FrankPilot
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FrankPilot
Flying cars are very close. One more generation of the tech and they’ll be here. Or they are already here. Depending on how the discussion is going at the time.I don't imagine that many people paid much attention to that one. They figured that flying was either possible or it wasn't. But a lot of people were fooled by stuff like this, from 1957:
View attachment 118277
It's only 56 years overdue...
So everything we want to happen, will some day soon, as long as we want it bad enough and fight cynicism?
That video says over and over that it’s just an experiment.For someone that wanted to go for just evening / sunset flights, this could be reasonably practical.
Also if allowed to operate as a motor glider.
certified in Europe, not the U.S. A certification framework for the us doesn’t exist, and is not really in sight
costs twice as much as it’s Rotax brother, but not practical for air work or cross countries
best thought of as a technology demonstrator
Yeah, a self launching glider seems to be a good application of the tech. Maybe. The weight may be an issue. Not sure. I suspect Pipistrel would be doing it if it made sense since they already make a lot of motor gliders with Rotax's in them.An electric glider seems fairly practical. All you need is enough energy to take-off and climb to a thermal . . .
Maybe the weight is an issue from an energy to weight ratio, but our current ASK 21 two seater can carry 414 pounds of pilot and passenger with a glide ratio of 34 to 1, so a 180 pound pilot flying solo would have capacity for 234 pounds of battery plus engine and its associated items using the current airframe.Yeah, a self launching glider seems to be a good application of the tech. Maybe. The weight may be an issue. Not sure. I suspect Pipistrel would be doing it if it made sense since they already make a lot of motor gliders with Rotax's in them.
Been done already.Yeah, a self launching glider seems to be a good application of the tech. Maybe. The weight may be an issue. Not sure. I suspect Pipistrel would be doing it if it made sense since they already make a lot of motor gliders with Rotax's in them.
Talk about selective listening. I'm probably *almost* as sure as you are that it's not that practical, but there's two things you are missing...That video says over and over that it’s just an experiment.
responding to 2. With your changes the price will be 2.5 times a rotax powered version that has more range and can carry a second person, and can make more than one flight a day. I'll concede, they might sell a few of those. But they'll never sell enough to make money on them.Talk about selective listening. I'm probably *almost* as sure as you are that it's not that practical, but there's two things you are missing...
1. The biggest hurdle is that the FAA is less forward thinking than Europe on this issue. And,
2. There is every reason for me to believe that if you accepted that this would be a single-seat aircraft, you could choose to install a third battery there that would effectively extend that Pipistrel product to closer to a full hour of recreational flight for a pilot who just enjoys flying for flying's sake.
I think if you look behind the scenes this assessment has been known for quite some time and was part of the move toward sustainable fuels and other propulsion technologies like hydrogen fuel cells. The battery powered systems have primarily been focused on the UAM/AAM markets with eTVOLs and similar aircraft with the larger aircraft/markets to be handled by sustainable fuel ICE systems, fuel cells, and hybrid ICE/electric propulsion systems. At least that is where the money is being spent and they've started to fly the prototypes or working to approve the use of 100% sustainable fuels in the real market. While there have been attempts at battery powered aircraft in a larger aircraft like Tecnams and the battery powered R22, most know with current technologies it will never be a main stream replacement at this point. However, the hydrogen fuel side has taken to air with larger aircraft so we'll see if they can fix the issues with that endeavor.finally- has an honest assessment of electric airplanes–
I wouldn't take that bet unless you plan to die in the next 10 years. ZeroAvia flew a Dornier 228 with a hydrogen/electric engine about 5 months ago and Universal Hydrogen flew a De Havilland Dash 8 with their electric engine about 3 months ago. Throw in MIT's 1 megawatt electric aircraft engine is off the drawing board and in the build stage, I think there will a few more commuter size aircraft flying in the near future.But not in my lifetime.
Evolve, yes, but to reach the type of weight vs storage vs output needed for useful aircraft? Nope...
--Blade Runner was filmed in 1982, and was supposed to depict 2019 Los Angeles.
