tspear
En-Route
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2010
- Messages
- 3,587
- Display Name
Display name:
Timothy
It is always funny to read the comments about how people forget. Politicians are now finding to their regret that the internet tends not to forget; and younger generations are much better at recall than old foggies like me, largely because they are willing to search and find it on the net
Anyway, electric flight should be viable for short range flights. You already have Cape Air and couple other short haul operators planning to switch to electric for flights under 200 miles which is a large percentage of their flights. Over the next thirty years, you would expect that the range and size will increase by a few percent every year.
Unless there is a major leap ahead in some sort of technology for energy storage, the only viable solutions remaining would be some sort of bio-fuel. Depending on the bio-mass you can either go one of two directions, bio-diesel which is largely based on the plant oil or ethanol which is based on the sugar/starches in the plants. Assuming I follow the states of both solutions, the ethanol based solutions are further ahead on the production side, likely by a few decades in terms of research. While bio-diesel is further ahead on testing and operating actual equipment with bio-diesel. It will be an interesting race to watch to get to the finish line.
Oh, for those advocating fuel cells, or other hydrogen solutions. They are just way to inefficient. The best fuel cell tech I have read upon converts roughly 50% of the hydrogen to electricity, the rest is heat. Then combine that with the weight and cost of pressure vessels... And the requirements the FAA will require on a large airliner. Yeah, I just do not see this technology working on a large scale.
Tim
Anyway, electric flight should be viable for short range flights. You already have Cape Air and couple other short haul operators planning to switch to electric for flights under 200 miles which is a large percentage of their flights. Over the next thirty years, you would expect that the range and size will increase by a few percent every year.
Unless there is a major leap ahead in some sort of technology for energy storage, the only viable solutions remaining would be some sort of bio-fuel. Depending on the bio-mass you can either go one of two directions, bio-diesel which is largely based on the plant oil or ethanol which is based on the sugar/starches in the plants. Assuming I follow the states of both solutions, the ethanol based solutions are further ahead on the production side, likely by a few decades in terms of research. While bio-diesel is further ahead on testing and operating actual equipment with bio-diesel. It will be an interesting race to watch to get to the finish line.
Oh, for those advocating fuel cells, or other hydrogen solutions. They are just way to inefficient. The best fuel cell tech I have read upon converts roughly 50% of the hydrogen to electricity, the rest is heat. Then combine that with the weight and cost of pressure vessels... And the requirements the FAA will require on a large airliner. Yeah, I just do not see this technology working on a large scale.
Tim