StakShax — FreshWater

🌊 FreshWater Building Plans

12 plans with complete SVG diagrams and instructions

🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran Frame

🌊 FreshWater Hull & Flotation Advanced ⏱ 40 hours 👷 4 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Industrial

Build the twin pontoon catamaran hull from 1,920 sealed PET bottles in hex-pack formation with aluminium cross-beams and marine plywood deck.

📐 Overview Diagram

🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran — Overview 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack Marine Plywood Deck — 4.0m × 2.4m Solar Canopy Roof 7.6m overall length 1,920 bottles total · Buoyancy: 3,763 kg · Safety factor: 3.1× UV-resistant mesh netting · Marine sealant · Aluminium cross-beams FreshWater Desalination Platform — Built from recycled plastic

🔍 Exploded View

🔍 Hull Cross-Section waterline Hex-pack PET UV mesh netting Hex-pack PET Aluminium cross-beam Marine plywood deck 2.4m beam width Each pontoon: 960 bottles · 480 kg buoyancy · Marine sealed Cross-section at mid-hull, looking forward

📖 Description

The hull is a twin-pontoon catamaran design. Each pontoon is a 7.6m tube of 960 hex-packed 2L PET bottles sealed with marine sealant and wrapped in UV-resistant mesh netting. Cross-beams connect the pontoons, supporting a marine plywood deck. Total buoyancy ~3,763 kg with a 3.1x safety factor.

Each pontoon is built in 8 sections of 120 bottles each. Bottles are arranged in a hexagonal close-pack pattern (like a honeycomb cross-section) — this maximizes density and structural strength. Each bottle is cap-sealed, then the entire section is wrapped in UV-resistant mesh netting and coated with marine sealant at every bottle-to-bottle contact point. The result is a rigid, waterproof tube that floats even if individual bottles are punctured — the hex-pack traps air in the interstitial spaces.

Aluminium cross-beams (salvaged from old bed frames, shelving, or purchased angle stock) bolt through the netting at 4 points per pontoon, connecting the two pontoons at a fixed 2.4m beam width. Marine plywood deck panels (12mm) sit on the cross-beams and are through-bolted with marine-grade stainless fasteners.

The platform deck supports all other subsystems: wave engines, wind turbines, solar panels, AirGen engines, hydroponics towers, desalination unit, and the Fuze solar thermal generator.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: The FreshWater hull diverts 1,920 PET bottles from waste streams per platform. Material cost (excluding salvaged items) is approximately $180 for sealant, netting, and fasteners. The platform produces 840 litres of fresh water per day and 2.6 kg of food — serving 80-100 people's daily water needs. This is a floating, self-powered water treatment plant built from garbage.

💡 Ideology

1,920 bottles. That is what one FreshWater platform eats. Bottles that would otherwise spend 450 years decomposing in a landfill or floating in an ocean gyre become the hull of a vessel that produces clean drinking water, grows food, and generates electricity.

The catamaran design is ancient — Polynesian sailors crossed the Pacific on twin hulls. We are doing the same thing with the same physics, but our hulls are made from the waste of industrial civilization. There is poetry in that: the ocean choked by plastic bottles is now cleaned by a boat made of plastic bottles.

Every community near water — coastal, riverine, lakeside — can build a FreshWater platform. The bottles are already there, washing up on every shore. The knowledge is free. The result is clean water for people who have none.

🔧 Methodology

The hull build is the largest single construction effort in the StakShax system. Plan for 4+ builders over multiple days.

PHASE 1 — BOTTLE COLLECTION: Gather 2,000+ clean, dry 2L PET bottles with caps (overage for defects). Inspect each — discard any with cracks, deep scratches, or deformed caps. Label rejected bottles for other uses.

PHASE 2 — HEX-PACK SECTIONS: Build 16 sections (8 per pontoon, 120 bottles each). Arrange bottles in hex-pack formation on a flat surface. Apply marine sealant at every contact point. Wrap each section tightly in UV-resistant mesh netting. Let sealant cure 24 hours per section.

PHASE 3 — PONTOON ASSEMBLY: Join 8 sections end-to-end for each pontoon. Wrap the entire 7.6m pontoon in a continuous outer layer of mesh netting. Seal all section joints with additional marine sealant.

PHASE 4 — CROSS-BEAMS: Cut aluminium angle stock to 2.4m lengths (4 beams). Bolt through the netting at evenly spaced points along the pontoons. Use large fender washers to distribute load across multiple bottles.

PHASE 5 — DECK: Cut marine plywood to fit the cross-beam frame. Through-bolt with stainless fasteners. Seal all cut edges and bolt holes with marine sealant. Sand non-slip texture into the deck surface.

PHASE 6 — FLOAT TEST: Launch the bare hull (no subsystems) in calm water. Load to 50% of rated capacity and check: waterline height, level trim, no leaks, stable in light chop. Fix any issues before proceeding.

🔗 Prerequisites

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 2L PET bottles with caps 1920 bottles Clean, dry, inspected — hex-pack pontoon fill Collect 2000+ for defect allowance Free / Recycled
2 Marine sealant 12 tubes (300ml) Seal bottle contact points and all joints Polyurethane marine sealant — Sikaflex or equivalent $84.00
3 UV-resistant mesh netting 30 linear metres Wrap pontoon sections and full pontoons UV-stabilised HDPE netting, 10mm mesh $75.00
4 Aluminium angle stock 4 2.4m lengths (40×40×3mm) Cross-beams connecting pontoons Salvaged bed frames/shelving or new stock $32.00
5 Marine plywood 3 sheets 1200×2400×12mm Deck panels — cut to fit cross-beam frame BS1088 marine grade preferred $105.00
6 Stainless steel bolts 40 M8×50mm with nuts and washers Through-bolt deck to cross-beams and cross-beams to pontoons 316 stainless for salt water resistance $32.00
7 Large fender washers 32 M8 × 30mm OD Distribute bolt load across netting and bottles Stainless steel $9.60
8 Cable ties (UV-rated) 200 300mm ties Secure netting during assembly Black UV-rated nylon $10.00
9 120-grit sandpaper 4 sheets Sand deck surface for non-slip texture Waterproof silicon carbide paper $2.00
10 Rope 20 metres of 10mm nylon Handling lines during assembly and launch Marine-grade braided nylon $16.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $365.60

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Collect, Inspect, and Sort Bottles

⏱ 3h Easy
🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran — Overview 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack Marine Plywood Deck — 4.0m × 2.4m Solar Canopy Roof 7.6m overall length 1,920 bottles total · Buoyancy: 3,763 kg · Safety factor: 3.1× UV-resistant mesh netting · Marine sealant · Aluminium cross-beams FreshWater Desalination Platform — Built from recycled plastic

Gather 2,000+ clean 2L PET bottles with caps. Inspect each: no cracks, no deep scratches, cap must thread on tightly with no stripped threads. Rinse and dry completely — moisture inside bottles promotes mould. Sort into bins of 120 bottles (one pontoon section each). You need 16 bins.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • 16 bins or bags for sorting
  • Water source for rinsing
  • Drying space
⚠️ Safety: Wash hands after handling collected bottles. Discard any bottles that contained chemicals — PET only.
💡 Tips: Organize a community bottle drive — schools, restaurants, and events generate bottles fast. 2,000 bottles sounds huge but 20 people each bringing 100 bottles covers it in one event.

Step 2 Build Hex-Pack Sections

⏱ 10h Intermediate
🔍 Hull Cross-Section waterline Hex-pack PET UV mesh netting Hex-pack PET Aluminium cross-beam Marine plywood deck 2.4m beam width Each pontoon: 960 bottles · 480 kg buoyancy · Marine sealed Cross-section at mid-hull, looking forward

For each of the 16 sections: Lay bottles in hex-pack formation on a flat surface (first row of ~12 bottles touching side-by-side, second row nests into the valleys, repeat). Apply marine sealant at every bottle-to-bottle contact point. Once the section is complete (~120 bottles), wrap tightly in UV-resistant mesh netting. Secure netting with UV-rated cable ties every 200mm. Let sealant cure 24 hours.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Marine sealant + caulking gun
  • UV-resistant mesh netting
  • Cable ties
  • Flat assembly surface
  • Tape measure
⚠️ Safety: Marine sealant is sticky and hard to remove from skin — wear nitrile gloves. Work in ventilated area.
💡 Tips: Assembly line: 2 people arrange bottles, 1 person applies sealant, 1 person wraps netting. Build 2-4 sections per day depending on cure time and workspace.

Step 3 Assemble Pontoons from Sections

⏱ 4h Intermediate
🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran — Overview 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack Marine Plywood Deck — 4.0m × 2.4m Solar Canopy Roof 7.6m overall length 1,920 bottles total · Buoyancy: 3,763 kg · Safety factor: 3.1× UV-resistant mesh netting · Marine sealant · Aluminium cross-beams FreshWater Desalination Platform — Built from recycled plastic

For each pontoon: Line up 8 cured sections end-to-end on a long flat surface. Apply marine sealant generously at every section-to-section joint. Wrap the entire 7.6m pontoon in one continuous outer layer of mesh netting, pulling tight with cable ties every 300mm. The finished pontoon should be rigid — pick up one end and the whole pontoon lifts as a unit. If it sags, add more cable ties and netting wraps.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Marine sealant
  • UV mesh netting
  • Cable ties
  • Long flat surface (7.6m+)
  • 4 people for handling
⚠️ Safety: 7.6m pontoons are awkward to handle — use 4 people minimum. Lift with legs, not back. Do not drag across rough surfaces.
💡 Tips: A driveway, parking lot, or gym floor makes a good assembly surface. Mark section positions with tape on the ground before starting.

Step 4 Install Cross-Beams

⏱ 2h Advanced
🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran — Overview 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack Marine Plywood Deck — 4.0m × 2.4m Solar Canopy Roof 7.6m overall length 1,920 bottles total · Buoyancy: 3,763 kg · Safety factor: 3.1× UV-resistant mesh netting · Marine sealant · Aluminium cross-beams FreshWater Desalination Platform — Built from recycled plastic

Lay both pontoons parallel, 2.4m apart (inside edge to inside edge). Position 4 aluminium cross-beams evenly spaced along the pontoon length. Each beam passes over both pontoons. Drill through the netting and into the bottle pack at each beam mount point. Bolt through using M8 bolts with fender washers on both sides — the washers distribute load across multiple bottles. Torque to snug but do not crush bottles.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Drill
  • M8 drill bit
  • Socket wrench set
  • Aluminium cross-beams
  • Bolts, washers, nuts
  • Tape measure
⚠️ Safety: Aluminium edges are sharp — deburr all cuts. Wear gloves when handling. Drilling through bottles creates PET chips — eye protection required.
💡 Tips: Pre-drill the aluminium beams at marked positions before mounting. Use a level across the beams to ensure the deck will be flat.

Step 5 Mount Deck Panels

⏱ 3h Intermediate
🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran — Overview 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack Marine Plywood Deck — 4.0m × 2.4m Solar Canopy Roof 7.6m overall length 1,920 bottles total · Buoyancy: 3,763 kg · Safety factor: 3.1× UV-resistant mesh netting · Marine sealant · Aluminium cross-beams FreshWater Desalination Platform — Built from recycled plastic

Cut marine plywood panels to fit the cross-beam frame. Lay panels on the beams and mark bolt positions. Pre-drill all holes in the plywood, then through-bolt to the cross-beams with stainless M8 bolts and fender washers. Seal all cut edges and bolt holes with marine sealant — unsealed plywood delaminates in water. Sand the deck surface with 120-grit for non-slip texture. Apply 2 coats of marine varnish or paint.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Circular saw or jigsaw
  • Drill
  • Stainless bolts and washers
  • Marine sealant
  • 120-grit sandpaper
  • Marine varnish or paint
⚠️ Safety: Saw safety: clamp plywood securely, wear eye and ear protection. Marine varnish fumes — ventilated area or outdoors.
💡 Tips: Leave 50mm overhang on all deck edges for water runoff. Pre-seal bolt holes with sealant before inserting bolts — prevents water wicking into plywood core.

Step 6 Float Test the Bare Hull

⏱ 2h Advanced
🚢 Twin-Hull Catamaran — Overview 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack 960 PET Bottles — Hex-Pack Marine Plywood Deck — 4.0m × 2.4m Solar Canopy Roof 7.6m overall length 1,920 bottles total · Buoyancy: 3,763 kg · Safety factor: 3.1× UV-resistant mesh netting · Marine sealant · Aluminium cross-beams FreshWater Desalination Platform — Built from recycled plastic

Launch the completed hull (no subsystems) in calm water — a lake, harbour, or protected bay. Load with ballast (sandbags, water jugs) to 50% of rated capacity (~600 kg). Check: (1) Waterline should be at approximately 40% of pontoon height. (2) Deck should be level — measure with a level at multiple points. (3) No visible leaks or bubbling from pontoons. (4) Stable in light chop — should not roll beyond 10° in small waves. If issues found, haul out and repair before adding subsystems.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Boat ramp or water access
  • Ballast (sandbags ~600 kg)
  • Level
  • Tape measure
  • Rope for handling
  • 4+ people
⚠️ Safety: ALL people near water must wear life jackets. Never stand under a hull being launched. Use ropes, not hands, to control the platform in water.
💡 Tips: A slow boat ramp works perfectly. Slide the hull on rollers or PVC pipes. Test on a calm day — first float is exciting but must be controlled. Take photos for grant documentation.
#structure #water #bottles #industrial #flotation

🌊 Wave Energy — OWC Chambers

🌊 FreshWater Wave Energy Advanced ⏱ 30 hours 👷 3 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Engineering

4 oscillating water column chambers harvest wave energy to drive air turbines generating ~300W continuous.

📐 Overview Diagram

🌊 Wave Energy — OWC Chambers 💨 OWC 1 💨 OWC 2 💨 OWC 3 💨 OWC 4 Wave rises → Air compressed → Turbine spins → Electricity 4 chambers × ~75W = ~300W continuous Oscillating Water Column — bi-directional air turbines Open-bottom chambers allow wave entry · No moving parts below waterline

🔍 Exploded View

🔍 Single OWC Chamber — Detail Oscillating water Compressed air column 💨 Bi-directional Air Turbine Generator Open bottom — waves enter freely ~75W per chamber · Bi-directional turbine spins on both push and pull No moving parts below waterline · Saltwater-resistant PVC walls Works in all wave conditions — even gentle harbour chop

📖 Description

The wave engine uses 4 Oscillating Water Column (OWC) chambers mounted under the catamaran deck between the pontoons. Each chamber is an open-bottom box submerged in the water. As waves pass, the water inside rises and falls, pushing and pulling air through a Wells turbine at the top. The Wells turbine spins in the same direction regardless of airflow direction — so both the rising and falling wave produce power.

Each OWC chamber is built from marine plywood lined with fibreglass resin for waterproofing. The Wells turbine is a symmetrical-airfoil blade set on a shaft connected to a small DC generator (salvaged from old cordless drills or car alternators). Four chambers produce approximately 300W continuous in moderate seas (0.5-1.0m wave height).

This is the primary power source for the FreshWater platform — it runs 24/7 as long as there are waves, which is essentially always on any coastal or open-water deployment. Combined with solar, wind, and AirGen, the platform achieves energy independence.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: OWC wave energy is proven technology deployed at grid scale worldwide (Limpet, Mutriku). This community-scale adaptation uses salvaged generators and hand-built turbines at a fraction of commercial cost. Each chamber costs approximately $60 in materials. The 4-chamber array provides base-load power for desalination, making the platform self-sufficient in both energy and water production.

💡 Ideology

The ocean never stops moving. Every wave that hits a coastline carries energy that is simply absorbed by rocks and sand — wasted. An OWC chamber captures a tiny fraction of that energy and converts it to electricity. No fuel. No emissions. Just the rhythm of the sea.

For island communities and coastal populations with unreliable grid power, wave energy is the most reliable renewable source available — more consistent than solar, more predictable than wind. The waves do not stop at night. They do not stop on cloudy days. They barely slow in calm weather.

