Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
1989worstyear wrote:Sadly, the Millennial generation in the west cares more about apps and shiny "bling" sh** to care about aviation - I see the Chinese taking the lead on hybrid aircraft.
1989worstyear wrote:I could see more research going into replacing APU's with fuel cells. I remeber Airbus retrofitted the 1986 A320 prototype with an experimental fuel cell system - can't remember what came of it.
Sadly, the Millennial generation in the west cares more about apps and shiny "bling" sh** to care about aviation - I see the Chinese taking the lead on hybrid aircraft.
Starlionblue wrote:- BWB: We've been "about to see" BWB for decades now. It seems to be harder than it looks at first glance. Evacuation issues and g-loads for cargo/pax far from the centerline are not trivial issues.
JustSomeDood wrote:I suspect the next advancement would be improved software and redundancies such that single pilot operation becomes feasible and safe for many occasions, airlines would eat up the potential crew cost savings and less space allocated towards the cockpit == more space allocated to revenue generating passengers.
Starlionblue wrote:Yes but who would I chat to?!?
Starlionblue wrote:JustSomeDood wrote:I suspect the next advancement would be improved software and redundancies such that single pilot operation becomes feasible and safe for many occasions, airlines would eat up the potential crew cost savings and less space allocated towards the cockpit == more space allocated to revenue generating passengers.
Yes but who would I chat to?!?
JustSomeDood wrote:I suspect the next advancement would be improved software and redundancies such that single pilot operation becomes feasible and safe for many occasions, airlines would eat up the potential crew cost savings and less space allocated towards the cockpit == more space allocated to revenue generating passengers.
kurtverbose wrote:I see big oportunities in how planes are operated at airports.
I'm going to introduce a new airport vehicle which I'll call AARDVARK1 (airport aircraft recover disembark vehicle also release o'K 1). This is an electrically powered vehicle - charged by the airport infrastructure so it doesn't need a large battery.
It picks up the passengers and luggage from the gate. It then drives out to meet the landing aircraft, which it docks with. It collects the disembarking passengers and luggage, refuels and does any service checks and embarks the new passengers. At the same time it's taxiing the aircraft to the correct end of the departure runway. This is a moving turnaround.
No APU needs to run. No main engines need to run. Turnaround times are startlingly good. Long wings are less of a problem. This wouldn't require big changes to existing aircraft.
Next stage - AARDVARK2. I forget what this stands for, but has all the features of ARDVARK1, plus....
....Aircraft will not need most of their landing/takeoff equipment. Heavy landing gear, slats, flaps, airbrakes, thrust reversers.
To take off AARDVARK2 will remain docked to the aircraft and will provide the excess power above climb thrust needed for takeoff. Without flaps, takeoff speed will be high, but this won't be a problem (hopefully). Any failure at takeoff will not be a problem as takeoff will be aborted and AARDVARK2 will have the stopping ability within the runway length.
To land AARDVARK2 will winch the plane down for docking and recover the landing energy as electricity.
I will admit AARDVARK2 would be considerably more difficult than AARDVARK1.
I also admit my acronym isn't very good.
stratclub wrote:The military UAV's already fly unmanned missions half way around the planet.
1989worstyear wrote:Sadly, the Millennial generation in the west cares more about apps and shiny "bling" sh** to care about aviation
VSMUT wrote:I think the next big revolution will be electric propulsion, either from batteries or hybrid electric systems.
I doubt that single pilot aircraft will ever be a thing. The redundancy required in case of a pilot incapacitation means that we will go straight from 2 pilots to none at all. I don't see this happening for the next 20 years though, based on the lifespan and development cycles of commercial aircraft. Using the proposed 797/MoM as an example: The technology isn't there yet, so it will almost certainly be manned. Development will take somewhere between 5 and 10 years, it will last in production for at least 20 years, and the last example will probably be in service for at least 20 years. Thats the next 50 years covered right there.
IMHO, folding wingtips will be a flop. My guess is that most 777X operators will end up locking them permanently in place and relying on bigger gates.1989worstyear wrote:Sadly, the Millennial generation in the west cares more about apps and shiny "bling" sh** to care about aviation
BS.
I see much more interest from the so called "millennials" than previous generations. Has it dawned on you yet that some of those apps and shiny bling sh** are about aviation?
airzona11 wrote:A single pilot with the technology for remote flying the plane if a pilot is incapacitated / autopilot technology is not a leap, it is really just a few upgrades away.
