exchemist
Valued Senior Member
I thought this was interesting:https://www.bartechnologies.uk/project/windwings/
Cargill has chartered a bulk carrier from China to Brazil, which uses this technology to cut fuel consumption by up to 30%. From the pictures, it looks like a set of aerofoils mounted on the forward half of the deck. Seems they are folded down in port. I imagine they would also be taken down in the event of storms at sea.
One thing I am curious about is the degree to which they will make the ship heel and slip sideways when the wind direction is oblique to the direction of travel. They won’t want the cargo to shift and make it list.
Here is the BBC article about it: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-66543643
Cargill has chartered a bulk carrier from China to Brazil, which uses this technology to cut fuel consumption by up to 30%. From the pictures, it looks like a set of aerofoils mounted on the forward half of the deck. Seems they are folded down in port. I imagine they would also be taken down in the event of storms at sea.
One thing I am curious about is the degree to which they will make the ship heel and slip sideways when the wind direction is oblique to the direction of travel. They won’t want the cargo to shift and make it list.
Here is the BBC article about it: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-66543643