🔧 Methodology

The wave engine build requires carpentry, basic fibreglass work, and generator wiring.

PHASE 1 — CHAMBERS: Build 4 open-bottom boxes from 12mm marine plywood (600×400×500mm each). Line the interior with fibreglass resin and cloth — 2 layers minimum. The box must be 100% waterproof.

PHASE 2 — TURBINE HOUSINGS: Cut a 100mm hole in the top of each chamber. Build a PVC turbine housing (100mm pipe, 200mm long) and mount over the hole with sealant.

PHASE 3 — WELLS TURBINES: Fabricate symmetrical airfoil blades from aluminium sheet (4 blades per turbine). Mount on a 10mm shaft with bearings at both ends of the PVC housing. The blades must be at 0° angle of attack (symmetrical) to spin in the same direction regardless of airflow.

PHASE 4 — GENERATORS: Couple each turbine shaft to a DC generator via direct drive or belt. Wire each generator through a bridge rectifier to the power bus.

PHASE 5 — MOUNTING: Bolt all 4 chambers to the underside of the deck between the pontoons, evenly spaced. Seal all deck penetrations. Connect generator wiring to the main power system.

PHASE 6 — TESTING: Float the platform in waves. Verify all 4 turbines spin. Measure voltage output at each generator. Troubleshoot any chamber that does not produce — usually an air leak or stuck bearing.

🔗 Prerequisites

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 Marine plywood 12mm 2 sheets 1200×2400mm Chamber walls — cut 4 boxes 600×400×500mm each BS1088 marine grade, fibreglass lined $70.00
2 Fibreglass resin + hardener 2 litres Waterproof lining inside each chamber Polyester resin with MEKP catalyst $24.00
3 Fibreglass cloth 4 square metres 2 layers per chamber interior 200g/m² woven cloth $12.00
4 100mm PVC pipe 4 200mm lengths Turbine housings — one per chamber Schedule 40 PVC $4.00
5 Aluminium sheet 1 600×600×1.5mm Wells turbine blades — 4 blades per turbine × 4 turbines Salvaged or new — must be flat and uniform $5.00
6 10mm steel rod 4 250mm lengths Turbine shafts Smooth rod, not threaded $4.00
7 Bearings 8 10mm ID sealed bearings 2 per turbine shaft for smooth rotation Sealed bearings resist salt spray $12.00
8 DC generators 4 12V DC motors used as generators Salvaged from cordless drills, car fans, or wiper motors Must spin freely and produce 12V+ at moderate RPM $20.00
9 Bridge rectifiers 4 25A rated AC to DC conversion from each generator Or build from 4 diodes each $4.00
10 Marine sealant 3 tubes 300ml Seal chamber tops, deck penetrations, and housing mounts Sikaflex or equivalent polyurethane $21.00
11 Stainless bolts 24 M6×40mm with nuts/washers Mount chambers to deck underside 316 stainless for salt resistance $14.40
Estimated Total Material Cost $190.40

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Build OWC Chamber Boxes

⏱ 8h Advanced
🔍 Single OWC Chamber — Detail Oscillating water Compressed air column 💨 Bi-directional Air Turbine Generator Open bottom — waves enter freely ~75W per chamber · Bi-directional turbine spins on both push and pull No moving parts below waterline · Saltwater-resistant PVC walls Works in all wave conditions — even gentle harbour chop

Cut marine plywood to make 4 open-bottom boxes (600×400×500mm each — 4 sides + 1 top, no bottom). Assemble with stainless screws and marine sealant at all joints. Line the interior of each box with 2 layers of fibreglass cloth saturated with polyester resin. Let cure 24 hours. The interior must be 100% waterproof — any leak reduces chamber pressure and kills output.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Circular saw or jigsaw
  • Drill/driver
  • Stainless screws
  • Marine sealant
  • Fibreglass resin and cloth
  • Brushes and rollers
  • Mixing cups
⚠️ Safety: Fibreglass resin is toxic — work outdoors or with forced ventilation. Wear nitrile gloves, eye protection, and a respirator. Fibreglass cloth causes skin irritation — long sleeves.
💡 Tips: Build a jig (simple right-angle support) to hold panels at 90° while screwing — much easier than free-handing. Apply fibreglass in thin even coats — thick spots create bubbles.

Step 2 Install Turbine Housings

⏱ 1h Intermediate
🔍 Single OWC Chamber — Detail Oscillating water Compressed air column 💨 Bi-directional Air Turbine Generator Open bottom — waves enter freely ~75W per chamber · Bi-directional turbine spins on both push and pull No moving parts below waterline · Saltwater-resistant PVC walls Works in all wave conditions — even gentle harbour chop

Cut a 100mm hole in the center of each chamber's top panel using a hole saw. Mount a 200mm length of 100mm PVC pipe vertically over each hole using marine sealant. The pipe extends upward — this is the turbine housing where air rushes in and out as waves move the water column inside the chamber.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • 100mm hole saw
  • Drill
  • Marine sealant
  • PVC pipe
⚠️ Safety: Hole saws can grab — clamp work securely and use slow drill speed.
💡 Tips: Bevel the inside edge of the hole to smooth airflow. The PVC housing should be airtight to the chamber top — any leak here reduces turbine efficiency.

Step 3 Fabricate Wells Turbine Blades and Shaft

⏱ 6h Advanced
🔍 Single OWC Chamber — Detail Oscillating water Compressed air column 💨 Bi-directional Air Turbine Generator Open bottom — waves enter freely ~75W per chamber · Bi-directional turbine spins on both push and pull No moving parts below waterline · Saltwater-resistant PVC walls Works in all wave conditions — even gentle harbour chop

For each turbine: cut 4 symmetrical airfoil blades from aluminium sheet (50mm wide × 40mm long). The key property of a Wells turbine is that blades are at 0° angle of attack — they are FLAT, not pitched. This makes them spin the same direction regardless of airflow direction. Mount blades to a 10mm shaft at 90° intervals using small clamp collars or brazing. Install the shaft in the PVC housing with a sealed bearing at each end.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Tin snips or dremel for aluminium
  • File for shaping
  • 10mm shaft
  • Bearings
  • Clamp collars or brazing equipment
  • Drill press (ideal)
⚠️ Safety: Cut aluminium has sharp edges — file all edges smooth. Wear cut-resistant gloves. Brazing requires fire — keep extinguisher ready.
💡 Tips: The blade profile does not need to be a perfect airfoil — flat plates work for this scale. Smoothness and balance matter more than aerodynamic perfection. Spin-test each turbine by blowing through the housing — it should spin freely and not wobble.

Step 4 Couple Generators and Wire Rectifiers

⏱ 3h Advanced
🔍 Single OWC Chamber — Detail Oscillating water Compressed air column 💨 Bi-directional Air Turbine Generator Open bottom — waves enter freely ~75W per chamber · Bi-directional turbine spins on both push and pull No moving parts below waterline · Saltwater-resistant PVC walls Works in all wave conditions — even gentle harbour chop

Attach each DC generator to its turbine shaft via direct coupling (shaft adapter) or small belt drive. Wire each generator output through a bridge rectifier (converts AC-like output to clean DC). Connect all 4 rectifier outputs in parallel to a common power bus. Test by spinning each turbine by hand — the multimeter on the bus should show voltage rising with each turbine spin.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • DC generators
  • Bridge rectifiers
  • Soldering iron
  • Wire
  • Multimeter
  • Shaft couplers or belt/pulleys
⚠️ Safety: Soldering iron burns. Verify polarity before connecting to power bus — reversed generators fight each other.
💡 Tips: Cordless drill motors make excellent generators at moderate RPM. Car wiper motors work too but need higher RPM. Test each generator standalone before connecting to the bus.

Step 5 Mount Chambers Under Deck

⏱ 3h Advanced
🌊 Wave Energy — OWC Chambers 💨 OWC 1 💨 OWC 2 💨 OWC 3 💨 OWC 4 Wave rises → Air compressed → Turbine spins → Electricity 4 chambers × ~75W = ~300W continuous Oscillating Water Column — bi-directional air turbines Open-bottom chambers allow wave entry · No moving parts below waterline

Bolt all 4 OWC chambers to the underside of the catamaran deck, evenly spaced between the pontoons. The open bottoms face the water. Seal all deck bolt penetrations with marine sealant. Route generator wiring through sealed deck conduit to the power system. Verify each chamber is level and square to the deck.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Drill
  • Stainless bolts M6
  • Marine sealant
  • Level
  • 4+ people for lifting
⚠️ Safety: Working under the deck is awkward — use jack stands or flip the hull if possible. Heavy chambers require team lifting.
💡 Tips: If you cannot flip the hull, build the chambers with mounting flanges that bolt from the top through the deck. Much easier than working upside down.

Step 6 Float Test Wave Engine Output

⏱ 2h Advanced
🌊 Wave Energy — OWC Chambers 💨 OWC 1 💨 OWC 2 💨 OWC 3 💨 OWC 4 Wave rises → Air compressed → Turbine spins → Electricity 4 chambers × ~75W = ~300W continuous Oscillating Water Column — bi-directional air turbines Open-bottom chambers allow wave entry · No moving parts below waterline

Launch the platform in water with waves (even small harbour chop works). Monitor each turbine: it should spin visibly. Measure voltage on the power bus — in moderate waves expect 12-14V unloaded. Connect a test load (12V LED bank or resistor) and verify sustained output. If any chamber shows no output, check: air leaks (listen for hissing), stuck bearings (spin by hand), and generator coupling (shaft turning but generator not?).

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Multimeter
  • Test load (LED bank or resistor)
  • Life jackets
  • Rope
⚠️ Safety: Life jackets mandatory on water. Do not reach into submerged chambers while platform is floating. Electrical connections near water — keep all wiring above the waterline.
💡 Tips: Even harbour chop of 10-15cm will produce some output. If zero output in calm water, try rocking the platform manually to verify the system works before blaming the waves.
#energy #wave #water #engineering

💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis

🌊 FreshWater Wind Energy Advanced ⏱ 25 hours 👷 2 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Engineering

2 Savonius-style VAWTs on 3m masts producing ~120W combined in average offshore winds.

📐 Overview Diagram

💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis (VAWT) 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 1 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 2 2 × Savonius VAWT on 3m masts · ~120W combined Omnidirectional — no yaw mechanism needed · Works in turbulent offshore wind Self-starting at 3 m/s · Peak output at 12 m/s

📖 Description

Two vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs) mounted on 3m masts at the fore and aft of the FreshWater platform. Each turbine is a Savonius design — two half-cylinder scoops offset on a vertical shaft. The Savonius rotor catches wind from any direction without a yaw mechanism, making it ideal for a platform that rotates at anchor.

The half-cylinders are made from split 200L steel drums (salvaged from industrial waste) or rolled aluminium sheet. Each scoop is approximately 600mm diameter × 1000mm tall. The vertical shaft runs down through the mast to a generator at the base (protected from spray). Combined output: ~120W in 15 knot winds.

Savonius turbines are less efficient than horizontal-axis designs but are vastly simpler to build, maintain, and survive storm conditions. They self-limit in high winds (the drag coefficient increases with speed) and have no blade pitch mechanism, no yaw bearing, and no tail vane. This is appropriate technology for a community-built platform.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: Each VAWT costs approximately $35 in materials when using salvaged drums. They provide supplementary power that extends the platform's energy independence during low-wave/low-sun conditions. The turbines are visible from shore and serve as a landmark for the FreshWater platform — useful for community awareness and grant documentation photography.

💡 Ideology

Wind has powered boats for ten thousand years. A Savonius rotor is the simplest possible wind machine — two scoops on a stick. A child can understand it. A teenager can build it. And the offshore wind that blows past every coastal community, day and night, becomes electricity.

The drums that become turbine scoops were once industrial waste — chemical containers, oil storage, food-grade barrels heading for scrap. Split in half and mounted on a shaft, they catch the wind and spin a generator. Waste becomes energy. Again.

🔧 Methodology

The VAWT build is metalwork + assembly. Two identical turbines are built, tested, then mounted.

PHASE 1 — SCOOPS: Split 2 steel drums lengthwise to create 4 half-cylinders (2 per turbine). Clean, deburr all cut edges, and prime/paint for corrosion resistance.

PHASE 2 — SHAFT AND ENDPLATES: Cut 2 steel shafts (20mm × 1500mm). Weld or bolt circular endplates (300mm diameter) at top and bottom. The endplates hold the scoops in position.

PHASE 3 — SCOOP MOUNTING: Mount 2 scoops on each shaft, offset by half the diameter so they form an S-shape when viewed from above. This offset is what makes the Savonius design work — one scoop catches wind while the other is shielded.

PHASE 4 — MASTS: Build 2 masts from 50mm galvanised pipe (3m each). Install bearings at top and bottom. Mount the turbine shaft inside the mast so it spins freely.

PHASE 5 — GENERATORS: Couple each shaft to a DC generator at the mast base. Wire through rectifiers to the power bus.

PHASE 6 — MOUNTING: Bolt masts to the deck at fore and aft positions with flange mounts and guy wires for stability.

🔗 Prerequisites

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 200L steel drums 2 drums Split lengthwise for 4 half-cylinder scoops Salvaged food-grade or industrial drums — clean and derust $10.00
2 20mm steel rod 2 1500mm lengths Turbine shafts Smooth solid rod — not hollow pipe $6.00
3 Steel plate 3mm 1 600×600mm Cut 4 circular endplates (300mm diameter) Mild steel, plasma cut or jigsaw with metal blade $4.00
4 50mm galvanised pipe 2 3m lengths Mast tubes — support turbines above deck Standard galvanised water pipe $16.00
5 Bearings 4 20mm ID sealed 2 per mast — top and bottom shaft support Sealed ball bearings for weather exposure $8.00
6 DC generators 2 12V permanent magnet motors Coupled to turbine shafts at mast base Salvaged from cordless tools or car parts $10.00
7 Bridge rectifiers 2 25A AC to DC for each generator Standard automotive bridge rectifiers $2.00
8 Flange mounts 2 50mm pipe flanges Bolt masts to deck Floor flange fittings with 4 bolt holes $8.00
9 Guy wire 8 3m lengths of 3mm stainless cable 4 per mast for stability With turnbuckles for tension adjustment $16.00
10 Rust-inhibiting primer + paint 1 1L each Coat drums and endplates for corrosion resistance Marine-grade or zinc-rich primer $6.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $86.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Split Drums and Prepare Scoops

⏱ 2h Intermediate
💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis (VAWT) 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 1 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 2 2 × Savonius VAWT on 3m masts · ~120W combined Omnidirectional — no yaw mechanism needed · Works in turbulent offshore wind Self-starting at 3 m/s · Peak output at 12 m/s

Mark a straight line down the length of each 200L drum, then mark the opposite side. Cut along both lines with an angle grinder or reciprocating saw to create 2 half-cylinders per drum (4 total). Deburr all cut edges with a file or flap disc — edges will be razor sharp. Clean inside and out. Apply rust-inhibiting primer to all surfaces, then topcoat with marine paint. Let dry 24 hours.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Angle grinder or reciprocating saw with metal blade
  • File or flap disc
  • Rust primer
  • Marine paint
  • Brushes
  • PPE
⚠️ Safety: Cutting steel drums creates sparks and sharp edges. Full PPE: eye protection, face shield, hearing protection, gloves, long sleeves. Verify drums are EMPTY and CLEAN before cutting — residual chemicals can ignite.
💡 Tips: Clamp the drum to a workbench or use a barrel holder. A straight edge clamped along the cut line gives a cleaner result. Paint inside and out — salt spray corrodes from both sides.

