Snowgoose-1
Well-Known Member
Interesting. Thanks.No. Plenty of research and experience says not. The big advantage of hybrid is that it can support high electric consumption for domestic use while still providing propulsion. There are 2 basic types of hybrid, serial and parallel. The former uses electric only for propulsion so the energy must be provided by either an ICE such as a generator, renewable such as solar or regeneration or from shorepower, The latter incorporates a generator/motor into an ICE so that propulsion is by the engine or the electric, individually or together.
They start to become viable in larger boats over 45' or so (a bit smaller for multihulls) where you have the space to fit them, space for solar arrays and speed potential for useful regeneration. Serial have been around for a long time in both commercial and leisure applications, particularly large ocean sailing multihulls and charter vessels like the Dufour Atoll range. That however proved not viable because of the increased initial cost and particularly higher maintenance cost.
Parallel has also been around for getting on for 20 years but has failed to make any progress in the medium size sector (10-15m sailing yachts). The positives are silent short range motoring (typically 2 hours), higher generating capacity, either using the ICE motor alone, or exploiting the "spare" output of the engine when being used for propulsion. Downsides are roughly double the cost of the basic ICE and the need for a large 48v battery bank to provide sufficient energy storage for the 2 hours silent motoring, sophisticated electronics to control the combination of mechanical propulsion, electrical propulsion and power generation and the limited regeneration under sail - a combination of lack of speed on smaller boats and the inefficiency of a propeller designed for mechanical propulsion.
Various manufacturers have offered parallel systems including Yanmar and Nanni but have failed to find buyers. The only active company is Hybrid Marine hybrid-marine.co.uk who initially aimed at just this market with a serial system, but switched to parallel because they could not find takers in the sailing boat market for the reasons given above. As you will see from the website their target markets are canal boats and the larger boats as I described above.
So great idea as it seems to meet many sailors' wish list (including mine) but does not work in reality. Unsurprisingly no new boat production builder in the small to medium sector has adopted hybrids although many builders of custom and semi custom larger boats and multihulls have - but mainly to exploit the power generation potential rather than the short range silent running. That is just a side benefit.