40 kW Surface Drive Integration — 6m Catamaran
Bus voltage
417 A continuous · 95–120 mm² HV feed
Motor power
40
kW continuous
Cont. current
417
A @ 96 V
Prop diameter
20
508 mm · Nibral
Appendage draft
~150
mm (prop arc only)
Design speed
8–10
knots · full power
System architecture — power & signal flow · surface drive config Transom Drive 20
BATTERY PACK 96 V nominal · LiFePO₄ · split bilge ~300 kg · bridgedeck keel · low CG SHORE CHARGER AC inlet · galvanic iso. SOLAR (OPT) MPPT → DC bus BMS Cell balance · protection · CAN MAIN ISOLATOR Manual DC disconnect + pre-charge VFD / MOTOR CTRL 40 kW · 3-phase PWM drive 96 V DC → 3φ AC variable freq PMSM · 40 kW High-speed output · aft compartment TRANSOM DRIVE 20 Steerable pod · bracket mount Nibral 20″ · surface-piercing VCU / HELM Throttle · pod steer · MFD STEER ACTUATOR Hydraulic / electro-hyd. DC–DC · 12 V Nav · lights · bilge · helm REDUCTION DRIVE Gearbox or toothed belt · 3:1–5:1 HV DC bus 40 kW motor feed Shaft / mechanical Hydraulic steer CAN / signal optional
Profile & transom arrangement — surface drive pod position No rudder · no stern tube · no shaft seal
PROFILE · STARBOARD SIDE WL MOTOR 40 kW PMSM inside hull VFD aft comp. BATTERY keel · ~300 kg low CG · LiFePO₄ HELM MFD · throttle TRANSOM POD high-speed shaft REDUCTION low-speed shaft → pod 20″ Nibral prop surface-piercing ← WL hyd. steer 6.0 m LOA hull draft ~0.28m prop arc ~150mm No rudder. No stern tube. No through-hull shaft seal. Pod bracket bolts to transom face — all drivetrain external.
Propeller selection — Transom Drive 20 · Nibral options
Option Diameter Blades Material Unit compatibility Touring boat suitability Notes
Selected 20″ (508 mm) 3-blade Nibral Transom Drive 20 only Best for 40 kW · highest efficiency · lower RPM Larger disc area → better low-speed thrust. Requires TD20 bracket.
Alternative 17″ (432 mm) 3-blade Nibral TD17 · SternPowr 107 · MCR III SSM Suited to lower power (20–30 kW range) Adequate for 40 kW but will require higher RPM for same thrust — less efficient.
Alternative 17″ (432 mm) 4-blade Nibral TD17 · SternPowr 107 · MCR III SSM Better low-speed than 3-blade 17″ Smoother torque delivery, less vibration — good for tour comfort if staying with TD17.
Pitch selection note: Surface-piercing props are typically pitched for higher speed operation. At 8–10 knot touring speeds, pitch must be reduced compared to standard inboard props — typically a lower pitch-to-diameter ratio (0.8–1.0 P/D). Final pitch should be confirmed with the drive manufacturer at your motor’s rated RPM. Underpitching is always recoverable; overpitching will overload the motor at low speed.
Drive & propulsion
Drive unitTransom Drive 20
PropellerNibral 20″ · 3-blade · solid hub
Prop diameter508 mm
Prop positionSurface-piercing at waterline
Appendage draft~150 mm (prop arc below WL)
Bracket mountTransom face · external · adjustable
Reduction driveGearbox or toothed belt · see below
Reduction ratio3:1 – 5:1 (to be confirmed)
Motor RPM (typical)3,000–5,000 RPM
Output RPM (target)800–1,400 RPM at prop
Shaft typeTwo sections: HiSpd + LoSpd · inside hull
Stern tubeNone required
Shaft sealNone — no through-hull penetration
SteeringPod rotation · hydraulic actuator
RudderNot required
ReverseMotor reversal via VFD · no reversing gearbox
Input couplingFlexible bellows · motor to reduction input
Output couplingRigid or flexible · reduction output to pod
Design speed8–10 knots
Power electronics
Bus voltage96 V nominal
VFD continuous I417 A DC input
VFD peak I (30 s)~625 A
VFD efficiency95–97%
HV DC cable95–120 mm² dual-core flex
3φ AC cable (VFD→motor)35–50 mm² screened · short run
Main fuse500 A Class-J at battery +
Pre-chargeMandatory · 50–100 Ω resistor + relay
Main contactor500 A DC rated
IP rating — VFDIP54 · dry aft compartment
IP rating — motorIP67 min
Regen brakingYes — drag braking returns to battery
Aux DC-DC12 V / 50 A for ship systems
Battery
ChemistryLiFePO₄ prismatic
Voltage96 V
Cell config30s2p (3.2 V cells)
Capacity100–200 Ah
Energy10–19 kWh
Mass budget~280–320 kg
PlacementKeel · bridgedeck · low CG
BMSActive balance · CAN output
Shore charge rate1–2 C max per BMS
Steering & control
Helm inputWheel → hydraulic pump
Steer actuatorElectro-hydraulic · pod bracket
Steer angle±30° pod rotation
ThrottleSingle lever · 0–5 V / CAN
MFD displaySOC · speed · power · temp
E-stopKill switch + lanyard · helm
InterlockBMS fault → VFD inhibit
CAN busVCU ↔ VFD ↔ BMS ↔ MFD
Thermal & safety
Motor coolingWater-cooled housing · raw water
VFD coolingHeatsink + forced air · louvres
Battery thermalPassive · bilge ventilation
Over-temp cutoffBMS → contactor open
Bilge alarmFloat switch → helm alarm
HV interlockService hatch switch
Fire suppressionABC ext. · motor bay
Galvanic isolationShore charger isolator · mandatory
Cable schedule · surface drive config
Type From → To Size @ 96 V Route Notes
HV DC Battery → Contactor → VFD input 95–120 mm² flex, dual-core Keel duct, watertight, aluminium conduit, bonded Pre-charge relay (50–100 Ω) in parallel with main contactor. Fused at battery +ve terminal.
