Bye
Aerospace to expand eFlyer family with six-to-nine-seat model
Bye Aerospace is
planning to expand its family of eFlyer all-electric aircraft with a six- to
nine-passenger model that could take on traditional executive turboprops and
light business jets.
While details of
the new programme are being kept under wraps, chief executive George Bye says
the aircraft is currently in the concept design phase. "We are very
excited about this project and will announce its publicly before too
long."
He says the
"momentum is growing" for low-cost and sustainable products, and
electric aircraft "perfectly fill that niche".
Entry into service
of the new model "is several years out", Bye says, by which time
battery technology will have improved dramatically, giving the aircraft the
necessary range and performance to compete in this sector.
"Battery
technology is getting better all the time, as work on our current [aircraft]
programmes proves," says Bye.
Its debut model,
the eFlyer 2, finished its critical design phase in early June, and Bye says the
company will start assembling the first production-conforming aircraft before
the end of the third quarter.
The firm, based in
Denver, Colorado, has been flight testing a proof of concept version of the
two-seat aircraft since April 2018 "and invaluable feedback from the
campaign has been incorporated into serial number 1," says Bye.
Changes include
widening the cabin by 10.2cm (4in), to 1.2m, lengthening the wing by just over
1.2m, to 11.6m, adding winglets, and replacing the clamshell doors with a
gullwing design.
Three
production-conforming aircraft will take part in the flight-test campaign, with
US Part 23 certification scheduled for mid-2021. The eFlyer 2 is powered by a
120hp (90kW) Rolls-Royce RRP70D electric motor, delivering speeds of over 135kt
(250km/h) and an endurance of over 3h. "The motor weighs 26kg, is 95%
efficient and operates on the eFlyer 2's 750v battery system," says Bye.
The choice of propeller supplier is still under consideration, he adds.
The all-composite
eFlyer 2 is targeted at owner-flyers and training schools, and pitched against
the Cessna 172 and Piper Archer. "The eFlyer 2 is vastly cheaper to
operate than these established designs," says Bye, citing a cost per
flight hour of $23, compared with around $110 for the piston-engined pair.
"By lowering
the cost of operation so drastically, pilot training and private flying will
become accessible to so many more people."
Similarly, the
in-development eFlyer 4 will offer a "highly cost-efficient and
sustainable alternative to advanced trainers and short-haul air taxis,"
Bye says.
Operating costs for
the four-seat model - which is in its preliminary design phase, and scheduled
to enter service around a year after the eFlyer 2 - will be around $30 per
flight hour against $150 for similar-sized models such as the Cessna 182 and
Cirrus SR22.
The latter has
established itself as an air taxi with companies including Imagine Air in the
USA and Fly Aeolus in Europe. "We have already received tremendous
interest in the eFlyer 4 as an air taxi, with the model accounting for a large
share of the 330-strong eFlyer orderbook," says Bye.
Customers declared
include US start-up Quantum Air, which announced an order last year for 26
aircraft, of which 22 are eFlyer 4s, and on-demand charter marketplace
BlackBird with a commitment for up to 100 aircraft.
Details of the
eFlyer 4's powerplant have not been disclosed, but Bye says the aircraft will
have cruise speed of 175kt and an endurance of 5h. The aircraft will also have
a full-fuel equivalent payload of 400kg (850lb) and feature an airframe
ballistic recovery parachute "for added safety".
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