Hello,
I have a small charity shipyard in Thailand where we build boats for fishermen.
I have been doing this since the tsunami which I lived through in 2004 and so far we have already built 88 of those boats.
Those boats are usually called "long tail" boats because they use engine mounted on a swivel on the aft deck and a long shaft driven straight into the water from the deck. I will try to post a few pictures.
Now most of those coastal fishermen are no longer using the boats because the fuel price has become too high to pay with the sales of their catch.
We successfully converted one of those boats to a sailboat last August, but the issue is that most fishermen are.. well.. fishermen and not sailors.
So now I am considering the electric option and any help, guidance and advice would be very welcome.
The boats are somewhere between 30 and 40 feet and the engines that we have been using were 11HP Yanmar, so I think I could replace those with a 5kW with similar max RPMs as the Yanmar and use the same propellers. My idea would be to build an inboard motor and drive the shaft straight through the stern and use a rudder. The power would come from LFP batteries.
Those boats cannot have a propeller shaft or a drive protruding under the hull because they rest on the sand at low tide.
My main concern with all this is what parts to use and especially how to protect them from seawater.
I have tried procuring a 5kW BLDC motor from China through the sites Alibaba and Globalsources for the last 2 months but they are unable to demonstrate their quality, give me efficiency curves, etc... so now I have turned to US products and started the search a few days ago. But I am quite concerned as to how how protect the assembly from seawater.
I managed to secure good LFP batteries at $1.5 per AH so at least that s good.
So once again, any suggestions and recommendation on what parts to use, would be most welcome. Oh and yes, it is a charity, so my budget is limited for this prototype. Probably less than 3 thousand US without the batteries.
Thank you..
Christian
Friday, April 23, 2010
Re: [Electric Boats] Conversion of Traditional Thai fishing boat to Electric
Christian,
I may be able to help yuou wioth data from my recent 26' electric conversion.
John
On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 7:35 PM, cpatouraux <cpatoura@hotmail.com > wrote:
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