I think my jaw dropped when I read about Mike Bontoft's 98+ MPH record in a 144 Volt Hydro at the Devil's Lake Kilos. I had no idea that speed like that was possible under electric power.
Let me ask my question first before you begin reading the details below. Would it be feasible for a >>planing<< hull, race boat or not, to carry the necessary battery power to last 24 miles at a speed just fast enough to keep the boat on plane?
In this month's PropTalk Magazine which is about powerboating on the Chesapeake Bay and occasionally covers local inboard boat races, I learned about the Wye Island Marathon. This electric boat race is run annually to "foster fun and invention in electric boat propulsion and design". Slow boats are encouraged because, according to www.electricboatmarathon.org, "in order to go the entire 24 miles, the boats, by necessity, must go fairly slowly".
Or do they? Current entries include canoes, skiffs and other very long non-planing hulls. The fastest record for any class is 3 hours. 6 minutes, 30 seconds for a blistering 7.66 average MPH over the 23.82 mile course. There is a mandatory 10 minute coffee break about halfway through the race (I'm not making this up). So there would have to be enough energy left in the batteries to get the boat up on plane a second time.
It seems to me that if you could plane a hull and sustain it at just 12 to 15 MPH you would not only shatter the existing Wye Island Marathon record, you would shatter expectations of electric power just like Mike Bontoft did with his new record.
You can read the article now about this year's race and see pictures of entries from this year by going to www.proptalk.com. Click on the December 2008 magazine cover and go to page 31.
Your thoughts?
Let me ask my question first before you begin reading the details below. Would it be feasible for a >>planing<< hull, race boat or not, to carry the necessary battery power to last 24 miles at a speed just fast enough to keep the boat on plane?
In this month's PropTalk Magazine which is about powerboating on the Chesapeake Bay and occasionally covers local inboard boat races, I learned about the Wye Island Marathon. This electric boat race is run annually to "foster fun and invention in electric boat propulsion and design". Slow boats are encouraged because, according to www.electricboatmarathon.org, "in order to go the entire 24 miles, the boats, by necessity, must go fairly slowly".
Or do they? Current entries include canoes, skiffs and other very long non-planing hulls. The fastest record for any class is 3 hours. 6 minutes, 30 seconds for a blistering 7.66 average MPH over the 23.82 mile course. There is a mandatory 10 minute coffee break about halfway through the race (I'm not making this up). So there would have to be enough energy left in the batteries to get the boat up on plane a second time.
It seems to me that if you could plane a hull and sustain it at just 12 to 15 MPH you would not only shatter the existing Wye Island Marathon record, you would shatter expectations of electric power just like Mike Bontoft did with his new record.
You can read the article now about this year's race and see pictures of entries from this year by going to www.proptalk.com. Click on the December 2008 magazine cover and go to page 31.
Your thoughts?
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