WIederling wrote:stratclub wrote:The military UAV's already fly unmanned missions half way around the planet.
Their loss rate is still excessively high. ( And not from being shot at ).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics ... /database/
VSMUT wrote:airzona11 wrote:A single pilot with the technology for remote flying the plane if a pilot is incapacitated / autopilot technology is not a leap, it is really just a few upgrades away.
So what if the remote control link is lost? You see, unless those questions are resolved, it won't happen. And if the remote link is good enough to remote control it, why have the single pilot in the first place?
VSMUT wrote:airzona11 wrote:A single pilot with the technology for remote flying the plane if a pilot is incapacitated / autopilot technology is not a leap, it is really just a few upgrades away.
So what if the remote control link is lost? You see, unless those questions are resolved, it won't happen. And if the remote link is good enough to remote control it, why have the single pilot in the first place?
Starlionblue wrote:I agree with the comments about single pilot operation. While it is technically feasible, I don't think it is happening in the near future.
Pilot incapacitation in various forms is perhaps the most common non-normal situation that faces pilots. More importantly, even well-trained pilots make errors every few hundred actions. Not serious errors, but little things like starting to wind a knob the wrong way before realising the mistake. This is why we have a pilot monitoring, and checklists, and a host of other safety features. Take away the PM and you remove the primary safety net.VSMUT wrote:airzona11 wrote:A single pilot with the technology for remote flying the plane if a pilot is incapacitated / autopilot technology is not a leap, it is really just a few upgrades away.
So what if the remote control link is lost? You see, unless those questions are resolved, it won't happen. And if the remote link is good enough to remote control it, why have the single pilot in the first place?
I'll add: How do you detect incapacitation? If a pilot falls asleep quietly in the seat, it might not always be that noticeable. You now have to design some sort of sensor suite, and the system has to figure out if it was just a micronap etc..
It gets more complicated by the fact that getting up to stretch our legs periodically is one of the best ways to stave off fatigue effects which can lead to incapacitation. Another is chatting to the guy next to me.
kitplane01 wrote:Recently we have seen the widespread adoption of carbon fiber and geared turbofans. We are about to see folding wingtips.
Next might come...
Ducted fans: Higher bypass ratio than a normal dan, better noise than props or inducted fans
Unducted fans: even better bypass ratio but problems with noise control.
Active laminier flow: By having air inlets on the wings and control surfaces one can reduce drag
Morphing Wings: Instead of flaps built on the normal way ... use a flexible skin and an internal structure. Supposed to reduce drab by more than 10% and has already flown.
New airplane configuration: blended wing/body aircraft
Starlionblue wrote:JustSomeDood wrote:I suspect the next advancement would be improved software and redundancies such that single pilot operation becomes feasible and safe for many occasions, airlines would eat up the potential crew cost savings and less space allocated towards the cockpit == more space allocated to revenue generating passengers.
Yes but who would I chat to?!?
Starlionblue wrote:Optimising ATC coordination between and within countries is not a big deal technologically but would save massive amounts in fuel and the tears of frustrated pilots.
kurtverbose wrote:I see big oportunities in how planes are operated at airports.
I'm going to introduce a new airport vehicle which I'll call AARDVARK1 (airport aircraft recover disembark vehicle also release o'K 1). This is an electrically powered vehicle - charged by the airport infrastructure so it doesn't need a large battery.
It picks up the passengers and luggage from the gate. It then drives out to meet the landing aircraft, which it docks with. It collects the disembarking passengers and luggage, refuels and does any service checks and embarks the new passengers. At the same time it's taxiing the aircraft to the correct end of the departure runway. This is a moving turnaround.
No APU needs to run. No main engines need to run. Turnaround times are startlingly good. Long wings are less of a problem. This wouldn't require big changes to existing aircraft.
Next stage - AARDVARK2. I forget what this stands for, but has all the features of ARDVARK1, plus....
....Aircraft will not need most of their landing/takeoff equipment. Heavy landing gear, slats, flaps, airbrakes, thrust reversers.
To take off AARDVARK2 will remain docked to the aircraft and will provide the excess power above climb thrust needed for takeoff. Without flaps, takeoff speed will be high, but this won't be a problem (hopefully). Any failure at takeoff will not be a problem as takeoff will be aborted and AARDVARK2 will have the stopping ability within the runway length.
To land AARDVARK2 will winch the plane down for docking and recover the landing energy as electricity.
I will admit AARDVARK2 would be considerably more difficult than AARDVARK1.
