The Pelarimis is, to my knowledge, one of the only commercial applications in the world. I can't help thinking that there is a 'killer' solution though. Solid state with fewer parts and minimal maintenance. A sealed sphere with a magnetic gyroscope in, for example.
@tonycatman The rams aren't exposed to the sea, the yellow ones you see are part of a test rig. In the machine itself the rams are protected by rubber bellows that look like tyres.
Most wave devices only take a small fraction of the power of the wave front.
The fact that you can tow it back to harbour is a plus point, I think. A permanently installed device has to be fixed on site.
I don't work for these guys but I do think the Pelamis is by far the best wave energy converter.
@jacklav1
The Pelarimis is, to my knowledge, one of the only commercial applications in the world. I can't help thinking that there is a 'killer' solution though. Solid state with fewer parts and minimal maintenance. A sealed sphere with a magnetic gyroscope in, for example.
Thanks for continuing the debate.
tonycatman 1 year ago
@tonycatman The rams aren't exposed to the sea, the yellow ones you see are part of a test rig. In the machine itself the rams are protected by rubber bellows that look like tyres.
Most wave devices only take a small fraction of the power of the wave front.
The fact that you can tow it back to harbour is a plus point, I think. A permanently installed device has to be fixed on site.
I don't work for these guys but I do think the Pelamis is by far the best wave energy converter.
jacklav1 1 year ago
How does this keep it's angle in relation to the waves?
mrjonhicks 1 year ago
Here are the problems :
- The fact that the waves continue after hitting the device show that only a tiny fraction of the wave's power must be getting extracted.
- The hydraulic rams will wear out pretty quickly - they are just too vulnerable.
- Maintenance is an issue. Each snake is constantly moving unless you tow it back to shore.
tonycatman 1 year ago
アイデアが良い。
matuokaisenokamikaze 3 years ago
thats my point the snakes name means seamouscle
zigsauer 4 years ago
They took their name from a sea snake named pelamis.
soylentgreenb 4 years ago
Pelamis comes from Greek Pelagos for sea and Mionas for muscle
Pelagos - Pela
Mionas - mis
pelamis means Seamuscle
AMAZING
zigsauer 4 years ago