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                |  | Mundoo 3  Solar Electric11  metres x 2.5 metres
 12hp Permanent magnet electric power
 Top Speed 8-9knots
 
 or 10/15hp 4 stroke outboard
 Top Speed 10-12knots
 Solar  Mundoo 3 along the Murray River Cliffs click images for larger views |  A couple of years ago I was  burning the  midnight oil on a huge job for Duck Flat Wooden Boats, but happily (and  with a great sigh of relief) I finally  (December 1, 2005) handed them 22 detail  drawings plus documentation on the building procedures for their Solar  Electric Mundoo III riverboat.
 The boat was featured in Woodenboat magazine  and  they had faced a growing demand for plans, so had been cracking the  whip (in the kindest possible way) in my direction.
 
                
                  | Original  Mundoo 3 |  |                  The original boat's hullshape was based on the existing 4  stroke  outboard powered Mundoo 3, but in a sense, grew organically out of the  collaboration between the Ducks and the owners John and Gabby - with  just about every aspect of the boat changed apart from the main  hullshape.  
 The main hull remained the same shape, but gained a raised  foredeck for  much more volume in the forward cabin, a nacelle beneath the main hull  was added to carry the batteries, motor and prop shaft (other major  changes were - a bow thruster was fitted, the cabin extended aft, the  galley enlarged and much shifting of interior spaces - not one bulkhead  from the  original design remains in the same position).
 
                
                  |  | Mundoo 3 Outboard |  The boat is a great success in every sense - it far exceeded  the  technical expectations of the hybrid electric power with a higher  cruising speed and a higher yield from the solar panels than expected.   On a reasonable summers day the "break even point" where the solar  panel output equals the motor's consumption is at about 4.5 knots. 
                
                  | The electric motor in its nacelle compartment |  |                  The original brief was for the solar power to be heavily  augmented by  hooking up to shore power most evenings of a cruise, but in actual use  has proved to be much more independent of outside power sources than  expected.
 There is a portable generator aboard if things get really  desperate, but it hasn't been used a great deal so far.
 
 As almost every detail of the boat was revised from the  original the  Ducks asked me initially to document the boat during the building  process so they had the information to build further boats.
 
                
                  |  | Solar  Mundoo 3 from the Stbd quarter |  Then when the founder of Duck Flat, Robert Ayliffe,   got  the opportunity to submit a major article on the solar version for  "Woodenboat" magazine it  quickly became clear that there was a large demand for plans.
 Enter Storer (er, me) and his trusty* computer to turn the  documentation of the  hull into a full plan that a first time builder could follow as well as  providing preliminary drawings of all the variants.
 
                *(or not  so trusty - as it turned  out - it died halfway through the building process, but no data was  lost!).  A note on computers - I do all my design on a three  year  old laptop - when the old one died I was able to pick up another for  about $320.  Probably little more than getting a tech person  to  look at repairing a newer model. It really goes to show how the  hardware has sped ahead of the software.  In other words - if  you  have great design ideas but someone tells you that you need a squillion  dollar computer and squillions of dollars of software - ignore them and  get stuck into it.  It's all about the ideas - the purpose of  the  computer is simply to transform them for distribution.)
 It  is some time since I have done a plan of this complexity, so I had  forgotten how the complexity somewhat overwhelms one; the effort of  holding the interrelationships of dozens of parts in my mind's eye is  rather intense - eg, just how the parts attaching to one bulkhead  relate to the adjacent bulkheads, or when finding that some crucial  part  like the cabinside is wider than normal plywood dimensions and then  having to go through and change just about every drawing. 
                
                  | Mundoo 3 Solar Electric |  |                  The advantage of designing on computer is considerable,  allowing a huge  amount of extra detail to be incorporated in the plans.   Comparing  the original Mundoo drawings (developed the old way - on paper) with  this new batch is like chalk and cheese - it makes it infinitely easier  (OK I am exaggerating ... much easier!) for a builder to make an  accurate boat with huge labour savings as the builder can see EXACTLY  where that next bit of wood goes.  It is all left a bit up to  the  skill and imagination of the builder with conventional drawings.
 Such is life.
 Anyway . . . a truly great boat - I had a good look on the  net at the time and I think this was the most fully developed electric boat  plan available.  It is a real boat for real use (and IS being  used  as I speak (write) cruising the Murray River and its extensive  backwaters) and must be one of the largest commercially available solar  boats (or plans) available.
 
                
                  |  | The  smaller and simpler Mundoo 2 |  It was great to be involved!  Thanks Duck  Flat!  Thanks John and Gabby!
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