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#1
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The demonstrator aircraft is a Dimona motor glider, built by Diamond
Aircraft Industries of Austria, which also performed major structural modifications to the aircraft. With a wing span of 16.3 meters (53.5 feet), the airplane will be able to cruise at approximately 100 kilometers per hour (62 miles per hour) using fuel cell-provided power. More info and picture www.aerogazette.com |
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... The demonstrator aircraft is a Dimona motor glider, built by Diamond Aircraft Industries of Austria, which also performed major structural modifications to the aircraft. With a wing span of 16.3 meters (53.5 feet), the airplane will be able to cruise at approximately 100 kilometers per hour (62 miles per hour) using fuel cell-provided power. More info and picture www.aerogazette.com The glider uses lithium batteries plus the fuel cell to get sufficient power for launching. According to the Boeing diagram http://boeingmedia.com/imageDetail.c...90&clr=release it has a crazy-tiny hydrogen (fuel) tank. First, it appears to use compressed hydrogen rather than liquid hydrogen, but even liquid hydrogen would need significantly more volume than an equivalent amount of gasoline. Definitely just a technology demonstration stunt, not a practical aircraft. Vaughn |
#3
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![]() "Vaughn Simon" wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... The demonstrator aircraft is a Dimona motor glider, built by Diamond Aircraft Industries of Austria, which also performed major structural modifications to the aircraft. With a wing span of 16.3 meters (53.5 feet), the airplane will be able to cruise at approximately 100 kilometers per hour (62 miles per hour) using fuel cell-provided power. More info and picture www.aerogazette.com The glider uses lithium batteries plus the fuel cell to get sufficient power for launching. According to the Boeing diagram http://boeingmedia.com/imageDetail.c...90&clr=release it has a crazy-tiny hydrogen (fuel) tank. First, it appears to use compressed hydrogen rather than liquid hydrogen, but even liquid hydrogen would need significantly more volume than an equivalent amount of gasoline. Definitely just a technology demonstration stunt, not a practical aircraft. Vaughn That may be true, but it is the coolest v1.0 technology I've seen in a while. |
#4
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In article ,
Vaughn Simon writes More info and picture www.aerogazette.com Definitely just a technology demonstration stunt, not a practical aircraft. Vaughn Yes. No doubt they said much the same about Orville and Wilbur's 1903 Flyer. -- Mike Lindsay |
#5
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This could well be a system to use in Iraq. Electric motor so no
noise. IR and millimeter Radar systems aboard. Could cruise over town and watch for IED's beng planted without the bad guys knowing they were being watched. Hope this is the end result. Big John ********************************************** On 28 Mar 2007 07:55:48 -0700, wrote: The demonstrator aircraft is a Dimona motor glider, built by Diamond Aircraft Industries of Austria, which also performed major structural modifications to the aircraft. With a wing span of 16.3 meters (53.5 feet), the airplane will be able to cruise at approximately 100 kilometers per hour (62 miles per hour) using fuel cell-provided power. More info and picture www.aerogazette.com |
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