Marine

Swordfish tender will be able to travel above or below the waves

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The pod at the center of the Swordfish can be lowered below the waves by hydraulic arms for underwater travel
Platypus/L2 Concepts
The Swordfish is scheduled to go into production in early 2021
Platypus/L2 Concepts
At the heart of the Swordfish is a pod for up to eight occupants, which can be opened up to enjoy the sea air and closed for underwater travel
Platypus/L2 Concepts
The design is meant to bring a 1970s Citroen coupe or futuristic stealth aircraft to mind
Platypus/L2 Concepts
The pod at the center of the Swordfish can be lowered below the waves by hydraulic arms for underwater travel
Platypus/L2 Concepts
The Swordfish will be available in pure electric and hybrid configurations, though travel underwater will always be electric
Platypus/L2 Concepts
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More than 10 years ago, François-Alexandre Bertrand came up with a concept for a novel above/below watercraft that he naturally named the Platypus. The first Blue Ocean edition was sold last year and now his company has launched a new version, the Platypus Swordfish.

The Swordfish is a 40-ft (12.1-m) recreational tender with the unique ability to let passengers travel above or below the water. Unlike the original Platypus design that we got to try out in St Tropez in 2016, the pod that's submerged beneath the waves by hydraulic arms is enclosed – so the pilot and up to seven passengers can sit back and enjoy the marine environment in comfort, without even getting wet.

Occupants will have air pumped into the pod so they won't have to wear face masks, the see-through plexiglass cockpit can be opened up on sunny days, and is closed off for shelter up top and, obviously, below-surface travel.

The Swordfish is scheduled to go into production in early 2021
Platypus/L2 Concepts

The Swordfish will be available in pure electric or hybrid flavors. The former is equipped with two 500-kW motors and 400-Wh batteries, and offers a top speed of around 40 knots, a cruising speed of 18 knots and a range at a steady 7 knots of 115 nautical miles per charge.

The hybrid version sports two inboard V8 petrol engines producing 900 horsepower each and two 80-kW electric motors. This model offers a top speed of 50 knots, a much longer range than the pure electric but benefits from quiet underwater navigation thanks to the craft's electric motors.

The trimaran architecture is said to be unusual for a craft of this size, with the sandwich-structure hulls having a wooden core. A smooth trip is promised, with an "almost complete lack of roll and an exceptional wave breaker capacity."

The watercraft has been designed by L2 Concepts for a look that's meant to bring to mind a 1970s Citroen SM coupe or stealth aircraft, depending on the viewing angle. The Factory Unit shipyard, which is a subsidiary of L2, will be responsible for building the Swordfish.

At the heart of the Swordfish is a pod for up to eight occupants, which can be opened up to enjoy the sea air and closed for underwater travel
Platypus/L2 Concepts

And that's about all we can tell you at this stage. Whether there will be a surface camera system installed to aid underwater navigation, what system will be employed to provide air to occupants, details on safety systems and so on are all unknowns. We'll bring you more as the project develops.

The Platypus/L2 partnership expects production to start in early 2021, in time for a world premiere at next year's Monaco Yacht Show. Expressions of interest have already been shown from folks in the US and the Gulf.

Source: Platypus

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1 comment
BlueOak
Cool stuff, James Bond-like. That removable plexiglass top must require some seriously smart seal-engineering.