Windjammers were only produced from the 1870s to the 1890s, as the steam engine outcompeted them economically, due to cheap coal. Steel hulls also replaced iron hulls at around the same time. The internal combustion engine forever sealed their fate. Sailing ships in general were expensive to operate, as they required a large crew and, like all sailing ships, depended on favorable wind conditions, making them unreliable. Companies would rather hire one crew and burn coal (offering reliability) than hire two crews (one to man each method of propulsion) and have minor savings in coal costs but retain its reliability.
Windjammers were used commercially (though recognised as a dying breed) until the 1930s. They occupied something of a niche in the transport of goods from remote ports where coal and water were not available, such as parts of Australia (carrying wool) and remote islands (harvesting guano). Windjammers were also used particularly for the transport of South American nitrates.
Today, some aspects of a windjammer design are again appealing in light of the soaring costs of diesel fuel in shipping and the environmental impacts of burning such fuels. However, these ships would be a hybrid design, with sails lessening the fuel required by augmenting the diesel engine with sails, allowing the diesel engine to run at a more efficient rate. Though each design has drawbacks, the governments of Denmark, Germany, Japan, and the European Union have all funded research into such development projects. Using modern materials, fuel efficient designs, and modern computers, these ships could be more fuel efficient and economically feasible than modern cargo ships, and more economically viable and reliable than traditional windjammer designs. A flying kite design could also be useful for passenger ships, since they also pull the ship up and are anchored on the center of the craft, stabilizing the ship's structure, allowing it to rock back and forth less.
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