Montblack
April 20th 06, 07:26 PM
("Martin Hotze" wrote)
> sorry for this ON-TOPIC *gasp* post *g*:
> pulled off the Avweb newsletter:
I wonder if 25,000-ft is for quicker certification and they'll end up
applying for higher certification at a later date? Cirrus did that with
their composite airframe life numbers.
Still wondering...
I wonder how much lighter the D-Jet would be using this system?
http://www.ainonline.com/Issues/12_05/12_05_spectrum_1.htm
A MUST READ!!! :-)
"Composites are much better than aluminum, which has been used in the
aerospace industry since the 1930s," Blue asserted. He said composites are
the reason that Spectrum can develop a 10-seat twinjet with an mtow of 7,300
pounds. According to Blue, the Model 33's one-piece fuselage, complete with
integrated window and door frames, weighs a mere 309 pounds. The aircraft's
single-piece, "co-cured" wing weighs just 305 pounds."
Screw the 10 place jet - Spectrum 33 (kidding, kidding, kidding)
Screw the D-Jet/Eclipse/Mustang 4-6 seat group. (still kidding)
Give me Spectrum's construction methods (link), with a single (mini)
HondaJet engine, on a mini D-Jet single seat platform. I'm telling you
there's a market out there for this!! (Not kidding)
I'm guessing you're looking at a 300 lb plane - using the Spectrum #'s in
the link.
Single-piece wing .......40 lbs.
One-piece fuselage ... 40 lbs.
Engine ....................... 150 lbs(?) ...200 lbs(?)
[1,568-pound-thrust Williams FJ33-4A = 290 lbs]
http://world.honda.com/news/2003/c031216_1.html
[1,670-pound-thrust HF118 = 392 lbs] Super quiet! Too heavy.
What's left? ...................70 lbs. (At the very most!)
Total Empty Weight ....300 lbs. :-)))))
[450 lb. Empty Weight with an off the shelf Williams FJ33-4A engine - too
much engine? <g>]
Montblack
D-Jet + Cri-Cri + Star Trek 4's Transparent Aluminum + the reliability of
Honda.
> sorry for this ON-TOPIC *gasp* post *g*:
> pulled off the Avweb newsletter:
I wonder if 25,000-ft is for quicker certification and they'll end up
applying for higher certification at a later date? Cirrus did that with
their composite airframe life numbers.
Still wondering...
I wonder how much lighter the D-Jet would be using this system?
http://www.ainonline.com/Issues/12_05/12_05_spectrum_1.htm
A MUST READ!!! :-)
"Composites are much better than aluminum, which has been used in the
aerospace industry since the 1930s," Blue asserted. He said composites are
the reason that Spectrum can develop a 10-seat twinjet with an mtow of 7,300
pounds. According to Blue, the Model 33's one-piece fuselage, complete with
integrated window and door frames, weighs a mere 309 pounds. The aircraft's
single-piece, "co-cured" wing weighs just 305 pounds."
Screw the 10 place jet - Spectrum 33 (kidding, kidding, kidding)
Screw the D-Jet/Eclipse/Mustang 4-6 seat group. (still kidding)
Give me Spectrum's construction methods (link), with a single (mini)
HondaJet engine, on a mini D-Jet single seat platform. I'm telling you
there's a market out there for this!! (Not kidding)
I'm guessing you're looking at a 300 lb plane - using the Spectrum #'s in
the link.
Single-piece wing .......40 lbs.
One-piece fuselage ... 40 lbs.
Engine ....................... 150 lbs(?) ...200 lbs(?)
[1,568-pound-thrust Williams FJ33-4A = 290 lbs]
http://world.honda.com/news/2003/c031216_1.html
[1,670-pound-thrust HF118 = 392 lbs] Super quiet! Too heavy.
What's left? ...................70 lbs. (At the very most!)
Total Empty Weight ....300 lbs. :-)))))
[450 lb. Empty Weight with an off the shelf Williams FJ33-4A engine - too
much engine? <g>]
Montblack
D-Jet + Cri-Cri + Star Trek 4's Transparent Aluminum + the reliability of
Honda.