Topic: Futuristic Boat Made for Multitasking  (Read 952 times)

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Offline The Postman

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Futuristic Boat Made for Multitasking
« on: September 07, 2007, 04:31:50 pm »
Futuristic Boat Made for Multitasking
Richard Pyle, Associated Press
 
Sept. 7, 2007 — Pity the fisherman or sailor who staggers on deck in the morning and through bleary eyes sees a 100-foot-long water strider coming at him, buzzing ominously.

No cause for alarm, however. It's just Proteus, a so-called Wave Adaptive Modular Vessel designed for everything from military uses to biological studies, ocean exploration and sea rescue.

Daniel Basta, director of the National Marine Sanctuaries for the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, said the lightweight, low cost and modular craft is well suited to scientific and environmental purposes. The spindly catamaran can travel 5,000 miles — farther than across the Atlantic — on one 2,000-gallon load of diesel fuel.
"Proteus will be able to launch and recover automatic vehicles, do remote vehicle operations, it will be tested for standard dive support operations, putting instruments on the bottom, collecting data — all the things that we currently do in one form or another, but most likely more cheaply, effectively and probably better," Basta said.

Proteus was making its first appearance in New York, the fourth leg of a tour that began in San Francisco in January and will end in Washington, D.C.

It tooled around the harbor off lower Manhattan, a seagoing traffic-stopper that looked like an escaped prop from "War of the Worlds." Although the U.S. Coast Guard had been alerted in advance to the strange craft's presence, it dispatched a small patrol craft to check it out.

Ugo Conti, an Italian-born engineer and oceanographer who designed Proteus, was aboard a chartered harbor cruise boat during his creation's star turn on Thursday.

He and his wife, Isabella, are the co-founders of Marine Advanced Research, Inc., a Silicon Valley-based firm that built the Proteus for about $1.5 million, Isabella Conti said.

The craft rides on metal and fabric pontoons that have hinges and shock absorbers to flex with the motion of the waves, which helps it to skim over the water at a maximum speed of 30 knots (34.5 mph).
Described as 100 feet long and 50 feet wide, the Proteus is no luxury craft. Its crew cabin, suspended like a gondola from its four-legged superstructure, is appropriately spartan for a boat named for a Greek sea god who in mythology was able to change into different forms.

In keeping with that versatility, Proteus does have pleasure-boat potential. It can be fitted with different types of detachable cabins that can accommodate anything from a honeymooning couple to 12 passengers.





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