Step 2 Build Turbine Assemblies

⏱ 5h Advanced
💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis (VAWT) 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 1 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 2 2 × Savonius VAWT on 3m masts · ~120W combined Omnidirectional — no yaw mechanism needed · Works in turbulent offshore wind Self-starting at 3 m/s · Peak output at 12 m/s

For each turbine: weld or bolt 2 circular endplates (300mm diameter, cut from 3mm steel plate) to the 20mm shaft at the top and bottom of the scoop zone. Mount 2 half-cylinder scoops between the endplates, offset by half the cylinder diameter — viewed from above, they form an S-shape. The scoops attach to the endplates with bolts or welds. Verify balance by spinning on a horizontal axle — add counterweights (bolts) if one side is heavier.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Welder (arc or MIG) OR drill and bolts
  • Plasma cutter or jigsaw with metal blade for endplates
  • Horizontal axle for balance test
  • Measuring tools
⚠️ Safety: Welding: full welding PPE (helmet, gloves, jacket). Grinding: eye and ear protection. Heavy parts — have a helper for assembly.
💡 Tips: If you cannot weld, bolt everything — use M8 bolts through the scoops into the endplates. Bolted assemblies can be disassembled for transport. Balance is critical — an unbalanced turbine vibrates the mast and loosens fasteners.

Step 3 Assemble Masts with Bearings

⏱ 1h 30min Intermediate
💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis (VAWT) 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 1 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 2 2 × Savonius VAWT on 3m masts · ~120W combined Omnidirectional — no yaw mechanism needed · Works in turbulent offshore wind Self-starting at 3 m/s · Peak output at 12 m/s

Install a sealed bearing at each end of the 3m galvanised pipe masts (top and bottom). The turbine shaft passes through these bearings and must spin freely. If bearings don't press-fit, use bearing housings bolted inside the pipe. Test by inserting the shaft and spinning — it should coast for 10+ seconds.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Bearings
  • Bearing housings (if needed)
  • Drill
  • Bolts
  • Mallet for press-fit
⚠️ Safety: Heavy mast pipes — handle with two people. Do not strike bearings directly with a hammer — use a bearing driver or wooden block.
💡 Tips: Grease bearings before assembly even if they are factory-sealed — salt air is brutal. Re-grease every 6 months.

Step 4 Couple Generators and Wire

⏱ 2h Intermediate
💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis (VAWT) 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 1 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 2 2 × Savonius VAWT on 3m masts · ~120W combined Omnidirectional — no yaw mechanism needed · Works in turbulent offshore wind Self-starting at 3 m/s · Peak output at 12 m/s

Mount each DC generator at the mast base. Couple to the turbine shaft using a flexible coupler (handles minor misalignment). Wire each generator through a bridge rectifier. Route wiring down the inside of the mast pipe to the deck. Connect both turbine outputs in parallel to the power bus.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • DC generators
  • Flexible shaft couplers
  • Bridge rectifiers
  • Wire
  • Soldering iron
  • Multimeter
⚠️ Safety: Spinning turbines generate voltage — disconnect generator before working on wiring. Treat all wires as live when turbine is spinning.
💡 Tips: Test each generator by spinning the turbine by hand and measuring voltage. In 15-knot wind expect 12-14V unloaded. If generator gets hot, it may be internally shorted — replace.

Step 5 Mount Masts on Deck

⏱ 2h Advanced
💨 Wind Turbines — Vertical Axis (VAWT) 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 1 🔄 PM Generator VAWT 2 2 × Savonius VAWT on 3m masts · ~120W combined Omnidirectional — no yaw mechanism needed · Works in turbulent offshore wind Self-starting at 3 m/s · Peak output at 12 m/s

Bolt flange mounts to the deck at fore and aft positions (reinforce deck underside with plywood doublers). Stand each mast in its flange. Attach 4 guy wires per mast — anchored to deck cleats at 90° intervals. Tension with turnbuckles until the mast is plumb in all directions. Tighten flange bolts fully.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Flange mounts
  • Guy wire + turnbuckles
  • Deck cleats
  • Level
  • Drill
  • Wrenches
  • 2+ people
⚠️ Safety: 3m masts are top-heavy with turbines — use ropes to control during raising. Never stand under a mast being raised. Two people minimum.
💡 Tips: Raise the mast by hinging at the base — bolt the flange first, then tip the mast up while a helper controls a steadying rope from the opposite side.
#energy #wind #engineering

☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels

🌊 FreshWater Solar Energy Intermediate ⏱ 8 hours 👷 2 builders 🧑 Teen (13-17) AdvancedConstruction

6 × 100W marine solar panels on canopy roof — ~140W average continuous output.

📐 Overview Diagram

☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels ☀️ 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W Deck 6 × 100W panels → MPPT controller → 48V battery bank 600W peak · ~140W average continuous Marine-grade monocrystalline · Canopy doubles as rain shelter Angled for optimal solar gain + rain runoff → freshwater collection

📖 Description

Six 100W monocrystalline solar panels mounted on a canopy frame above the deck. The canopy serves double duty: generating electricity and providing shade for the hydroponics area, work space, and desalination equipment. Panels are wired in 2 series strings of 3 panels each, feeding an MPPT charge controller.

The canopy frame is built from aluminium angle stock or galvanised pipe, tilted 15° toward the equator for optimal solar angle. Panels are through-bolted to the frame with stainless fasteners and rubber isolation grommets to absorb wave motion. Average output accounting for cloud cover and panel angle: ~140W continuous.

Solar is the most predictable daytime power source on the platform. Combined with wave energy (24/7) and wind (variable), the three sources provide layered energy resilience — if one drops, the others compensate.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: Solar panels are the most grant-friendly renewable energy component. They are well-understood by reviewers, have clear cost-per-watt metrics ($0.80-1.20/W installed), and 25-year manufacturer warranties. The canopy design provides both energy and shade — double the benefit per dollar.

💡 Ideology

The sun hits every ocean surface with roughly 1,000 watts per square metre at noon. Six panels capture less than 1% of the light falling on the platform deck — yet that is enough to desalinate water, charge batteries, and run monitoring systems all day.

Solar panels are the one AirGen component we cannot build from recycled materials (yet). But they are widely available, increasingly affordable, and the most visible symbol of energy independence. When a community sees solar panels on their FreshWater platform, they see the future — and they believe it is possible.

🔧 Methodology

The solar array build is primarily structural — framing the canopy, then mounting and wiring panels.

PHASE 1 — CANOPY FRAME: Build a rectangular frame from aluminium angle or galvanised pipe that spans the deck at 2.2m height. Tilt the south-facing side 15° up (northern hemisphere) for optimal panel angle.

PHASE 2 — PANEL MOUNTING: Bolt panels to the frame with stainless hardware. Use rubber grommets between panel frames and canopy rails to absorb wave motion vibration.

PHASE 3 — WIRING: Wire 3 panels in series to create a ~60V string. Run 2 parallel strings to the MPPT charge controller. Use UV-rated outdoor cable with MC4 connectors.

PHASE 4 — CHARGE CONTROLLER: Mount the MPPT controller in a weatherproof enclosure below the canopy. Connect solar input and battery output. Configure for the battery bank voltage (48V).

PHASE 5 — TESTING: Measure open-circuit voltage of each string (should be ~60V in sunlight). Connect to controller and verify charging current flows to the battery bank.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 100W monocrystalline solar panels 6 panels Main power generation — marine-rated preferred Standard 100W panels with MC4 connectors $270.00
2 Aluminium angle stock (40×40mm) 12 metres total Canopy frame and panel rails Galvanised pipe also works $36.00
3 MPPT charge controller 1 unit (600W+ rated) Maximum power point tracking for optimal panel efficiency Must match battery bank voltage (48V) $35.00
4 MC4 solar cable 20 metres (4mm²) UV-rated outdoor wiring between panels and controller With MC4 connectors pre-crimped $30.00
5 Stainless bolts + grommets 24 M6 bolt + rubber grommet sets Panel-to-frame mounting with vibration isolation 316 stainless $12.00
6 Weatherproof enclosure 1 IP65 box Houses charge controller — protected from spray and rain Ventilated to prevent overheating $8.00
7 Cable glands 4 IP68 glands Sealed cable entry into weatherproof enclosure Match cable diameter $4.00
8 Self-tapping stainless screws 40 screws Frame-to-deck and cross-brace connections Hex-head for easy torquing $6.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $401.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Build Canopy Frame

⏱ 3h Intermediate
☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels ☀️ 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W Deck 6 × 100W panels → MPPT controller → 48V battery bank 600W peak · ~140W average continuous Marine-grade monocrystalline · Canopy doubles as rain shelter Angled for optimal solar gain + rain runoff → freshwater collection

Construct a rectangular frame from aluminium angle stock that spans the deck area designated for solar (typically the center 2/3 of the deck). Frame height: 2.2m at the low side. Tilt the south-facing edge up 15° (in northern hemisphere — reverse for southern hemisphere). Support with 4 vertical posts bolted to the deck with flange mounts. Add cross-braces for rigidity — the canopy must withstand wind loads without flexing.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Hacksaw or angle grinder
  • Drill
  • Stainless screws and bolts
  • Level
  • Tape measure
  • Protractor or phone angle app
⚠️ Safety: Overhead work — wear hard hat. Aluminium cuts create sharp edges — deburr all cuts. Secure posts before climbing or leaning on frame.
💡 Tips: 15° tilt is a good compromise for most latitudes (20-40°). Steeper tilt = better winter output but more wind load. In tropical locations 5-10° is sufficient for rain runoff.

Step 2 Mount Solar Panels

⏱ 1h 30min Easy
☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels ☀️ 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W Deck 6 × 100W panels → MPPT controller → 48V battery bank 600W peak · ~140W average continuous Marine-grade monocrystalline · Canopy doubles as rain shelter Angled for optimal solar gain + rain runoff → freshwater collection

Place each panel on the canopy frame rails. Insert rubber grommets between panel frames and rails (vibration isolation). Bolt through with M6 stainless bolts — snug but not overtorqued (the grommets must remain slightly compressed, not crushed). Space panels 20mm apart for airflow cooling. Leave access gaps for wiring and maintenance.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Socket wrench
  • Stainless bolts
  • Rubber grommets
  • 2 people for panel handling
⚠️ Safety: Panels generate voltage in any light — cover with a blanket during mounting to prevent accidental shock. Glass panels are fragile — handle with care.
💡 Tips: Mount panels face-down first (attach hardware to frame), then flip. Easier than trying to align bolts while holding a panel overhead.

Step 3 Wire Panel Strings

⏱ 1h Intermediate
☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels ☀️ 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W Deck 6 × 100W panels → MPPT controller → 48V battery bank 600W peak · ~140W average continuous Marine-grade monocrystalline · Canopy doubles as rain shelter Angled for optimal solar gain + rain runoff → freshwater collection

Connect 3 panels in series using MC4 connectors: Panel 1 positive to Panel 2 negative, Panel 2 positive to Panel 3 negative. This creates one string at ~60V open circuit. Build 2 identical strings. Run cables from each string down the frame posts to the charge controller location. Use cable clips to secure — no loose wires that could chafe in wind.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • MC4 solar cable
  • MC4 crimping tool
  • Cable clips
  • Multimeter
  • Wire labels
⚠️ Safety: 60V DC can deliver a painful shock. Work with panels covered or at night. Never short-circuit a string — MC4 connectors can arc.
💡 Tips: Label every cable at both ends (String 1+, String 1-, String 2+, String 2-). Test each string with a multimeter before connecting to the controller — voltage should be ~60V in direct sun.

Step 4 Install Charge Controller and Connect

⏱ 1h Intermediate
☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels ☀️ 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W Deck 6 × 100W panels → MPPT controller → 48V battery bank 600W peak · ~140W average continuous Marine-grade monocrystalline · Canopy doubles as rain shelter Angled for optimal solar gain + rain runoff → freshwater collection

Mount the MPPT charge controller inside the weatherproof enclosure. Run cables through IP68 cable glands. Connect the 2 solar strings to the controller's PV input (observe polarity). Connect the controller's battery output to the main battery bank (see fw-power-system). Configure the controller for 48V battery, LiFePO4 chemistry (or appropriate chemistry for your battery bank).

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Screwdriver
  • Wire strippers
  • MPPT controller
  • Weatherproof enclosure
  • Cable glands
  • Multimeter
⚠️ Safety: Connect battery BEFORE solar — most controllers require battery presence before PV input. Reversed polarity can destroy the controller.
💡 Tips: Read the controller manual for your specific model — charge profiles vary. Most have a display or LED that shows charging status. Verify current flow with a clamp meter.

Step 5 Test Solar Output

⏱ 30 min Easy
☀️ Solar Array — Canopy Panels ☀️ 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W 100W Deck 6 × 100W panels → MPPT controller → 48V battery bank 600W peak · ~140W average continuous Marine-grade monocrystalline · Canopy doubles as rain shelter Angled for optimal solar gain + rain runoff → freshwater collection

On a sunny day, verify: (1) Each string reads ~60V open circuit. (2) Controller display shows PV input voltage and charging current. (3) Battery bank voltage is rising. (4) No hot connections (feel each MC4 joint and terminal — warm is OK, hot means a bad crimp or loose connection). Record peak wattage for baseline performance reference.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Multimeter
  • Clamp meter (ideal)
  • Notebook for recording
⚠️ Safety: Do not disconnect MC4 connectors under load — arcing damages connectors. Use the controller's disconnect function or cover panels first.
💡 Tips: Peak output occurs between 10am and 2pm. Expect ~400-500W peak on a clear day with all 6 panels clean and correctly angled. If significantly less, check for shading, dirty panels, or a wiring error.
#energy #solar #panels

🌱 Hydroponics — Vertical Towers & Beds

🌊 FreshWater Food Production Intermediate ⏱ 12 hours 👷 2 builders 🧒 Child (9-12) IntermediateBuild

8 vertical towers + 4 rooftop beds — berries, herbs, leafy greens, ~2.6 kg/day food yield.

📐 Overview Diagram

🌱 Hydroponics — Vertical Towers & Beds 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 Rooftop Beds 🍓 🌿 🥬 🫑 8 towers + 4 beds · ~2.6 kg/day food yield Berries · Herbs · Leafy greens · Fed by desalinated water + seaweed nutrients Vertical towers from cut PET bottles · Rooftop beds from plywood offcuts

📖 Description

The hydroponics system grows fresh food directly on the FreshWater platform using nutrient-rich water from the desalination system and seaweed nutrient processing. Eight vertical PVC towers (1.5m tall, 150mm diameter) hold 12 plant sites each (96 plants total), while 4 shallow rooftop beds (600×400mm) grow low-profile herbs and leafy greens.

The vertical towers use a recirculating nutrient film technique (NFT) — a thin stream of nutrient water flows from the top of each tower down past the roots and drains back to a central reservoir. A small pump (powered by the platform's power system) circulates the water continuously. The rooftop beds are passive wicking beds filled with perlite and coco coir, fed by gravity from an elevated reservoir.

Target yield: ~2.6 kg/day of mixed produce — lettuce, basil, cilantro, strawberries, cherry tomatoes, and microgreens. This feeds 4-6 people fresh daily greens or supplements a larger community's diet.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: The hydroponics system demonstrates food security from ocean-sourced nutrients on a recycled-material platform. It uses desalinated seawater enriched with processed seaweed nutrients — a fully closed loop from ocean to plate. Material cost: ~$80 for PVC, pump, and growing media. Ongoing cost: near zero.

💡 Ideology

A floating platform that makes fresh water and grows food from seaweed nutrients is not just a machine — it is a small civilization. The hydroponics towers are the proof that this system does not just survive on the ocean, it thrives.

For coastal communities with poor soil, limited fresh water, or no arable land, growing food on the water is not a novelty — it is a necessity. And when the towers are made from PVC pipe and the nutrients come from seaweed that grows wild in the ocean, the entire food system is built from what nature already provides.

🔧 Methodology

The hydroponics build is plumbing + assembly. Towers first, then beds, then the recirculation system.

PHASE 1 — TOWERS: Cut 8 lengths of 150mm PVC pipe (1.5m each). Drill 12 holes (50mm) spaced evenly along each pipe for net cups. Cap the bottoms with PVC end caps (drilled for drain fitting).

PHASE 2 — MOUNTING: Mount towers vertically on the solar canopy frame or deck railings using pipe clamps. Position to receive maximum sunlight but sheltered from heavy spray.

PHASE 3 — RESERVOIR AND PUMP: Set up a 60L reservoir (salvaged barrel or built from plywood + liner). Install a small submersible pump (12V, 400L/hr). Run feeder lines (12mm poly tube) from pump to the top of each tower.

