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On Sat, 17 Jan 2004 11:20:36 -0600, Alan Minyard
wrote: Well, the V-1 used the same type of pulse jet, and they were routinely shot down. The pulse jet was a dead end technology. It *was* a dead-end technology. Certainly the arrival of the gas-turbine meant that the noisy, ineffecient pulsejet was relegated to the scrap-heap for many years. However, Ray Lockwood, while working at the HIller Corp in the 1960's did quite a bit of R&D on a valveless pulsejet that the company touted as a highly efficient lift engine for VTOL applications. Unfortunately the noise and vibration problems persisted and it was never actually used in practice. Since then however, pulsejets have been used by various manufacturers for powering low-cost (often disposable) unmanned vehicles such as RPVs, UAVs and target drones. More recently, a relation of the pulsejet (the Pulse Detonation Engine) has attracted a lot of research funding and its proponents claim it will be *the* jet engine of the future -- offering very high efficiencies, supersonic capabilities and high power to weight/volume ratios. Unfortunately, although a number of cumbersome prototypes have been demonstrated and actually do run, the efficiency potential has yet to be even remotely realized. In the meantime, I have been working on a type of pulsejet engine that is almost a half-way house in terms of efficiency and performance. It's documented at http://aardvark.co.nz/pjet/xjet.shtml No, it's never going to power a manned aircraft, and its efficiency only matches that of a pure turbojet (but that's still 3 times better than a regular pulsejet) -- yet it does have a very specific market in which it represents an ideal powerplant. At a production cost of less than 10% the price of the equivalent turbojet, it is ideal for low-cost, high durabiity subsonic UAVs and RPVs. So the pulsejet isn't dead -- it's just been relegated to a very specific set of niches. -- you can contact me via http://aardvark.co.nz/contact/ |
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