Lightwave395
Well-Known Member
Are they here now ? What's the USP - if there is one ?
PGN L5 Sodium Ion Battery(L5 Case) 12V 100AH – BMS Technologies LTD
PGN L5 Sodium Ion Battery(L5 Case) 12V 100AH – BMS Technologies LTD
Not just batteries either, whatever happened to graphene?Every so often forums and media go on about a new tech in batterys about to hit the market .... about how much better it will be .... and then ?????? Zilch .. Nada ... nothing !!
I note that diesel has the highest energy density of any energy store on a boat, beating any form of rechargeable battery by orders of magnitude!The big downside of Sodium Ion for leisure boat use is that the power is delivered over quite a wide voltage range.
This is fine if you're running a dedicated system, like a car, that is designed for it. But we want a healthy 12v+ on our boats and these batteries will drop below that when they still have a lot of capacity left.
It's like having a big tank of fuel but the pickup is half way down the side- you just can't use it all.
There's been a lot of hype about sodium, and people saying that they are holding out until it goes mainstream, but honestly, there's not much wrong with LFP. It's here, it's about as safe as any high density energy storage can be, it's cheap, it's well understood, and it works in the voltage range that we need. You'll be waiting a long time for anything better.
Not just batteries either, whatever happened to graphene?
Magic - the holy grail is within reachI note that diesel has the highest energy density of any energy store on a boat, beating any form of rechargeable battery by orders of magnitude!
This always makes me laugh when people moan about range on electric yachts. A diesel yacht will permanently be out of fuel after enough hours of motoring while an electric one has unlimited range with even a modest solar setup.except that batteries can harvest the sun and so far no-one has found a way to replace diesel used except from the fuel bowser
This always makes me laugh when people moan about range on electric yachts. A diesel yacht will permanently be out of fuel after enough hours of motoring while an electric one has unlimited range with even a modest solar setup.
My catalac is full electric propulsion (well, that and sails). Works fine 8 months of the year in the UK. In the depths of winter you need to use marinas overnight rather than anchoring out so you can top up the batteries but you don't use the boat as much so....Fine ... but who wants a boat covered in solar panels ?? The inherent problem is that not every day can you harvest at anywhere near full rate on panels ... many days - the panels will struggle to harvest anything ... what do you do then ?
You wait. Much easier than finding a fuel dock mid-pacific.Fine ... but who wants a boat covered in solar panels ?? The inherent problem is that not every day can you harvest at anywhere near full rate on panels ... many days - the panels will struggle to harvest anything ... what do you do then ?
You wait. Much easier than finding a fuel dock mid-pacific.
Maybe you’ve not noticed but most boats are covered in solar anyway![]()
Yes, but this is the same between diesel and electric. Eventually sailors run out of wind.Isn't that what sails are for ?
You’re confusing unlimited range with perpetual running. Most boats move once a week and could easily recharge in between. My point though is that if a diesel and an electric motor into the pacific, the diesel may never be seen again because it’s range is definitely finite and a fuel refill depends entirely on others. The electric may take time but will refill and motor without outside help forever effectively (and the components will last longer with no maintenance too).Not to the extent that would be required to maintain electric propulsion indefintely as you implied in your previous post ... there's a practical / cosmetic limit and there's what would be required to maintain the power levels ... the two often do not agree ...
Even you must agree there .. unless another disagreement is intended ??
Funnily enough, it's used in those very batteries as part of the cathode.Not just batteries either, whatever happened to graphene?
When you need speed to make a tidal gate of you are heading back to your home port after two weeks summer holiday and their is no wind, speed and range become important. Being able to manage 1kt under motor because you have no battery power available isn't offering anywhere near the convenience of a tank of diesel.This always makes me laugh when people moan about range on electric yachts. A diesel yacht will permanently be out of fuel after enough hours of motoring while an electric one has unlimited range with even a modest solar setup.
Start up the generatorsFine ... but who wants a boat covered in solar panels ?? The inherent problem is that not every day can you harvest at anywhere near full rate on panels ... many days - the panels will struggle to harvest anything ... what do you do then ?