PHASE 4 — DRAIN LINES: Connect tower bottom drains back to the reservoir via gravity return lines. The system recirculates continuously.

PHASE 5 — ROOFTOP BEDS: Build 4 shallow beds (600×400×100mm from marine plywood, lined with pond liner). Fill with perlite/coco coir mix. Install wicking cord from an elevated gravity reservoir.

PHASE 6 — PLANTING: Fill net cups with clay pebbles and transplant seedlings. Mix seaweed nutrient solution into the reservoir (see fw-seaweed-nutrient). Start pump. Monitor pH (target 5.8-6.5) and top up nutrients weekly.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 150mm PVC pipe 8 1.5m lengths Vertical tower bodies — 12 plant sites each Schedule 40 for rigidity $32.00
2 150mm PVC end caps 8 caps Tower bottoms — drill for drain fittings Standard PVC caps $12.00
3 50mm net cups 96 cups Plant holders — sit in tower holes Standard hydroponic net cups $14.40
4 Clay pebbles (LECA) 20 litres Growing media for net cups Expanded clay aggregate $16.00
5 12V submersible pump 1 400L/hr Recirculates nutrient water from reservoir to tower tops 12V DC for platform power compatibility $8.00
6 12mm poly tubing 20 metres Feeder lines from pump to towers and return drains Food-safe irrigation tubing $10.00
7 60L reservoir 1 barrel or built container Central nutrient reservoir Opaque to prevent algae growth $5.00
8 Marine plywood 1 sheet for 4 beds (600×400×100mm each) Rooftop wicking beds Line with pond liner $10.00
9 Pond liner 1 2m² Waterproof bed lining EPDM or PVC liner $3.00
10 Perlite + coco coir 1 20L mix Growing media for rooftop beds 50/50 mix by volume $4.00
11 Pipe clamps 16 150mm clamps 2 per tower for mounting to frame or railing Stainless steel $16.00
12 pH test kit 1 kit Monitor nutrient solution pH weekly Liquid test kit or pH meter $5.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $135.40

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Build Vertical Towers

⏱ 3h Intermediate
🌱 Hydroponics — Vertical Towers & Beds 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 Rooftop Beds 🍓 🌿 🥬 🫑 8 towers + 4 beds · ~2.6 kg/day food yield Berries · Herbs · Leafy greens · Fed by desalinated water + seaweed nutrients Vertical towers from cut PET bottles · Rooftop beds from plywood offcuts

For each of 8 towers: cut 150mm PVC to 1.5m length. Mark 12 evenly spaced positions for plant holes (staggered spiral pattern — each hole 120mm apart, rotated 60° from the previous). Drill or cut 50mm holes at each position. Deburr holes. Glue PVC end cap on the bottom. Drill a 12mm hole in the end cap for the drain fitting.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • 50mm hole saw
  • Drill
  • PVC cement
  • Tape measure
  • Marker
⚠️ Safety: Hole saw can grab — clamp pipe securely. PVC dust — ventilated area.
💡 Tips: The spiral stagger pattern ensures every plant gets light from all sides as the sun moves. Mark all positions before drilling. A jig (V-block) holds the pipe steady for drilling.

Step 2 Mount Towers and Connect Plumbing

⏱ 2h Intermediate
🌱 Hydroponics — Vertical Towers & Beds 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 Rooftop Beds 🍓 🌿 🥬 🫑 8 towers + 4 beds · ~2.6 kg/day food yield Berries · Herbs · Leafy greens · Fed by desalinated water + seaweed nutrients Vertical towers from cut PET bottles · Rooftop beds from plywood offcuts

Mount towers vertically on the canopy frame or deck railings using stainless pipe clamps (2 per tower). Run 12mm poly tubing from the pump outlet to a manifold, then branch to the top of each tower. Run drain lines from the bottom of each tower back to the reservoir. Use barb fittings and hose clamps for all connections. Verify no leaks by running the pump with plain water for 10 minutes.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Pipe clamps
  • Poly tubing
  • Barb fittings
  • Hose clamps
  • Drill for mounting
  • Pump
⚠️ Safety: Water and electricity on a platform — keep pump wiring above water level. Use GFCI protection on the pump circuit if available.
💡 Tips: Label each tower (T1-T8) and its corresponding feed line. Makes troubleshooting blockages much easier. A slightly oversized drain line prevents overflow if the feed rate is too high.

Step 3 Build Rooftop Wicking Beds

⏱ 1h 30min Easy
🌱 Hydroponics — Vertical Towers & Beds 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 Rooftop Beds 🍓 🌿 🥬 🫑 8 towers + 4 beds · ~2.6 kg/day food yield Berries · Herbs · Leafy greens · Fed by desalinated water + seaweed nutrients Vertical towers from cut PET bottles · Rooftop beds from plywood offcuts

Construct 4 shallow beds (600×400×100mm) from marine plywood scraps. Line each with pond liner — fold corners neatly and staple to the outside. Fill with a 50/50 mix of perlite and coco coir. Install cotton or felt wicking cord running from the bottom of each bed down into a small elevated reservoir (a 5L bucket mounted above the beds). The wick draws nutrient water up by capillary action.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Saw
  • Pond liner
  • Staple gun
  • Perlite
  • Coco coir
  • Cotton wick cord
⚠️ Safety: Perlite dust — wear a dust mask when handling dry perlite. Wet it down before mixing.
💡 Tips: Coco coir must be rinsed before use — it often contains salt from processing. Soak in fresh water and drain 3 times.

Step 4 Plant and Start Nutrient Circulation

⏱ 1h 30min Easy
🌱 Hydroponics — Vertical Towers & Beds 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 🌿 Rooftop Beds 🍓 🌿 🥬 🫑 8 towers + 4 beds · ~2.6 kg/day food yield Berries · Herbs · Leafy greens · Fed by desalinated water + seaweed nutrients Vertical towers from cut PET bottles · Rooftop beds from plywood offcuts

Fill 96 net cups with clay pebbles. Transplant seedlings into the cups (roots dangling into the tower). Mix seaweed nutrient solution (see fw-seaweed-nutrient plan) into the 60L reservoir at recommended dilution. Start the pump. Verify water flows from the top of each tower and returns to the reservoir. Check pH (target 5.8-6.5). Sow seeds directly into the rooftop beds for herbs and microgreens.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Net cups
  • Clay pebbles
  • Seedlings
  • Seaweed nutrient solution
  • pH test kit
⚠️ Safety: No significant hazards. Wash hands after handling nutrient solution.
💡 Tips: Start with fast-growing lettuce and basil — visible results in 2-3 weeks boosts team morale. Strawberries and tomatoes take longer but yield much higher value produce.
#food #plants #water #sustainable

🧪 Seaweed Nutrient Processing

🌊 FreshWater Food Production Beginner ⏱ 4 hours 👷 1 builder 🧒 Child (9-12) SimpleAssembly

Harvest ocean seaweed → dry → grind → steep → liquid plant food for hydroponics.

📐 Overview Diagram

🧪 Seaweed Nutrient Processing 🌊 Harvest Pull from ocean ☀️ Dry Sun-dry on deck ⚙️ Grind Mortar & pestle 💧 Steep Hot water 48hrs 🌱 Feed To hydroponics Nutrient Content N (nitrogen) · P (phosphorus) · K (potassium) · Trace minerals Natural, free, renewable — the ocean provides all macro-nutrients Kids can do every step — great first contribution to the platform 1 kg dried seaweed → 10L liquid feed → feeds 8 towers for 2 weeks

📖 Description

Seaweed nutrient processing converts raw ocean seaweed (kelp, sargassum, or any locally abundant species) into concentrated liquid plant food for the hydroponics system. The process is simple: harvest, rinse, dry, grind, steep in fresh water, strain, and use the liquid as hydroponic nutrient solution.

Seaweed is one of the most nutrient-dense natural fertilizers available. It contains nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium (the three macronutrients plants need most), plus micronutrients including iron, manganese, zinc, and natural growth hormones (cytokinins). A single batch of processed seaweed provides enough nutrient solution for 2-3 weeks of hydroponic tower operation.

This closes the nutrient loop: the ocean provides seaweed, which feeds the hydroponics, which feeds people. No synthetic fertilizers. No supply chain. No cost. Just the ocean and sunlight.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: Seaweed nutrient processing eliminates the need for purchased hydroponic nutrients — typically the highest ongoing cost of any hydroponic system. This makes the FreshWater platform's food production truly self-sustaining with zero recurring material costs. The process is simple enough for children to perform and produces consistent, high-quality plant food.

💡 Ideology

The ocean gives everything. Water, salt, food, energy — and the nutrients to grow more food. Seaweed grows wild in every ocean, washes up on every shore, and contains every mineral a plant needs to thrive.

Commercial hydroponic nutrients are expensive, synthetic, and require a supply chain. Seaweed is free, natural, and grows faster than you can harvest it. Teaching a child to make plant food from seaweed is teaching them that the ocean is not just water — it is a farm, a pharmacy, and a factory.

🔧 Methodology

Simple batch processing. Each batch takes 3-5 days from harvest to ready-to-use nutrient solution.

PHASE 1 — HARVEST: Collect 5kg of fresh seaweed from the ocean surface, tideline, or rocks. Any species works but kelp and sargassum are highest in nutrients. Avoid seaweed from polluted areas.

PHASE 2 — RINSE: Rinse harvested seaweed in fresh water (desalinated water from the platform) to remove excess salt, sand, and marine organisms. 2-3 rinses until water runs relatively clear.

PHASE 3 — DRY: Spread rinsed seaweed on drying racks in direct sunlight. Turn daily. Dry until crispy (2-3 days in sun). The drier, the easier to grind and the more concentrated the final product.

PHASE 4 — GRIND: Crumble dried seaweed by hand or grind with a mortar and pestle. Target: coarse powder or small flakes. Finer = faster steeping.

PHASE 5 — STEEP: Add ground seaweed to fresh water at a ratio of 1:20 (500g seaweed per 10L water). Steep for 48 hours, stirring daily. The water turns dark brown-green as nutrients leach out.

PHASE 6 — STRAIN AND USE: Strain through cloth or fine mesh. The liquid is your nutrient concentrate. Dilute 1:10 with fresh water for hydroponics use. Add to reservoir. Test pH and adjust if needed.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 Fresh seaweed 5 kg per batch Kelp, sargassum, or local species Harvest from clean water areas only Free / Recycled
2 Fresh water 20 litres per batch For rinsing (6L) and steeping (10L) and dilution (4L) Desalinated water from platform Free / Recycled
3 Drying rack 1 rack or mesh screen Spread seaweed in sun to dry Window screen on a frame works well Free / Recycled
4 Steeping container 1 10-20L bucket Opaque bucket for steeping ground seaweed in water Food-grade plastic bucket $2.00
5 Straining cloth 1 muslin or cheesecloth Strain liquid from ground seaweed solids Old cotton t-shirt works Free / Recycled
6 Mortar and pestle or grinding surface 1 tool Grind dried seaweed to powder/flakes Two rocks work if no mortar available Free / Recycled
7 Storage bottles 4 1-2L bottles Store nutrient concentrate — use within 2 weeks Opaque bottles prevent algae growth Free / Recycled
8 pH test kit 1 kit Test nutrient solution before adding to hydroponics Shared with hydroponics system Free / Recycled
Estimated Total Material Cost $2.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Harvest and Rinse Seaweed

⏱ 45 min Easy
🧪 Seaweed Nutrient Processing 🌊 Harvest Pull from ocean ☀️ Dry Sun-dry on deck ⚙️ Grind Mortar & pestle 💧 Steep Hot water 48hrs 🌱 Feed To hydroponics Nutrient Content N (nitrogen) · P (phosphorus) · K (potassium) · Trace minerals Natural, free, renewable — the ocean provides all macro-nutrients Kids can do every step — great first contribution to the platform 1 kg dried seaweed → 10L liquid feed → feeds 8 towers for 2 weeks

Collect 5kg of fresh seaweed from the ocean — pick from rocks at low tide or gather from the tideline (only fresh, not decomposing). Rinse 3 times in fresh water: fill a bucket, agitate the seaweed, drain, repeat. The third rinse water should be relatively clear. Pick out any visible shells, stones, or debris.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Collection bag or bucket
  • Rinsing bucket
  • Fresh water (6L)
⚠️ Safety: Wear shoes on rocky shorelines. Be aware of tides and wave action. Avoid harvesting from areas near sewage outfalls or industrial runoff.
💡 Tips: Harvest after a storm — waves knock loose large quantities of seaweed that wash up fresh. Morning harvest avoids the heat of drying seaweed baking in the sun on the way home.

Step 2 Dry Seaweed

⏱ 15 min Easy
🧪 Seaweed Nutrient Processing 🌊 Harvest Pull from ocean ☀️ Dry Sun-dry on deck ⚙️ Grind Mortar & pestle 💧 Steep Hot water 48hrs 🌱 Feed To hydroponics Nutrient Content N (nitrogen) · P (phosphorus) · K (potassium) · Trace minerals Natural, free, renewable — the ocean provides all macro-nutrients Kids can do every step — great first contribution to the platform 1 kg dried seaweed → 10L liquid feed → feeds 8 towers for 2 weeks

Spread rinsed seaweed in a single layer on drying racks in direct sunlight. If no racks available, spread on clean concrete, plywood, or hung on lines. Turn the seaweed once daily. Dry for 2-3 sunny days until completely crispy and crumbly. If weather is humid, this may take 4-5 days. Seaweed must snap when bent, not flex.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Drying rack or flat surface
  • Sunlight
  • Time (2-5 days)
⚠️ Safety: Drying seaweed attracts flies — cover with fine mesh if needed.
💡 Tips: Speed up drying by cutting large seaweed pieces into strips before laying out. Smaller pieces = more surface area = faster drying.

Step 3 Grind and Steep

⏱ 20 min Easy
🧪 Seaweed Nutrient Processing 🌊 Harvest Pull from ocean ☀️ Dry Sun-dry on deck ⚙️ Grind Mortar & pestle 💧 Steep Hot water 48hrs 🌱 Feed To hydroponics Nutrient Content N (nitrogen) · P (phosphorus) · K (potassium) · Trace minerals Natural, free, renewable — the ocean provides all macro-nutrients Kids can do every step — great first contribution to the platform 1 kg dried seaweed → 10L liquid feed → feeds 8 towers for 2 weeks

Crumble dried seaweed by hand into a bucket. For finer particles, use a mortar and pestle or place in a bag and crush with a rolling pin. Add 10L of fresh water to the bucket (1:20 ratio by weight). Stir thoroughly. Cover the bucket loosely (allows gas exchange but keeps debris out). Let steep for 48 hours, stirring once each day. The liquid will turn dark brown-green and develop a mild ocean smell.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Mortar and pestle or rolling pin
  • 10-20L bucket
  • 10L fresh water
  • Stirring stick
⚠️ Safety: No significant hazards. The steep may develop a mild odor — normal.
💡 Tips: Warmer water speeds steeping — if in a hot climate, 24 hours may be sufficient. The liquid should be dark brown. If still light-colored after 48 hours, grind finer and steep longer.

Step 4 Strain, Test, and Store

⏱ 30 min Easy
🧪 Seaweed Nutrient Processing 🌊 Harvest Pull from ocean ☀️ Dry Sun-dry on deck ⚙️ Grind Mortar & pestle 💧 Steep Hot water 48hrs 🌱 Feed To hydroponics Nutrient Content N (nitrogen) · P (phosphorus) · K (potassium) · Trace minerals Natural, free, renewable — the ocean provides all macro-nutrients Kids can do every step — great first contribution to the platform 1 kg dried seaweed → 10L liquid feed → feeds 8 towers for 2 weeks

Pour the steeped liquid through muslin cloth or fine mesh into storage bottles. Squeeze the cloth to extract maximum nutrient liquid. Compost the solid residue (or add to rooftop beds as mulch). Test pH of the concentrate — typically 6.0-7.0. To use: dilute 1:10 with fresh water and add to the hydroponics reservoir. Adjust pH to 5.8-6.5 with vinegar (lower) or baking soda (higher). Store concentrate in opaque bottles out of direct sunlight. Use within 2 weeks.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Straining cloth
  • Storage bottles
  • pH test kit
  • Measuring cup for dilution
⚠️ Safety: No significant hazards. Wash hands after handling.
💡 Tips: One batch of concentrate lasts 2-3 weeks of hydroponics operation. Start the next batch when current supply is half gone — ensures uninterrupted nutrient supply. Label bottles with date of preparation.
#food #nutrients #ocean #simple

⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers

🌊 FreshWater Stability & Energy Advanced ⏱ 20 hours 👷 3 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Engineering

Twin outriggers with ballast + wave-energy harvesting linear generators — ~90W bonus.

