large ones that move cargo and with sleeping accommodations for passengers. At least for runs mostly in daylight, solar/battery power might work for them.

  • @BOK-04
    @BOK-04 Před 2 lety +4

    Living on a lake, I’d LOVE a solar/electric affordable boat!

    • @HeliBoyVR
      @HeliBoyVR Před 2 lety +2

      Build one

    • @joeprizzi407
      @joeprizzi407 Před 2 lety

      A solar house boat would be a lot cheaper than a solar luxury yacht. I believe there are some models available.

    • @kstorm889
      @kstorm889 Před 2 lety

      build a solar pontoon boat. very easy to do yourself. there are some manufacturers that offer them new.

  • @grimftl
    @grimftl Před 2 lety +18

    There was a time when large boats were actually powered by wind - even if it blew in the wrong direction. But you've already done a video on that.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester Před 2 lety

      A computer driven sail would be a catalyst for "free energy".

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před 2 lety +1

      And they were too slow to match modern day needs in industry applications. For pleasure crafts - can still be used most certainly but then the owners would need to learn how to sail.

  • @noell.capangpangan7645

    Thank you for sharing, new friend watching from the, Philippines♥️🇵🇭👍

  • @matthewleitch1
    @matthewleitch1 Před 2 lety

    Many years ago my wife and I tried a holiday on the Norfolk Broads (UK). We hired a small diesel boat with a bedroom etc. The worst part of it was the loud noise from the engine combined with the ever-present smell of diesel fumes. The dream of gliding around peacefully on the water turned out to be no more than a dream. An ELECTRIC boat would have made it a real holiday and very pleasant, despite the rather grey weather and boring scenery. Once again, the cleaner, more efficient alternative also turns out to be more enjoyable.

  • @BernardLS
    @BernardLS Před 2 lety +6

    Insolation rate in Joules will vary due to time of day, latitude of vessel, declination of sun, (those three impact the elevation of the power source) cloud cover, the efficiency of the solar panels and how clean they are. Solar panels create about 155 Watts m2 averaged out; those Watts might allow you to distil enough fresh water from the sea to wash the crud off of the solar panels (surprise fact harvesting renewable energy does come with some maintenance costs) but nowhere near enough to effectively 'push the boat along'. For small scale, low weight, time sensitive, high value cargo (people) direct harvest solar energy could be a site specific solution being most effective in the tropics on daylight hours, good weather, short voyages in protected waters, such as the ‘Aditya’ ferry in India. The advantages are that it is quiet and clean in operation with low fuel and maintenance costs for the drive train; the hull and fittings will still require routine maintenance.

    • @graemepearce5813
      @graemepearce5813 Před 2 lety +1

      agreed. And looking at those yachts there was no way they had 17kw and 26kw of solar on their roofs

  • @FoolishDane
    @FoolishDane Před 2 lety +8

    For a long time I have been thinking about if it wouldn't be possible to use solar on container ships. When the crane is done loading all the containers on the ships it could load solar-modules on top of all the containers. Maybe solar can't fully power a ship, but if it can reduce the fossil fuel consumption by 50% I can imagine it would be worth it.

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před 2 lety

      That would be too expensive and too time consuming - we are already in a massive supply shortage and that would just add to it.

  • @BenSeibel
    @BenSeibel Před 2 lety +1

    Catamarans have a great synergy for renewable propulsion. They are:
    A large surface area for solar power
    The same large area for living or passenger space
    Efficient Multihull configuration requires less power
    Leverages the advantages of electric propulsion with
    Minimal maintenance
    Freedom to be untethered to fuel stations
    Zero fuel costs

  • @StreuPfeffer
    @StreuPfeffer Před 2 lety +1

    The Adytia ferry looks like it has a panel watering system installed. either to clean or cool them. neat usage if youre in non saltwater environments.

  • @mikecheslock3542
    @mikecheslock3542 Před 2 lety +5

    I would love to have a Silent 55 that uses a backup diesel generator.

    • @marlmyster
      @marlmyster Před 2 lety

      It already has it.

    • @mikecheslock3542
      @mikecheslock3542 Před 2 lety

      @@marlmyster yes, I'm aware. The 55 is the one I want though. But, unless I hit the mega millions lottery, it will never happen.....

    • @marlmyster
      @marlmyster Před 2 lety

      @@mikecheslock3542
      I have faith in you... You'll get it late 2022-2023!

