Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Telescopic hard sail concept for bulk carrier

Telescopic hard sail concept for bulk carrierPDFPrintE-mail
Monday, 23 August 2010 07:19

A new design for a sailing cargo ship with telescopically reefing hard composite sails could result in a third of the fuel use of a traditional capesize bulk carrier, says the vessel’s designers, Professors Kazuyuki Ouchi and Kiyoshi Uzawa of the University of Tokyo, Japan.

The motor assisted sailing vessel would have nine carbon fibre-reinforced plastic sails 50 metres high and 20 metres wide giving a total sail area of 9,000 square-metres. The researchers confirmed that a hard sail 10mm thick with horizontal ribs and weighing 30 tonnes has enough strength as a main sail for propulsion in wind velocities of around 15 metres per second.

Based on a simulated voyage along an actual Pacific trade route near Hawaii, the sails could result in 64 percent less fuel use and would generate enough forward thrust to drive a 180,000DWT bulk carrier at 14 knots in winds of 13 metres per second from the beam.

Wendy Laursen

http://www.bairdmaritime.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7690:telescopic-hard-sail-concept-for-bulk-carrier-&catid=76:marine-environment&Itemid=212

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