📐 Overview Diagram

⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers Main Hull Outrigger L Outrigger R Ballast + linear gen Ballast + linear gen Twin outriggers: stability + ~90W wave-energy bonus Ballast water tanks for trim adjustment · Linear generators harvest heave motion PET bottle pontoons with aluminium connecting arms

📖 Description

Twin outrigger arms extend from the catamaran hull at port and starboard, each ending in a ballasted float made from sealed PET bottle clusters. The outriggers dramatically increase roll stability in heavy seas — the wider effective beam prevents the platform from capsizing in storm conditions.

Each outrigger incorporates a linear generator: as the float rides up and down on waves, a magnet piston inside a coil tube (mounted on the arm) moves back and forth, generating electricity. This harvests energy from the very motion that would otherwise be wasted as hull stress. Combined bonus output: ~90W in moderate seas.

The outrigger arms are aluminium tube or galvanised pipe, hinged at the hull connection so they can be folded for transport. Each float contains 120 sealed PET bottles in hex-pack plus sand ballast bags to lower the center of gravity.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: The outrigger system serves dual purpose — safety and energy. It converts platform motion (a liability) into electrical power (an asset). The linear generators use the same magnet-and-coil physics as AirGen but in a reciprocating rather than rotary configuration. Materials cost: ~$65 per outrigger arm.

💡 Ideology

The ocean tries to roll you. The outriggers say no. And while they are holding you steady, they are also making electricity from the waves that tried to tip you over. Every threat becomes a resource.

Polynesian canoes used outriggers. Norwegian fishing boats used them. Any community that lives on the water understands the principle: wider is more stable. We add linear generators because why waste the motion?

🔧 Methodology

The outrigger build combines structural arm fabrication with linear generator assembly.

PHASE 1 — ARMS: Cut 2 aluminium tubes or galvanised pipes to 2.5m length. Install a hinge bracket at the hull end and a float mounting plate at the outboard end.

PHASE 2 — FLOATS: Build 2 floats from 120 hex-packed PET bottles each (same technique as hull sections). Add 10kg sand ballast bags inside each float to lower center of gravity.

PHASE 3 — LINEAR GENERATORS: Build 2 linear generators — a 300mm PVC tube with copper coils on the outside and a magnet piston (neodymium magnets on a sliding rod) inside. The piston moves as the float rises/falls.

PHASE 4 — ASSEMBLY: Mount linear generators on the outrigger arms. Attach floats to arm ends. Hinge arms to the hull sides. Wire generators through rectifiers to the power bus.

PHASE 5 — TESTING: Float the platform. Verify outriggers reduce roll significantly. Measure generator output in moderate waves.

🔗 Prerequisites

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 50mm aluminium tube or galvanised pipe 2 2.5m lengths Outrigger arms — hinged at hull Must support dynamic loads — thick wall schedule $24.00
2 Heavy-duty hinges 2 marine-grade hinges Foldable arm connection to hull 316 stainless, load-rated $16.00
3 2L PET bottles 240 bottles 120 per float — hex-pack formation Same quality as hull bottles Free / Recycled
4 Sand ballast bags 4 5kg bags (2 per float) Lower center of gravity in each float Double-bagged for water resistance $4.00
5 50mm PVC pipe 2 300mm lengths Linear generator housings Schedule 40 $1.00
6 Neodymium magnets 8 20mm disc × 5mm 4 per linear generator piston Stacked on a sliding rod $16.00
7 28AWG copper wire 2 15m per generator Coils wound around linear generator housing Salvaged from transformers $4.00
8 10mm steel rod 2 350mm lengths Piston rod for linear generators Smooth rod, magnets epoxied on $2.00
9 Bridge rectifiers 2 10A AC to DC from each linear generator Standard bridge rectifiers $2.00
10 Marine sealant 3 tubes Float construction and arm weatherproofing Polyurethane marine sealant $21.00
11 UV mesh netting 10 metres Float wrapping Same as hull construction $25.00
12 Guy lines 4 2m lengths of 6mm rope Limit outrigger arm travel range in storms Nylon braided rope with snap hooks $6.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $121.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Build Outrigger Floats

⏱ 4h Intermediate
⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers Main Hull Outrigger L Outrigger R Ballast + linear gen Ballast + linear gen Twin outriggers: stability + ~90W wave-energy bonus Ballast water tanks for trim adjustment · Linear generators harvest heave motion PET bottle pontoons with aluminium connecting arms

Build 2 floats using the same hex-pack technique as the hull sections — 120 sealed PET bottles per float wrapped in UV mesh netting with marine sealant at all contact points. Before sealing each float, insert 2 sand ballast bags (5kg each, double-bagged) into the center of the hex-pack. The ballast lowers the float's center of gravity for stability. Let sealant cure 24 hours.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • 240 PET bottles
  • Marine sealant
  • UV mesh netting
  • Sand bags
  • Cable ties
⚠️ Safety: Same as hull section construction. Gloves for sealant. Ventilated area.
💡 Tips: The floats are small enough for 1-2 people to build. Same hex-pack technique as the hull — if you built the hull, these are easy.

Step 2 Fabricate Outrigger Arms with Hinges

⏱ 2h Advanced
⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers Main Hull Outrigger L Outrigger R Ballast + linear gen Ballast + linear gen Twin outriggers: stability + ~90W wave-energy bonus Ballast water tanks for trim adjustment · Linear generators harvest heave motion PET bottle pontoons with aluminium connecting arms

Cut 2 aluminium tubes to 2.5m length. At the hull end: bolt on a heavy-duty marine hinge. At the outboard end: weld or bolt a flat mounting plate (200×200mm) for the float attachment. Drill through-bolt holes in the float mount plate. Test the hinge action — arms must fold flat against the hull for transport and deploy at 90° for operation.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Pipe cutter or hacksaw
  • Welder or drill+bolts
  • Hinges
  • Steel plate for mount
⚠️ Safety: Welding: full PPE. Sharp aluminium edges: deburr and file. Arms are long and unwieldy — have a helper.
💡 Tips: A pin-lock at the 90° deployed position prevents the arm from folding under wave load. A simple bolt through both hinge plates works.

Step 3 Build Linear Generators

⏱ 3h Advanced
⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers Main Hull Outrigger L Outrigger R Ballast + linear gen Ballast + linear gen Twin outriggers: stability + ~90W wave-energy bonus Ballast water tanks for trim adjustment · Linear generators harvest heave motion PET bottle pontoons with aluminium connecting arms

For each generator: Wind copper coils around the outside of a 300mm PVC tube (4 coil sections, 200 turns each). Epoxy 4 neodymium disc magnets to a 10mm steel rod at 50mm spacing (alternating polarity). Insert the magnet rod inside the PVC tube — it should slide freely. Cap both ends with loose-fitting PVC caps (the rod must move but not fall out). Wire coils in series through a bridge rectifier.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • PVC tube
  • Copper wire
  • Neodymium magnets
  • Steel rod
  • Epoxy
  • Bridge rectifier
  • Soldering iron
⚠️ Safety: Same magnet safety as AirGen builds. Soldering iron burns. Epoxy fumes — ventilated area.
💡 Tips: Test by shaking the completed generator — you should feel the magnetic resistance (cogging) as the piston passes through the coils. A multimeter on AC millivolts should show output with each shake.

Step 4 Assemble and Mount Complete Outriggers

⏱ 3h Advanced
⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers Main Hull Outrigger L Outrigger R Ballast + linear gen Ballast + linear gen Twin outriggers: stability + ~90W wave-energy bonus Ballast water tanks for trim adjustment · Linear generators harvest heave motion PET bottle pontoons with aluminium connecting arms

Mount linear generators on the outrigger arms using pipe clamps (oriented so the piston axis is vertical when the arm is deployed). Attach floats to the arm end plates with through-bolts. Mount the complete arm assemblies to the hull sides via the hinges. Attach guy lines to limit arm travel range in storms. Wire generator outputs through the arm (cable-tied along the tube) to the deck power bus.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Pipe clamps
  • Through-bolts
  • Guy lines
  • Wire
  • Cable ties
  • 3+ people for assembly
⚠️ Safety: Complete outrigger assemblies are heavy and awkward. Team lift. Secure arms before letting go — an unsecured arm can swing under its own weight.
💡 Tips: Deploy one arm at a time. Have two people hold the arm while a third bolts the hinge to the hull. The guy lines should limit outward swing to about 85° — prevents hyperextension in storms.

Step 5 Float Test Stability and Generator Output

⏱ 1h Intermediate
⚓ Outrigger Stabilisers Main Hull Outrigger L Outrigger R Ballast + linear gen Ballast + linear gen Twin outriggers: stability + ~90W wave-energy bonus Ballast water tanks for trim adjustment · Linear generators harvest heave motion PET bottle pontoons with aluminium connecting arms

Launch the platform with outriggers deployed. Compare roll behavior to the bare hull test (should be dramatically more stable). In moderate waves, measure voltage output from each linear generator — expect 2-5V per generator with each wave cycle. Combined output through rectifiers should contribute measurable charging current to the battery bank. Record baseline for maintenance reference.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Multimeter
  • Life jackets
  • Moderate wave conditions
⚠️ Safety: Life jackets mandatory. Outrigger floats ride at water level — do not stand on them. Stay on the main deck during testing.
💡 Tips: Video the platform from shore during stability testing — side-by-side comparison with bare hull footage makes excellent grant documentation.
#stability #energy #structure

🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion

🌊 FreshWater Propulsion Expert ⏱ 60 hours 👷 4 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Industrial

Cast aluminium gears from melted cans, 3-speed gearbox, slip clutch, propeller — ~2.5 knots.

📐 Overview Diagram

🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion 3-Speed Gearbox ⚙️ Slip Clutch Drive shaft Propeller 🌊 Gears cast from melted aluminium cans · Sand-cast moulds · Filed to tolerance Slip clutch prevents damage in heavy seas ~2.5 knots cruising speed Wave energy → mechanical gearing → propeller thrust Zero fuel propulsion — the ocean moves you through the ocean

📖 Description

The wave-drive propulsion system converts wave energy into forward motion through a mechanical drivetrain. The OWC wave engines (see fw-wave-engine) drive air turbines, which spin generators. The wave-drive adds a parallel mechanical path: one turbine shaft is coupled through a gearbox to an underwater propeller.

The gearbox is hand-cast from recycled aluminium cans — melted in a backyard foundry and poured into sand molds. Three gear ratios (low/medium/high) allow the propeller to operate efficiently in different wave conditions. A slip clutch protects the drivetrain from shock loads.

Top speed: approximately 2.5 knots in moderate seas. This is slow but sufficient to reposition the platform, move to calmer water during storms, or relocate to a new deployment area. The platform is not designed for long-distance travel — it is a station-keeping system.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: The wave-drive system uses zero fuel — propulsion is powered entirely by wave energy. The aluminium gears are cast from recycled beverage cans, demonstrating advanced recycling techniques (metal casting from waste streams). The system enables platform repositioning for optimal water quality, storm avoidance, and seasonal deployment changes.

💡 Ideology

A boat that moves without fuel, powered by the waves themselves. The ocean pushes the OWC, the OWC spins the turbine, the turbine turns the gearbox, the gearbox turns the propeller, and the platform moves through the very water that provided the energy. Closed loop.

Casting gears from melted aluminium cans is industrial recycling at its most dramatic. A soda can that cost nothing becomes a precision gear that transmits mechanical power. The foundry skills learned here transfer to any metalworking context — it is vocational training disguised as platform building.

🔧 Methodology

This is the most advanced build in the FreshWater system. Metalcasting + machining + marine assembly.

PHASE 1 — FOUNDRY: Build a simple charcoal-fired crucible furnace from a steel bucket lined with refractory cement. Collect and melt aluminium cans. Skim slag and pour clean aluminium ingots.

PHASE 2 — GEAR CASTING: Create sand molds for 3 gear pairs (6 gears total — 3 ratios). Melt aluminium and pour into molds. Demold, clean, and drill center holes and keyways.

PHASE 3 — GEARBOX: Build a gearbox housing from steel plate or thick aluminium. Mount gear pairs on shafts with bearings. Install a selector mechanism (sliding gear or dog clutch) for 3 speed ratios.

PHASE 4 — SLIP CLUTCH: Build a friction slip clutch between the turbine shaft and gearbox input. This protects against shock loads when waves hit suddenly.

PHASE 5 — PROPELLER: Mount a marine propeller on a through-hull shaft with a stuffing box seal. Connect to gearbox output via coupling.

PHASE 6 — INTEGRATION: Connect gearbox input to one OWC turbine shaft. Test all 3 gear ratios. Verify slip clutch engages under overload.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 Aluminium cans 200 cans Melt into ingots for gear casting — ~100 cans per ingot, 2 ingots needed Clean, dry cans — remove paint in furnace Free / Recycled
2 Charcoal 20 kg Foundry fuel for melting aluminium (660°C) Lump charcoal, not briquettes — burns hotter $10.00
3 Refractory cement 5 kg Line the foundry crucible and furnace interior Withstands 1200°C+ $20.00
4 Steel bucket 1 10L bucket Foundry body — lined with refractory Heavy-gauge steel, no galvanising (zinc fumes) $3.00
5 Steel crucible 1 2kg capacity Melting vessel for aluminium Thick-wall steel cup or pipe section with welded base $5.00
6 Casting sand 20 kg Green sand (sand + bentonite clay) for molds Fine silica sand + 10% bentonite $40.00
7 Steel plate 1 500×500×5mm Gearbox housing walls Mild steel — welded or bolted box $8.00
8 Shafts and bearings 4 shaft sets with 2 bearings each Gearbox internals — input, output, intermediate 12-16mm shafts, sealed bearings $20.00
9 Marine propeller 1 200-300mm diameter 3-blade fixed pitch Bronze or stainless — salvaged from small outboard $15.00
10 Propeller shaft 1 500mm × 20mm stainless Through-hull shaft to propeller Stainless steel — must not corrode in seawater $8.00
11 Stuffing box 1 20mm shaft seal Watertight hull penetration for prop shaft Standard marine stuffing box with packing $12.00
12 Flexible coupling 1 coupling Connect gearbox output to propeller shaft Absorbs misalignment $6.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $147.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Build Foundry and Cast Aluminium Ingots

⏱ 6h Expert
🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion 3-Speed Gearbox ⚙️ Slip Clutch Drive shaft Propeller 🌊 Gears cast from melted aluminium cans · Sand-cast moulds · Filed to tolerance Slip clutch prevents damage in heavy seas ~2.5 knots cruising speed Wave energy → mechanical gearing → propeller thrust Zero fuel propulsion — the ocean moves you through the ocean

Build a small charcoal-fired furnace: line a steel bucket with 50mm of refractory cement. Let cure 48 hours. Place the crucible inside. Fill around and below with lump charcoal. Light with a blowtorch and add forced air (hair dryer or shop vac on blow) to reach 660°C+. Feed clean aluminium cans into the crucible — they melt in seconds. Skim slag with a steel rod. Pour clean aluminium into ingot molds (muffin tins or steel channels). Cast at least 2kg of ingots for gears.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Steel bucket
  • Refractory cement
  • Steel crucible
  • Charcoal
  • Forced air source (hair dryer)
  • Tongs
  • Ingot molds
  • Blowtorch
⚠️ Safety: EXTREME HEAT — molten aluminium is 660°C. Full PPE: face shield, leather gloves (elbow length), leather apron, closed-toe boots (no synthetics). Work on dry dirt or concrete — NEVER on wet ground (steam explosion risk). No water near molten metal. Fire extinguisher within reach.
💡 Tips: Start with small batches — 10-20 cans per melt. Remove paint by pre-burning cans in the furnace before adding to crucible. Work in daylight — molten aluminium is hard to see at night.

