I'm no engineer, but...strad wrote:You guys are the engineers and the ones that seem to think you have all the answers, so come up with something that doesn't include breathing carcinogenic fumes as a by-product. Hell take it a step further, pick up the challenge to find something better than any internal combustion engine.
Considering...
Makes one think, yes? I think there are a couple of companies that are sell retrofit parasails for cargo ships that supposedly allow them to cut fuel use by 30% or so.A combination of the recession and growing awareness in the shipping industry about climate change emissions encouraged many ship owners to adopt "slow steaming" to save fuel two years ago. This lowered speeds from the standard 25 knots to 20 knots, but many major companies have now taken this a stage further by adopting "super-slow steaming" at speeds of 12 knots (about 14mph).
Travel times between the US and China, or between Australia and Europe, are now comparable to those of the great age of sail in the 19th century. American clippers reached 14 to 17 knots in the 1850s, with the fastest recording speeds of 22 knots or more.