![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
There is an electric motorglider that has been in series production
for over a year now, with others entering the market this year. 57 HP motor running at 190 - 288V and pulling up to 160A. The Li-ion battery pack delivers 10,000 feet of climb before depletion. In the absence of soaring conditions, this translates to roughly 100 miles of range. Certainly these are not figures that meet airplane requirements, but they do very nicely for a motorglider, and I think they go along way toward proving the feasibility of electric powered aircraft for certain applications. http://lange-flugzeugbau.com/htm/eng...tares_20E.html On Apr 16, 5:07 am, Dylan Smith wrote: On 2008-04-15, Larry Dighera wrote: Another limitation is that for something the size of a C-172, your battery has to deliver around 120 kW to get off the ground and climb to altitude. I don't see that fact as being too limiting. Why do you feel that's an issue? 120kW, or about 160 horsepower, at any sane voltage is going to be a tremendous amount of current. If your supply voltage to the motor was 600 volts, you'd need to deliver 200 amps. This requires a serious piece of cable to do efficiently (i.e. without getting insanely hot). It also needs batteries or a power source with a very low resistance to not also get very hot. With typical high current motive applications like trains or cars you can just add more metal to the conductors to the motors. You have a weight issue with aircraft, though, with both the control circuitry and the high voltage, high current wiring. Of course gasoline also requires tanks, but they are often just sealed parts of the wing structure, so their weight isn't really significant. I don't know the strength of carbon-fiber or Kevlar composite, but pressure cylinders constructed of them are about 60% lighter than comparable Al cylinders It's not just the tanks - you also have to make an idiot proof fuelling system that can be operated by the typical 17 year old line boy, but is capable of handling *five tonnes* per square inch of pressure. To put that into perspective, that's like two SUVs sitting on each square inch of pipe, connector and tank. Without even considering the energy content of the actual fuel, the potential energy of even an inert gas at those sorts of pressure would result in very bad stuff happening if someone got careless with the fuelling equipment. While the engineering challenges can be solved, it's never going to be anything remotely resembling low cost due to the enormous pressures involved, and the safety issues with handling anything at those enormous pressures. -- From the sunny Isle of Man. Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. There |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Well, It flies! | Doug Palmer | Home Built | 8 | June 17th 07 04:58 PM |
it flies and is huge. | Jim Macklin | Piloting | 12 | October 2nd 06 09:39 PM |
Antares Electric Motorglider | [email protected] | Soaring | 11 | July 15th 05 11:03 PM |
Jet Sailplane Flies! | Mhudson126 | Soaring | 10 | January 5th 04 09:10 PM |
C-119 flies again | Ron | Military Aviation | 9 | December 22nd 03 08:44 AM |