I am working on a new ballast system right now that is a departure from my Sheerline type sealed ballast tank and impeller pump set up. Would appreciate others thoughts. I am trying a new system as whilst the Sheerline system works very well, I love the idea of always trying something new.
In providing comments, please limit these to what I am proposing, I am well aware of how gas systems work, how Engel systems work, how INTOPPS works, how hybrid systems such as that Skip uses works, and how the adjustable ballast system Matt Thor is testing out works.
I am trying to stick with a 6 volt system, utlise a sealed lead acid battery. I am fully aware of all the arguements surrounding the use metal hydrides.
So here goes, imagine a ballast system that works along the following principles -
Diving -a reversible 6 volt geared pump pumps water into a ballast tank. The tank has a non return valve that lets air out of the tank. When fully filled the ballast tank takes the sub to periscope depth or just above it. Okay so far so good - this has been done extensively before.
The ballast tank - also has a snorkel that vents the tank. The snorkel is linked to a float valve that mechanically closes when the sub is completely submerged and opens the moment the sub is at a depth where the sail has just broken the surface. The snorkel is on a separate line to the non return valve mentioned above.
Surfacing - when fully dived at depth beyond the reach of the snorkel, the snorkel vent remains closed. To surface the 6 v geared pump runs in reverse and starts pumping out water. In doing so a vacuum forms in the ballast tank as its not vented, but the geared pump can overcome this. When the ballast tank has only pumped out 30% of the water, the boat is or should be close to decks awash, and the moment the sail breaks the surface the snorkel valve opens automatically, the vacuum is then released and the pump then empties the full contents of the tank.
A nice hypothesis that will depend on a geared pump overcoming a vacuum, and a float valve overcoming the same vacuum, and a ballast tank the won't implode under vacuum pressure. I would appreciate your thoughts. No doubt someone has thought of this before.
In providing comments, please limit these to what I am proposing, I am well aware of how gas systems work, how Engel systems work, how INTOPPS works, how hybrid systems such as that Skip uses works, and how the adjustable ballast system Matt Thor is testing out works.
I am trying to stick with a 6 volt system, utlise a sealed lead acid battery. I am fully aware of all the arguements surrounding the use metal hydrides.
So here goes, imagine a ballast system that works along the following principles -
Diving -a reversible 6 volt geared pump pumps water into a ballast tank. The tank has a non return valve that lets air out of the tank. When fully filled the ballast tank takes the sub to periscope depth or just above it. Okay so far so good - this has been done extensively before.
The ballast tank - also has a snorkel that vents the tank. The snorkel is linked to a float valve that mechanically closes when the sub is completely submerged and opens the moment the sub is at a depth where the sail has just broken the surface. The snorkel is on a separate line to the non return valve mentioned above.
Surfacing - when fully dived at depth beyond the reach of the snorkel, the snorkel vent remains closed. To surface the 6 v geared pump runs in reverse and starts pumping out water. In doing so a vacuum forms in the ballast tank as its not vented, but the geared pump can overcome this. When the ballast tank has only pumped out 30% of the water, the boat is or should be close to decks awash, and the moment the sail breaks the surface the snorkel valve opens automatically, the vacuum is then released and the pump then empties the full contents of the tank.
A nice hypothesis that will depend on a geared pump overcoming a vacuum, and a float valve overcoming the same vacuum, and a ballast tank the won't implode under vacuum pressure. I would appreciate your thoughts. No doubt someone has thought of this before.

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