  • @artsmith103
    @artsmith103 Před 2 lety +17

    Could be the future of transportation until it gets too cloudy. My array is 17% below estimate for the last month due to clouds. Thank goodness for grid tie. Solar is a great 10-20% potential to energy pie as long as there is backup.

  • @Fastlan3
    @Fastlan3 Před 2 lety

    I worked for a company and help build 3 tier 50m yachts and the down payment for buyers was $8 million, and $40+ million when completely built and delivered.

  • @suzanneschreiner5145
    @suzanneschreiner5145 Před 2 lety

    Terrific video. Gives me real hope of seeing solar powered ferries on Puget Sound where I live. Next, a solar powered houseboat to live on! It could absolutely happen.

  • @richardowens9061
    @richardowens9061 Před 2 lety +6

    The big problem with solar powered boats arises when there is no direct sunlight to recharge and maintain the batteries. So, to mitigate that problem, we could transition into full electric boats by incorporating diesel generators that would only be used to recharge the batteries when needed - like a plug-in hybrid car. Yes, there would still be a diesel motor involved, but it could be much smaller and use much less fuel than if it were being used to actually propel the boat.
    If you're vacationing on your yacht without a schedule, pure solar/electric is a viable option - just stay put until the sun comes out, again. But, if you're running a ferry service or hauling freight, you can't afford to shut down on cloudy days.

    • @Matzes
      @Matzes Před 2 lety +1

      diesel generator adds alot of weight lowering the efficiency/viability for the whole thing

    • @stephenb7333
      @stephenb7333 Před 2 lety

      in the case of silent yachts and they do have cheaper options like silent 44 coming in at 700 000 pounds has 3 battery banks 1 for engine,one for inhouse electrics and one for back up.plus a relatively small generator for crossing oceans and then there is an option of putting a fully automatic kite system that you can sail alone with it at 4 knots or use it in tandom with the onboard system and you will use half the electricity to go 8 knots infinately day and night and this kite system charges the battery as well.with all these redundancy systems one can go anywhere anytime and sail 365 days a year without stopping.there is an older silent 64 vlog about a turkish captain that crossed the atlantic in the dead of winter from cartegena spain to florida.thats 5500 nm and used if you calculate it in dollars in generator fuel with american fuel prices was 600 dolars.and if you want to go fast i mean at 20 knots then the generator will directly supply the engines with electric until you run out of generator fuel and that will probably take you 1500 nm at constant 20 knots.. i hope it helps.;)

    • @richardowens9061
      @richardowens9061 Před 2 lety

      @@Matzes That really depends on the size of the generator and the amount of fuel you're carrying. If you're only using the generator to recharge the batteries, the generator could be ten percent the size of a diesel engine intended to propel the boat directly. Likewise, your fuel consumption would be ten percent, as well. And, if you're carrying freight or passengers anyway, the extra weight of the generator and fuel is going to be nominal.

  • @Toastmaster_5000
    @Toastmaster_5000 Před 2 lety +10

    It's always been not so clear to me whether electric boats could be a better option than electric cars. Boats have a few advantages to going solar such as:
    A. There are a lot fewer rules about how slow they can/should go
    B. They can take up a wider footprint without being too much of an issue
    C. They never have to go uphill; aside from some big waves, boats are always on a level plane
    D. Because they're in water, motors need a lot less torque to get moving, and stall current is what really sucks up a lot of power for electric motors
    E. They can coast more easily. and if necessary, can be pushed by the wind.
    However, the #1 issue with boats is water adds a tremendous amount of drag, so, you need a lot more energy to maintain speed.
    So the way I see it, electric boats make a lot more sense for short bursts of travel (like with ferries) where they're not expected to go fast, they're not expected to fight strong winds, and they get enough moments throughout the day to recharge. They also make sense for fishing boats, where you need enough energy to get to your destination, stay there for a long while, and then have enough energy to return. When it comes to international travel though, they seem like a really bad idea.

  • @Henryy980
    @Henryy980 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video 👍👍

  • @allenhammer7923
    @allenhammer7923 Před rokem

    Good job and gives me all kind of ideas for new businesses. What about EMF? .

  • @testthewest123
    @testthewest123 Před 2 lety +8

    Honestly, your very first point should have been:
    "Why use solar panels for boats over SAILS?"
    Because that's the real question here. Sailing is 100% carbon neutral, costs a fraction and works at night (as a tradeoff to not work without wind).

