Absolutely agree, although not based on any professional involvement.Joeboy wrote: ↑Sat Aug 10, 2024 9:20 pm Hell of a kicking they seem to take. Don't get me wrong, I hope they succeed but I don't know anything metal that does well in the sea without regular maintenance or replacement and that in itself is massively expensive to carry out with multi month system shutdown if it goes wrong at the wrong point in the year.
The dock sea surface interface point between air & water can be absolutely brutal.
If I ever backed something sea energy based, it would have to be subsurface, midwater and current depending not wave.
Haven't we also seen something proposed like a hollow vertical shaft with a turbine in the top of it pressurised by waves at the bottom? I think it was bi-directional, but now I'm wondering whether it would be better to have the fan run in just one direction and have the chimney pressurised by the waves, or have non-return valves so that the fan free-wheels as the waves suck back down... This seemed like a better way of using surface waves but with the moving parts put somewhere a bit safer!