3φ AC VFD output → Motor terminals 35–50 mm² screened, 3-core Rigid conduit, motor bay. Keep run <3 m. Screen bonded at VFD chassis only. Separate conduit from HV DC.
HYD STEER Helm pump → Pod bracket actuator 6 mm OD hydraulic hose, 200 bar rated Transom penetration · watertight gland Separate from all electrical runs. Single lock-to-lock steer angle: ±30°. Use marine-grade hose fittings.
CAN VCU → VFD → BMS → MFD (daisy chain) 2× 0.5 mm² twisted pair, shielded Separate conduit, min 100 mm from HV cables 120 Ω termination each end. Shield bonded at one point only.
SHORE AC Shore inlet → Galvanic isolator → Charger 6 mm² / 32 A marine cable Aft deck socket → charger below sole Galvanic isolator mandatory. ELCB on AC inlet. Waterproof shore connector.
12 V AUX DC-DC → Nav / lights / bilge / helm 4–6 mm² per circuit, fused individually Helm console panel Isolated from HV bus. Single-point hull bonding.
Reduction drive options — gearbox vs toothed belt
A 40 kW PMSM typically delivers peak torque at 3,000–5,000 RPM. The Transom Drive 20 and Nibral 20″ propeller require 800–1,400 RPM at hull speeds of 8–10 knots. A reduction drive of approximately 3:1 to 5:1 is required between motor output and pod input shaft. Two practical options are compared below.
Parameter Marine Gearbox Toothed Belt Drive (HTD/GT) Recommendation
Reduction ratio Fixed · typically 2:1–5:1 Very flexible · 1.5:1–10:1 via pulley sizing Belt: easier to tune ratio exactly
Efficiency 96–98% (helical gears) 96–98% (toothed belt, no slip) Comparable — both acceptable
Torque capacity at 40 kW Easily handles 100+ Nm Requires correct belt width / tension — calculate carefully Gearbox: inherently more robust
Reverse capability Reversing gearbox adds cost/complexity — not needed (VFD reverses motor) Belt runs reverse freely with motor reversal Belt: simpler for VFD-controlled reverse
Shaft alignment tolerance Requires precise axial + radial alignment Centre-distance flexible · minor misalignment tolerated Belt: more forgiving in boat builds
Noise & vibration Gear mesh noise — isolate from hull Near-silent · no gear mesh · good vibration isolation Belt: better for passenger vessel
Maintenance Oil changes · seals · periodic inspection Belt replacement every 2,000–4,000 hrs · check tension regularly Both require periodic service
Ingress protection Sealed housing · IP65+ typical Open belt drive needs sealed enclosure (bilge moisture) Gearbox: better in marine bilge environment
Mass (indicative) 15–40 kg depending on ratio & make 3–8 kg (pulleys + belt + tensioner) Belt: significant weight advantage
Cost (indicative) USD 800–3,000 (marine-rated gearbox) USD 150–500 (industrial pulleys + belt) Belt: much lower upfront cost
Design recommendation: For this application a toothed belt drive (HTD 8M or GT3 8M profile) is the preferred option — lower mass, quieter operation, easy ratio adjustment, and significantly lower cost. Use a minimum belt width of 30–50 mm and confirm the dynamic torque capacity at peak motor output (40 kW ÷ [output RPM × 2π/60] Nm). Enclose the belt drive in a sealed aluminium housing with drain plug. If the installation environment is particularly wet or space-constrained, a compact helical marine gearbox is the more robust fallback.
RPM calculation note: Final reduction ratio = Motor RPM ÷ Target prop RPM. Example: 4,000 RPM motor ÷ 1,000 RPM prop = 4:1 ratio. Confirm motor rated RPM at 40 kW with the motor supplier, then calculate: prop RPM = motor RPM ÷ ratio. Cross-check against drive manufacturer’s recommended prop RPM range for the Transom Drive 20 at your displacement and speed.
Surface drive advantages in this application: Eliminating the stern tube removes the single most common source of catamaran bilge flooding. No shaft seal to maintain, inspect, or replace. The external bracket allows the drive unit to be inspected, serviced, or swapped without drydocking — important for a commercial tour vessel. Prop replacement is above waterline.
Low-speed performance note: Surface drives are optimised for planing speeds. At displacement/semi-displacement touring speeds (8–10 kn), expect the prop to run partially ventilated rather than fully surface-piercing. This is acceptable — the efficiency is still good — but pitch selection is critical. Request the drive manufacturer’s pitch recommendation for your specific motor RPM at 8–10 knots and a ~1,400 kg displacement.
Transom structural note: The Transom Drive 20 bracket imposes significant thrust and vertical loads on the transom plate. The aluminium transom must be reinforced with a backing plate (minimum 8 mm 5083 plate, 400 × 600 mm) and the bracket bolts should pass through with large-area washers inside. Have the transom structural load verified before drilling.
electric_40kw_surface_drive · Transom Drive 20 · Nibral 20″ · REV C · 2026-04-05 Confirm motor RPM and reduction ratio with drive manufacturer · toothed belt or marine gearbox required