    • @killuazoldyck1352
      @killuazoldyck1352 Před 2 lety +1

      because you can't go into marina's under sail, also the wind does not always blow.
      Sail and solar is a good way to go which is what i am doing, electric propulsion for going in and out of ports/marinas and sail the rest of the time.
      Boats also need electric for everyday things, solar is much better than running a generator.

    • @gf4913
      @gf4913 Před 2 lety

      Because you need electricity anyway

    • @gf4913
      @gf4913 Před 2 lety

      @@killuazoldyck1352 if you are skilled you can dock using sail, I've seen people do It with small boats

  • @rkm237
    @rkm237 Před 2 lety +3

    There is a lot more that could be said about this topic, Matt. Consider that a 200hp car usually is run at 10-20hp 99% of the time, but a 200hp displacement boat is run at 100hp, semi-displacement at 150hp, and planing at 180hp. Comparing a ferry that probably cruises at 8knots with another one that cruises at 4knots also isn't fair, and just looking at engine maintenance as a percentage is misleading because engine maintenance is just a small part of boat maintenance... really the savings is small, and since all solar boats move at displacement speeds, weight savings is irrelevant. Also I question the cost of an 8knot ferry engine maintenance... such a small ferry would need a very modest diesel engine, and for the costs you mention you can replace that engine with a new engine annual! I would think your estimate is 1000% too high. I do however love the idea and for certain uses it can really make sense. Another topic you might be interested in is sail boats which replace their standby diesel with an electric motor/generator that can generate electricity to power a/c, lights, electronics, and so on... and even recharge the battery bank. That seems the most promising, as all sailboats are displacement boats already. Lastly I would question your comment on the "equitable"-ness of ferry transportation versus private boating. While it is more efficient, I don't think humanity is in such dire straits as to say there is any justification of elimination private transportation (land, sea, or air)... and most transportation systems require tremendous population density for the savings to appear. A subway system in a small Montana town would be completely useless and wouldn't save any energy, and the cost would be more than buying every resident a new Tesla. My $0.02. :)

  • @Phantom-kz9bv
    @Phantom-kz9bv Před 2 lety

    Hey undecided I really like your videos and I was wondering if you could do a video about osmotic power and see how it could be used in the future.

  • @DougJessee
    @DougJessee Před 2 lety

    Should watch a channel Sailing Uma, they converted a monohull to electric and have tried different systems over the years. Starting first with a homemade system using a forklift motor, but have a much more commercial system now.

  • @richdobbs6595
    @richdobbs6595 Před 2 lety +4

    Using LCOE to compare the cost of photovoltaics to coal is comparing apples to oranges. A better metric would be Value Adjusted LCOE, which takes into account that electricity generated when it is needed is more valuable than electricity generated just when the sun is shining. Pair the cost of storage for a sunny day with panels, and the LCOE for solar will go up by maybe four-fold. Add in the capital cost of back-up natural gas sitting idle to cover three days of rain or heavy clouds and probably the real LCOE of solar is at least 6 times as much as those quoted LCOE's.

  • @_r_ma_
    @_r_ma_ Před 2 lety +3

    The "unlimited range" argument is moot. The solar arrays on these vessels barely produce enough power to move the vessel at cruising speeds, leaving nothing left over to charge the batteries. The vessel would be completely disabled at night or on a cloudy day. Okay, add a generator, problem solved. But if a vessel is built with all this solar and battery capacity and adds even the smallest generator, you've completely negated any of the "no-running cost" or "no maintenance" advantages. Instead, the vessel would have been far less expensive and more useful if it just had a diesel engine to begin with. For ferries moving high volumes of people at extremely slow speeds during the daytime only, solar and electric propulsion may work but this is an extremely small slice of the marine market and is likely its only real application. The electric superyachts are just a flex for the ultra-rich. If they actually gave a sht about sustainability they wouldn't be commissioning these monstrosities to begin with.

    • @artsmith103
      @artsmith103 Před 2 lety

      Also, the electric ferries you speak of are traveling between designated ports typically less than 2hrs away. They likely plug in to shore (nuclear, nat gas, coal) power as soon as possible. Being a people mover, little to no traffic at night for a full charge.

    • @licencetoswill
      @licencetoswill Před 2 lety +1

      there have been quite a few of these solar only yachts that produce enough reserve power to cruise overnight without fully depleting the power bank, but it's only possible with super efficient custom hulls.

