Sunday, May 1, 2011

[Electric Boats] Re: Future Proof... Reason #149 Why I Love Electric Propulsion

 

Right-on Greg.
I had the same kind of thoughts about the "modularity" of our systems. I've got a new set of flooded golf car batteries in my Albin 25 which I expect to last 5 years or more. Who knows what will be available then? Meanwhile I can continue to enjoy and refine my drive system and be confident that things will only get better on the battery front. If nothing else, the rise in popularity of newer technologies will keep downward price pressure on the older tech, thus lowering the entry cost for folks just getting started.
I'm not sold on those molten salt batteries, not for my kind of use anyway. There are some suitable applications I'm sure, but the fact that they need to be kept hot means they need constant energy input in order to be ready for use. Not a good recipe for efficient "off grid" operation, but might work for commuter cars, ski boats, aircraft, or some other intermittent-use applications where you need high power-to-weight ratio while in motion but can stay plugged in to a reliable energy source most of the time.
Jim

--- In electricboats@yahoogroups.com, "Greg Martin" <ffmagellan@...> wrote:
>
> Everyone has probably thought of this already but one thing that I think is really cool about electric propulsion is that as energy storage technology (our Achilles Heel) improves, our boats will be ready to swap out the old batteries for the next better thing. I know we're all on the edge of our seats, waiting for the next better battery, right? Our electric motors work with lead- acid and lithium ion batteries of course, but they would also work with any future wonder that may develop- be that fuel cells, hydrogen, ultracapacitors, cold fusion, or...?
>
> What does everyone think of ZEBRA batteries? For those that haven't heard of them, they are thermal sodium batteries that use molten salt as an electrolyte, and proponents claim that they have 4x as much capacity and are lighter/ smaller than the alternatives. They use salt and so are better for the environment and potentially cheaper. They are also currently being used in EVs (Think City and Modec), by the British Royal Navy on submarines and are now even being used on a sailing yacht in Europe, apparantly with great success.
>
> Here's a short summary, with links and references about ZEBRA batteries and Innovanautic's use of them on their boat in Europe:
>
> http://www.electricseas.org/profiles/blogs/innovanautic-inspires-europe
>
> What do you think?
>
> -Greg
>

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