David Megginson
Pattern Altitude
A friend of mine in the Netherlands is about to take his first intro flight in a Pipstrel Velis (certified electric plane). I'll report back on his experience.
A friend of mine in the Netherlands is about to take his first intro flight in a Pipstrel Velis (certified electric plane). I'll report back on his experience.
Yes, it's 90 min charge, so about an hour with reserve. I suspect it's good for ab-initio flight lessons or local sightseeing, but it's obviously not up to transportation.Website says they get up to "50 minutes with VFR reserve." It's got a lot of wing and nearly 80 HP with gross limited to 1320 lbs. I'll be interesting to see what your friend has to say about it.
With a 3 hour charge between flights, I doubt the dispatch rate is a plus.Yes, it's 90 min charge, so about an hour with reserve. I suspect it's good for ab-initio flight lessons or local sightseeing, but it's obviously not up to transportation.
OTOH, it's possible that the dispatch rate is much higher than with our ICE planes, since there's less to break in the powerplant. Most flight schools I've seen to always have a few planes off the line for protracted periods (and thus not earning revenue).
I'll report back on his experience.
I find this concept frustrating... if they offered a modular battery pack that could be quickly removed/installed, then all you would need is two extra batttery packs and you could fly pretty much nonstop except when swapping packs.
Yes, it's 90 min charge, so about an hour with reserve. I suspect it's good for ab-initio flight lessons or local sightseeing, but it's obviously not up to transportation.
Queue up all the regenerative braking fallacies hereI wonder how many TO/Landing cycles they include in that 90 minutes? Any time you stop/start, you're wasting a LOT of energy.
I find this concept frustrating... if they offered a modular battery pack that could be quickly removed/installed ...
EDIT: Sorry, I know you can swap batteries on their Alpha Trainer. Not sure about the Velis ...
With a 3 hour charge between flights, I doubt the dispatch rate is a plus.
Hey! That’s MY Aggie joke!How long is the extension cord needed to get around the pattern?
From what I read elsewhere, they recharge between lessons (60 min fast charge from flat, so less than that with 1/3 reserve remaining), so there wouldn't normally be many full stop cycles on a single charge. And the plane does a small amount of energy recovery on descent/deceleration (not much, obviously, compared to an electric car).I wonder how many TO/Landing cycles they include in that 90 minutes? Any time you stop/start, you're wasting a LOT of energy.
Queue up all the regenerative braking fallacies here
From what I read elsewhere, they recharge between lessons (60 min fast charge from flat, so less than that with 1/3 reserve remaining), so there wouldn't normally be many full stop cycles on a single charge. And the plane does a small amount of energy recovery on descent/deceleration (not much, obviously, compared to an electric car).
Can you explain your reasoning? Obviously it takes more power to initiate a full power climb than cruise flight, but also can be near zero (or negative) power during descent. Electric motors don't generally suffer from largely increased losses at different power settings, other than very low power (however these low power settings also do not consume much energy, and don't last that long in either cruise or pattern work). See the quote from the linked article, which has a figure 1 showing that larger motors have nearly 100% efficiency down to 10% power. Electric motors also do not have any losses from actual startup or shutdown of the prop, no losses from having to warm up the engine on a cold morning, waiting for a traditional run-up, etc.I wonder how many TO/Landing cycles they include in that 90 minutes? Any time you stop/start, you're wasting a LOT of energy.
Can you explain your reasoning?
According to the Pipistrel site, the battery life is quoted for operations near the aerodrome like touch-and-go's, not for point-to-point flight.Can you explain your reasoning? Obviously it takes more power to initiate a full power climb than cruise flight, but also can be near zero (or negative) power during descent. Electric motors don't generally suffer from largely increased losses at different power settings, other than very low power (however these low power settings also do not consume much energy, and don't last that long in either cruise or pattern work). See the quote from the linked article, which has a figure 1 showing that larger motors have nearly 100% efficiency down to 10% power. Electric motors also do not have any losses from actual startup or shutdown of the prop, no losses from having to warm up the engine on a cold morning, waiting for a traditional run-up, etc.
"Most electric motors are designed to run at 50% to 100% of rated load. Maximum efficiency is usually near 75% of rated load. Thus, a 10-horsepower (hp) motor has an acceptable load range of 5 to 10 hp; peak efficiency is at 7.5 hp. A motor’s efficiency tends to decrease dramatically below about 50% load. However, the range of good efficiency varies with individual motors and tends to extend over a broader range for larger motors (75-100hp), as shown in Figure 1. A motor is considered underloaded when it is in the range where efficiency drops significantly with decreasing load. Figure 2 shows that power factor tends to drop off sooner, but less steeply than efficiency, as load decreases."
https://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2014/04/f15/10097517.pdf
Don't worry. I still like using an E6B and round gauges. But I think maybe electric trainers might be a way to get more people into aviation more cheaply (and to help flight schools, most of which are usually teetering on the edge of insolvency), and that can't be a bad thing for any of us. We want to get them thoroughly hooked before they realise how much aviation really costs."troglodytic luddites"
Hey! I resemble that remark!