--Jetsons was written in 1962, depicting 2062.
--Lost in Space, created in 1965, was supposed to be 1997.
Lots of dreamers out there, but reality isn't gonna play along.
Ooooh. I forgot about cold fusion!Electric passenger planes, flying cars, cold fusion. All of 'em just 10-30 years away.
That's because nobody's seriously talked about it in decades.Ooooh. I forgot about cold fusion!
That's because nobody's seriously talked about it in decades.
And the absence flying cars is because of common sense, not a technological barrier.
Ok, cool! Link?Then you haven't been paying attention. It's been all over the news the past 5 years.
First link: Cold Fusion? Is it Possible?
Oh, it’s definitely garbage.First link: Cold Fusion? Is it Possible?
(from March of this year)
And quote from that article:
"They — like many before them — still haven’t proven the phenomenon of cold fusion exists."
I'm asking an honest question. I'm not a physicist and am fully willing to be proven wrong.
You can buy software that helps a chemist to synthesize compounds:@Cap'n Jack, some formerly hard problems are now more tractable due to ML techniques (see protein structure prediction, AlphaFold). Have there been analogous advances in chemistry? It seems reasonable to expect some game changers as these methods bear fruit.
I think SAFE will be the answer for passenger planes. Hydrogen isn't very energy dense. People who remember Henning will also remember he was fixated on the stuff. The ICE beat hydrogen for range, even if it was liquid hydrogen. If they improve the energy density (adsorbing it onto something or something else), I'll change my mind. Hydrogen "refuels" faster than batteries.I think if you look behind the scenes this assessment has been known for quite some time and was part of the move toward sustainable fuels and other propulsion technologies like hydrogen fuel cells. The battery powered systems have primarily been focused on the UAM/AAM markets with eTVOLs and similar aircraft with the larger aircraft/markets to be handled by sustainable fuel ICE systems, fuel cells, and hybrid ICE/electric propulsion systems. At least that is where the money is being spent and they've started to fly the prototypes or working to approve the use of 100% sustainable fuels in the real market. While there have been attempts at battery powered aircraft in a larger aircraft like Tecnams and the battery powered R22, most know with current technologies it will never be a main stream replacement at this point. However, the hydrogen fuel side has taken to air with larger aircraft so we'll see if they can fix the issues with that endeavor.
Oh, it’s definitely garbage.
But it makes clickbait so the media keeps publishing it.
An electric glider seems fairly practical. All you need is enough energy to take-off and climb to a thermal . . .
Agree. The only drop-in/plug-n-play fuel source I know of that equals or exceeds conventional fuels is SAF. Its the stop gap and once it gets certified for 100% use will change a number of things flying wise at the commercial level.I think SAFE will be the answer for passenger planes.
I think the concept of "range" is the part that has become rather subjective of late. But what if the market accepts a new range requirement? What if the market accepts an eVTOL that is limited by battery technology and commuter aircraft that is limited by hydrogen energy density? There's a lot of money being spent to answer those questions. Time will tell.The ICE beat hydrogen for range
FYI: you simply stated "electric propulsion" in your post. There are several methods to produce clean electrical propulsion airborne other than with batteries. As I said, becareful what you wish for.that gives them 43 years to make batteries that hold 100 times the energy
And the absence flying cars is because of common sense, not a technological barrier.
And quote from that article:
"They — like many before them — still haven’t proven the phenomenon of cold fusion exists."
I'm asking an honest question. I'm not a physicist and am fully willing to be proven wrong.
FYI: you simply stated "electric propulsion" in your post. There are several methods to produce clean electrical propulsion airborne other than with batteries. As I said, becareful what you wish for.
I'm taking batteries...not a fule burning generator making electricity in flight.
That seems silly, then just keep using the fuels we have now.
Well, I was alluding to the fact that flying cars don't exist yet due to reasons other than technology. Your average driver is bad enough. 40k deaths per year in the US by people struggling to navigate two dimensions of movement. No way that blurring the lines between aviation and driving makes logical sense at this point.There are indeed lots of technological barriers, which is why the sky isn't full of these things