john zimmerlee
Junior Member
I need help!
My electric powered personal watercraft prototype was commended by the 2005 International Concept Boat Competition, but it was powered by trolling motors which require too much draft.
It appears that electric power is not sufficient enough to drive jet pumps and they don't work well at low speed anyway.
The craft currently drafts only 5" of water and I would prefer to have propulsion that will work in the same depth.
Paddle wheels make too much noise spalshing above the waterline.
But this is what I'm thinking: Build a catamaran with a tunnel down the centerline. Turn two paddlewheels on their side and embed one in each hull about half way in . . . exposing half of the wheels in the tunnel. The wheels will turn counter-rotating . . . much like a cake batter mixer . . . sucking the water through the tunnel. I think this is the way vane pumps are built.
If the width of the wheels are about the same as the depth of the tunnel, and the top of the tunnel is below the waterline, it should not cavitate and should have propulsion wherever the the boat can draft.
Obviously, I'm missing something. It seems too logical and I can't find where any one is using this, so please tell me where my thinking is flawed.
John Zimmerlee
Marietta GA
www.streamdancer.com
My electric powered personal watercraft prototype was commended by the 2005 International Concept Boat Competition, but it was powered by trolling motors which require too much draft.
It appears that electric power is not sufficient enough to drive jet pumps and they don't work well at low speed anyway.
The craft currently drafts only 5" of water and I would prefer to have propulsion that will work in the same depth.
Paddle wheels make too much noise spalshing above the waterline.
But this is what I'm thinking: Build a catamaran with a tunnel down the centerline. Turn two paddlewheels on their side and embed one in each hull about half way in . . . exposing half of the wheels in the tunnel. The wheels will turn counter-rotating . . . much like a cake batter mixer . . . sucking the water through the tunnel. I think this is the way vane pumps are built.
If the width of the wheels are about the same as the depth of the tunnel, and the top of the tunnel is below the waterline, it should not cavitate and should have propulsion wherever the the boat can draft.
Obviously, I'm missing something. It seems too logical and I can't find where any one is using this, so please tell me where my thinking is flawed.
John Zimmerlee
Marietta GA
www.streamdancer.com