dasmiller
Just the right amount of cowbell
You'll forgive me if I don't take the red-eye on a solar powered plane.
But think how short the flight would be!
You'll forgive me if I don't take the red-eye on a solar powered plane.
But think how short the flight would be!
Current planes carry around a lot of rechargable batteries now.
It's more efficient to throw energy away than recover it? Especially when electric motors turn in to to generators so easily? The overall realism of this particular plane may not make sense, but if you've got electric motors you also have electric generators. If it ever makes sense to power a planes engines by electricity it's very likely to be guaranteed that using them to recover energy will also make sense.
Bang on the money.Let me rewrite the article very slightly.
They do; they are called iPhones, iPads and iMacs.Current planes carry around a lot of rechargable batteries now.
I don't think craig4 is planning on a fiery ball of flames as his destination. Though, I could be wrong. I don't know craig4.
So recover a small amount. If one of your engines is an electric turbine why not use it? And airplanes need a lot of electricity now, which is generated from the engines and the APU. This design (if you can call it that) just moves some of that around because it's got at least one engine capable of doing both.They carry around tiny banks of batteries, appropriate for small housekeeping tasks (emergency hydraulics). Nothing comparable to the energy you'd get from a cruising-speed wind turbine during descent.
This crazy plane claims to have generation capacity (solar) sufficient to run the engines at full cruise speed, and then---during descent, when the engines are closer to idle, and the solar capacity is still there, you have additional generation capacity?
Here's another link that might be a better description of this design. No mention of being entirely solar at cruise or that the engines are ever fully electric powered that I can see.
http://www.tuvie.com/awwa-sky-whale-concept-plane-by-oscar-vinals/
That suggests that the aircraft can operate in an electric-only mode, though I suppose it's conceivable that 2 engines would be operating in electric-only while the other two would be in dual-mode.The aircraft’s engines could use both fuel to burn in the engine’s core, and electricity to turn the turbofan when the core is powered down.
which sounds like they're talking about running a wind turbine to generate electricity to drive 4 other turbines to generate thrust. If it works, it violates conservation of energy.with an active air flow control system – eccentric turbine inside the wing near to the fuselage – which could redirect the laminar air flow and turbulences and at the same time produce electric energy for the hybrid engines (4 oversize electric-fuel engines).
The disposition of the wings and its architecture (with integrate engines) separated from the airplane’s fuselage like a security measure, that in a hypothetical fatal case of an emergency landing, these could auto-break up to reduce the damages on the passengers section.
There is no need to assume that. Is there something this guy's background I don't know about that suggests he's prone to woo? You have to read in stuff that's not there to get a violation of conservation of energy.Weirdly, there's also ...
which sounds like they're talking about running a wind turbine to generate electricity to drive 4 other turbines to generate thrust. If it works, it violates conservation of energy.
"Six engines, one of which is a mixed engine (wind generator/electric engine); the airplane could generate all the necessary energy to feed its superconductive engines (only will need “external” Hydrogen fuel to start –engines & TLMA system- and in specifics moments in the fly); and for the principal systems and subsystems. At the same time it could generate an extra energy that could be storage in the down side of the plane (on the airplane’s cargo bay) to be collected with special electrical storage trucks in the airports, to use after in the same airport or for industries, homes or other electric vehicles.
There is no need to assume that. Is there something this guy's background I don't know about that suggests he's prone to woo? You have to read in stuff that's not there to get a violation of conservation of energy.
What you quoted does sound sketchy, but where did you find it? I don't see it at the link I provided or at the Behance site.From the Behance page. Seems pretty clear.
But the text did say that electricity from the "eccentric turbine" would be fed to the other engines. Seriously, I don't know of any way to make that make sense. It'll always lose energy in the conversion steps (wind ->rotation, rotation->electricity, transmission losses, electricity->rotation, rotation->thrust). They'd be better off simply letting the eccentric turbine spin freely and doing without whatever electricity would have gone to the other engines.
This is not the primary purpose of these winglets, either on a plane or on a car. They are designed to reduce wingtip vortices.Well, yeah. I get that. But does the specific design of of the flinger-like winglets on the "sky whale II" actually do anything more than the normal winglets on planes today?
Those winglets serve the same purpose as the winglets on the ends of spoilers on race cars. It keeps the vehicle steady on the road surface at fast speeds.
Really?Just never saw anything even like those fingers on so much as a concept other than for the hypothetical Sky Whale II design.
Again, this sort of "fingered" wing is much more prevalent on large, heavy soaring birds such as eagles, vultures and cranes. Since the design reduces wing vortices and thus drag on a rigid wing, such as when a bird is soaring not flapping, it makes sense that it can achieve the same when applied to the rigid wing of a large, heavy plane.But plane wings don't flap up-and-down like eagle's wings.
What you quoted does sound sketchy, but where did you find it? I don't see it at the link I provided or at the Behance site.
At the link I provided it says the purpose of that turbine is primarily to control turbulence and pre-process intake air for the turbines.
andwith an active air flow control system - eccentric turbine inside the wing near to the fuselage - which could redirect the laminar air flow and turbulences and at the same time produce electric energy for the hybrid engines
To control the laminar flow and turbulences, redirecting the flow to intake turbofan engine