mandag 28. september 2015
GA USA - Elektriske fly er ulovlig - Curt Lewis
Blame an FAA Blunder for the Lack of Electric Airplanes
THERE'S A KIND of beauty in electric planes you don't get from their gas-powered counterparts. They're quiet. They don't vibrate or require expensive fuel. They're great for training pilots.
So you'd think we'd have lots of battery-powered airplanes on the market by now, but we don't. The reason, according to industry insiders, is not because of technological issues or safety concerns.
It's because of a single phrase in the government's seemingly endless list of rules that must be followed to certify a new airplane design as safe to fly. The rule was written before electric powerplants for aviation were taken seriously, but the government won't change it.
In 2004, the Federal Aviation Administration created a new category of airplanes, called Light Sport Aircraft (LSA), to make it easier and cheaper for manufacturers to certify simple, fun-to-fly airplanes.
The new rules have allowed for the creation of dozens of new two-seat airplane designs. None of these are electric, however, because in the preamble to the rule, the FAA wrote that all planes in this class must have "a single, reciprocating engine, if powered."
The point of the rule, FAA officials acknowledge, was to keep more powerful turbine engines out of the picture. The banning of electric powertrains is unfortunate collateral damage.
"This is the thing that has scuttled electric aircraft's significant development, for years," says Dan Johnson, president of the Light Aircraft Manufacturing Association, a trade group. "Just by changing six or eight words, you could undo the problem - but we can't get there."
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