I also admit my acronym isn't very good.
Nean1 wrote:I would be looking at solutions with electric motors that are coming up to allow the taxiing of aircraft without the use of propulsion engines, saving fuel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGTS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WheelTug
kitplane01 wrote:Recently we have seen the widespread adoption of carbon fiber and geared turbofans. We are about to see folding wingtips.
Next might come...
Ducted fans: Higher bypass ratio than a normal dan, better noise than props or inducted fans
Unducted fans: even better bypass ratio but problems with noise control.
CowAnon wrote:kitplane01 wrote:Recently we have seen the widespread adoption of carbon fiber and geared turbofans. We are about to see folding wingtips.New Chance for Fiber-Metal-Laminates (7/31/2016 - see bottom of page): In order to meet Airbus’ announced production target of 60+ aircraft/month, Premium AEROTEC established a development program to automate this process. Their target is 10,000 m2/mo, an increase of 50X, and a single-shot bonding process where sheet metal, prepreg, doublers and stringers are all co-cured in a single autoclave cycle.
The resurgence of GLARE (8/18/2016): Airbus pursues fiber metal laminates for future narrowbody construction, citing cost, weight, repair and lightning strike benefits.
Fiber-metal laminates in the spotlight (7/12/2017): Interest in FMLs is growing again as aeroengineers search for lightweight solutions adaptable to new narrowbody commercial aircraft.
I included these GLARE-related links in the A380-900NEO thread, but since the articles seem to imply that Airbus would be using GLARE on its narrowbodies in the near future instead of carbon, it bears repeating here. (Would Airbus be allowed to incorporate GLARE on the A320neo/A321neo instead of waiting for the A322 or a clean-sheet? The supplier ramp-up plans seem very aggressive.)
With that said, I bet the OEMs are excited about this latest bit of news about densified wood. The increased strength after wood densification is in the neighborhood of aluminum, but the density after processing is still only 1.3 g/cm3, less than half of the density of Al2024 (2.78 g/cm3), still much lower than GLARE (2.38-2.52 g/cm3), and lighter than carbon fiber (1.55-1.80 g/cm3?). If there aren't any showstoppers, the OEMs may not even have to bother with aluminum or carbon in the future.Next might come...
Ducted fans: Higher bypass ratio than a normal dan, better noise than props or inducted fans
Unducted fans: even better bypass ratio but problems with noise control.
Weight Assessment for Fuselage Shielding on Aircraft With Open-Rotor Engines and Composite Blade Loss (NASA/FAA, December 2013)
Since the A320neo and B737max are raining orders and money on them, Airbus or Boeing won't bother doing an unducted fan, though I really hope some other company tries. NASA estimated that a composite fuselage would require only 236-428 pounds of shielding for the open rotor engines and 24 layers of composites (with a total thickness of 0.50 inches, or 12.7 millimeters). The link to the densified wood article contains a video of a 5-ply, 3-mm thick block of wood stopping a bullet at close range, so the increased ballistic resistance of the processed wood over carbon would mean less shielding thickness required and an even smaller weight penalty.
kitplane01 wrote:It’s not obvious why an open rotor airplanes to be protected from blade loss when a propeller airplane does not.
Starlionblue wrote:- BWB: We've been "about to see" BWB for decades now. It seems to be harder than it looks at first glance. Evacuation issues and g-loads for cargo/pax far from the centerline are not trivial issues.
Starlionblue wrote:I'll add: How do you detect incapacitation? If a pilot falls asleep quietly in the seat, it might not always be that noticeable. You now have to design some sort of sensor suite, and the system has to figure out if it was just a micronap etc..
It gets more complicated by the fact that getting up to stretch our legs periodically is one of the best ways to stave off fatigue effects which can lead to incapacitation. Another is chatting to the guy next to me.
airzona11 wrote:The second part of your question is a fair question. The first part is simple, no pilot, the plane has an autoland feature, where it goes into self flying mode. We use the technology with unmanned planes already today. Have a protocol established for what happens.
airzona11 wrote:We have the technology for fully-automated flight today.
VSMUT wrote:airzona11 wrote:We have the technology for fully-automated flight today.
