I was going to let this topic go but it seems to keep being resurrected every now and again.
Most everyone keeps harping on the "cost".* One contributor said, "But what I haven't seen is what it's going to cost."* Well, respectfully, you haven't seen it because apparently you haven't bothered to look at any of the links that have been posted or done any searching on your own.* Ossa, seemingly one of the major movers in the field, estimates that a re-power currently would be 150-200% of a traditional re-power.* They also say, "For a typical new boat build, the premium paid for a complete OSSA Powerlite system adds about 5% to the cost of the boat."
That's a steep hit for a re-power, that's true, but the price of almost all new technology starts high then drops as it matures and develops.* Does anyone remember what microwaves and video recorders sold for when they were new technology?** That's an apples and oranges comparasion, I know, but the fact remains that prices drop as a technology ages.* And the hit for a new build is not, in my opinion, that great for the potential benefits liable to be gained.
FEYS (Fast Electric Yacht System)*in Houston has some prices posted on their website for an equally sized propulsion system:
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I don't know how current those prices are or even how reliable they were in the first place.* But the general gist of what I see is that, while current prices for this technology are high, they aren't so stratospherically high as to earn the ""exotic"*side product" that the "Average Joe can't afford" label.*
People have also commented that the technology is sound <u>but</u> "don't look for it in the showroom anytime soon" with the admonition that companies "aren't going to re-tool their product line based on a few one-off examples of a lab-built system custom installed in a demo boat."* News flash....there are more companies, big companies, beginning to employ this technology all the time.* Lagoon Catamarans (part of Beneteau) has a production boat that is 100% diesel-electric, the Lagoon 420.* According to a March/April 2006*article on catamaran.com,
here the company has over 50 orders on the books for this boat.* If you read the article you'll see that the 420 is 8% more expensive than the diesel powered boat it replaced.... but the re-designed model is also larger than its predecssor.* (8% for this boat works out to around $39K US....but if you can afford $400K for a boat I doubt that the extra 39K will sink you into poverty).* With Nordhavn, Main Cats, Island Pilot, and more coming on-line, I don't think anyone can fairly say that this technology is just an "interesting experiment".**
Speed concerns?* If you want to go fast you don't buy a sailboat...or a trawler.* If you want to pull water skiers you don't buy a Grand Banks.* This topic was started in a trawler discussion group.* I thought that's what we were talking about.....innovative propulsion systems for trawlers.
And it's true that the "experts" have divided opinions on diesel-electric.* But to say that their opinion is "In a word FORGETABOUTIT" is stretching the truth a little.* In one of the magazine articles referenced by that poster, ("Pro Boat Builder",* Aug 2007) the article by Nigel Caulder says, on page 99, "Nevertheless, the diesel-electric approach still has widespread merit because it brings the*boat owner benefits other than efficiency.* I'll explore those benefits in the next issue."* Caulder does seem more down than up concerning diesel-electric but at least he sounds like he's trying to keep an open mind.
I think we're going to be hearing more about diesel-electric in the coming years.* It won't replace conventional systems overnight.....it may never replace conventional systems.* But to disregard it as high-falutin, pie in the sky, exotic, day-dreaming nonsense is totally innappropriate.* I'm glad to read a few more posts admitting that it may be a viable technology.* That saves me from posting some of the really great quotes I dug up.** Quotes from famous people and respected newspapers about past "passing fads" such as automobiles and airplanes.
-- Edited by gns at 19:24, 2008-01-16