Marine electrification specialist Voltari continues to deliver some of the sleekest and best-performing electric boats on the market today. The company’s latest market entry is the Patrol 26 RIB, a carbon fiber electric boat with military-grade specs designed for security and government operations.
Voltari Electric was founded in Canada in 2021 after acquiring LTS Marine – a designer and manufacturer of turn-key electric boat systems, and Carbon Marine, an advanced marine carbon fiber laminate specialist led by current company CEO Cam Heaps.
From that point, Voltari quickly got to work implementing technologies from both acquired companies to deliver its flagship all-electric performance boat, the Voltari 260.
We saw a couple of the Volatari 260s up close during the 2023 Miami Boat Show and spoke with Heaps directly as he walked us around the vessels. The company’s all-electric speed boats are some of the coolest-looking in a growing segment of sustainable marine mobility and have the performance to back them.
To demonstrate the boat’s capabilities, Heaps took a Voltari 260 91 miles from Key Largo, Florida, to Bimini, Bahamas on a single charge. The company has since followed up with a superyacht RIB tender called the TT26, and a new electric patrol boat called the Voltari Patrol 26 RIB.
Voltari’s electric patrol boat offers 740 horsepower
The Voltari Patrol 26 RIB is hydrodynamic and intimidating, as it should be. The all-electric patrol boat was designed with military, government, and other security applications in mind and can handle rough waters at high speeds.
The boat features a 24-degree deadrise deep-vee RIB hull built entirely from carbon fiber and Shockwave suspension seating to protect passengers. The result is an all-electric patrol boat that can reach speeds of 50+ mph under almost any open water conditions, including heavy chop.
The Voltari Patrol 26 is propelled by a Konrad trimmable outdrive with contra-rotating propellers. The patrol boat’s 740 horsepower and 1,007 lb-ft torque combine with a dual-prop contra-rotating military-spec drive to go and do so quickly. Per Voltari, “the 2024 Patrol 26 RIB will out-accelerate, out-sprint and out-perform any ICE vessel in its class of similar size/shape and horsepower.”
The dual-prop drive provides 550 kW of peak power and 425 kW of continuous power and can navigate and secure waters for up to 100 miles at idle speeds (or 30 miles at a cruising speed of 25 mph).
In addition to the standard T-Top configuration, Voltari offers an optional Pilot House upgrade that gives passengers (up to four in the cabin) additional protection against the elements. The cabin also features climate control with heating and air conditioning.
The company shared that its electric patrol boats, which start at $557,000, are already being used by the US Department of Defense, Navy, and Coast Guard.
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On today’s episode of Quick Charge, Tesla’s Cybertruck is now available in Canada – and, like in the US, there’s no waiting! Plus, we’ve got an “actually” smart summon Tesla that’s actually stuck, GM reaches a sales milestone, and we get a brand-new title sponsor!
Today’s episode is the first with our new title sponsor, BLUETTI – a leading provider of portable power stations, solar generators, and energy storage systems.
New episodes of Quick Charge are recorded, usually, Monday through Thursday (and sometimes Sunday). We’ll be posting bonusLucid proves than an EV company can keep its promises while Xiaomi teams up with Chevrolet and Honda to prove – at least conceptually – that records are made to be broken. audio content from time to time as well, so be sure to follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a minute of Electrek’s high-voltage daily news!
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Mobile car care company Yoshi Mobility launched a DC fast charging EV mobile unit that it likens to “a supercharger on wheels.”
November 4, 2024 update: Yoshi Mobility will only be charging EVs on the side of the road now – it announced today that it’s selling its fleet fueling operation to EZFill Holdings (Nasdaq: EZFL).
It was originally founded as a direct-to-consumer, mobile fueling business in 2016, but now it’s going to focus on mobile EV charging, virtual vehicle inspections for partners like Uber and Turo, and onsite preventative maintenance.
Bryan Frist, Yoshi Mobility’s CEO & cofounder, said, “By spinning off our fuel business and focusing all of our energy on solving hair-on-fire problems that fleet owners face, we are meeting the changing needs of enterprise customers while making the future of transportation safer, cleaner, and more sustainable.”
May 22, 2024: Yoshi Mobility saw that its existing customers needed mobile EV charging in places where infrastructure has yet to be installed, so the Nashville-based company decided to bring the mountain to Moses.
“We recognized a demand among our customers for convenient daily charging, reliable private charging networks, and proper charging infrastructure to support their fleet vehicles as they transition to electric,” said Dan Hunter, Yoshi Mobility’s chief EV officer and cofounder.
The company says its 240 kW mobile DC fast charger, which can turn “any EV” into a mobile charging unit, is the first fully electric mobile charger available. It can provide multiple charges in a single trip but doesn’t detail how they charge the DC fast charger or who manufactured it. (I asked for more details, and they replied that they won’t disclose client names or the manufacturer of its DC fast charger yet.)
Yoshi is launching its mobile charger on two GM BrightDrop Zevo 600s and will introduce additional vehicles throughout 2024. It aims for full commercialization by Q1 2025. (I wonder if the Zevo 600 ever charges itself? Yes, I asked that too.)
Yoshi Mobility says it’s already deployed its EV charging solutions to service “major OEMs, autonomous vehicle companies, and rideshare operators” across the US. Its initial customers are made up of large EV operators managing “hundreds” of light-duty vehicles requiring up to 1 megawatt of energy per day that don’t yet have grid-connected EV chargers. I’ve asked Yoshi for details of who it’s working with, and will update if they share that info.
The company says pricing is based on location and enterprise charging needs. Once under contract for service, the service will be deployed to US-based customers within 10 days.
To date, Yoshi Mobility has raised more than $60 million, with investments from GM Ventures, Bridgestone, ExxonMobil, and Y-Combinator in Silicon Valley.
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Marqeta celebrates its initial public offering at the Nasdaq on June 9, 2021.
Source: The Nasdaq
Marqeta shares tumbled more than 30% in extended trading on Monday after the company issued weaker-than-expected guidance for the fourth quarter.
Here’s how the company did compared with Wall Street estimates, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:
Loss per share: 6 cents adjusted vs. a loss of 5 cents expected
Revenue: $128 million vs. $128.1 million expected
While third-quarter results showed a slight disappointment on the top and bottom lines, Marqeta’s forecast for the current period was more concerning.
The payment processing firm said revenue in the fourth quarter will increase 10% to 12% from a year earlier. Analysts were looking for growth of more than 17%, according to LSEG.
Marqeta, which primarily functions as a card-issuing platform, attributed the guidance miss to “heightened scrutiny of the banking environment and specific customer program changes.” The company has been struggling for a while, and its stock is now down more than 80% from its peak in 2021, the year it went public. The stock was down 15% for the year prior to the report.
Total processing volume of $74 billion was up more than 30% from a year earlier. Net revenue and gross profit were up 18% and 24%, respectively.
Marqeta’s digital commerce business sells payment technology designed to detect potential fraud and ensure that money is properly routed. It also issues customized physical cards that look like a credit or debit card that can be used for point-of-sale purchases.
The company has been trying to break into the buy now, pay later business with a recently launched product called Marqeta Flex. The service brings BNPL from lenders such as Affirm or Klarna to any credit card wherever Mastercard and Visa are accepted.
“It’s an orchestration layer, but it’s tied to issuing and processing and disputes and chargebacks,” CEO Simon Khalaf told CNBC at Money2020 in Las Vegas last week. “So it is not actually a Wild West in BNPL. It is actually very well established. And there is a reason why a lot of people are jumping to it.”