Marine

Vision Marine kicks electric outboard tech amidships

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Vision says it adapted 95% of the 180E outboard's components to create its all-new electric inboard
Vision Marine Technologies
Vision says it adapted 95% of the 180E outboard's components to create its all-new electric inboard
Vision Marine Technologies
Vision's scalable NMC battery is the beating heart of its E-Motion all-electric powertrains
Vision Marine Technologies
Vision hard at work on an electric motor
Vision Marine Technologies
Vision Marine revealed the new 180e inboard at this week's IBEX boat show
Vision Marine Technologies
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The Quebecois company behind the one-time fastest electric motor technology on water, Vision Marine Technologies shows no signs of slowing down. This year, the company has been hard at work on securing patents for a number of e-drive technologies and components, as well as launching a virtually indestructible boat hull. Now it's pushing its famed outboard technology toward the bow with the E-Motion 180e inboard system, a more integrated electric marine drive that's every bit as powerful as its outboard.

While Vision Marine Technologies has been laser-focused on all-electric outboards for the past several years, that wasn't always the case. The company changed its name in 2020 but was originally the Canadian Electric Boat Company (CEBC), an old hand in the modern e-boat market that built vessels relying on third-party electric and ICE propulsion systems. One of its well-known models, the Bruce22 was built in a number of configurations, including an inboard layout with a shaft drive that could be powered by either a gas or electric motor.

Long story short, Vision was already plenty familiar with inboard systems before it began adapting the 180E outboard to an inboard layout. It used that expertise in reconfiguring 95% of the outboard's components into an integrated drive unit. And as is obvious from the name, the 180e inboard delivers the same continuous 180 horsepower that Vision once leveraged to tag the 180E the most powerful electric outboard in the world (alas, it no longer is).

Vision Marine revealed the new 180e inboard at this week's IBEX boat show
Vision Marine Technologies

With the 180e inboard, Vision looks to offer serious all-electric power and performance to a wider range of boats. More specifically, it hopes to increase the use of electric propulsion across the spectrum of ski boats, sailboats, recreational boats, catamarans, wakeboard boats, tugboats and cruisers.

"The E-Motion 180e Inboard leverages the expertise we've built since 2015, starting with our work on inboard electric propulsion in the Bruce22 model," said Alexandre Mongeon, Vision Marine Technologies CEO. "The solid foundation of our E-Motion outboard system, developed from this inboard experience, ensures the reliability and efficiency of our new inboard offering."

Like the outboard, the 180e inboard will benefit from Vision's IP67 marine-grade High Voltage (HV) Battery System. Buyers can configure the scalable battery setup with one, two or three packs for between 43- and 129-kWh of total capacity. Builders looking for more range can also add a generator to create a range-extended hybrid setup. Each battery pack is designed to operate independently, so should one pack in a multi-pack system fail, the other(s) can get the boat safely back to shore.

Vision's scalable NMC battery is the beating heart of its E-Motion all-electric powertrains
Vision Marine Technologies

Unsatisfied with existing market battery solutions, Vision developed the nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) HV battery system to exceed automotive standards. The company intends to offer it as a standalone solution as well as a critical component of its E-Motion 180 inboard and outboard systems.

Vision debuted the 180e inboard system this week at the IBEX international boat show in Tampa, Florida. The firm says that it's already performed successful sea trials with the 180e mounted to an inboard vessel from a prominent European boat brand, so we suspect it will only be a matter of time before it starts arriving on production boats.

Source: Vision Marine Technologies

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5 comments
CAVUMark
I would like to know what happened to the stock price?
Trylon
They need to adopt Sharrow propellers as standard equipment.
Smokey_Bear
Trylon - I agree. When it comes to electric, efficiency is key since modern batteries are pretty meh.
christopher
@Trylon: Sharrow is fake; even when they pick the worst possible existing prop to compare against, they barely better it, and only at some speed ranges. Look at their own test data - they might not be truthful in their claims, but at least they had the guts to release the real test data disproving themselves.
Fun fact: it's cheaper to order a bespoke prop in Titanium from a 3D CNC shop than buy their off-the-shell snake-oil...
Knut
The future is batteries, and since we use the boat 1-3 days per week, there is plenty of time to charge. But efficiency is imperative, and this design has one gear too much. Then the propeller design can be improved. But, the batteries are not that bad, it is 600Kg for 100KWH, so a couple of tonnes is needed. But a motor is 600Kg, a 1000l fuel is 800kg, 180KW - 250Hp and 2 drives, 360KW is needed just for full throttle. At 35 knots you get to sea in an hour, nobody does 40 knots for hours, its a distance a sailing yatch need 15 hours to cover. The yatch has 9 tonnes in the keel, that is 1,5MWh of bettery capacity. More important is it that the battery does not have to be in the back, but can be where they "meet the sea" - in front, giving a much smoother ride in the waves. The boat lies mostly in the port, and 10KW solar panels gives 50KWH per day, 250 from Money to Friday. That is a fair distance during the weekend with these motors.