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Electric Boat

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Electric Boat is sometimes used as a colloquial abbreviation for the US Electric Boat Corporation. This article is about electric boats themselves, rather than this corporation.
While most boats on the water today are powered by diesel engines, and sail power and gasoline engines are also popular, it is perfectly feasible to power boats by electricity too.

Electric boats were very popular from the 1880s until the 1920s, when the internal combustion engine took dominance. Since the energy crises of the 1970s, interest in this quiet and potentially renewable marine energy source has been increasing steadily again. With the present state of technology so developed, many believe that the time is right for electric boats to become popular again.

Components

The main components of the drive system of any electrically powered boat are similar in all cases, and similar to the options available for any electric vehicle.

Charger

Electric energy will have to be obtained for the battery bank from some source.

In all cases, a charge regulator will be needed. This is to ensure that the batteries are charged at the maximum rate that they safely can stand when the power is available. It must also ensure that they are not overcharged when nearing full charge and not overheated when they are discharged and a great deal of charge current becomes available.

Battery bank

There have been significant technical advantages in battery technology in recent years, and more is to be expected in the future.

The size of the battery bank will determine the range of the boat under electric power alone. The speed that the boat is motored at will also affect this - a lower speed can make a big difference to the energy required to move a hull. Other factors that affect range include sea-state, windage and any charge that can be reclaimed while under way, for example by solar panels in full sun. A wind tubine in a good following wind will help, and motor-sailing in any wind could do so even more.

Speed controller

To make the boat usable and manoeuvrable, a simple-to-operate forward/stop/backwards speed controller is needed. This must be efficient - i.e. it must not get hot and waste energy at any speed - and it must be able to stand the full current that could conceivably flow under any full-load condition.

Electric motor

Electric motor technology is also complex and changing. Permanent magnet, brushless motors are considered very suitable by some specialists.

Drive chain

Depending on the size of the boat and the choice of electric motor, a standard propeller shaft, bearings and propeller may be available. In some cases some reduction gearing may be required, but from the point of view of efficiency, wear-and-tear and routine maintenance this should be avoided if at all possible, perhaps by choosing a different propeller.

Types

There are as many types of electric boat as there are boats with any other method of propulsion, but some types are significant for various reasons.

Lifetime pollution and energy costs

Of course, all the component parts of any boat have to be manufactured and will eventually have to be disposed of. Some pollution and use of other energy sources are inevitable during these stages of the boat's life and electric boats are no exception. The benefits to the global environment that are achieved by the use of electric propulsion are manifested during the working life of the boat, which can be many years. These benefits are also most directly felt in the sensitive and very beautiful environments in which such a boat is used, by a careful and caring owner and crew.

See also

External links

 


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