timbeau
Computer
- Sep 27, 2003
- 5
Forgive me for such a basic question.
I live under an intermittent flight path. While I accept this as a natural consequence of where I live (West London, which has many other advantages!) I am amazed at the sheer volume of noise that civil airliners produce.
The aircraft in question appear to be flying no faster than a propeller plane is capable of, though they may well be gradually ascending. These are 747s, 777s, 767s, Airbuses...everything.
Surely there is something fundamentally flawed with a means of propulsion that produces so much noise. Would the noise be lower if the turbofans were actually ducted fans using internal combustion instead of jet engines?
I can understand that the brute power of a turbofan would require a monster of an engine, but from the lesson given by the Apple G5, many slow fans are quieter than one big high speed fan.
Thus, would it not be quieter to have, say, 8 small ducted fans instead of 2 turbofans? Are combustion and emissions more controlled?
Sorry, lots of questions.
Thanks in advance
Tim
I live under an intermittent flight path. While I accept this as a natural consequence of where I live (West London, which has many other advantages!) I am amazed at the sheer volume of noise that civil airliners produce.
The aircraft in question appear to be flying no faster than a propeller plane is capable of, though they may well be gradually ascending. These are 747s, 777s, 767s, Airbuses...everything.
Surely there is something fundamentally flawed with a means of propulsion that produces so much noise. Would the noise be lower if the turbofans were actually ducted fans using internal combustion instead of jet engines?
I can understand that the brute power of a turbofan would require a monster of an engine, but from the lesson given by the Apple G5, many slow fans are quieter than one big high speed fan.
Thus, would it not be quieter to have, say, 8 small ducted fans instead of 2 turbofans? Are combustion and emissions more controlled?
Sorry, lots of questions.
Thanks in advance
Tim