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8 votes
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US pilot shot down four Soviet MiGs in thirty minutes – and kept it a secret for fifty years
8 votes -
Why you wouldn’t want to fly the first Soviet jetliner
3 votes -
The REAL reason ships go missing in the Bermuda Triangle!!!
9 votes -
Two aircraft collide during Veterans Day air show in Dallas
9 votes -
US to fly supersonic bomber in show of force against North Korea
3 votes -
I'm not a pilot. Can I land a 737?
8 votes -
Sofia, the historic airplane-borne telescope, lands for the last time
5 votes -
Heart Aerospace's current project is a thirty-passenger plane designed to have a fully battery-powered range of 200 kilometres
4 votes -
What happened to flying wings?
7 votes -
When it comes to flaunting its defense industry, Stockholm is shy – and it's hurting Swedish companies and handing lucrative contracts to competitors
4 votes -
Landseaire, the crazy Catalina flying camper of the 1950s
1 vote -
What actually happened to the Concorde
5 votes -
US aviation first: Private pilot certificate earned using an electric airplane
7 votes -
64-year old finds the ejection handle in an impromptu fighter jet ride. He survives and now hates his co-workers.
22 votes -
The world’s fastest bomber: The XB-70 Valkyrie
3 votes -
The sanction-fueled absolute destruction of the Russian aviation industry
11 votes -
Four dead after US military plane crashes in Norway – MV-22B Osprey was taking part in NATO exercise 'Cold Response'
8 votes -
US skateboarder Josh Neuman, 22, among four people killed in Iceland plane crash
7 votes -
Tom Scott plus Lucy Edwards learn how to fly a plane blind
8 votes -
Emirates’ (probably) terrifying Boeing 777 flight to Washington
8 votes -
The jet that terrified the West: The MiG-25 Foxbat
7 votes -
Part of a Spitfire which was shot down over Norway during World War II has gone on display after being restored
5 votes -
The history of the jet: Digital culture built on the seamless speed of the jet age
4 votes -
The strangest aircraft ever built: The Soviet Union's VVA-14
13 votes -
Nine people have died onboard an airplane carrying skydivers that crashed as the plane was taking-off in Örebro, Sweden
5 votes -
The Sky Thief - How did Beebo Russell — a goofy, God-fearing baggage handler — steal a passenger plane from the Seattle-Tacoma airport and end up alone in a cockpit, with no plan to come down?
6 votes -
The 1962 flight of Army Rangers that vanished into thin air
6 votes -
ValuJet Flight 592
6 votes -
What the 2000s thought today would be: Flying cars
2 votes -
The insane engineering of the X-15 (experimental hypersonic rocket-powered aircraft)
5 votes -
Part of Wright brothers’ first airplane on NASA’s Mars chopper
11 votes -
Sweden to increase airport fees for high-polluting planes – climate impact, such as use of biofuels, to be taken into account when calculating charges
8 votes -
Electric airliners coming soon, as Scandinavian carrier goes with Tecnam P-Volt
9 votes -
Why this enormous plane really exists: The An-225 Mriya
6 votes -
US Air Force is preparing to deploy bombers to Norway for the first time – detachment of B-1Bs, accompanied by 200+ personnel, is set to arrive at Ørland Main Air Station
7 votes -
NASA's weirdest experimental plane - The Ames-Dryden-1 oblique wing aircraft
9 votes -
In first major commercial aviation accident of 2021, a Boeing 737-500—Sriwijaya Air flight 182—crashes near Jakarta
13 votes -
Boeing charged and agrees to pay $2.5 billion for 737 MAX fraud conspiracy
16 votes -
A plane without wings: The story of the C.450 Coléoptère
4 votes -
US FAA and Boeing manipulated 737 Max tests during recertification
17 votes -
Boeing’s 737 MAX aircraft is now back in service
3 votes -
Is the F-35 worth $115 million? An engineering deep-dive
5 votes -
Boeing 737 MAX cleared to fly after deadly crashes forced a two-year US ban
8 votes -
This plane tried to do the impossible: The Caproni Transaereo
4 votes -
Ammonia on route to fuel ships and planes
8 votes -
That US Air Force B-52 flying over the Black Sea was bait for the Russians
11 votes -
A proposal for a purely electric-powered commercial airline industry
Around 3-5 years ago, Elon Musk was teasing that he thought he had a clever idea for how to make electric-powered aircraft viable/profitable with, basically, current technology ... and he was...
Around 3-5 years ago, Elon Musk was teasing that he thought he had a clever idea for how to make electric-powered aircraft viable/profitable with, basically, current technology ... and he was basically daring people to guess it.
Regardless of what he actually did or didn't know, it got me thinking, and I came up with an idea. I thought I'd run it past the Tildes Team, see if it passes muster.
My idea, in a nutshell, is to build airplanes with only 25%-50% of the battery capacity required for their flight (making them much lighter, with much more capacity for people/cargo) ... combined with, I'll call them Maser Cells on the undersides of the wings ... coupled with low-intensity maser beam emitters at all the major airports.
Airplanes use a ridiculous amount of energy gaining altitude. For short flights, it can be upwards of 50% of their fuel spent just getting from takeoff to cruising altitude. My basic idea is for planes to get up to cruising altitude in large circles over the airport, powered by a combination of battery power and maser energy beamed up from the airport below. Then stay in a taxi-ing circle over the airport until the batteries are fully charged, before departing. Longer flights can plan their route to include one or more detours to pass over other major airports (or other recharging hubs, like the Tesla Supercharging network, but for airplanes) to recharge the batteries along the way.
Trans-oceanic flights would be more challenging, perhaps requiring some kind of recharging hubs located midway in the oceans.
To clarify, my "Maser Cells" are similar to traditional solar-electric power cells, except they are optimized to convert either laser or maser beamed energy into electricity. These things already exist (I forget what they're called), although getting them to a high-efficiency commercial-airline level of production, that would take some effort.
There is, potentially, a lot of inefficiency in the conversion rates, from ground-generated electricity to ground-generated laser/maser, then on the plane, maser converted back to electricity into battery, then from battery into electric engines ... perhaps there are ways to reduce the amount of conversions necessary, or to increase the efficiency of the conversions. Or perhaps this is what kills the idea.
Similarly, if this were actually implemented large-scale, to largely replace fossil-fuel-driven planes, we would be talking about a LOT of electricity requirements, a lot of laser/maser emitters at every airport, and a massive redesign of flight traffic management, to allow for hundreds of planes routinely in hours-long recharging flights over every airport, all the time ... potential choke-points at various recharging hubs (again, similar to what Tesla sees at overly-popular Supercharging stations on the ground) ... and doubtless lots of other issues I'm not thinking of.
Anyway, though, that's the notion.
ETA: This idea could be extrapolated to an extreme degree, with on-board batteries almost completely eliminated.
With clearly defined flight corridors, and ground-based maser power stations located every 10-20 miles along, planes could fly their entire route on power beamed up to them, with only 20-30 minute battery capacity for emergencies.
ETA #2: A person who owned his/her own rocket company might also consider putting the maser cells on the tops of the planes, and launching a bunch of solar-power-generating satellites, with maser emitters shooting power down onto them.
I guess my main point is, if this maser-energy delivery system is even remotely feasible at a commercial level, there's a lot of potential.
10 votes -
Boeing quietly pulls plug on the 747, closing era of jumbo jets
8 votes -
Titanium: The metal that made the SR-71 possible
6 votes