infinite_loop
Member
I just had a chance to see a Greenline 39 at the Seattle Boat show and found it fascinating. There is a lot to like about it and I was surprised to see how many Greenline boats have been built across the whole product line.
If I understand correctly, when running on diesel, the diesel engine actually turns the electric motor, which is connected to the drive shaft. So the electric motor is now effectively a generator. The up side of this is that you get a massive current for charging, but what is the down side? It seems like you will always be paying a fuel efficiency penalty due to the increased drag on the engine from that resistence. If you can use or store that electricity, then there is effectively no/low running cost, but once you have stored all the power you can, you are still turning the electric motor for as long as you are running your diesel.
Is my understanding accurate?
I'm not sure how to think about this vs just having a big alternator or genset with a traditional diesel (non hybrid) setup. I don't own a boat, so I may simply not have enough experience to know what I don't know.
It looks like Greeline sell diesel-only versions of their boats, so do we know what the fuel cost/difference is to drive the electric motor/generator vs the non-hybrid diesel in the same hull?
I appreciate your insight and experiences. Thanks.
If I understand correctly, when running on diesel, the diesel engine actually turns the electric motor, which is connected to the drive shaft. So the electric motor is now effectively a generator. The up side of this is that you get a massive current for charging, but what is the down side? It seems like you will always be paying a fuel efficiency penalty due to the increased drag on the engine from that resistence. If you can use or store that electricity, then there is effectively no/low running cost, but once you have stored all the power you can, you are still turning the electric motor for as long as you are running your diesel.
Is my understanding accurate?
I'm not sure how to think about this vs just having a big alternator or genset with a traditional diesel (non hybrid) setup. I don't own a boat, so I may simply not have enough experience to know what I don't know.
It looks like Greeline sell diesel-only versions of their boats, so do we know what the fuel cost/difference is to drive the electric motor/generator vs the non-hybrid diesel in the same hull?
I appreciate your insight and experiences. Thanks.