jfm
Well-Known Member
jfm, Excuse my ignorance,.... I assumed stabilisers only worked when you were moving.... they also work when stationary??.... Or am I really showing my ignorance, do you have 2 types of stabilisers, fin type for travelling motion and a gyro or the like for at anchor......although from layup I can't see any space has been left for a gyro... (sorry, just struggling to keep up with this superyacht tech)..
...and build will take to December... is that for the finished article??!! that sounds incredible if it is...
As regards build time it is roughly a 9 month boat. They started beginning of May (it will be an E011 HIN) and scheduled finish is Dec 22, after which it has to go to Ipswich for commissioning and trials, so will be finished late January 2011 say. Remember that lots of processes happen in parallel. Currently, while all the GRP moulding is being done, another part of Fairline is making loads of furniture subassemblies.
Yup, the stabs work at anchor as well. The stabs computer has a GPS feed to tell it SOG, and as the boat goes faster the stabilisers obviously swing around less to get the same stabilising effect. At 30kts, the angluar movement of the tabs will be slight, but at zero speed, ie at anchor, they flap about quite substantially, to reduce rolling etc. The stab blades are amidships, and approx 1 metre square. They are pivoted at the front edge
The stabs are each operated by two hydraulic cylinders. The hydraulic pack is both electric and engine PTO (priority to the PTO, obviously). At anchor the pack is run by a generator, and has a 7.5Kw electric motor (sheesh). This pack also powers the (proportional) bow and stern thrusters, and the anchor winch
The stabs are made by Sleipner. Details at www.side-power.com. At top of the page you can see the new proportional thruster control with LCD display. At bottom of page there is a link to the stabs.
Below is the general arrangement drawing of my boat, showing the stabs. To scale them, note that the radar scanner is 4 foot