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On Jun 20, 12:15 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
There are 100's, if not 1000's of features, that a general-purpose computer + inexpensive, commoditized accessories, can add to flying. I want to know which aircraft components can be "commoditized," and what that means. Does it mean that ordinary industrial or automotive bits are used in building the airplane? Where can I get such commoditized cheap parts for my airplane? It needs new wheels and brakes, which can't be replaced by car brakes because they're all too big and heavy, it needs a new engine but that engine has to weigh 178 pounds or less, it needs new radios that can tune in aircraft fequencies. Can I buy those at JC Penney or Canadian Tire? What is notable is that the cost of the $1000 PC does not increase. Only the software and accessories change. Of course, since billions of them are out there and many, many millions more are sold every year. Not like airplanes at all. We have some 172s and a 182 and a couple of Citabrias. These airplanes all came with electromechanical voltage regulators, where a small electromagnet pulls open the field current contacts to limit alternator output. The 172s and 182 are all 1970s models and ran for years and years and thousands of hours on those primitive make-and- break buzzer-type regulators, and when they did quit we'd buy new ones. Now, the manufacturer makes regulators that look the same and have the same part number, but the make-break contact setup has been replaced with an electronic control circuit. No moving parts. And those regulators last as little as a week and no more than a year or two and cost every bit as much as the old style. What did we gain there? We fly in Canada where it can get really, really cold. The epoxy cases on computer chips or transistor cases contract and crack at -40 and moisture from the air gets in there and shorts them and they're dead. Finished. This can happen when the unit is parked outside, as they often are. Next time the pilot goes to use his airplane the radio doesn't want to work right because the synthesized tuner, which replaced a bank of switched crystals, is wandering all over the place because its frequency counter chip is pooched. What did we gain there? That radio weighs as much as the old crystal unit did and lasted one fifth as long as the old one. What else would we use to encapsulate a chip that wouldn't shrink and crack at -40? The LCD displays on these things quit at -25 degrees. The liquid crystal freezes. Useless. Narco uses a special gas discharge display in many of their avionics, and that stupid thing burns out regularly. $350 for each side of a NavComm. The old mechanically tuned radios keep on going. What did we gain there? I'm not against electronics. I've worked on electronic devices since I was 14 years old, which was 41 years ago. It's just that the "advances" we've been sold aren't ready yet and cost MORE than the older ones did and are LESS reliable. We really haven't moved ahead much at all and I would not trust my primary flight controls to a single set of FBW controls. Airliners use three systems, just like heavy trucks have three separate braking systems (but only one drum/ shoe per wheel) and such redundancy adds a lot of cost and weight. Those 1/8" cables and their pulleys are going to be around for a long time yet, believe me, and it's not because we don't want electronics, it's because we can't trust them that much. My Power Mechanics teacher in high school told us kids that 90% of all car problems would be electrical, and in those many years since he's been proven right over and over again. The FAA is not against innovation and improvement. In the early '70s a guy named Ken Rand took a set of Taylor Monoplane blueprints (I once had one of those airplanes) and made some changes and came up with the KR-1. It was the same size but much lighter and slicker and went 50% faster, all using styrofoam and polyester fabric and epoxy resins, and the idea caught on and Burt Rutan refined it and built some astounding airplanes, paving the way for a host of new designs. Lots of folks thought is was crap, and the composite airplane still has lots of shortcomings (hard to repair, temperature extremes are hard on it, resins are toxic, and lightning passing through it tends to blow it to tiny bits) but we now have certified airplanes like the Cirrus and composite propellers and composite tails on airliners along with composite flaps and so forth, and the new 787 is almost all composite. The FAA is happy with it and the 787, due to its enormous strength, will have much better differential pressure for higher cruise altitudes with lower cabin altitudes, so that its worst fuel mileage will be better than the A380's best. Stop dreaming about alternate propulsion methods and fancy FBW systems and go invent and build them and if they make sense they'll sell and you'll become rich and famous. Aviation is as market- driven as anything else, and we're not resistant to innovation that saves us money or makes us safer. But we WON'T buy something that doesn't work as well as what we have now. Period. Dan |
#82
