drawoh
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2002
- 8,956
Industrial 3D Printing Accelerates Electric Aircraft Time-to-Market
Not an aircraft designer. Just a curious techie.
There is a link to the manufacturer's website. The aircraft in the picture does not look like a good design. The windows and doors are close enough together that the remaining structure has to be weak. This thing is pressurized, with a maximum altitude of 35,000ft. Two of the engines are out at the wingtips. If one wingtip engine goes, the remaining engines will be wildly asymmetric, leading to control issues. If you are designing and building three engines, why do three of them? Why not make them bigger and just have two of them, located much closer to the fuselage, of course. Where do the batteries go?
The article makes it sound like they are in prototype fabrication stage. The pictures look like an artist's impression, not the work of a design engineer who has tried to solve technical problems.
Does this look real to anyone here?
--
JHG
Not an aircraft designer. Just a curious techie.
There is a link to the manufacturer's website. The aircraft in the picture does not look like a good design. The windows and doors are close enough together that the remaining structure has to be weak. This thing is pressurized, with a maximum altitude of 35,000ft. Two of the engines are out at the wingtips. If one wingtip engine goes, the remaining engines will be wildly asymmetric, leading to control issues. If you are designing and building three engines, why do three of them? Why not make them bigger and just have two of them, located much closer to the fuselage, of course. Where do the batteries go?
The article makes it sound like they are in prototype fabrication stage. The pictures look like an artist's impression, not the work of a design engineer who has tried to solve technical problems.
Does this look real to anyone here?
--
JHG