Step 2 Cast Gear Blanks in Sand Molds

⏱ 10h Expert
🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion 3-Speed Gearbox ⚙️ Slip Clutch Drive shaft Propeller 🌊 Gears cast from melted aluminium cans · Sand-cast moulds · Filed to tolerance Slip clutch prevents damage in heavy seas ~2.5 knots cruising speed Wave energy → mechanical gearing → propeller thrust Zero fuel propulsion — the ocean moves you through the ocean

Create a pattern for each gear (wood or 3D-printed disc with teeth profile). Pack casting sand around the pattern in a 2-part flask (cope and drag). Remove pattern, cut a pour sprue and risers. Melt aluminium ingots and pour into the sand mold. Let cool completely (1 hour minimum). Break out the casting. Clean off sand and flash. Drill center holes and cut keyways for shaft mounting.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Gear patterns (wood/plastic)
  • Casting flask (2-part)
  • Casting sand
  • Crucible and furnace
  • Drill press
  • Files and deburring tools
⚠️ Safety: Same molten metal precautions as Step 1. Sand dust — wear a dust mask during mold packing and demolding.
💡 Tips: Make 2 of each gear — one may have casting defects. Gear teeth don't need to be perfect for this application — the slip clutch absorbs shock from imperfect meshing. File teeth smooth and test mesh by hand before building the gearbox.

Step 3 Build Gearbox Housing and Assembly

⏱ 8h Expert
🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion 3-Speed Gearbox ⚙️ Slip Clutch Drive shaft Propeller 🌊 Gears cast from melted aluminium cans · Sand-cast moulds · Filed to tolerance Slip clutch prevents damage in heavy seas ~2.5 knots cruising speed Wave energy → mechanical gearing → propeller thrust Zero fuel propulsion — the ocean moves you through the ocean

Weld or bolt a steel plate box (housing) large enough for all 3 gear pairs. Mount shafts on bearings inside the housing. Install the 3 gear pairs (3 ratios). Build a selector mechanism — a sliding key or dog clutch that engages one gear pair at a time. The gearbox should have: input shaft (from turbine), intermediate shaft, and output shaft (to propeller). Seal the housing with gaskets and fill with grease.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Welder
  • Drill press
  • Shafts
  • Bearings
  • Gasket material
  • Grease
  • Measuring tools
⚠️ Safety: Welding: full PPE. Rotating gears in an open housing — install guards before testing. Keep fingers clear of meshing gears.
💡 Tips: Start with just one gear ratio working before adding the other two. Verify smooth operation under hand power before connecting to the turbine. Grease all gear teeth generously.

Step 4 Install Propeller and Through-Hull Shaft

⏱ 4h Expert
🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion 3-Speed Gearbox ⚙️ Slip Clutch Drive shaft Propeller 🌊 Gears cast from melted aluminium cans · Sand-cast moulds · Filed to tolerance Slip clutch prevents damage in heavy seas ~2.5 knots cruising speed Wave energy → mechanical gearing → propeller thrust Zero fuel propulsion — the ocean moves you through the ocean

Drill a through-hull hole at the stern between the pontoons for the propeller shaft. Install the stuffing box (watertight seal) in the hole. Insert the propeller shaft through the stuffing box. Mount the propeller on the outboard end with a cotter pin. Connect the inboard end to the gearbox output via the flexible coupling. Tighten the stuffing box packing until it drips 1 drop per second at rest (correct tightness).

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Hole saw for hull
  • Stuffing box
  • Propeller
  • Shaft
  • Flexible coupling
  • Marine sealant
  • Wrenches
⚠️ Safety: Hull penetration below waterline — ensure watertight seal. Test in calm water before open sea. A leaking stuffing box can sink the platform. Have packing material ready for adjustment.
💡 Tips: The stuffing box should drip SLIGHTLY when the shaft spins — this is cooling water for the packing. If completely dry, it will overheat and seize. If gushing, tighten the packing nut.

Step 5 Connect to Wave Engine and Test

⏱ 3h Expert
🔩 Wave-Drive Propulsion 3-Speed Gearbox ⚙️ Slip Clutch Drive shaft Propeller 🌊 Gears cast from melted aluminium cans · Sand-cast moulds · Filed to tolerance Slip clutch prevents damage in heavy seas ~2.5 knots cruising speed Wave energy → mechanical gearing → propeller thrust Zero fuel propulsion — the ocean moves you through the ocean

Connect the gearbox input shaft to one OWC turbine output via a slip clutch. The slip clutch is a friction disc assembly that slips under overload — protecting gears from wave shock. Test each gear ratio in calm water: engage ratio, rock the platform to simulate waves, verify propeller turns. Then test in actual waves — the platform should move at 1-2.5 knots depending on conditions and gear selection.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Slip clutch assembly
  • Shaft coupling
  • Multimeter
  • GPS for speed measurement
  • Life jackets
⚠️ Safety: Spinning propeller is DANGEROUS — never enter the water near the stern when the system is engaged. Disengage clutch before approaching the propeller area. Life jackets mandatory.
💡 Tips: Start in the lowest gear ratio. Higher ratios only work in larger waves. If the slip clutch engages frequently (you hear/feel it slipping), use a lower gear ratio — the waves are not providing enough energy for that speed.
#propulsion #casting #industrial #aluminium

🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution

🌊 FreshWater Electrical Advanced ⏱ 8 hours 👷 2 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Engineering

48V LiFePO4 battery bank, MPPT controllers, distribution bus, and monitoring.

📐 Overview Diagram

🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution 🌊 Wave OWC ~300W 💨 Wind VAWT ~120W ☀️ Solar ~140W ⚙️ AirGen ~12W ☀️ Fuze TEG ~25W MPPT Controller 48V bus 🔋 LiFePO4 48V · 200Ah 9.6 kWh Distribution 💧 Desal RO 🌱 Hydro pumps 💡 Lighting 📱 USB charging ⚙️ AirGen start ~597W total generation · 9.6 kWh storage 48V LiFePO4 bank · MPPT charge controllers · Fused distribution bus Multi-source redundancy — platform never runs out of power

📖 Description

The power system is the electrical backbone of the FreshWater platform. It collects energy from all sources (wave engines, wind turbines, solar panels, AirGen engines, and outrigger linear generators), stores it in a 48V LiFePO4 battery bank, and distributes it to all loads (desalination pumps, hydroponics pump, LED lighting, monitoring systems, and the Fuze cooling circulation pump).

The battery bank is 48V nominal (16S LiFePO4 configuration), approximately 100Ah capacity (4.8kWh). This stores enough energy for roughly 8 hours of full desalination operation with no generation input — enough to ride through calm nights. MPPT charge controllers optimize solar input. Individual rectifiers handle wave, wind, and AirGen sources.

The distribution bus uses a fused main panel with individual circuits for each load. A simple monitoring system (voltage, current, and temperature sensors connected to an Arduino or ESP32) tracks battery state and energy balance in real time.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: The power system design follows marine electrical best practices with LiFePO4 chemistry (safest lithium battery — no thermal runaway risk). Total system cost: ~$300-500 depending on battery sourcing. The monitoring system provides real-time data suitable for grant reporting: energy generated, water produced, and system uptime metrics.

💡 Ideology

Energy independence is not just about generation — it is about storage and management. You can have all the solar panels and wave engines in the world, but without a battery bank and a distribution system, the energy is useless at night and wasted at noon.

LiFePO4 batteries are the safest lithium chemistry available. They do not catch fire. They do not explode. They tolerate abuse, heat, and deep discharge far better than any other battery type. For a community-operated platform on the ocean, safety is not optional — it is the first requirement.

🔧 Methodology

The power system build is electrical work — wiring, connections, and configuration.

PHASE 1 — BATTERY BANK: Configure LiFePO4 cells in a 16S (series) arrangement for 48V nominal. Build a battery box from marine plywood, ventilated and water-resistant. Install a BMS (battery management system).

PHASE 2 — CHARGE CONTROLLERS: Install MPPT controller for solar. Verify wave, wind, and AirGen rectifier outputs are compatible with battery voltage.

PHASE 3 — DISTRIBUTION PANEL: Build a fused distribution bus with individual circuits for each load. Use marine-grade terminal blocks and fuse holders.

PHASE 4 — MONITORING: Install voltage, current, and temperature sensors. Connect to an Arduino/ESP32 for data logging and display.

PHASE 5 — TESTING: Verify all sources charge the battery. Verify all loads operate from the battery. Test BMS cutoff under simulated overcharge and over-discharge conditions.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 LiFePO4 cells (3.2V 100Ah) 16 cells 16S configuration = 51.2V nominal, 100Ah = 5.12kWh Grade A cells with matched capacity $288.00
2 16S BMS 1 unit Battery management system — balancing, overcharge/over-discharge protection 100A continuous rated for desalination pump loads $25.00
3 Battery box (marine plywood) 1 box Ventilated, water-resistant enclosure for cells + BMS Build from plywood scraps, lined with non-conductive material $10.00
4 MPPT charge controller 1 600W+ unit Solar array charge management 48V battery setting, see fw-solar-array $35.00
5 Marine fuse panel 1 8-circuit panel Distribution bus with individual blade fuses per circuit Marine-rated waterproof panel $20.00
6 Blade fuses (assorted) 16 fuses Various ratings for different loads Spare set included $8.00
7 Marine terminal blocks 6 4-position blocks Neat connection points for all sources and loads Tinned copper, IP65 rated $15.00
8 Wire (assorted gauges) 1 kit: 2.5mm², 4mm², 6mm² Power wiring — sized for current and distance Tinned marine wire $3.00
9 Arduino or ESP32 1 microcontroller Monitoring system — voltage, current, temperature logging ESP32 preferred for WiFi data access $5.00
10 Current sensor (ACS712) 2 sensors Measure total charge and discharge current 30A rated modules $4.00
11 Voltage divider resistors 4 resistor pairs Scale 48V to 3.3V for microcontroller ADC input Precision 1% resistors $0.40
12 Bus bars 2 copper bus bars Positive and negative main distribution points Tinned copper, bolted connections $8.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $421.40

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Build Battery Bank

⏱ 3h Advanced
🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution 🌊 Wave OWC ~300W 💨 Wind VAWT ~120W ☀️ Solar ~140W ⚙️ AirGen ~12W ☀️ Fuze TEG ~25W MPPT Controller 48V bus 🔋 LiFePO4 48V · 200Ah 9.6 kWh Distribution 💧 Desal RO 🌱 Hydro pumps 💡 Lighting 📱 USB charging ⚙️ AirGen start ~597W total generation · 9.6 kWh storage 48V LiFePO4 bank · MPPT charge controllers · Fused distribution bus Multi-source redundancy — platform never runs out of power

Arrange 16 LiFePO4 cells in series (positive of cell 1 to negative of cell 2, etc.). Use nickel strip or bolted bus bars for connections. Install the 16S BMS — connect the balance leads to each cell junction point. Build the battery box from marine plywood: ventilated top (drill holes + mesh), water-resistant bottom (marine sealant). Place cells in the box with foam spacers between them. Verify total voltage: ~51.2V (fully charged: ~54.4V).

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Spot welder or bolts for bus bars
  • Multimeter
  • BMS
  • Marine plywood
  • Foam spacers
  • Wire strippers
⚠️ Safety: LiFePO4 cells carry enormous current capability. A short circuit will cause immediate fire. INSULATE ALL CONNECTIONS as you go. Work on one cell at a time. Remove all metal jewelry. Use insulated tools.
💡 Tips: Number each cell (1-16) and record individual voltages before connecting. If any cell differs by more than 0.1V from the others, charge it individually first to match. The BMS handles small differences but starts better from a balanced state.

Step 2 Install Distribution Panel and Wiring

⏱ 2h Advanced
🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution 🌊 Wave OWC ~300W 💨 Wind VAWT ~120W ☀️ Solar ~140W ⚙️ AirGen ~12W ☀️ Fuze TEG ~25W MPPT Controller 48V bus 🔋 LiFePO4 48V · 200Ah 9.6 kWh Distribution 💧 Desal RO 🌱 Hydro pumps 💡 Lighting 📱 USB charging ⚙️ AirGen start ~597W total generation · 9.6 kWh storage 48V LiFePO4 bank · MPPT charge controllers · Fused distribution bus Multi-source redundancy — platform never runs out of power

Mount the marine fuse panel in a weatherproof location (inside the equipment bay or under the solar canopy). Run the main positive and negative bus bars from the battery bank to the panel. Install individual fused circuits: desalination pump (15A), hydroponics pump (5A), LED lighting (3A), monitoring (1A), Fuze pump (5A), spare circuits for future loads. Label every circuit. Size wire gauge for current and run length.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Fuse panel
  • Bus bars
  • Wire (assorted gauges)
  • Crimping tool
  • Ring terminals
  • Labels
  • Drill for mounting
⚠️ Safety: Work with the battery disconnected (open the main breaker or disconnect one bus bar). Verify dead circuits with a multimeter before working on them.
💡 Tips: Run positive and negative wires together (zip-tied) for every circuit — makes troubleshooting easier and reduces electromagnetic interference. Leave 10% extra wire length at each end for future re-routing.

Step 3 Connect Energy Sources

⏱ 1h 30min Advanced
🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution 🌊 Wave OWC ~300W 💨 Wind VAWT ~120W ☀️ Solar ~140W ⚙️ AirGen ~12W ☀️ Fuze TEG ~25W MPPT Controller 48V bus 🔋 LiFePO4 48V · 200Ah 9.6 kWh Distribution 💧 Desal RO 🌱 Hydro pumps 💡 Lighting 📱 USB charging ⚙️ AirGen start ~597W total generation · 9.6 kWh storage 48V LiFePO4 bank · MPPT charge controllers · Fused distribution bus Multi-source redundancy — platform never runs out of power

Connect all generation sources to the battery bus: Solar MPPT controller output (already installed per fw-solar-array). Wave engine rectifier bus. Wind turbine rectifier bus. AirGen engine outputs. Outrigger linear generator outputs. Each source should have a blocking diode or dedicated charge input on the controller. Verify polarity of EVERY connection before powering on.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Wire
  • Terminal blocks
  • Blocking diodes
  • Multimeter
  • Labels
⚠️ Safety: Multiple energy sources mean multiple live circuits. Disconnect/cover solar panels. Stop wave turbines (block air holes). Disconnect AirGen. Disable wind turbines (brake or tie blades). Work on a dead system.
💡 Tips: Connect and test one source at a time. Solar first (most predictable), then wave, then wind, then AirGen. Verify battery voltage rises with each source connected.

Step 4 Install Monitoring System

⏱ 1h 30min Advanced
🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution 🌊 Wave OWC ~300W 💨 Wind VAWT ~120W ☀️ Solar ~140W ⚙️ AirGen ~12W ☀️ Fuze TEG ~25W MPPT Controller 48V bus 🔋 LiFePO4 48V · 200Ah 9.6 kWh Distribution 💧 Desal RO 🌱 Hydro pumps 💡 Lighting 📱 USB charging ⚙️ AirGen start ~597W total generation · 9.6 kWh storage 48V LiFePO4 bank · MPPT charge controllers · Fused distribution bus Multi-source redundancy — platform never runs out of power

Wire ACS712 current sensors on the main positive bus (one for total charge, one for total discharge). Build voltage dividers (100kΩ + 10kΩ) to scale battery voltage to 3.3V for the ESP32 ADC input. Connect a temperature sensor (DS18B20) to the battery bank. Program the ESP32 to read and log: battery voltage, charge current, discharge current, temperature. Display on an OLED screen or serve via WiFi.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • ESP32 or Arduino
  • ACS712 modules
  • Resistors
  • DS18B20 sensor
  • OLED display (optional)
  • Breadboard or PCB
  • Soldering iron
  • USB cable for programming
⚠️ Safety: The microcontroller operates at 3.3V — the battery bank is 48V. Double-check voltage divider values before connecting. A wiring error will instantly destroy the microcontroller.
💡 Tips: Start with basic voltage monitoring — just the voltage divider and a serial print. Add current and temperature sensing once the basic reading works. The ESP32's WiFi makes it easy to check from a phone.

