Rigtige både, rigtige passager, rigtige systemer – bygget til driftssikkerhed offshore.
A young couple with two children preparing a 43‑foot monohull for extended Mediterranean and Atlantic cruising prioritised simplicity, serviceability, and minimal permanent modification. A portable Rainman system was selected to allow water production primarily at anchor while retaining installation flexibility. Energy management was handled through a Victron system sized for domestic loads, combined with Maretron monitoring to maintain visibility of charging behaviour and consumption patterns. The result is a highly adaptable onboard system aligned with a cruising rhythm centred around anchoring life, where reliability and ease of handling outweigh absolute automation.
A retired couple commissioning a new cruising catamaran intended for long‑distance passages required continuous water availability independent of anchoring schedules. A modular Rainman installation was integrated to enable water production both at anchor and while underway. Bluewater Systems generation architecture was configured for sustained onboard loads, supported by Victron energy management and Maretron monitoring for thermal and electrical stability. This configuration supports predictable, low‑intervention operation during extended passages, reducing marina dependency and simplifying daily onboard management.
An offshore‑oriented crew preparing for multi‑week passages prioritised redundancy, fault isolation, and stable system behaviour under varying loads. A modular Rainman installation formed the primary water source, complemented by portable backup capability. Charging and generation strategy was designed around load stability rather than peak output, using Victron management and distributed Maretron monitoring. The installation reflects a systems‑engineering philosophy where predictable behaviour and serviceability are valued above component ratings.