http://www.oceannavitas.com - Ocean Navitas' technology is called The Aegir Dynamo™. The name is derived from the name for the Norse god of the sea 'Ægir' and the definition of a dynamo 'an electrical generator'. The Aegir Dynamo™ functions in a unique fashion by generating electrical current from the motion of the prime mover in one phase via a direct mechanical conversion and the use of a bespoke buoyancy vessel.
@fargonebewdy check out Zeitgeist movement or the Venus project. Ideas like this are our future
nuksucow1983 1 year ago
has anyone here checked out the zeitgeist movement?
nuksucow1983 1 year ago
i have immense respect for anyone throwing their time effort and ingenuity into this exciting frontier of zero emission energy - even the dude from mauritius on youtoob BUT after considering all the storms ships typhoons rust blah blah blah - its obvious to me the CETO technology takes the freaking cake!!! and it also does onshore DESALINATION!!!!!!!!
---- one hard act to follow!! we need to get our shit together to mass produce 'em fast and get the price down.
fargonebewdy 2 years ago
Personaly I believe your system has to be the one of the most efficient currently being investigated. It uses off the shelf generators as against linear generators where most is redundant at any one time. Direct drive to electrical energy - you can't get better than that.
As for doubters and tree huggers, what else is there out there. Only wind and the energy density is far less than waves. Only Brussels keeps that belief alive for the European turbine manufacturers. Hope it does well.
identernet 2 years ago
The type of steel that this device will be constructed of will corrode at a rate of approx 0.1mm per year in sea water. All components that are to be exposed to the elements will be coated with cathodic protection materials to provide a tested life cycle of over 20 years.
To design a device without taking such things into account would have been negligent to say the least.
oceannavitas 3 years ago
This is only a small-scale prototype.
The full-scale model has roughly the same mass and survivability as a standard navigational buoy.
People with far less marine engineering knowledge than are blessed with in modern times have been successfully deploying such devices at sea for over 200 years without too much trouble.
It is also moored using proven techniques pioneered by the off-shore oil and gas industries. Stop worrying!
oceannavitas 3 years ago
how easy, bravo
hugejoint 3 years ago
That's fantastic. Well done!
cant7think7clearly 4 years ago
i think its a great idea, but man its a high maintence one. considering salt water distroys everything. ive had chains thick as my wrist rot to dust in 4 years just by leaving them up near the water, not even on the shore. cant imagine what kind of corrosion can happen to something that moves like that being exposed 24/7.
yourredcomrade717 4 years ago 2
Lol. Working the shaft.
gheatwole 4 years ago 2