  • @calgal8308
    @calgal8308 Před 2 lety

    I love this! Thanks!

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 Před rokem

    The last few of your videos I have seen have been super.

  • @maximustitan8171
    @maximustitan8171 Před 2 lety

    I love this channel. Its take us to the future.

  • @ungoyone
    @ungoyone Před 2 lety

    I've been binge-watching solar yacht vids for a few days so seeing this vid is kinda interesting. Would love to have a Tri-deck Silent 80... but international sailing still scares me.

  • @gregmcmullen6698
    @gregmcmullen6698 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Matt. Great comparison of past v. future possibilities. I'm in favor of the future... btw- buyers considering dropping $1.8 million on a used m/y, probably can afford a $3 million solar cat.

  • @whatthedeuce47d68
    @whatthedeuce47d68 Před 2 lety

    I had a work colleague who was ex navy and is now a chief engineer on an exclusive yacht, apparently running the yacht is what will financially ruin someone as apposed to the initial cost of buying one..

  • @kaf2303
    @kaf2303 Před rokem +1

    Yes I do think local relatively short rout ferry service will catch on now and hopefully longer routes as tech improves.

    • @BernardLS
      @BernardLS Před rokem

      Solar power for shipping has a scale problem, the area of the solar panels required to harvest the energy means that the carrying capacity of the vessel (load displacement) is low. In suitable situations such as this it will work but the opportunity for expansion is limited. With regard to propulsion with electric motors powered by ‘green electricity’, leaving aside the fact that there is no truly ‘green’ electricity, the best we can do is low carbon impact both at installation (capital account cost) and production (revenue account cost). Running ships on the ‘lecky’ is tricky; the two examples that I personally know of, and have used, are a vehicle and foot traffic ‘chain’ ferry that ply’s its trade across the hundred meters or so of the Nordre älv between the island of Hisingen and Kornhall on the Swedish mainland. The motors are on the ferry and a power supply cable is unwound and wound back up on board as the ferry shuttles back and forth from Kornhall. When the vessel goes anywhere else, id est dry dock for survey and or maintenance, it is towed by a good old ICE powered tug. The other electric vessel is a vehicle and foot traffic ferry that runs from Helsingborg (Sweden) to Helsingor (Denmark), a twenty minute trip undertaken using energy stored in batteries on board, she tops up the charge each time she is alongside and battery capacity is said to be sufficient for an hour of main engine use.
      For small scale, low weight, time sensitive, high value cargo (people) direct harvest solar energy could be a site specific solution being most effective in the tropics on daylight hours, good weather, short voyages in protected waters, such as the ‘Aditya’. The advantages are that it is quiet and clean in operation with low fuel and maintenance costs for the drive train; the hull and fittings will however still require some routine maintenance. Electric ships which currently have short ranges and high light displacement in proportion to their cargo capacity if battery storage is added. Sadly as of now, except for niche usage, electrically powered ships are as functional as chocolate fireguards.

  • @michahalczuk9071
    @michahalczuk9071 Před 2 lety +1

    If you add the fact that new perovskite solar panels could lower the *cell cost 10-100x in long run compared to what we have today,* it would make sense to crate *large custom barges* that would containt batteries and solar panels.
    These could be towed with high power electric tankers/container ships with much *smaller batteries* on them.
    This way you could have normal sized container ship that would be able to use currently *built docks,* but you could also have gigantic barges or barge arrays that wouldn't need to dock so often.
    Water transport is already cheap, but this way it could be nearly free of charge compared to other transportation methods.
    Also with large excess of energy produced by those barges, and low drag if designed properly, you could possibly start increasing average speed of container ships to levels similar to speeds of slow trains.
    It would obviously need some necessary engineering and changes to overall container ship desing, but I suppose that's how the future will look in next couple decades.

  • @zed9zed
    @zed9zed Před 2 lety

    Silent Yachts are adding a model which includes a kite, which further reduces the need for the diesel generator. So that's a good compromise or enhancement, for not a huge cost increase. There are so many good possibilities that only lack for development effort ($$$). Hopefully we will make these developments in time to keep our planet livable!

  • @dchas4842
    @dchas4842 Před 2 lety

    great information, but keep in mind the maintenance of a yacht diesel engine is only a portion of overall cost. There are many other systems that require maintenance, water maker, HVAC, hydraulics, sea keepers, etc. that need to be maintained regardless of were the power is generated.

