Marine Energy Technology SymposiumJoslin, JamesRush, BenStewart, AndrewPolagye, Brian2014-06-302014-06-302014-04http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49229The Adaptable Monitoring Package (AMP), along with a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) and custom tool skid, is being developed to support near-field (≤10 meters) monitoring of hydrokinetic energy converters. The AMP is intended to support a wide range of environmental monitoring in harsh oceanographic conditions, at a cost in line with other aspects of technology demonstrations. This paper, which is the second in a two part series, covers the hydrodynamic analysis of the AMP and deployment ROV given the strong waves and currents that typify marine renewable energy sites. Hydrodynamic conditions from the Pacific Marine Energy Center's wave test sites (PMEC) and Admiralty Inlet, Puget Sound, Washington are considered as early adoption case studies. A methodology is presented to increase the AMP's capabilities by optimizing its drag profile through a combination of computational fluid dynamic (CFD) modeling and sub-scale experiments. Preliminary results suggest that AMP deployments should be possible in turbulent environments with a mean flow velocity up to 1 m/s.application/pdfen-USIn CopyrightEnvironmental monitoringMarine renewable energyAdaptable monitoring packageDevelopment of an Adaptable Monitoring Package for Marine Renewable Energy Projects Part II: Hydrodynamic PerformanceConference proceedingJoslin, JamesRush, BenStewart, AndrewPolagye, Brian