Do it at night.
Well, unless you have Underwater Night Vision Goggles, somebody is likely to see the lights underwater.
Frank
Am I wrong in my thinking? No matter which method you use, a suction dredge is going to produce a plume of sand and other material that has to go somewhere and is going to very visible and the air lift method is going to stir up the bottom sand and sediments which will likely make it to the surface and be visible due to not only mixing these with the surrounding waters but also because the rising air bubbles will carry some to or close to the surface. In either case, if you are trying to move sand underwater inconspicuously, I don't believe that is going to happen!! So that is why I posed the question in the beginning! I am always wanting to learn such things, so please correct me if I am wrong.
Frank
Has nobody used a thruster motor to clear light overburden?I love these old posts. But I need another solution.
i am making a custom ROV which I hope to operate at 300 feet.
i know there is lots of sand and silt and I considered usiing a thruster to "blow holes".
However, it would probably be self defeating. So I am going t o reverse the thruster and imbed it between 2 sections of 4 inch flexible plastic pipe, and drop it just below the drone and visible from one of the cameras. The suction will add to my negative buoyancy and help dig deeper
My question is, which would be the most reliable thruster? Bear in mind that if I lose suction I can reverse the thruster to remove jammed materisl.
Comments?
one option is a large electric bilge pump with an H-bridge of relays to reverse the flow, another option is putting a simple pump on a dredge and using a venturi with a flapper valve to drop large objects if the pump is offHas nobody used a thruster motor to clear light overburden?