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Gig 601Xl Builder wrote: Le Chaud Lapin wrote: I must ask then, if one were to look at a typical GA aircraft, in the year 2100, in your opinion, will it be as devoid of electro-mechanical controls as it is today? What will it look like? -Le Chaud Lapin- In less than 100 years we went from the first plane the Wrights built to the Space Shuttle, the F22 and more importantly for this conversation the Cirrus SR-22. For over half of that century we've told out kids through magazines like "Popular Science" that flying cars are about 10 years away. I personally think you have bought into the "Popular Science" mindset and if you aren't a 15 year old kid (which I'm not really sure that you aren't) you will probably grow out of it. Will there be electro-mechanical controls in future GA aircraft? Of course there will be. The 601XL I'm building has electro-mechanical in it running the elevator and aileron trim. Will the entire wire or push-rod system be replaced? If the parts get to the point where they are of equal or less weight AND the system is as reliable AND cost is equal or less than what is used now the answer is yes. If the Wright brothers were to come back to life today they could look at the SR-22 or the other aircraft I mentioned and understand why they fly how they do. They could probably fly the Cirrus with no more check out than is required of the average guy who is transitioning from a 172. There is a reason for this. Airplanes work the way they do because they are flying in the same environment they were in 1903. They have to overcome the same gravity and they need to be as light as possible for a given job. You have all these grand ideas that replacing everything with electronics will make aircraft easier to fly and cheaper. Yet you have never really told us your idea. You just keep saying things like, "Well, my design will get around that problem." I know you think that there is all this open source software and electronic hardware that is available and cheap. And you have been raised to think that there is not problem that a few silicon chips can't fix. BUT I can pretty much assure you that there are a lot of people a lot smarter than you in the world and some of them work for companies called Lockheed and Boeing and even Cessna and Cirrus. Tell me this. If it could be done cheaper why aren't any of these companies doing it? It isn't like they are making all the money they want and I'm sure any of them would be more than happy to increase the size of the market for aircraft by 1000 fold. I want the flying car I've been promised by "Popular Science" and so do a lot of other people and Boeing and Cessna and Cirrus and the other know it. They just don't know how to make it because with technology available today it can't be made. I'm still waiting for the rocket backpacks they promised... |
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On Jun 20, 1:47*pm, Gig 601Xl Builder
wrote: Le Chaud Lapin wrote: I know you think that there is all this open source software and electronic hardware that is available and cheap. And you have been raised to think that there is not problem that a few silicon chips can't fix. *BUT I can pretty much assure you that there are a lot of people a lot smarter than you in the world and some of them work for companies called Lockheed and Boeing and even Cessna and Cirrus. Tell me this. If it could be done cheaper why aren't any of these companies doing it? It isn't like they are making all the money they want and I'm sure any of them would be more than happy to increase the size of the market for aircraft by 1000 fold. I am glad we agree about the desirability of a PAV. As for why it has not been done yet, I think the answer has more to do with managerial dynamics than technology. Ten years from now, someone will invent a system, software or otherwise, that will be herald as a "breakthrough". The fundamental components that are required to build that system most likely exist today, in 2008, especially in the case of software. What changes in 10 years that makes the breakthrough able to occur later than sooner? I want the flying car I've been promised by "Popular Science" and so do a lot of other people and Boeing and Cessna and Cirrus and the other know it. They just don't know how to make it because with technology available today it can't be made. I disagree with this. There is a difference between cannot and has not. If the truth were always "cannot", there would never be any breakthroughs. If you say that there will be breakthroughs, but it will be done by Boeing, Cessna, or Cirrus, then NASA should take the CAFE/PAV award and give it to engineers inside those companies directly. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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#85
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On Jun 20, 2:17*pm, wrote:
* * * * *We have some 172s and a 182 and a couple of Citabrias. These airplanes all came with electromechanical voltage regulators, where a small electromagnet pulls open the field current contacts to limit alternator output. The 172s and 182 are all 1970s models and ran for years and years and thousands of hours on those primitive make-and- break buzzer-type regulators, and when they did quit we'd buy new ones. * * * * * *Now, the manufacturer makes regulators that look the same and have the same part number, but the make-break contact setup has been replaced with an electronic control circuit. No moving parts. And those regulators last as little as a week and no more than a year or two and cost every bit as much as the old style. What did we gain there? A poorly designed switching regulator, a component so common in electrical design that it is often given as a project to undergraduates in electrical engineering [http://www.rason.org/ Projects/swregdes/swregdes.htm]. You could go over to sci.electronics.design and ask the other EE's what they think about botching a switching regulator and see what they say. ![]() * * * * * *We fly in Canada where it can get really, really cold. The epoxy cases on computer chips or transistor