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#151
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On Jun 23, 10:49*am, Gig 601Xl Builder
wrote: Le Chaud Lapin wrote: It's a Catch-22. *The FAA, NASA, DARPA, CAFE, and other organizations are trying to make it not a small market, so the assumption is that, if a PAV were created, it would be created for a mass market. You just named three government agencies and a non-profit. By all their very nature they are designed to blow smoke up the publics collective ass. Winning the X-Prize isn't what motivated SpaceShipOne into sub-orbital flight. It was a nice bonus though. The $250,000 prize CAFE is offering won't even buy and fly one copy of what they are trying to replace. You cannot blame them for trying. After all, when DARPA allocates $3 million award for a company or organization to solve a problem, and the problem is not solved, it is the organization's fault, generally. The alternative is to fund nothing at all, which will not work, because someone will come up with the brilliant idea that government agencies should provide stimulus funding for innovation. The $300,000 being offered by NASA/CAFE is not a huge amount, true. I regard it as NASA's way of saying, "if you do your part, we will do ours." Last year, the entries into the PAV Challenge were embarrassingly unimaginative, but the funds were still allocated. I suspect that, if someone were to actually enter something that looked more like a PAV, NASA would not be the only agency providing funding. DARPA would join, etc. They are waiting for innovators in aviation to do more than introduce slightly-modified LSA's. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
#152
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 20, 8:27 pm, wrote: Just a gimmick addict, I think you are. If you want to fly, fly. if you want to take pictures or listen to music or do a lot of other things that distract you from paying attention so that you don't collide with other airplanes or get lost on a cross-country, then find some other means of travel, like in an airliner. Super-complex airplanes operated by computers that allow the dumbest and most inattentive people into the air are just a disaster waiting to happen, and they'd be so expensive that none of us would be flying if we had to buy them. We fly the airplanes we fly because we can afford them and because we want to FLY, not play with computers and pretend to be pilots. Piloting involves learning some challenging skills, which is why most of us do it. Restoring an old car or truck like I did also involves a wide range of skills, which is why I did it. I could go buy a new car that has so many safety gimmicks, like antiskid brakes, but that involves nothing more than spending money and there's absolutely no challenge to that. Besides, things like antskid brakes are well known to make dumber drivers who just stand on the brakes and trust the vehicle to prevent a skid into the snowbank, and soon enough that driver, because he no longer has to learn the feel of the surface, gets onto a slippery-enough surface that the system cannot save him and he crashes good and proper. Along the freeways here during snowstoms the vehicles in the ditch or upside- down are ALL newer cars and SUVs. The drivers of non-antiskid cars have to watch what they're doing and it makes them more aware of the conditions. Safety systems, indeed. Computers still cannot replace the human brain and won't be able to do all that that brain can do for a long time, if ever. So use your head. Go learn to fly and stop trolling just to infuriate us. We'll be asking how the lessons are going. I think you post gets at the root of the matter. I think many of the pilots who object to my point of view object on the grounds that you outline above. Essentially, flying is a hobby for them, and they take pleasure in the knobs, dials.... I think the day will come when the average person, one who is not inclined to do all the things that are required in 2008 to earn a PPL, will be allowed, and even encouraged, to get into the air, by all the federal agencies that matter, including the FAA. Then what? Will all the private pilots who like the feel of their Bravo demand that state-of-art state remain stagnant? Will you speak for those who might like a vehicle as outlined by NASA/ CAFE/PAV? Again we are back to the "Popular Science" aircraft. It's been touted by that magazine and others for years. There's a reason it hasn't been built. Actually there are several If some organization is successful in building such a vehicle, one that relies mostly on computers, will you object? If the safety is not as dire as indicated in this thread, on what ground will you object? "Well, simply put Mr. Administrator, we do not like the idea of someone flying a vehicle that is insufficiently complex and has too few knobs and quite frankly is too cheap and does vibrate or make enough noise or does not overheat or require hangar space or uses fly- by-wire and has too much cockpit amusement and lends itself to highly- commoditized components... you see, there is a process that one must go throuhg, that requires years of hard work and financial investment...and these new guys are cheating..." None of these things have anything to do with technical feasibility. It has more to do with how currents pilots feel about aviation. At least it seems that way. -Le Chaud Lapin- It's not the GA guys that will scream. It is the airlines. Just think about what they are saying now and multiply it by what ever number you think the sales will be of PAV. |
#153
