Assassin
Well-Known Member
One other issue is that of battery life as they only quote battery function figures for a brand new battery and once its done some running with its charge and discharge cycles what is its capacity then.
True...but not true....large electric semis are already being built. Many corporations are very aware of their carbon footprint and how that looks to their customers...and they are seeking to reduce it...and transport is the area that they choose. For example...McDonalds advertise that their fleet of trucks run on chip fat (which of course they have an abundance)..other companies...for example Pepsi are going electric..a large corporation that takes loads from their depots to their plants to their distributors (in other words, all in house) can manage on battery power...and Pepsi has ordered a fleet of electric trucks.Electric lorries are already dismissed as a fantasists dream as lories operate on cargo capacity in both cargo weight or volume and often a combination of the two and an average electric lorry would require both fuel tanks removing and replacing with batteries plus another 8 tonnes of batteries in the trailers just to give them a range of 200 miles running at the current limit if 44 tonnes and this reduces the cargo weight by 8 tonnes and the cubic capacity by the volume of the batteries so no hybrid or electric powertrain would be viable on a boat.
One other issue is that of battery life as they only quote battery function figures for a brand new battery and once its done some running with its charge and discharge cycles what is its capacity then.
No - they were advertised as having had the hybrid bit removed ... you'd have to assume they were inefficient or even useless! There must have been a good reason on what can't have been very old boats.Do you know why?
Of course battery power is useless for traveling any sort of distance or speed but marinas have a lot of sail boats which could be battery powered if enough electricity was available. Hence my suggestion.
One other issue is that of battery life as they only quote battery function figures for a brand new battery and once its done some running with its charge and discharge cycles what is its capacity then.
Which model is it ?I charge my elec car every day and in 2 years battery SOH is still 100%, I still get the same range, so with the tiny number of cycles on a boat, age would be the only problem - but it will certainly be 20 years of life and then a second use as home storage batteries probably.
Rough calculation: diesel about 56kj/l I think. Now 4l/h at 6kn seems reasonable from my limited displacement experience. That would be 224kj/h and 6' so 37kj/m. Say 35% efficiency and 100% for electric gives 13kj/mile needed. Seems a lot.
I am very sceptical about your 15 mile per kWh figure; in a 100kWh Tesla that would result in a range of 1500 miles; I’ve hypermiled in BEVs and not got near that high efficiency figure you quoted if we are talking about level ground; a gradient is another matter of course, but what comes up must go down and regen isn’t as efficient as not using the energy in the first place. EVs are at optimum efficiency between 20 and 25mph; any lower and you hold onto very little momentum, any higher and you get impacted by drag.Not sure that is accurate.
Elec motors have stunning torque - so are perfect for displacement speeds.
I would think very small motors could easily power a displacement boat up to say 2/3rds of hull speed, but above that it all falls apart.
So in my EV I average 4.2m per KWH in Summer.... At motorway speeds that drops to 4.0 or even 3.9.
However - at town speeds I can get 15m per KWH - so electric motors are vastly more efficient at low speeds / low drag than ICE - however an ICE is efficient at higher speeds (most fuel cars are most efficient at motorway speeds - evs are most efficient at town speeds) hence why I think for canal, river and displacement boats elec can work - but planing, not yet
I can get 500km or possibly more from a 75 kWh Tesla....that’s average driving at 137 Wh per kilometer....of course most people don’t drive like meI am very sceptical about your 15 mile per kWh figure; in a 100kWh Tesla that would result in a range of 1500 miles; I’ve hypermiled in BEVs and not got near that high efficiency figure you quoted if we are talking about level ground; a gradient is another matter of course, but what comes up must go down and regen isn’t as efficient as not using the energy in the first place. EVs are at optimum efficiency between 20 and 25mph; any lower and you hold onto very little momentum, any higher and you get impacted by drag.
As I said it seems high, perhaps someone can find where my estimates are wrong?Not sure that is accurate.
Elec motors have stunning torque - so are perfect for displacement speeds.
I would think very small motors could easily power a displacement boat up to say 2/3rds of hull speed, but above that it all falls apart.
So in my EV I average 4.2m per KWH in Summer.... At motorway speeds that drops to 4.0 or even 3.9.
However - at town speeds I can get 15m per KWH - so electric motors are vastly more efficient at low speeds / low drag than ICE - however an ICE is efficient at higher speeds (most fuel cars are most efficient at motorway speeds - evs are most efficient at town speeds) hence why I think for canal, river and displacement boats elec can work - but planing, not yet
Unless I can't see a large part of that article it contains nothing helpful!Here’s a quick article that has done the maths for you...
About Electric Propulsion, Part 3: Battery Power for Your Electric-Boat Motor | BoatTEST
I think, for solar, it seems that a power cat is the best way forward, just for the roof size