[Assam] A wave of the future?

Ram Sarangapani assamrs at gmail.com
Wed Mar 12 21:48:03 CST 2008


This is just fantastic. Is this feasible thoug?



* (From the New York Times)*




*March 11, 2008 **Long Ocean Voyage Set for Vessel That Runs on Wave Power *

*By JOHN GEOGHEGAN*

On Sunday, a boat will sail from Honolulu on a planned voyage of 3,780
nautical miles, powered just by the wave action of the sea.

The craft, the Suntory Mermaid II, is promoted as the first oceangoing,
wave-powered boat. If it completes its maiden voyage from the Hawaii Yacht
Club to the Kii Channel off the east coast of Japan, it will show that an
environmentally friendly wave-powered boat not only works in the laboratory,
but can also navigate in real-world conditions.

And the journey would set a record for the longest trip by a wave-powered
vessel.

Dr. Yutaka Terao of the department of naval architecture and ocean
engineering at the Tokai University School of Marine Science and Technology
is responsible for engineering the propulsion system for the Mermaid.

"Fossil fuel will run out one day," Dr. Terao said. "So I have studied wave
propulsion as a promising way to save energy."

He has been doing so for more than 20 years.

The Mermaid propulsion mechanism is mounted under the bow and not the stern,
and it is designed to pull the boat, rather than push it forward, regardless
of weather, wave height or direction.

The mechanism consists of two side-by-side horizontal fins that move up and
down with the motion of the waves to create a dolphinlike tail kick that
propels the boat.

"A wave-powered boat can transform wave energy into a propulsive power that
moves the craft forward," Dr. Terao said.

He conducted his first large-scale test of a "wave devouring boat" in
partnership with Dr. Hiroshi Isshiki of the Hitachi Zosen Corporation in
1988.

The test was on Suruga Bay, near Mount Fuji, and used a single 12 1/2 -foot
fin mounted on the bow of the Tokai University teaching vessel. The test was
considered a success when three-foot waves propelled the 20-ton boat at 2
knots.

The test did not bring interest from shipbuilders. To improve efficiency,
Dr. Terao arrived at the two-fin configuration.

According to an English patent application, wave-powered boats have been in
development since at least 1895. In 1935, Popular Science reported that an
18-inch model of a wave-powered boat traveled five miles per hour in a test
off Long Beach, Calif.

Until now, tests of wave-powered boats have been small scale or in simulated
conditions. This is the first time a three-ton wave-powered boat has been
tested over thousands of miles.

"I am not aware of any attempts by a wave-powered boat over such a
distance," said R. W. Yeung, a professor of naval architecture and ocean
engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. "They could be
successful, but it's a risky undertaking. It depends a lot on weather
conditions."

The Guinness Book of World Records lists the captain of the Mermaid,
Ken-ichi Horie, 69, as holding two records for piloting environmentally
sensitive boats. In 1993, Captain Horie set a 4,660-nautical-mile record in
a human-powered pedal boat. The record, in 1996, was for the fastest Pacific
crossing in a solar-powered boat, 148 days.

Captain Horie has run successful sea trials of the Mermaid. Progress of the
coming voyage can be tracked at
www.suntory-mermaid2.com.<http://www.suntory-mermaid2.com/>

Mr. Horie will have access to a sail and a motor if the wave-powered
mechanism fails. In case of an emergency, the motor can also be used to
recharge the batteries on the boat.

The Mermaid may set a distance record, but it will not break any speed
records. Traveling at an average three knots per hour, the trip from Hawaii
to Japan should take two and a half months, meaning the Mermaid is not
expected to arrive at its destination before the end of May.


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