Step 5 Full System Test

⏱ 1h Advanced
🔋 Power System — Battery & Distribution 🌊 Wave OWC ~300W 💨 Wind VAWT ~120W ☀️ Solar ~140W ⚙️ AirGen ~12W ☀️ Fuze TEG ~25W MPPT Controller 48V bus 🔋 LiFePO4 48V · 200Ah 9.6 kWh Distribution 💧 Desal RO 🌱 Hydro pumps 💡 Lighting 📱 USB charging ⚙️ AirGen start ~597W total generation · 9.6 kWh storage 48V LiFePO4 bank · MPPT charge controllers · Fused distribution bus Multi-source redundancy — platform never runs out of power

With all sources connected and all loads wired: (1) Verify battery charges from each source independently. (2) Turn on each load circuit and verify operation. (3) Run all loads simultaneously and verify battery voltage remains stable. (4) Test BMS protection: simulate over-discharge by running heavy loads with no generation — BMS should disconnect at ~2.5V per cell. (5) Record baseline metrics for grant reporting.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Multimeter
  • Clamp meter
  • Notebook
  • All loads operational
⚠️ Safety: BMS disconnect can cause voltage spikes on inductive loads (pumps). Ensure all circuits are fused. Monitor battery temperature during heavy load testing.
💡 Tips: Create a test checklist and go through it systematically. Record every measurement. This data becomes the baseline for maintenance — if something changes later, you can compare to today's numbers.
#electrical #battery #power #distribution

💧 Desalination — Reverse Osmosis

🌊 FreshWater Water Production Advanced ⏱ 10 hours 👷 2 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Engineering

Dual reverse-osmosis membranes producing ~840 litres of fresh water per day.

📐 Overview Diagram

💧 Desalination — Reverse Osmosis 🌊 Seawater In Pre-Filter 5μm + 1μm HP Pump 55 bar RO Membrane × 2 modules 99.5% salt rejection 💧 Fresh! Brine reject ~840 litres/day fresh water Dual membranes · Energy recovery device · 3.5 kWh/m³ Pre-filtered seawater → 55 bar pressure → RO membrane → drinking water Enough water for 28 people at 30L/day

🔍 Exploded View

💧 Desalination Flow — Process Detail 🌊 Ocean Intake Screened pump at 2m depth 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 1 5μm sediment filter 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 2 1μm carbon block HP Pump 55 bar · 180W 🧫 RO Membrane A 420 L/day permeate 🧫 RO Membrane B 420 L/day permeate 💧 Post-Treatment Mineraliser + UV steriliser 🚰 Fresh Water Tank 500L storage Brine concentrate → energy recovery turbine → ocean return Total: 840 L/day · 3.5 kWh/m³ · Energy recovery reduces pump load by 40%

📖 Description

The desalination system is the primary purpose of the entire FreshWater platform. Two reverse-osmosis (RO) membrane units operate in parallel, each producing approximately 420 litres per day of fresh drinking water from seawater. The system is powered by the platform's combined energy sources.

Seawater is drawn through a pre-filter (removes sand, sediment, and organic matter), then pressurized by a high-pressure pump (800-1000 PSI) and forced through the RO membranes. Fresh water passes through; salt and contaminants are rejected and flushed back to the ocean as concentrated brine.

840 litres per day provides drinking water for 80-100 people (WHO minimum: 7.5-15 litres per person per day for drinking, cooking, and basic hygiene). For a coastal community with contaminated or insufficient fresh water, this is transformational.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: Reverse osmosis desalination is proven technology used worldwide at every scale. The FreshWater platform's innovation is powering it entirely from renewable sources (wave, solar, wind, gravity) on a floating platform built from recycled materials. Operating cost: zero (no fuel, no grid connection). Membrane replacement: ~$60 every 2-3 years. This produces water at under $0.01 per litre over the membrane life.

💡 Ideology

Water is life. One billion people lack access to clean drinking water. Many live within sight of the ocean — surrounded by water they cannot drink. Reverse osmosis changes that equation: seawater in, fresh water out.

The technology is not new. What is new is powering it for free on a platform built from trash. When a community that has been buying bottled water or boiling contaminated river water starts drinking fresh water from the ocean, everything changes. Health improves. Time previously spent collecting water becomes productive. Children go to school instead of walking miles to a well. This is not just water — it is freedom.

🔧 Methodology

The desalination build is plumbing + electrical. The RO membranes are purchased components; everything else is assembled.

PHASE 1 — PRE-FILTER: Build a 2-stage pre-filter using 5-micron and 1-micron sediment cartridges in standard filter housings. Connect to a seawater intake (through-hull fitting with a screen).

PHASE 2 — HIGH-PRESSURE PUMP: Install a 12V or 48V DC diaphragm pump rated for 800+ PSI. This is the only major purchased component. Connect to the power system.

PHASE 3 — RO MEMBRANES: Install 2 RO membrane elements in pressure housings. Connect the pump output to the membrane inlets. Route permeate (fresh water) to storage. Route concentrate (brine) overboard.

PHASE 4 — STORAGE: Install a 200L fresh water storage tank on the deck. Connect permeate output to the tank. Install a tap or pump for distribution.

PHASE 5 — TESTING: Run the system and test output water quality with a TDS meter (should be under 500 ppm — WHO standard). Measure flow rate. Adjust pump pressure for optimal output.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 RO membrane elements 2 membrane cartridges Standard 2.5"×21" or 4"×40" residential RO membranes Replace every 2-3 years depending on water quality $60.00
2 RO membrane housings 2 pressure vessels Match membrane size — rated for 1000+ PSI Fibreglass or stainless housing $50.00
3 High-pressure pump 1 DC diaphragm pump 800+ PSI Main energy consumer — drives water through membranes 12V or 48V DC rated, ~100W draw $80.00
4 Sediment filter housings 2 standard 10" filter housings Pre-filtration — 5μm and 1μm stages Standard residential filter housings $16.00
5 Sediment filter cartridges 4 cartridges (5μm + 1μm × 2 each) Replaceable pre-filter elements — replace every 3-6 months Spun polypropylene cartridges $12.00
6 200L fresh water tank 1 tank Permeate storage on deck Food-grade HDPE barrel or built plywood+liner tank $15.00
7 Through-hull seawater intake 1 fitting with screen Screened intake below waterline Bronze or stainless through-hull fitting $10.00
8 High-pressure tubing 10 metres (1/4" or 3/8" rated 1000 PSI) Connections between pump, membranes, and fittings Polyethylene or nylon rated tubing $20.00
9 Quick-connect fittings 12 assorted fittings Push-fit connections for tubing John Guest or equivalent $18.00
10 TDS meter 1 handheld tester Test permeate water quality — target under 500 ppm Pocket TDS meter $5.00
11 Pressure gauge 1 0-1500 PSI Monitor pump output pressure Glycerin-filled for vibration $6.00
12 Check valve 1 1/4" check valve Prevent backflow from storage tank to membranes Low-cracking-pressure type $2.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $294.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Install Seawater Intake and Pre-Filters

⏱ 1h 30min Advanced
💧 Desalination Flow — Process Detail 🌊 Ocean Intake Screened pump at 2m depth 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 1 5μm sediment filter 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 2 1μm carbon block HP Pump 55 bar · 180W 🧫 RO Membrane A 420 L/day permeate 🧫 RO Membrane B 420 L/day permeate 💧 Post-Treatment Mineraliser + UV steriliser 🚰 Fresh Water Tank 500L storage Brine concentrate → energy recovery turbine → ocean return Total: 840 L/day · 3.5 kWh/m³ · Energy recovery reduces pump load by 40%

Drill a through-hull hole below the waterline at the stern. Install the bronze through-hull fitting with a screened intake (keeps out seaweed and debris). Run tubing from the intake up to the 2-stage pre-filter assembly (5μm first stage, 1μm second stage). Mount filters in an accessible location for cartridge changes. Seal the through-hull fitting with marine sealant — this is a hull penetration below waterline.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Hole saw
  • Through-hull fitting
  • Marine sealant
  • Filter housings
  • Tubing
  • Fittings
⚠️ Safety: Hull penetration below waterline — verify watertight seal before launch. Have a plug ready in case of leaks. Work on the hauled-out hull, not in the water.
💡 Tips: Install the intake near the waterline center of the hull (not too deep — more pressure needed, not too shallow — air gets in during waves). An inline shut-off valve above the waterline allows maintenance without hauling.

Step 2 Install High-Pressure Pump

⏱ 1h 30min Advanced
💧 Desalination Flow — Process Detail 🌊 Ocean Intake Screened pump at 2m depth 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 1 5μm sediment filter 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 2 1μm carbon block HP Pump 55 bar · 180W 🧫 RO Membrane A 420 L/day permeate 🧫 RO Membrane B 420 L/day permeate 💧 Post-Treatment Mineraliser + UV steriliser 🚰 Fresh Water Tank 500L storage Brine concentrate → energy recovery turbine → ocean return Total: 840 L/day · 3.5 kWh/m³ · Energy recovery reduces pump load by 40%

Mount the DC diaphragm pump on vibration-dampening rubber mounts in the equipment bay. Connect the pre-filter output to the pump inlet. Connect the pump outlet to the pressure gauge tee, then to the RO membrane inlets. Wire the pump to the power distribution panel (dedicated fused circuit). Install an on/off switch accessible from the deck.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Pump
  • Rubber mounts
  • High-pressure tubing
  • Pressure gauge
  • Wiring
  • Switch
  • Fuse
⚠️ Safety: HIGH PRESSURE — 800+ PSI can cause serious injury if tubing fails. Use rated tubing ONLY. Tighten all fittings fully. Never put your face near a pressurized connection during testing.
💡 Tips: The pump is the loudest and most power-hungry component. Rubber mounts reduce noise transmission to the deck. A pressure relief valve (set to 1200 PSI) protects against dead-head operation if the membrane path is blocked.

Step 3 Install RO Membranes and Plumbing

⏱ 2h Advanced
💧 Desalination Flow — Process Detail 🌊 Ocean Intake Screened pump at 2m depth 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 1 5μm sediment filter 🔬 Pre-Filter Stage 2 1μm carbon block HP Pump 55 bar · 180W 🧫 RO Membrane A 420 L/day permeate 🧫 RO Membrane B 420 L/day permeate 💧 Post-Treatment Mineraliser + UV steriliser 🚰 Fresh Water Tank 500L storage Brine concentrate → energy recovery turbine → ocean return Total: 840 L/day · 3.5 kWh/m³ · Energy recovery reduces pump load by 40%

Mount 2 RO membrane housings horizontally in the equipment bay. Insert membrane elements per manufacturer instructions (check O-ring seals). Connect the pump output to both membrane inlets (parallel feed). Route permeate (fresh water) outputs through a check valve to the 200L storage tank. Route concentrate (brine) outputs overboard through a brine discharge fitting above the waterline.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Membrane housings
  • Membranes
  • High-pressure fittings
  • Check valve
  • Tubing
  • Tank
⚠️ Safety: Ensure brine discharge is above waterline — submerged discharge creates backpressure. All connections on the high-pressure side must be rated and tight.
💡 Tips: A brine flow restrictor (needle valve on the concentrate line) lets you adjust the recovery ratio. Start at 15% recovery (low pressure) and increase gradually. Higher recovery = more water but shorter membrane life.

Step 4 Commission and Test Water Quality

⏱ 1h Intermediate
💧 Desalination — Reverse Osmosis 🌊 Seawater In Pre-Filter 5μm + 1μm HP Pump 55 bar RO Membrane × 2 modules 99.5% salt rejection 💧 Fresh! Brine reject ~840 litres/day fresh water Dual membranes · Energy recovery device · 3.5 kWh/m³ Pre-filtered seawater → 55 bar pressure → RO membrane → drinking water Enough water for 28 people at 30L/day

Turn on the pump. Watch the pressure gauge — it should rise to 600-1000 PSI. Permeate should begin flowing within 30 seconds. Let the system flush for 10 minutes (discard initial permeate — it may have preservative from new membranes). Test permeate with the TDS meter: target under 500 ppm (good membranes produce under 100 ppm). Measure flow rate in litres per hour. Adjust pump pressure to optimize output. Fill the 200L storage tank. Taste the water — it should be fresh and clean.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • TDS meter
  • Measuring jug
  • Timer
  • Notebook
⚠️ Safety: Discard the first 10 minutes of permeate if using new membranes — may contain sodium metabisulfite preservative. Safe but tastes bad.
💡 Tips: Record TDS readings at startup and weekly. If TDS rises above 300 ppm over time, the membrane needs cleaning or replacement. Expected life: 2-3 years with proper pre-filtration.
#water #desalination #membrane #production

🛡️ Weatherproofing & Sealing

🌊 FreshWater Protection Intermediate ⏱ 6 hours 👷 2 builders 🧑 Teen (13-17) AdvancedConstruction

Marine sealant, UV-stabilised panels, scuppers, and Beaufort Force 8 storm rating.

📐 Overview Diagram

StakShax Diagram weatherproofing-overview

📖 Description

Weatherproofing makes the FreshWater platform survive storm conditions up to Beaufort Force 8 (gale force, 34-40 knot winds, 4-5.5m waves). Every joint, penetration, and exposed surface is treated for salt spray, UV degradation, and wave impact.

Key elements: (1) Marine sealant on every joint, bolt hole, and deck penetration. (2) UV-stabilised plastic panels over equipment bays to protect electronics. (3) Scuppers (deck drainage openings) at all low points to prevent water pooling on deck. (4) Lashing points for securing loose equipment in storm conditions. (5) Anti-corrosion treatment on all metal fasteners and fittings.

This is not a standalone construction — it is an ongoing process applied to every subsystem during and after installation. Weatherproofing is the difference between a platform that lasts 10 years and one that falls apart in 6 months.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: Storm survivability is a critical metric for marine deployments. The Beaufort Force 8 rating means the platform can be deployed year-round in most coastal environments without seasonal retrieval. Weatherproofing materials cost approximately $120 total. Annual maintenance: re-seal and inspect, ~$30/year.

💡 Ideology

The ocean tests everything. Salt corrodes steel in months. UV degrades plastic in a season. Waves stress every joint, every bolt, every seal. The only defense is thorough, systematic weatherproofing — applied everywhere, maintained regularly, and never skipped.

A platform that sinks helps no one. A platform that degrades slowly becomes a hazard. Weatherproofing is not glamorous work — it is sealant and paint and corrosion spray — but it is the work that keeps everything else working.

🔧 Methodology

Weatherproofing is applied in layers throughout the build process, then maintained regularly.

PHASE 1 — DECK SEALING: Seal every bolt hole, joint, and penetration in the deck with marine sealant. Apply 2 coats of marine varnish or paint to all plywood surfaces.

PHASE 2 — EQUIPMENT PROTECTION: Build UV-stabilised polycarbonate panels over equipment bays. Install drip edges and drain channels to route water away from electronics.

PHASE 3 — SCUPPERS: Cut scuppers (drainage slots) at every deck low point. Install scupper flaps (one-way valves) to allow water out but prevent waves from entering.

PHASE 4 — LASHING POINTS: Install stainless eye bolts at strategic locations for tying down equipment, barrels, and tools in storm conditions.

PHASE 5 — ANTI-CORROSION: Apply zinc-rich primer or anti-corrosion spray (Lanolin/CRC Marine) to all exposed metal surfaces. Wrap stainless cable ends with anti-corrosion tape.