  • @John-eq8cu
    @John-eq8cu Před 2 lety

    I'm very glad to see you are now only using metric units in your videos. It sends the right message, and more youtubers and journalists should follow suit. It's so clumsy and confusing to say everything in two types of units, so by settling on Metric, it's the standard and it just makes sense.

  • @JamesQuattlebaum
    @JamesQuattlebaum Před 2 lety

    hello good sir! just want to say that i enjoy the video topics of lately. they have been mostly renewable energy focused. but....... are you going to get back into the tech reviews and home automation stuff. you are the reason I pulled the trigger on a arlo system, and also the reason why I recommended to my friend that he get eufy instead of arlo. The stuff you review now is awesome stuff to absorb... but its also a segment of products that i'll likely never afford or have here in the deep south.
    Thanks for the video content.

  • @Steve-cl7hr
    @Steve-cl7hr Před 2 lety

    Good coverage of the current state of solar/electric boat propulsion. A related topic worth covering might be state of the art wind/electric propulsion. A sail boat with a motor/generator unit can charge a substantial battery pack using regen with only a small reduction of speed under sail alone. This gives the sailboat options in tight quarters and limited cruising under power during calm wind conditions. For those who like sailing over motoring it is a very viable option right now. And the systems are comparable with Diesel engine power in sailboats for regular sailers that are not independently wealthy.

    • @BernardLS
      @BernardLS Před 2 lety

      On board wind turbines might get you around some of the problems, however for marine use vertical axis wind turbines (VAWT) would be better than the, what have now become 'traditional', horizontal axis wind turbines (HAWT); for reasons that include the air draught of the vessel, weight distribution and maintenance access. The energy yield, which is low compared to combustion of hydrocarbon, is still subject to the wind blowing at the right strength and having space available on board for the hardware. The rotors, masts, rigging and sail handling arrangements would take up 'prime real estate' on the vessel. Fuel oil bunker tanks can be, and usually are, stuck away in any odd corner and the ICE power plants are themselves relatively compact. The stacked up 'boxes' would mean putting the wind driven propulsion units in a bad situation from a ship stability point of view. The availability of the wind, the amount of energy that could be gathered from it and the cost of the installation receive little consideration but on the limited information circulated VAWT seems to be the best of a poor group compared to hydrocarbon fuel.

  • @alaaa1794
    @alaaa1794 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video

  • @tomhunter7536
    @tomhunter7536 Před 2 lety +1

    I have been following Silent Yachts for close to 2 years now since the Virus era caused no job etc. I live on a medium size Spanish island, which gets around 300 days of sunshine a year. I watch many other models, checking the features etc. The founders (a couple, built there first yacht and sailed all round the Globe as a test bed, before starting their company, which is now popular.
    I also follow many companies producing new Battery technology, as well as other enhancements, so all I need is a good Lottery win 🤞well I know that is a long shot, but if it does, I know what to do. 😊

  • @brentbauer8258
    @brentbauer8258 Před 15 dny

    Great idea and practical, but do not forget the lithium battery footprint.

  • @hodadyou
    @hodadyou Před 2 lety +1

    Very well done. The sailing community is slowly adopting and retrofitting electric auxiliary propulsion.

  • @GTStudios1470
    @GTStudios1470 Před 2 lety +2

    a drawback could be the salt water spray sticking to the panels and drying. which would leave a layer of salt and lower the energy production

    • @MrMagnus
      @MrMagnus Před 2 lety +1

      The boats has desalination machines and a hose so you can easily clean them on occasion or even in port

  • @Neuralatrophy
    @Neuralatrophy Před 2 lety +2

    The most efficient hybrid boat would be a solar/fuel cell combo. It could use some solar to regenerate the hydrogen stores for later use.

  • @1Tane55
    @1Tane55 Před 2 lety

    the addition of the sky sail is a good idea.

  • @lylestavast7652
    @lylestavast7652 Před 2 lety

    even if a boat has a diesel powered generator on it, that generator can be designed / sized specifically to generate electricity at the optimal rate for charging the batteries onboard as required. That drives it's weight/cost down, since it's not also being used for propulsion so that shaft and prop push-back doesn't need to be accommodated. Total fuel and be pegged to expected need to run in the specific local at which the boat is used, as many of them have pretty fixed service routes - like ferries - which are quite predictably and seasonality can be factored in.