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 21, 12:45 am, wrote: In rec.aviation.piloting Le Chaud Lapin wrote: I think the day will come when the average person, one who is not inclined to do all the things that are required in 2008 to earn a PPL, will be allowed, and even encouraged, to get into the air, by all the federal agencies that matter, including the FAA. People have been daydreaming about automatic cars since the 1930's, which is an extremely simple subset of the automatic airplane problem. Automatic cars don't exist and there is little likelyhood the will exist anytime in the near future. You are a comic book reading babbler with no connection to the real world. So basically you are saying that the FAA, NASA, EAA, AOPA, and Boeing, are wasting their money sponsoring PAV? -Le Chaud Lapin- Yes, if the outcome is a PAV as outlined by CAFE. That really isn't what they are trying for though. Look at the prizes CAFE is giving out. They are looking for evolutionary changes that can be brought into the current fleet. Not revolutionary changes. |
#154
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Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: Automatic cars don't exist and there is little likelyhood the will exist anytime in the near future. Um, you may want to start doing a bit of catch-up reading before making any further categorical statements like the above since you appear to be making claims outside your realm of knowledge or expertise. It appears you are probably unaware of current development in this area. Autonomous vehicles are probably in the near future; this is what DARPA's Grand Challenge was intended to accomplish: http://www.darpa.mil/GRANDCHALLENGE/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darpa_grand_challenge Those aren't for road use. Remember what the D in DARPA stands for. |
#156
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On Jun 23, 10:36*am, Gig 601Xl Builder
wrote: Le Chaud Lapin wrote: Software doesn't make airplanes fly. And as I mentioned I think this is your problem, you think it does. Might something be invented in the next 10 years that makes PAV an option? Sure, I have no idea what might be invented in the next 10 years. Somebody might invent Mr. Fusion. What I can guarantee is that no SOFTWARE is going to be written in the next 10 years or ever that is going to make current hardware able to fulfill your idea of a PAV. There are a lot of very smart software people out there and there are also a lot of folks who build homebuilt aircraft. There is bound to be a subset in there of the two and none of them have done it. I have scoured the web for these homebuilt craft, and most of them conform to the tractor model, which automatically precludes many possibilities, even the ones with folding wings. I'll repeat there is no way SOFTWARE could make current technology do what you want to do. If you think I'm wrong prove it. It is up to the person making the wild ass claims to do so. Otherwise your are asking us to prove a negative and we can't do that. What do you mean by "current technology"? Do you mean taking a standard aircraft or kit and adding software to it? If so, I would agree that software will not help here. As mentioned before, a $100,000 plane, it would be impossible to take something that already costs $100,000 and add more to it and make it cost less than $100,000. A systemic approach must be taken, one that does not presume the pre- existence of the $100,000 aircraft as a base. A different dollar amount would have to be sought, perhaps something in the $40,000- $50,000 range. Naturally, this would automatically exclude the possibility of pre-built aircraft. So, if "current technology" does not mean the $100,000 tractor-model aircraft, but something else, which might or might not use the fundamental components of the $100,000 aircraft (steel, aluminum, plastic, gears, RAM, capacitors), software could help immensely. For example, one thing that could be done is to eliminate the ICE, which would obviate many other expensive components. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
#157
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
If someone were to make a PAV that satisfied the criteria outlined by NASA/CAFE/PAV, there would be tremenous consumer response. -Le Chaud Lapin- Is affordable one of the criteria? |
#158
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
Many of these interested parties are experienced pilots themselves, and some of them are highly-respected aeronautical designers who understand many of the technical problems presented in this thread, yet they still persist. Yet none of them have built such a PAV. |
#159
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 21, 10:05 pm, wrote: In rec.aviation.piloting Le Chaud Lapin wrote: On Jun 21, 4:15?pm, wrote: Your basic premise is utter nonsense and naive. Gee-whiz components will just drive the cost of flying up, further reducing the pilot population. And don't even bother with you childish blather about "commodities" as the mass market has to exist BEFORE something can become a commodity. Hmm..are you sure? Yes. There are a lot of products that were created on the premise that, even though there is not yet a market present, the market will exist by virtue of the product: * ball-point pen * sticky-notes from 3M * Sony Walkman, Discman * Atari game console * waverunner * Kevlar * Velcro * microwave oven * various medicines and lubricants for psychosexual impotence and frigidity * gasoline additives * mosquito repellant * baby wipes * polarized sunglasses * pet rock (came and went) * USB memory sticks * DVD player The creators of these products speculate that the market might want the product, but the speculation is grounded in reason. And all those products are free compared to the price of an airplane. The most expensive thing on your list of wonders is at least 3 orders of magnitude less in price than an airplane ever could be. But at least it shows that, if someone builds something that consumers will want, before the consumers know what it is, the consumers will still want it. In case of low-cost PAV, it is already known that the consumers will want it. -Le Chaud Lapin- It shows nothing of the sort. Most of those items were just new products that evolved from older products. We could start a real long list of products that didn't catch on. I know many people who purchase high end cars that would never in a million years buy the CAFE inspired PAV. |
#160
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