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#1
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A couple of very good perspectives HERE
https://www.avweb.com/features/reader-mail/top-letters-and-comments-february-7-2020/?MailingID=280&utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_mediu m=email&utm_content=Bryant+Crash+Prelim%2C+Drone+C ertification+NPRM&utm_campaign=Bryant+Crash+Prelim %2C+Drone+Certification+NPRM-Monday+February+10%2C+2020. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J |
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On 2/10/20 8:43 AM, Dan Marotta wrote:
A couple of very good perspectives HERE https://www.avweb.com/features/reader-mail/top-letters-and-comments-february-7-2020/?MailingID=280&utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_mediu m=email&utm_content=Bryant+Crash+Prelim%2C+Drone+C ertification+NPRM&utm_campaign=Bryant+Crash+Prelim %2C+Drone+Certification+NPRM-Monday+February+10%2C+2020. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J Yep. Came across an article from COPA (Canadian Owners and Pilot's Association) filling in some the the details of the Harbour Air plane. It was so stuffed full of batteries there was hardly any useful load left. Which puts it more in the category of publicity stunt than a serious attempt to develop an electric plane. And of course calling it the first all-electric commercial aircraft is disingenuous in the extreme. https://copanational.org/en/2019/12/...zQBJD3aCPb93FA |
#3
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kinsell wrote on 2/10/2020 7:59 AM:
On 2/10/20 8:43 AM, Dan Marotta wrote: A couple of very good perspectives HERE https://www.avweb.com/features/reader-mail/top-letters-and-comments-february-7-2020/?MailingID=280&utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_mediu m=email&utm_content=Bryant+Crash+Prelim%2C+Drone+C ertification+NPRM&utm_campaign=Bryant+Crash+Prelim %2C+Drone+Certification+NPRM-Monday+February+10%2C+2020. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J Yep.Â* Came across an article from COPA (Canadian Owners and Pilot's Association) filling in some the the details of the Harbour Air plane. It was so stuffed full of batteries there was hardly any useful load left.Â* Which puts it more in the category of publicity stunt than a serious attempt to develop an electric plane. And of course calling it the first all-electric commercial aircraft is disingenuous in the extreme. https://copanational.org/en/2019/12/...zQBJD3aCPb93FA The article made clear it's _test_ plane, not prototype for the commercial version. That version will use a different chemistry Li battery that is significantly lighter. "The flight was not in a commercial aircraft in the sense that it was certified to carry passengers – it is a prototype used in the certification process. As such, the flight was made for ‘proof of concept’ purposes only." -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
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And who outside of the media did not understand that?
On 2/10/2020 3:28 PM, Eric Greenwell wrote: kinsell wrote on 2/10/2020 7:59 AM: On 2/10/20 8:43 AM, Dan Marotta wrote: A couple of very good perspectives HERE https://www.avweb.com/features/reader-mail/top-letters-and-comments-february-7-2020/?MailingID=280&utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_mediu m=email&utm_content=Bryant+Crash+Prelim%2C+Drone+C ertification+NPRM&utm_campaign=Bryant+Crash+Prelim %2C+Drone+Certification+NPRM-Monday+February+10%2C+2020. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J Yep.Â* Came across an article from COPA (Canadian Owners and Pilot's Association) filling in some the the details of the Harbour Air plane. It was so stuffed full of batteries there was hardly any useful load left.Â* Which puts it more in the category of publicity stunt than a serious attempt to develop an electric plane.Â* And of course calling it the first all-electric commercial aircraft is disingenuous in the extreme. https://copanational.org/en/2019/12/...zQBJD3aCPb93FA The article made clear it's _test_ plane, not prototype for the commercial version. That version will use a different chemistry Li battery that is significantly lighter. "The flight was not in a commercial aircraft in the sense that it was certified to carry passengers – it is a prototype used in the certification process. As such, the flight was made for ‘proof of concept’ purposes only." -- Dan, 5J |
#5
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![]() Ummm, the COPA article is not the message that Harbour Air and Magnix have been putting out. This is representative of the story they tell, indicating the prototype is ready for certification: https://www.flightglobal.com/airline...135711.article And yes, there's lots of people not associated with aviation that are being mislead by this. -Dave On 2/11/20 11:56 AM, Dan Marotta wrote: And who outside of the media did not understand that? On 2/10/2020 3:28 PM, Eric Greenwell wrote: kinsell wrote on 2/10/2020 7:59 AM: On 2/10/20 8:43 AM, Dan Marotta wrote: A couple of very good perspectives HERE https://www.avweb.com/features/reader-mail/top-letters-and-comments-february-7-2020/?MailingID=280&utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_mediu m=email&utm_content=Bryant+Crash+Prelim%2C+Drone+C ertification+NPRM&utm_campaign=Bryant+Crash+Prelim %2C+Drone+Certification+NPRM-Monday+February+10%2C+2020. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J Yep.Â* Came across an article from COPA (Canadian Owners and Pilot's Association) filling in some the the details of the Harbour Air plane. It was so stuffed full of batteries there was hardly any useful load left.Â* Which puts it more in the category of publicity stunt than a serious attempt to develop an electric plane.Â* And of course calling it the first all-electric commercial aircraft is disingenuous in the extreme. https://copanational.org/en/2019/12/...zQBJD3aCPb93FA The article made clear it's _test_ plane, not prototype for the commercial version. That version will use a different chemistry Li battery that is significantly lighter. "The flight was not in a commercial aircraft in the sense that it was certified to carry passengers – it is a prototype used in the certification process. As such, the flight was made for ‘proof of concept’ purposes only." |