True, but the same technology will also happily blast you straight through the first killer-TCU in its way. A few days ago I had the de-icing system go inop on me. I only noticed by looking out of the window, we didn't get any warnings. The computer wouldn't have noticed that. It was pretty significant, because it was almost overcast that afternoon, and we had to weave our way down to avoid picking up any ice. Would the technology have been able to do that?
airzona11 wrote:In the defense sector, 1-pilot is common, fully automated is the future.
airzona11 wrote:Becuase the technology absolutely would be able to land safely if it knew the ice was there, in your example, the key would having systems that detected the icing.
airzona11 wrote:Contrasting that with batteries, there needs to be some hefty innovation, batteries are heavy and once they've exhausted their energy are still present and heavy.
JustSomeDood wrote:This would require extensive infrastructure support from airports and significant tech improvements, but....
At present, engines entirely propel an airplane through the takeoff roll, and are the biggest bottleneck to thrust level requirements for aircraft (engine sized for takeoff). Jet engines, all things considered, are also terrible at accelerating aircraft from a standstill efficiency wise. Enter electric motors, the same characteristics that make Teslas awesome at the drag strip (max torque at 0rpm), would also make them great at accelerating aircraft from standstill to low speeds. Then it stands to reason that putting electric motors (big ones) in the MLG to assist in takeoff roll would decrease engine thrust requirements, allowing for smaller engines for a given capacity aircraft, leading to greater fuel efficiency (feedback loop of engines->fuel->weight) and emissions.
Now let's do some calculations, for an A35k at MTOW (311t), assuming a takeoff roll of 40 seconds and takeoff speed of 170mph (reasonable?), average acceleration is ~1.9m/s^2, power = 311000*1.9m/s^2*38m/s~=22.4MW. Now let's say that, for a simple assumption, we want 30% of that power to be made by the motors, meaning it will help the most during low speeds before the constant force jets take over for acceleration. that means 6.7MW divided into 12 wheels is ~558kw per motor, certainly not infeasible, there are countless Teslas running around with motors that have nearly such output power, and the motors themselves aren't particularly heavy.
Notice that nothing has been said about batteries, and that's because since the motors are only used on the ground, there wouldn't be such a need for batteries (at least really heavy huge ones that kill electric commercial aircraft feasibility). With admittedly ginormous advancements in wireless electricity transmission tech, it's certainly feasible that runways can be made with electricity transmission capability which the aircraft receive while on takeoff.
kurtverbose wrote:I see big oportunities in how planes are operated at airports.
I'm going to introduce a new airport vehicle which I'll call AARDVARK1 (airport aircraft recover disembark vehicle also release o'K 1). This is an electrically powered vehicle - charged by the airport infrastructure so it doesn't need a large battery.
It picks up the passengers and luggage from the gate. It then drives out to meet the landing aircraft, which it docks with. It collects the disembarking passengers and luggage, refuels and does any service checks and embarks the new passengers. At the same time it's taxiing the aircraft to the correct end of the departure runway. This is a moving turnaround.
No APU needs to run. No main engines need to run. Turnaround times are startlingly good. Long wings are less of a problem. This wouldn't require big changes to existing aircraft.
Next stage - AARDVARK2. I forget what this stands for, but has all the features of ARDVARK1, plus....
....Aircraft will not need most of their landing/takeoff equipment. Heavy landing gear, slats, flaps, airbrakes, thrust reversers.
To take off AARDVARK2 will remain docked to the aircraft and will provide the excess power above climb thrust needed for takeoff. Without flaps, takeoff speed will be high, but this won't be a problem (hopefully). Any failure at takeoff will not be a problem as takeoff will be aborted and AARDVARK2 will have the stopping ability within the runway length.
To land AARDVARK2 will winch the plane down for docking and recover the landing energy as electricity.
I will admit AARDVARK2 would be considerably more difficult than AARDVARK1.
I also admit my acronym isn't very good.
1989worstyear wrote:Sadly, the Millennial generation in the west cares more about apps and shiny "bling" sh** to care about aviation
GalaxyFlyer wrote:
The critical element for sizing jet engines isn’t take-off performance on the runway, it’s climb performance, specifically engine-out second segment performance and cruise thrust at optimum flight level at initial level-off after gross weight take-off. Adding electric motors for the roll would increase acceleration some, but do nothing for the critical issue, hence engine thrust could not be reduced.
GF
Matt6461 wrote:1989worstyear wrote:Sadly, the Millennial generation in the west cares more about apps and shiny "bling" sh** to care about aviation
What a crazy thing to type on a computer and send over the internet so that I (a Millennial*) can read it on my blingy phone, via my browser app, in a virtual community that enables sharing and deepening a love of aviation.
*-ish