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6 votes
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Oakland Airport wants to attract passengers with free rapid Covid testing
2 votes -
United to be first US airline to offer coronavirus tests for passengers
7 votes -
Finland has deployed coronavirus-sniffing dogs at the Nordic country's main international airport – a four-month trial of an alternative testing method
9 votes -
Ammonia on route to fuel ships and planes
8 votes -
What happened to the largest helicopter ever built?
9 votes -
Airline pilots landing at LAX report "a guy in a jetpack" flying alongside them
17 votes -
Amazon moves closer to drone delivery with US Federal Aviation Administration approval
4 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 -
Check in but never leave: Taiwan offers fake flights for travel-starved tourists
5 votes -
Boeing quietly pulls plug on the 747, closing era of jumbo jets
8 votes -
Forgotten for a century, Australia's first sanctioned air mail flight re-enacted at Lismore
4 votes -
Would you give up flying to lower your environmental impact?
21 votes -
Titanium: The metal that made the SR-71 possible
6 votes -
Sweden has said an offer of support for Scandinavian Airlines would be dependent on the airline agreeing to tougher emissions goals
3 votes -
Australian airline coronavirus (COVID-19) rules: We flew the Sydney-Melbourne route under new hygiene rules
5 votes -
Why helicopter airlines failed
6 votes -
All-electric Grand Caravan makes maiden flight
9 votes -
Software bug in Bombardier airliner made planes turn the wrong way
6 votes -
RC plane hitting almost 500mph - world's fastest
13 votes -
EU regulator to probe Air Canada's proposed takeover of Transat
3 votes -
The insane engineering of the A-10 Warthog
4 votes -
Pakistan plane crash survivor: 'All I could see was fire'
6 votes -
Pulling seven G's in an F-16 and going supersonic with US Air Force Thunderbirds
4 votes -
RIP Captain Jen Casey -RCAF Snowbirds Public Affairs Officer that perished in crash today
7 votes -
TSA working on plan to check temperatures at some American airports
8 votes -
Air France 'must cut domestic flights' in the name of fighting climate change to get state loan
16 votes -
EAA cancels AirVenture 2020
3 votes -
Boeing, expecting a long slump, will cut 16,000 jobs
7 votes -
I sing the airplane electric—Until now, an airplane was never a cheap date
6 votes -
Why the An-225 Mriya is such a badass plane
7 votes -
The search for DB Cooper
10 votes -
Air Greenland’s record-breaking eight hour turboprop flight
10 votes -
Frozen airline food mountain to feed those in need
7 votes -
Where are all the unused planes right now?
5 votes -
Norwegian Air reported that four Swedish and Danish subsidiaries had filed for bankruptcy – 4,700 pilots and cabin crew members would be affected
4 votes -
The Australian government has finalised a deal with Qantas and Virgin to underwrite a minimum domestic network, to the value of $165 million
6 votes -
Finnish carrier Finnair, which has focused heavily on routes to Asia, says it will deepen its cooperation with China's Juneyao Air
3 votes -
The ancient computers in the Boeing 737 Max are holding up a fix
10 votes -
New report released for MH370 search by the Independent Research Group
6 votes -
The story of the hijacking of Eastern Airlines Flight 1320 in 1970: The first hijacked US flight with a fatality, which led to many of the modern airline security measures
6 votes -
Airport architect creates the ideal layout for LaGuardia airport
4 votes -
In pictures: Grounded aircraft around the world
6 votes -
With a drop in passengers, American Airlines starts cargo-only flights for first time since 1984
4 votes -
JetBlue has banned a passenger from the airline after he flew whilst awaiting the results of a coronavirus test
7 votes -
The airport chaos is the product of negligence
9 votes -
Air New Zealand concerned about Auckland International Airport's loss of 'aeronautical competency'
4 votes -
Norwegian Air crew were shut out of hotel over cash fears – Gatwick hotel asked for upfront payment from lossmaking low-cost carrier
3 votes -
Europe OKs suspension of strict ‘use-it or lose-it’ airline slot rules amid coronavirus outbreak
9 votes -
Airlines are burning thousands of gallons of fuel flying empty 'ghost' planes so they can keep their flight slots during the coronavirus outbreak
13 votes