cases contract and crack at -40 and moisture from the air gets in there and shorts them and they're dead. Finished. This can happen when the unit is parked outside, as they often are. Next time the pilot goes to use his airplane the radio doesn't want to work right because the synthesized tuner, which replaced a bank of switched crystals, is wandering all over the place because its frequency counter chip is pooched. What did we gain there? That radio weighs as much as the old crystal unit did and lasted one fifth as long as the old one. What else would we use to encapsulate a chip that wouldn't shrink and crack at -40? The LCD displays on these things quit at -25 degrees. The liquid crystal freezes. Useless. Narco uses a special gas discharge display in many of their avionics, and that stupid thing burns out regularly. $350 for each side of a NavComm. The old mechanically tuned radios keep on going. What did we gain there? Bad designs. I have a spare deactivated cell phone that I keep in my Jeep for 911 emergencies. It sat in my Jeep for years. Every time I have connected it to power outlet, it works, without a problem. True, -25 is extreme, but not so extreme that reliable components could not be made for those temperature. The point here is that it is not the devices fault. If it breaks, it is because it was not engineered properly for that environment. * * * * * I'm not against electronics. I've worked on electronic devices since I was 14 years old, which was 41 years ago. It's just that the "advances" we've been sold aren't ready yet and cost MORE than the older ones did and are LESS reliable. I think this happens in aviation (and automotive industry in general). This is what I meant about inter-discipline engineering. The Dean at my university had launched a program that essentially asked, for example, the mechanical engineering department to allow the electrical engineers more freedom in designing those aspects of ME devices that required electronics, and vice versa, the idea being that, if the EE's are allowed to do the EE part, and the ME's are allowed to do the ME part, the the overall system will be cheaper, more reliable, etc, because each department would be exercising their natural competencies. There were multiple programs like this at my university, so many that one would have to conclude that this type of development was not occurring. We really haven't moved ahead much at all and I would not trust my primary flight controls to a single set of FBW controls. Airliners use three systems, just like heavy trucks have three separate braking systems (but only one drum/ shoe per wheel) and such redundancy adds a lot of cost and weight. Those 1/8" cables and their pulleys are going to be around for a long time yet, believe me, and it's not because we don't want electronics, it's because we can't trust them that much. My Power Mechanics teacher in high school told us kids that 90% of all car problems would be electrical, and in those many years since he's been proven right over and over again. Well, as you mentioned, change is going to happen some day. What will change to allow these things to happen? It most likely will not be new materials. Faults in electronics are generally due bad design of the system, not the components themselves. What will have changed when the day comes where you can trust the system? [snipped] * * * * * *Stop dreaming about alternate propulsion methods and fancy FBW systems and go invent and build them and if they make sense they'll sell and you'll become rich and famous. Aviation is as market- driven as anything else, and we're not resistant to innovation that saves us money or makes us safer. But we WON'T buy something that doesn't work as well as what we have now. Period. Well, something that makes sense would be something that is lighter, cheaper, easier to fix, etc than what we have, which would mean it would be imprudent, to say, spend $50,000 on a base plane, and add a $5000 of extra equipment to it. That would not make sense. In any case, my focus is only in the propulsion system. If that failed, there would be no point for me, personally, to continue, as it is very difficult, if not impossible, to improve upon the tractor model to satisfy requirements outlined by CAFE/PAV. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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Recently, Le Chaud Lapin posted:
[...] In any case, because the material cost of software is $0, the cost of verification would have to be very high indeed before a point would reached, beyond which, it did not make sense to make the software because the market could not support it. I tried to resist jumping in, but having read through many of the posts only to see you wind up where you began is incredible. if one more voice saying that you are grossly missing the fundamental costs involved in software development helps to move you from this position, then perhaps it won't be wasted effort. GA is a small market. Too small to warrant specialized development of much of anything, which is why most of the components are either used or spin-offs from other areas of aviation. Comparing it to the _general_ automotive market is completely off-base, as even a single model of a single brand in a single year will have more units in the market than all of GA. So, to think that a body of expert programmers will somehow collaborate on systems that, at best will be less reliable than the pulley and wire that they replace is an unrealistic fantasy. BTW - if you think that "the material costs of software is $0", let me know where you're getting your language compilers and hardware to create and test your code. And, don't tell me about "Open Source" options, either, unless you want to increase your development costs by a factor of 100 or so. Neil |
