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#1
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I just saw this story on slashdot about deicing technology, the
submitter of the story mentions deicing plane windscreens but I don't think they realized how much more valuable it could be to deice wings if it is a good as it sounds like it could be. http://science.slashdot.org/comments...6/04/16/007227 -- Chris W KE5GIX Gift Giving Made Easy Get the gifts you want & give the gifts they want One stop wish list for any gift, from anywhere, for any occasion! http://thewishzone.com |
#2
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opps, wrong link
http://science.slashdot.org/article....6/04/16/007227 Chris W wrote: I just saw this story on slashdot about deicing technology, the submitter of the story mentions deicing plane windscreens but I don't think they realized how much more valuable it could be to deice wings if it is a good as it sounds like it could be. http://science.slashdot.org/comments...6/04/16/007227 -- Chris W KE5GIX Gift Giving Made Easy Get the gifts you want & give the gifts they want One stop wish list for any gift, from anywhere, for any occasion! http://thewishzone.com |
#3
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"Chris W" wrote in message
news:TTF0g.947$9c6.897@dukeread11... I just saw this story on slashdot about deicing technology, the submitter of the story mentions deicing plane windscreens but I don't think they realized how much more valuable it could be to deice wings if it is a good as it sounds like it could be. Link to the actual article: http://news.com.com/A+high-tech+way+...3-6061333.html The submitter's "mention" is simply a quote from the article. From the article: "The difficulty with PETD lies in power delivery. The surface only has to be heated to about 1 to 2 degrees Celsius, but a broad surface has to be heated simultaneously" It may be that a surface the size of a wing would be substantially too difficult to apply this technology to. There are already related technologies being used. Columbia is using electrically heated deicing, and I have read of a technology more like the one you've referenced, in which an pulsed electro-magnetic field is used to knock ice off mechanically (but it doesn't require heating the surface, if I recall correctly). Pete |
#4
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If they ever did get it "airplane ready" though the price would be
quite high, simply because its for airplanes. It's hard to imagine anything more simple than TKS de-icing but even that is about $30,000 for a light single. -Robert |
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