#6
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On Monday, February 10, 2020 at 7:43:11 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote:
A couple of very good perspectives HERE. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J The first two of Clark's laws may apply here. 1)When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong. 2)The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible. 3)Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. Steve |
#7
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On 2/10/20 3:38 PM, Steve Bralla wrote:
On Monday, February 10, 2020 at 7:43:11 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: A couple of very good perspectives HERE. Let the flames begin... -- Dan, 5J The first two of Clark's laws may apply here. 1)When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong. 2)The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible. 3)Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. Steve He needs to add one mo 4) If you're looking to defraud investors, or land huge government grants, then you won't find more fertile hunting grounds than electric airplanes. |
#8
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On Mon, 10 Feb 2020 08:43:04 -0700, Dan Marotta wrote:
A couple of very good perspectives HERE https://www.avweb.com/features/reade...-and-comments- february-7-2020/? MailingID=280&utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_medium =email&utm_content=Bryant+Crash+Prelim%2C+Drone+Ce rtification+NPRM&utm_campaign=Bryant+Crash+Prelim% 2C+Drone+Certification+NPRM- Monday+February+10%2C+2020. Let the flames begin... That was an interesting read. For fun, I dug up the numbers on a 7.2 AH SLA, Gasoline, and a SAFT Li- ion cell and lobbed the lot into a spreadsheet. I picked on SAFT cells because they made the cylindrical Li-ion cells used in the Antares, and used the numbers for their highest capacity cell. Here's what it showed: Parameter Yuasa NP7-12 Petrol (1 litre) SAFT LS133600 Chemistry SLA Hydrocarbon Li-ion Voltage (V) 12 3.67 Capacity (AH) 7 17 (w.hr) 84 9600 62.39 Weight (Kg) 2.200 0.755 0.090 Volume (litres) 0.739 1.000 0.323 Density 0.976 0.755 0.278 To hold equal amounts of energy, we need Units installed 114.286 1.000 153.871 Weight (kg) 251.429 0.755 13.848 Volume (litres) 84.497 1.000 49.728 I hope the formatting doesn't get too mangled by the wonders of NNTP. Its interesting that petrol (gasolene) is lighter than SAFT cells by a factor of over 10 and takes up around 50 times the space - and this is an underestimate because its the total volume of the cells and doesn't count either the extra space needed because cylindrical cells can't be packed without leaving air gaps or the space needed to cooling air to circulate round the batteries, which are quite widely spaced inside the Antares wing. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#9
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Martin Gregorie wrote on 2/10/2020 5:52 PM:
That was an interesting read. For fun, I dug up the numbers on a 7.2 AH SLA, Gasoline, and a SAFT Li- ion cell and lobbed the lot into a spreadsheet. I picked on SAFT cells because they made the cylindrical Li-ion cells used in the Antares, and used the numbers for their highest capacity cell. Here's what it showed: Parameter Yuasa NP7-12 Petrol (1 litre) SAFT LS133600 Chemistry SLA Hydrocarbon Li-ion Voltage (V) 12 3.67 Capacity (AH) 7 17 (w.hr) 84 9600 62.39 Weight (Kg) 2.200 0.755 0.090 Volume (litres) 0.739 1.000 0.323 Density 0.976 0.755 0.278 To hold equal amounts of energy, we need Units installed 114.286 1.000 153.871 Weight (kg) 251.429 0.755 13.848 Volume (litres) 84.497 1.000 49.728 I hope the formatting doesn't get too mangled by the wonders of NNTP. Its interesting that petrol (gasolene) is lighter than SAFT cells by a factor of over 10 and takes up around 50 times the space - and this is an underestimate because its the total volume of the cells and doesn't count either the extra space needed because cylindrical cells can't be packed without leaving air gaps or the space needed to cooling air to circulate round the batteries, which are quite widely spaced inside the Antares wing. Your chart doesn't account for the efficiencies in converting energy to propulsion. An electric motor will deliver about 95% of the electrical energy to the propeller, but only about 40% of the gasoline energy will be delivered to the propeller. Since it is propulsion we desire, not just stored energy, you should reduce the lead acid and lithium battery sizes by 55% to account for their greater energy to propulsion efficiency. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
#10
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On Mon, 10 Feb 2020 19:12:42 -0800, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Your chart doesn't account for the efficiencies in converting energy to propulsion. An electric motor will deliver about 95% of the electrical energy to the propeller, but only about 40% of the gasoline energy will be delivered to the propeller. Since it is propulsion we desire, not just stored energy, you should reduce the lead acid and lithium battery sizes by 55% to account for their greater energy to propulsion efficiency. Fair point, but SLA still shows as a non-starter while SAFT cells are still six times the weight of hydrocarbon and occupy at least 25 times the volume. The one thing we both missed, though is that a good brushless motor plus its controller will be a lighter and smaller than the equivalent ICE piston engine driving a propeller. Has anybody got numbers for this? IOW, is motor+controller+prop+Li-ion battery still heavier than petrol+piston engine+prop? It will almost certainly be heavier than a Jet-A+turboprop engine+propeller. And, or course, empty fuel tanks are a lot lighter than full ones but a flat battery weighs the same as a fully charged one. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
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