What's the fancy term for those that get excited about "new tech" that performs in every way worse than the old tech?I think it’s pretty cool that a mfg is actually producing full electric aircraft. Not my preferred power source, but very cool that it exists. It will get better quickly from here, from a design standpoint. Battery tech is getting better, but we live in an era when no one can wait for 15 minutes for anything, so the troglodytic luddites will talk their incessant mess.
What's the fancy term for those that get excited about "new tech" that performs in every way worse than the old tech?
What I wish the industry would do is develop hot swappable standardized modular battery packs. Then you could have batteries charging while your flying (or driving!). Land, swap packs in a few minutes, then off flying again. Heck, airports could stock them so you could go on cross countries.I think it’s pretty cool that a mfg is actually producing full electric aircraft. Not my preferred power source, but very cool that it exists. It will get better quickly from here, from a design standpoint. Battery tech is getting better, but we live in an era when no one can wait for 15 minutes for anything, so the troglodytic luddites will talk their incessant mess.
It's not just the position, according to Pipistrel, but the switch to water cooling and the weight (two batteries at 70 kg/155 lb each) that would preclude fast field swapping by an instructor or line staff between students.I think electric airplanes have reached the point they can perform a single one hour lesson before they have to go back on the charger for an extended period.
if you can't swap the batteries because they're in a bad position, it sounds like a design flaw to me.
The term is "early bleeders". Or early adopters if you're optimistic about it.
I'm surprised anyone's trying a hybrid approach for planes, because that just doubles the weight: you're carrying the batteries and some kind of ICE engine with its fuel. Maybe some clever person will figure it out, though.I have no doubt that electric aircraft for limited use will be available fairly soon. I would have thought the hybrid approach would have been used more on the way over to full electric. See what Diamond was doing:
https://www.diamondaircraft.com/en/...flight-multi-engine-hybrid-electric-aircraft/
What's the fancy term for those that get excited about "new tech" that performs in every way worse than the old tech?
I'm surprised anyone's trying a hybrid approach for planes, because that just doubles the weight: you're carrying the batteries and some kind of ICE engine with its fuel. Maybe some clever person will figure it out, though.
Absolutely. They have a while before they'll be ready to cross the chasm to the early majority on the Rogers innovation adoption curve. Most of the adapters right now well either be enthusiastic experimenters, or people with special needs that they can't meet any other way (for example, cutting the cost of training in the face of high European avgas prices).I think electric airplanes have reached the point they can perform a single one hour lesson before they have to go back on the charger for an extended period.
if you can't swap the batteries because they're in a bad position, it sounds like a design flaw to me.
The term is "early bleeders". Or early adopters if you're optimistic about it.
"Venture capitalist"What's the fancy term for those that get excited about "new tech" that performs in every way worse than the old tech?
ROTFLVisionary geniuses.
A 100 hp recip weighs close to 200 lb, IIRC. The batteries in the Pipistrel weigh 300 lb and go up to a bit under 90 hp for 1½ hours (probably not at full power the whole time), while that 100 hp engine will need 100–150 lb of avgas to run for any amount of time. I'm sure engineers will figure out slight optimizations for all of those, but I just can't see any way of making the numbers add up for a hybrid solution in a light aircraft.Think about it this way, though. Your 172 needs 160 hp for takeoff and climb, but cruises all day on 100 hp. So put a 60 hp electric boost motor and relatively small battery in it in addition to a 100 hp recip. Recharge the boost battery inflight.
Think about it this way, though. Your 172 needs 160 hp for takeoff and climb, but cruises all day on 100 hp. So put a 60 hp electric boost motor and relatively small battery in it in addition to a 100 hp recip. Recharge the boost battery inflight.
I wouldn't do that at this point in market maturity, because I wouldn't want to surrender so much of my control and equity. I'd try to limit myself to bootstrapping and angel investors. VC's are useful only when you need huge sums of money to scale up fast, but there's no big market to scale up in yet."Venture capitalist"
I agree, though I'm probably coming from a different part of the political spectrum. Personal electric cars are bad for the environment; they're usually a bit less bad than ICE cars, but they're not actually good, especially if you live in a country like the United States or China that still uses coal for a lot of its power generation.Some electric car owners pride themselves in their zero emissions vehicle but look the other way when driving past a coal or oil fired power plant ...
We're not too far apart on this. I believe that battery technology has two doublings left, then it will hit the absolute chemical energy-density wall for a non-consumable power source.I don't have any of the answers but battery power alone isn't gonna work for any serious flight time in much over a two seat glider type plane. When the technology improves we'll see some improvement.
And don't take this as a personal judgment, because like everyone else here, I fly an airplane, so I'm in no position to throw the first stone.