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Ethereal Is Quite the Ketch PDF Print E-mail
Written by Diane M. Byrne   
Thursday, 02 July 2009 04:25

Ethereal running by Franco Pace

Leave it to the former head of Sun Microsystems to commission a yacht where the lighting and other systems are operated through touchpad screens much like that of the iPhone.

This is Ethereal, the 58-meter (190-foot) ketch commissioned by Bill and Shannon Joy from Royal Huisman, which recently completed her maiden voyage from Holland to the Canary Islands and back. While touchpad controls are nothing new, some of the other technologies employed onboard certainly make her, in Bill’s words, “a floating lab.” The Joys’ project-management team and the yard developed solutions for energy efficiency and flexible energy management to reduce operational costs as well as the yacht’s environmental impact. Some of these solutions are far more complex than any measures taken to date on a megayacht, either power or sail.

One example: the hybrid propulsion system. Two Caterpillar C18s are paired with 300-kW Combimac electric motors/generators. A veritable brochure could be written about how the system works, but in a nutshell, it’s unlike a typical diesel-electric system. The drive train doesn’t use the electric motors as the principal method of turning the drive shaft. Instead, the motors can serve as gensets to recharge a litium-ion phosphate battery bank. Alternately, they can serve as electric motors to turn the propellers, by drawing power from the traditional gensets or batteries.

Speaking of the gensets, the setup onboard Ethereal is yet another example of energy efficiency and management. While every yacht is equipped with units to run the “hotel load” (lighting, air conditioning, even the washing machines), Ethereal doesn’t necessarily need to use hers. Instead, she can tap into the lithium-ion phosphate batteries just mentioned, which are said to have double the storage capacity of conventional gel batteries. This means, among other things, that if the Joys or their guests are pulling up alongside the yacht in the tender or go for a dip off the side, they won’t inhale exhaust gases. In addition, for those times when the power need is high, only one of the two 90-kW gensets usually has to operate, in partnership with the battery bank. That kilowatt level is nearly half of what a yacht this size would typically feature. It’s also worth noting that the electrical system was designed to permit replacing one of the gensets with a fuel cell in the future, should the Joys so decide.

Ethereal deck by Franco Pace

There’s a good deal of automation onboard Ethereal, from the way the mainsail hoists via wireless remote – giving crewmembers better visuals in the process – to the push-button, hydraulically operated crow’s nest. There’s even a “station-keeping mode,” much like dynamic positioning, allowing the yacht to remain on point through synchronized control of her thrusters, engines, and rudder.

The application of technology extends to the interior, too. Royal Huisman “cocooned” the accommodations in insulation to protect against heat from systems and sea temperature and therefore reduce air-conditioning needs. The materials used and the way they were applied resulted from research into other industries, such as refrigerated transport. Even the windows help reduce heat transfer, as their solar reflectivity is controllable.

You could say that the cocoon concept applies to the layout, too, as a calming, traditional ambiance designed by Pieter Beldsnijder envelops the Joys and their guests. Rooms flow from one to the other, and a handful of intimate spaces like a study permit privacy. “We prefer Zen to ornate,” explains Bill Joy. Even though “you don’t have to put any art on these boats, the boat itself is the art,” he says, he and Shannon are quite pleased with the woodwork: “When you go to Royal Huisman, you would be foolish not to let them express all their skill.”

Rather than describe the interior, I’ll let the photos do the talking. Here’s a closer look at Ethereal.

photos: Franco Pace

 

 

Last Updated on Monday, 14 September 2009 12:19
 
Comments (3)
Green Initiative
3 Wednesday, 07 October 2009 15:48
Tory
Some may think it odd that anyone with enough money to construct such a megayacht would have any interest in saving resources through the use of Green technology. But it is just this type of vessel, with the funding and owner interest to build, install, and test Green systems that will eventually allow less opulent vessels to adopt energy saving system in the future. The Joys should be praised for their Green initiative. It's definitely inline with the spirt of sailing, which harnesses one of nature's greatest energy sources, the wind.
radar instruments
2 Thursday, 23 July 2009 11:27
Diane, administrator
The domes you're referring to are housing satellite communications instruments; radars are horizontal, bar-like devices. It may be hard to see in the photo, but if you look closely, you can see a radar below the two domes, centered between them.

Michael Koppstein, the U.S. representative for Royal Huisman, also provides the following information:

"Radar installation complies with the strict certification requirements of Lloyds / MCA. Beyond that, the radar meets the installation requirements of the manufacturer in order to perform as specified.

Due to the pitching and rolling moment, the higher the radar on a sailing yacht mast, the greater the tendency for disturbance and interference. Also the choice of height is a blend between performance and aesthetics. And the higher the weight, the more adverse effect to the righting moment."

Hope that helps.
Ethereals' radar.
1 Wednesday, 22 July 2009 23:52
Barry Nunnally
Not that I am in this league, but most I have spoken with that are have pointed out that the
radar domes are far too low to know the weather conditions beyond several miles; sail over the horizon and you are on your own...

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