s There are two major variants, based on the location of the motor: •
Mechanical transmission, which connects a motor inside the ship to the outboard unit by
gearing. The motor may be
diesel or
diesel–electric. Depending on the shaft arrangement, mechanical azimuth thrusters are divided into
L-drive and
Z-drive. An L-drive thruster has a vertical input shaft and a horizontal output shaft with one right-angle gear. A Z-drive thruster has a horizontal input shaft, a vertical shaft in the rotating column and a horizontal output shaft, with two right-angle gears. •
Electrical transmission, more commonly called pods, where an electric motor is fitted in the pod itself, connected directly to the propeller without gears. The electricity is produced by an onboard engine, usually
diesel or
gas turbine. Invented in 1955 by
Friedrich W. Pleuger and
Friedrich Busmann (Pleuger Unterwasserpumpen GmbH),
ABB's
Azipod was the first product using this technology. The most powerful podded thrusters in use are the four 21.5 MW Rolls-Royce Mermaid units fitted to . Mechanical azimuth thrusters can be fixed installed, retractable or underwater-mountable. They may have fixed pitch propellers or
controllable pitch propellers. Fixed installed thrusters are used for tugboats, ferries and supply-boats. Retractable thrusters are used as auxiliary propulsion for dynamically positioned vessels and take-home propulsion for military vessels. Underwater-mountable thrusters are used as dynamic positioning propulsion for very large vessels such as
semi-submersible drilling rigs and
drillships. ==Advantages and disadvantages==