flyingcheesehead
Touchdown! Greaser!
Harbour Air is a fantastic operator... and they are all about going green. I agree with you... this model would be a good place to start. My question is how do you stay charged. This operation is a turn and burn model, with flights leaving every hour, and turning around to come back. That is how they do well. How can you charge an airplane and continue this?
Well, if they're saying it's good for a 30-minute flight, and charge time equals flight time, then all they really need to do is plug 'em in as soon as they arrive, charge while unloading/reloading pax and cargo, and that'll be most of the charge time they need. And no more hot starts!
The Beaver came with the 450 HP Wasp Jr. I know they are specing a 750 HP motor but figure 300 HP average over the trip. 300 HP x .746 kW/HP = 223 kW or 223 kWh for their stated endurance. For the Tesla S, "90kWh pack has 7,616 cells; battery weighs 540kg (1,200 lb)", so we are looking at about a 3000 lb battery pack.
Yeah, these aren't going to be quick-swap batteries, unless there's some sort of a lift they can build into the docks. This is going to be a plug-in-and-quick-charge model I'm sure.
It's not a problem dragging a huge high power electric cord over the dock to a plane floating in water?
You're not just putting a massive extension cord on it. Looking at what is used for electric cars, there is no power on the power pins until the plug is in the vehicle, and the vehicle's and charger's computers have communicated the amount of power available and the amount of power desired. THEN they turn on... And the power pins are a first-make, last-break type of connection so if you unplug it while it's charging, it automatically shuts off and you don't get a giant spark.
You could drop an automotive charge cable into salt water and not have it short anything.
Making these planes electric with a horde of high-tech batteries will give an inflight electrical fire a whole new level of excitement.
Batteries burn slower than avgas.
Going green is good! Fire up those coal, oil, and gas power plants to make more of that green electricity!
Even if you burn avgas to make the power in the first place, you'll be more efficient and thus nicer to the environment than burning avgas in a piston engine. Power generation, transmission, and electric motors are all around 90% efficient, so figure 73% overall efficiency in terms of useful energy out of the fuel, vs the 30% or so efficiency of a naturally aspirated piston engine.
That's a great thought if you're in British Columbia where you have thousands of acres of unused land that you can dedicate to storing water and enough elevation change to make hydro power profitable, but here in the flat lands, every foot of water takes up a lot of land space which is used for ag production. Somebody's got to feed the world.
And that's why we have a lot of wind power going in here in "ag country". But you can put solar in above the ditches and canals that take water to the crops, too. Hell, you can burn cow farts!
As I like to tell people, there's a lot more energy in your Taurus's fuel tank than a Tesla's batteries.
Yes, but the vast majority of the energy in the Taurus's fuel tank is going to be made into waste heat instead of usable power. A 100kWh battery on a Tesla is, well 100kWh. That's about the same energy content as 3 gallons of gas. But, the Tesla will be 90% efficient at turning that into motive power, while the Taurus will be maybe 30% efficient if it's relatively new and well-maintained. So, the Tesla will go over 300 miles with its "3 gallons" while the Taurus is going to take about 13 gallons to travel the same distance.