🔗 Prerequisites

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 Marine sealant 6 tubes 300ml Seal all joints, bolt holes, and penetrations Sikaflex or equivalent polyurethane $42.00
2 Marine varnish or paint 4 litres Coat all plywood surfaces — 2 coats minimum UV-resistant marine grade $48.00
3 UV-stabilised polycarbonate sheet 2 1200×600×4mm Equipment bay covers Clear or tinted — blocks UV while allowing visibility $30.00
4 Aluminium angle (drip edge) 4 1m lengths 25×25mm Drip edges over equipment openings Route water away from electronics $6.00
5 Scupper flaps 6 one-way rubber flaps Deck drainage — water out, waves blocked Self-closing rubber or neoprene $12.00
6 Stainless eye bolts 12 M10 eye bolts with backing plates Lashing points for storm tie-downs 316 stainless, welded eye $36.00
7 Anti-corrosion spray 2 cans (400ml) Protect all exposed metal Lanolin-based or CRC Marine 6-56 $12.00
8 Anti-corrosion tape 1 roll 25mm × 10m Wrap cable ends and fittings Denso tape or equivalent petrolatum tape $5.00
9 Paintbrushes + rollers 4 assorted Apply varnish and sealant Disposable foam rollers for smooth finish $4.00
10 Ratchet straps 6 1m straps Storm tie-downs for equipment Hook to eye bolts $18.00
Estimated Total Material Cost $213.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Seal All Deck Joints and Penetrations

⏱ 2h Intermediate
StakShax Diagram weatherproofing-overview

Systematically inspect every bolt hole, joint, cross-beam connection, and through-hull penetration on the deck. Apply marine sealant to every one. Pay special attention to: deck-to-cross-beam joints, solar canopy post mounts, equipment bay bolt holes, and any cracked or split plywood. Apply 2 coats of marine varnish to all exposed plywood — top, bottom, and cut edges.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Marine sealant + caulking gun
  • Marine varnish
  • Brushes/rollers
  • Inspection light
⚠️ Safety: Sealant and varnish fumes — work in well-ventilated area. Wear nitrile gloves for sealant application.
💡 Tips: Work systematically — start at one end of the deck and work to the other. It is easy to miss spots. Mark sealed areas with chalk to track progress. The bottom of the deck is easy to forget and the first to rot.

Step 2 Install Equipment Bay Covers and Drainage

⏱ 1h 30min Intermediate
StakShax Diagram weatherproofing-overview

Cut polycarbonate panels to cover equipment bays (battery bank, fuse panel, charge controllers, monitoring electronics). Mount on hinges for access. Install aluminium drip edges above each cover — angled to route water sideways and away. Install drain channels below each cover to catch any water that gets past. Seal all mounting screws with sealant.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Polycarbonate panels
  • Drill
  • Hinges
  • Aluminium angle
  • Marine sealant
  • Screws
⚠️ Safety: Polycarbonate cutting creates chips — eye protection. Use fine-tooth blade to prevent cracking.
💡 Tips: Leave a 10mm gap at the bottom of each cover for ventilation — electronics generate heat and need airflow. But angle the gap downward so spray cannot enter.

Step 3 Cut Scuppers and Install Flaps

⏱ 1h Intermediate
StakShax Diagram weatherproofing-overview

Identify every low point on the deck where water pools (pour a bucket of water on the deck and watch where it collects). Cut a scupper (drainage slot, 50×100mm) at each low point through the deck edge. Install one-way rubber flaps over each scupper — they open outward when water pushes from the deck side, but close when waves push from the outside. This prevents deck flooding while allowing drainage.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Jigsaw
  • Scupper flaps
  • Screws
  • Marine sealant
  • Bucket of water for testing
⚠️ Safety: Cutting the deck edge weakens it locally — keep scuppers away from structural bolt points.
💡 Tips: More scuppers are better than fewer. A wave that dumps 100 litres on the deck needs to drain in seconds — not pool and add weight. 6-8 scuppers minimum for a 7.6m platform.

Step 4 Install Lashing Points and Apply Anti-Corrosion

⏱ 1h Easy
StakShax Diagram weatherproofing-overview

Install stainless eye bolts at 12 strategic locations: near each equipment bay, near hydroponics towers, near each AirGen engine, and at deck corners. Use backing plates on the underside to distribute load. Then apply anti-corrosion spray to ALL exposed metal on the platform: bolts, hinges, mast hardware, cross-beam connections. Wrap stainless cable ends (guy wires) with anti-corrosion tape.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Stainless eye bolts + backing plates
  • Drill
  • Anti-corrosion spray
  • Anti-corrosion tape
  • Ratchet straps for testing
⚠️ Safety: Anti-corrosion spray is flammable — do not use near open flames or hot work. Ventilated area.
💡 Tips: Test each lashing point by hooking a ratchet strap and pulling hard. If it flexes or starts to pull out, add a larger backing plate. In a storm you will be very glad these hold.
#protection #sealing #weather #marine

🏗️ Final Assembly & Launch

🌊 FreshWater Assembly Expert ⏱ 16 hours 👷 6 builders 👤 Adult (18+) Industrial

Integrate every subsystem, commission, test, launch — and celebrate.

📐 Overview Diagram

🏗️ Final Assembly — Exploded View Pontoon Hulls (1,920 bottles) Cross-Beams (aluminium) Marine Plywood Deck Power System (battery + MPPT) Desalination Unit (dual RO) Hydroponics + Grow Beds AirGen Gravity Engines × 2 OWC Wave Chambers × 4 Solar Canopy (6 × 100W) Assembly Order ↓ Commission each subsystem · Sea trials · Celebrate 🎉 6 builders · ~960 hours total · Every component from recycled or salvaged materials

🔍 Exploded View

🗺️ Platform Top-Down View Port Pontoon Starboard Pontoon ☀️ Solar Canopy (6 panels) 🌊 OWC Chambers × 4 💧 Desal RO 🔋 Power Room ⚙️ AirGen 1 ⚙️ AirGen 2 🌱 Grow Zone 💨 💨 VAWT × 2 (aft) 🔩 Wave-Drive Prop ↑ BOW ↓ STERN 7.6m × 4.0m · All subsystems visible · Self-sufficient desalination platform

📖 Description

Final assembly is the culmination of all FreshWater subsystem builds. Every component — hull, wave engines, wind turbines, solar array, AirGen engines, hydroponics, desalination, power system, outriggers, weatherproofing, and optionally the wave-drive and Fuze — are integrated, commissioned, tested, and launched as a complete water-producing, food-growing, power-generating platform.

This is not just assembly — it is system integration. Every subsystem was tested individually, but they must now work together: wave engines feeding the power bus while solar and AirGen contribute, the power bus feeding the desalination pump and hydroponics pump simultaneously, the monitoring system tracking all of it in real time.

The launch is a community event. The people who collected 2,000 bottles, rolled weight rolls, wound copper coils, cast aluminium gears, and soldered circuit boards now see their work floating, producing clean water, and growing food. This is the moment it all becomes real.

GRANT WRITING NOTE: The launch event is the ideal moment for grant documentation: photos, video, water quality testing results, energy output measurements, and community celebration. Invite press, sponsors, and community leaders. Produce a one-page metrics sheet: litres of water per day, watts of power, kg of food, number of bottles recycled, hours of volunteer labor, total material cost.

💡 Ideology

This is the moment. Months of work by dozens of hands. Thousands of recycled bottles. Salvaged magnets and copper wire. Hand-cast aluminium gears. Seaweed nutrients. Every component built from waste and intention.

When the platform touches water and the desalination pump hums to life and clean water flows into the tank for the first time — that is not just engineering. That is a community proving to itself that it can build its own future from what others threw away.

🔧 Methodology

Final assembly follows a strict integration sequence: structure first, then power, then loads, then testing.

PHASE 1 — INTEGRATION CHECKLIST: Verify every subsystem has been individually tested and signed off. Walk the platform and physically inspect every bolt, wire, seal, and connection.

PHASE 2 — POWER SYSTEM INTEGRATION: Connect all energy sources to the power bus. Verify the battery charges from each source. Verify the distribution panel powers each load circuit.

PHASE 3 — LOAD TESTING: Turn on all loads simultaneously. Monitor battery voltage and current draw. Verify the platform can sustain all loads from its generation sources.

PHASE 4 — LAUNCH PREPARATION: Move the platform to the launch site. Organize the launch team (6+ people). Prepare safety equipment: life jackets, rope, first aid kit, radio.

PHASE 5 — LAUNCH: Slide the platform into the water on rollers. Deploy outriggers. Start all systems. Monitor for 1 hour before declaring operational.

PHASE 6 — COMMISSIONING: Record baseline metrics. Fill the fresh water tank. Harvest the first food. Celebrate.

📦 Bill of Materials

#ItemQtyUnitDescriptionNotesEst. Cost
1 Integration checklist (printed) 1 document Pre-launch inspection checklist covering every subsystem Create from subsystem test records Free / Recycled
2 Life jackets 8 adult PFDs Safety equipment for all people near the water during launch Must be worn by everyone — no exceptions $80.00
3 Rope 30 metres of 12mm nylon Handling and mooring lines Braided nylon — strong and floats $30.00
4 First aid kit 1 kit Burns, cuts, and general first aid Include cold packs and eye wash $15.00
5 Marine radio or phone 1 device Communication during launch VHF marine radio preferred Free / Recycled
6 Rollers or PVC pipes 6 1m lengths 100mm PVC Slide the platform into the water Reusable from PVC scrap pile Free / Recycled
7 Camera 1 device Document the launch for grants and community records Phone camera is fine Free / Recycled
8 Mooring gear 1 anchor or mooring line set Secure the platform at its deployment location Match to local conditions $20.00
9 Celebration supplies 1 set This is a community achievement — celebrate it Food, drinks, music, whatever fits Free / Recycled
Estimated Total Material Cost $145.00

🔨 Build Steps

Step 1 Complete Integration Checklist

⏱ 2h Intermediate
🏗️ Final Assembly — Exploded View Pontoon Hulls (1,920 bottles) Cross-Beams (aluminium) Marine Plywood Deck Power System (battery + MPPT) Desalination Unit (dual RO) Hydroponics + Grow Beds AirGen Gravity Engines × 2 OWC Wave Chambers × 4 Solar Canopy (6 × 100W) Assembly Order ↓ Commission each subsystem · Sea trials · Celebrate 🎉 6 builders · ~960 hours total · Every component from recycled or salvaged materials

Walk the entire platform with the integration checklist. For every subsystem, verify: (1) Individual test passed. (2) All bolts tight. (3) All electrical connections secure and labeled. (4) All sealant joints intact. (5) No loose tools or materials left on deck. Sign off each item. Do NOT proceed to launch with any unchecked items.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Printed checklist
  • Pen
  • Torque wrench for bolt verification
  • Multimeter for electrical verification
  • Flashlight for inspection
⚠️ Safety: This step IS the safety check. Take it seriously. Every missed item is a potential failure on the water.
💡 Tips: Have two people do the walkthrough independently, then compare notes. Items one person catches, the other may miss. Two sets of eyes are better than one.

Step 2 Full System Power Test on Land

⏱ 1h Advanced
🗺️ Platform Top-Down View Port Pontoon Starboard Pontoon ☀️ Solar Canopy (6 panels) 🌊 OWC Chambers × 4 💧 Desal RO 🔋 Power Room ⚙️ AirGen 1 ⚙️ AirGen 2 🌱 Grow Zone 💨 💨 VAWT × 2 (aft) 🔩 Wave-Drive Prop ↑ BOW ↓ STERN 7.6m × 4.0m · All subsystems visible · Self-sufficient desalination platform

With the platform still on land (stable, accessible): Connect all energy sources to the power bus. Turn on every load simultaneously: desalination pump, hydroponics pump, LED lighting, monitoring. Run for 30 minutes. Monitor: battery voltage (should remain stable), pump operation (no cavitation noises), monitoring display (correct readings). If anything fails, fix it NOW — not on the water.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Multimeter
  • Clamp meter
  • Notebook
  • All tools for quick fixes
⚠️ Safety: Multiple high-current circuits active — keep hands away from bus bars. No water near electrical panels during testing.
💡 Tips: If the battery voltage drops significantly under full load, check that all generation sources are actually charging. One disconnected solar string can make the difference between a net charge and a net discharge.

Step 3 Transport to Launch Site

⏱ 2h Advanced
🏗️ Final Assembly — Exploded View Pontoon Hulls (1,920 bottles) Cross-Beams (aluminium) Marine Plywood Deck Power System (battery + MPPT) Desalination Unit (dual RO) Hydroponics + Grow Beds AirGen Gravity Engines × 2 OWC Wave Chambers × 4 Solar Canopy (6 × 100W) Assembly Order ↓ Commission each subsystem · Sea trials · Celebrate 🎉 6 builders · ~960 hours total · Every component from recycled or salvaged materials

Move the platform to the water's edge using rollers (100mm PVC pipes under the pontoons). This requires 6+ people pushing and guiding. Choose a gentle slope into the water — a boat ramp is ideal. Verify the launch path is clear of obstacles. Position the platform pontoons on the rollers, perpendicular to the water's edge. Attach ropes to all 4 corners for control during the slide.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • 6 PVC pipe rollers
  • 4 ropes (8m each)
  • 6+ people
  • Boat ramp or gentle slope
⚠️ Safety: The platform is HEAVY — do not try to carry it. Roll only. Keep feet clear of rollers. Never stand downhill of the platform — it can roll faster than expected on a slope.
💡 Tips: Grease the rollers with dish soap — dramatically reduces friction. Move one person ahead to reposition rollers from behind the platform to the front as it advances.

Step 4 Launch and Deploy

⏱ 2h Advanced
🏗️ Final Assembly — Exploded View Pontoon Hulls (1,920 bottles) Cross-Beams (aluminium) Marine Plywood Deck Power System (battery + MPPT) Desalination Unit (dual RO) Hydroponics + Grow Beds AirGen Gravity Engines × 2 OWC Wave Chambers × 4 Solar Canopy (6 × 100W) Assembly Order ↓ Commission each subsystem · Sea trials · Celebrate 🎉 6 builders · ~960 hours total · Every component from recycled or salvaged materials

EVERYONE puts on life jackets. Slide the platform into the water using ropes for control. Once floating, deploy outriggers immediately (stability). Start the monitoring system. Start the desalination pump. Verify all wave turbines spin (if there are waves). Check for leaks — look under the deck for dripping. Moor the platform at its deployment location. Monitor for 1 full hour before declaring operational.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • Life jackets for everyone
  • Ropes
  • Mooring gear
  • Radio
  • First aid kit
  • Multimeter
  • TDS meter
⚠️ Safety: LIFE JACKETS MANDATORY — no exceptions. Stay on the platform deck — do not enter the water near a newly launched structure. Keep a rescue rope ready. Have one person on shore with a phone for emergency calls.
💡 Tips: The first hour is critical — if a leak develops, it is better to catch it while close to shore and able to haul out. Assign specific people to monitor specific systems: one on power, one on desalination, one on hull inspection.

Step 5 Commission, Record Metrics, and Celebrate

⏱ 1h Easy
🗺️ Platform Top-Down View Port Pontoon Starboard Pontoon ☀️ Solar Canopy (6 panels) 🌊 OWC Chambers × 4 💧 Desal RO 🔋 Power Room ⚙️ AirGen 1 ⚙️ AirGen 2 🌱 Grow Zone 💨 💨 VAWT × 2 (aft) 🔩 Wave-Drive Prop ↑ BOW ↓ STERN 7.6m × 4.0m · All subsystems visible · Self-sufficient desalination platform

With the platform floating and all systems running: (1) Fill the 200L fresh water tank — measure TDS (should be under 500 ppm). (2) Record power output from each source. (3) Record battery voltage and state of charge. (4) Check hydroponics pump is circulating. (5) Take photos and video from multiple angles. (6) Write the one-page metrics sheet (litres/day, watts, kg food, bottles recycled, volunteer hours, total cost). (7) Hand the first glass of desalinated water to a community leader. (8) Celebrate — this platform was built from trash by a community, and it works.

🧰 Tools Required:
  • TDS meter
  • Multimeter
  • Camera
  • Notebook
  • Printed metrics template
  • A glass for the first water
⚠️ Safety: Celebrations on a floating platform — stay seated or use handholds. No alcohol until everyone is safely back on shore.
💡 Tips: This moment matters. Document everything. The photos and metrics from launch day will appear in every grant application, every community presentation, and every news story about this platform. Make it count.
#assembly #launch #integration #final