So i thought this fits here, he calls the boat Helios 11 and builds it with very little experience. He docunents the adventure quite well and shares what he learns, and also shares all the plans for the boat for free.
So i thought this fits here, he calls the boat Helios 11 and builds it with very little experience. He docunents the adventure quite well and shares what he learns, and also shares all the plans for the boat for free.
I think the best option is to take two old sailboats (already efficient hulls) and connect them together into a large catamaran with a platform in between them. This greatly increases the possible surface area for solar panels, with a minimum of water resistance added. It allows you to add a large section of solar panels in the middle without anything adding drag in the water in that section.
Catemaran hulls are specifically designed as such, you can’t use normal hulls.
You do gain the extra room for solar, but equally you also make the boat wider, making it less flacrical in confined waterways like canals and rivers.
In high latitudes having a vertical solar sail might actually work quite well to well as both a solar array and a wind sail. But that will require significant engineering design time to get right.
A single-hull can be made self-righting, in case it flips in bad weather. A 35 foot catamaran? You’re not getting that back up-right with a crew of one - you basically hope and pray a bigger boat comes along at that point.
Don’t worry, he said up front it is “rated for cross-atlantic” so it’s all good.
He does end up adding ballast later. Added batteries, living stuff and about 150KG of rocks.
His takeaway was that it didn’t really affect cruising speed and that he should have made a sturdier, heavier bottom hull.
Edit: he’s in the process of turning it into a trimaran at the moment also for stability.
Except that the risk of a 35 foot catamaran flipping over is very significantly lower in the first place.
Depends where you sail, but I’ve made some edits to that comment since anyways.
Uhm. This is not done by welding a bit or using big bolts. If done wrong, your “catamaran” will not survive a single wave, let alone the conditions of the open sea. Don’t forget how much force water has.
So if you do this on a lake, you’ll be fine, but not in open waters.
LOL! That’s the best option? Why wouldn’t you just start with a catamaran?
If you ever built a thing like that please give me the link to your YouTube, that would be funny as hell to watch.
If done right, this could be more stable as well