“This isn’t just an existing design, where we dropped a couple of electric motors in. The boat has been designed, ground up, for electric propulsion,” Scott Bryant, Hinckley’s Director of New Product Development, said of the Dasher.
“There are several lakes where you’re not allowed to have a petrol-based platform,” Bryant explained about the continent across the Atlantic. “You can row your boat, or sail your boat, or you have electric propulsion. In the U.S. it’s a little bit less prominent, but we believe that’s going to be coming sooner than later.”
Hinckley typically builds its vessels using dense, varnished teak, but this time replaced it with the company’s trademarked Artisanal Teak – a molded composite structure hand-painted with wood grain which looks almost exactly like the real thing. This material is much lighter, which helps the Dasher achieve its title of lightest Hinckley boat, but it’s not the only factor. Hinckley’s Center Console 29 runabout has similar dimensions to the 6,500 lb Dasher, but it weighs 1,500 lbs more. Key to this weight reduction is the company’s “liberal use of carbon fiber” in the vessel’s stringers and carbon-epoxy hull, and its 3D printed metal components.
The Dasher is built, like all other Hinckley yachts, using the Seeman Composite Resin Infusion Molding Process (SCRIMP), except that this vessel also contains 3D printed titanium hardware components. Additive manufacturing can not only help lower the production cost and time it normally takes to hand craft a boat, but also the weight of the boat itself. Precise, complex geometries offering high strength and low weight are hallmarks of what additive manufacturing makes possible, setting it apart from traditional, subtractive production techniques and providing qualities of great value to the maritime industry.
“Hinckley’s Dasher is pushing the boatbuilding envelope with an intriguing concept that blends retro-styling, modern technology, and perhaps a look into the future of yachting,” Yachting Magazine’s Patrick Sciacca wrote. “It’s a vessel that may be viewed in digital media terms as an influencer. And that can only be a good thing.”
The first test rides of the Dasher prototype won’t be until later this month, but reservations for the final model are currently being accepted, with delivery slated for next summer; the Hinckley Dasher will cost over half a million dollars, like other Hinckley vessels that size, with no price premium. By early 2018, Bryant believes that the Dasher will “exceed its current range.”
“When we started this project [a little more than two years ago], our test boat actually used a totally different battery, similar in weight to the existing i3 batteries that we have in there now. But it had about about 30 percent less power density, which translated to 30 percent less range. So, really, we are riding a development wave in ways that’s pretty significant right now in the marketplace,” he explained.
“I don’t believe that Dasher will be our only electric-propulsion product. I think what we’re looking to do is to incorporate a bunch of the features that we’re introducing on Dasher into our other products. There’s so much going on in the automotive space, and just in the energy-storage space right now, that to not be a part of it is just silly.”
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