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On Jun 20, 4:27*pm, "Neil Gould" wrote:
GA is a small market. Too small to warrant specialized development of much of anything, which is why most of the components are either used or spin-offs from other areas of aviation. Comparing it to the _general_ automotive market is completely off-base, as even a single model of a single brand in a single year will have more units in the market than all of GA. 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. So, to think that a body of expert programmers will somehow collaborate on systems that, at best will be less reliable than the pulley and wire that they replace is an unrealistic fantasy. A bit of a stretch. BTW - if you think that "the material costs of software is $0", let me know where you're getting your language compilers and hardware to create and test your code. And, don't tell me about "Open Source" options, either, unless you want to increase your development costs by a factor of 100 or so. Accountants define material cost to be the cost of the components from which the system is synthesized, not from the tools used to design or create the system. For example, the material cost of an iPod would include its hard disk, RAM, ROM, resistors, capacitors, dials, faceplace, battery holder, wires, mounts, shock absorbers, etc. It would not include dehumidifier, blower, oscilloscope, spectral analyzer, or other factor equipment used to manufacture the product. The material cost of software, if sold in a store, would include the cost of manual, the disks, and the packaging. Compilers and hardware do not factor into the material cost of software any more than an oscilloscope factors into the material cost of an iPod. To determine what components are considered "material", move the product over a large distance. Whatever components move with the products, those components are considered material. Those that stay behind are something else. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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On Jun 20, 3:32*pm, John Smith wrote:
Le Chaud Lapin wrote: I do not know what your profile is with regard to engineering and years of experience, but you really should do some independent research on the topics you have proposed and learn what has actually already been done. Following that, come back here and propose something new that will solve the problems that were found to be obstacles to the ideas you propose. Burt Rutan used an early Apple Powerbook in the early/mid-1990's to control the engine of his homebuilt Catbird research aircraft. Very nice! -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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In rec.aviation.piloting Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: I'm a bit on edge at the moment as I am deeply involved in testing a system due to go live in a couple of days which if it goes tits up will embarass a lot of people and cost me a lot of money and if it works means a huge amount of follow on work. Sounds like fun. ;-) Seriously though, I wish you good success. Thanks. A bunch of major tests just finished with zero problems. Things are looking good... -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#90
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In rec.aviation.student Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 20, 4:27?pm, "Neil Gould" wrote: GA is a small market. Too small to warrant specialized development of much of anything, which is why most of the components are either used or spin-offs from other areas of aviation. Comparing it to the _general_ automotive market is completely off-base, as even a single model of a single brand in a single year will have more units in the market than all of GA. 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. So, to think that a body of expert programmers will somehow collaborate on systems that, at best will be less reliable than the pulley and wire that they replace is an unrealistic fantasy. A bit of a stretch. BTW - if you think that "the material costs of software is $0", let me know where you're getting your language compilers and hardware to create and test your code. And, don't tell me about "Open Source" options, either, unless you want to increase your development costs by a factor of 100 or so. Accountants define material cost to be the cost of the components from which the system is synthesized, not from the tools used to design or create the system. For example, the material cost of an iPod would include its hard disk, RAM, ROM, resistors, capacitors, dials, faceplace, battery holder, wires, mounts, shock absorbers, etc. It would not include dehumidifier, blower, oscilloscope, spectral analyzer, or other factor equipment used to manufacture the product. The material cost of software, if sold in a store, would include the cost of manual, the disks, and the packaging. Compilers and hardware do not factor into the material cost of software any more than an oscilloscope factors into the material cost of an iPod. To determine what components are considered "material", move the product over a large distance. Whatever components move with the products, those components are considered material. Those that stay behind are something else. Therefore you saying "the material costs of software is $0" is about as usefull and insightfull as saying "watermelon has no bones". -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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