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''Omer'' is the name of a series of human-powered
submarine A submarine (often shortened to sub) is a watercraft capable of independent operation underwater. (It differs from a submersible, which has more limited underwater capability.) The term "submarine" is also sometimes used historically or infor ...
s. The submarines were built by students of the ''
École de technologie supérieure École de technologie supérieure (, ''Higher Technology School'', ÉTS), founded in 1974, is a public university, public research university in Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada and affiliated to the Université du Québec system. The school s ...
'' (School of Higher Technology) in
Montreal Montreal is the List of towns in Quebec, largest city in the Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Quebec, the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, second-largest in Canada, and the List of North American cit ...
,
Quebec Quebec is Canada's List of Canadian provinces and territories by area, largest province by area. Located in Central Canada, the province shares borders with the provinces of Ontario to the west, Newfoundland and Labrador to the northeast, ...
, for the International Submarine Races. , ''Omer'' teams hold the human-powered submarine world
speed records A speed record is a world record for speed by a person, animal, or vehicle. The function of speed record is to record the speed of moving animate objects such as humans, animals or vehicles. Overall speed record Overall speed record is the recor ...
for two-seater and non-propeller categories. Those records are : *8.035 knots for ''Omer 5'' (two-seater) *4.96 knots for ''Omer 11'' (one-seater / non-propeller) ''Omer 11'' is the latest generation of ''Omer'' submarine.


History

Since 1992, a group of students from the É.T.S. in electrical, mechanical, software and automated automation engineering have taken part in the completion of ''Omer'', a human-powered submarine. The first generation of ''Omer'' was a two-seater submarine that made its mark around the world. Despite the students' efforts and with numerous prizes and awards in conception and innovation, ''Omer'' was not the world's fastest submarine. Otherwise, at the first presence of the ''Omer'' team, a variable pitch system was operational and gave good performances and helped the next ''Omer'' submarines to increase their speed. In September 1995, the team decided that ''Omer'' would become the world's champion. With new members' ideas and older members' expertise, ''Omer 2'' was born. In four months, a new hull was made and a new onboard computer was added to control the variable pitch from the
propeller A propeller (often called a screw if on a ship or an airscrew if on an aircraft) is a device with a rotating hub and radiating blades that are set at a pitch to form a helical spiral which, when rotated, exerts linear thrust upon a working flu ...
, and to give some information to the pilot as well. ''Omer'' went to California for a competition in May 1996, where it won a world record in the two-seater category. With that victory in hand, the team decided to aim for first place in the one-seater category. Construction on ''Omer 3'' began. The team found success in Washington in June 1997, winning world record in all categories. In the summer of 2001, ''Omer 4'' was set to beat the previous world record of 7.192 knots. Since then, a new electrical control system has been tested and integrated for the 2002 competition in California. Since their creation, ''Omer'', ''Omer 2'' and ''Omer 3'' had a lot of visibility in the media, and gained offers of help from individuals and corporations. In the summer of 2003, ''Omer 5'', the new two-seater submarine took first place again using the experience acquired from ''Omer 4''. The new submarine is now much more stable than ''Omer 4''. In 2005, it beat the world speed record for a two-seater submarine setting the mark at 7.061 knots. In the summer of 2007, the submarine ''Omer 5'' set the new world record reaching a speed of 8.035 knots. Omer 6 a submarine using non-propeller reach 4.642 knots, with its driver Nicolas Tardif, setting also a world record for non-propeller submarine.


2007 results

Carderock, Maryland, June 28, 2007 – Speed results by division in the 9th International Submarine Races held June 25–29 at the Naval Surface Warfare Center's Carderock Division David Taylor Model Basin in Bethesda, Maryland: Two Person Propeller: #8.035 knots, OMER 5, École de technologie supérieure, University of Quebec #4.795 knots, F-A-U Boat, Florida Atlantic University #4.775 knots, Drekar, Western Washington University #4.043 knots, Sub Taxi, Independent One Person Propeller: #7.420 knots, Wasub V, Delft University of Technology #6.473 knots, Archimede 4, École Polytechnique de Montreal #5.022 knots, Maroon Harpoon, Texas A&M #4.958 knots, Mercury, University of Michigan #4.835 knots, Sublime, Hernando County Schools, Spring Hill, Florida #3.771 knots, Phantom 5, Virginia Tech #3.488 knots, Sea Wolf, Hernando County Schools #2.343 knots, Dive Dawg, University of Washington #2.262 knots, Swamp Thing, University of Florida #1.694 knots, U-3.2, Sussex Technical High School, New Jersey #1.285 knots, RSR Fourier, University of Maryland #0.505 knots, Sea Car, Don Burton, Independent One-Person, Non-Propeller: #4.642 knots, OMER 6, École de technologie supérieure, University of Quebec #2.092 knots, Sea Bomb, University of Bath, UK #2.035 knots, Sebastion, University of California San Diego #0.854 knots, Bogus Batoid, Bruce Plazyk, Independent #0.499 knots, Battlin' Pete, U.S. Merchant Marine Academy


External links


Omer submarineÉcole de technologie Supérieure website
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International Submarine Race website
} Midget submarines École de technologie supérieure Human-powered vehicles Underwater sports Submarines of Canada Human-powered submarines