Vertical Aerospace has briefly revealed a glancing view of what seems to be its new tiltwing eVTOL aircraft. (Image: Vertical Aerospace)
Vertical
Aerospace appears to be preparing to fly, or at least unveil publicly, the
first full-scale prototype of its planned eVTOL aircraft. On August 10, the UK
startup briefly unveiled an animated presentation of what appears to be the
fixed-wing aircraft it discussed with media and prospective investors when it
completed the preliminary design review in early January.
The
fixed-wing design seen on social media and at the company’s website appears to
have four propellers that look to be in a tilt-wing configuration. To the rear
of the fuselage, there seems to be a v-shaped tail, but no other details of the
design can be easily discerned.
Over
the past three months, Vertical Aerospace has been strengthening its technical
team with three senior appointments. In late May, former Rolls-Royce chief
engineer Tim Williams joined the Bristol-based company in the same position. Then
in June Dean Moore joined from Boeing as lead flight test engineer, and in
July former Jet Aviation and Gulfstream executive Eric Samson was appointed as
head of engineering.
In
January, Vertical Aerospace COO Michael Cervenka (who has since been made CEO)
confirmed that the new eVTOL design would make a significant departure from the
multi-rotor Seraph technology demonstrator that had already been extensively
flown at a test site in north Wales. He indicated that the new design could be
ready to begin flight testing in the second half of 2020. The as-yet-unnamed
eVTOL aircraft is expected to deliver a range of almost 100 miles and a cruise
speed of around 150 mph.
This
week, Vertical Aerospace signed an agreement under which Honeywell will
supply flight deck technology for the new eVTOL aircraft, building on a
relationship that saw the U.S. company to supply a fly-by-wire system and
flight control software for the Seraph technology demonstrator. For the new
prototype, Honeywell will also provide multitouch displays, avionics system
controls, avionics software and the vehicle operating system.
"One of the most important outcomes of this program will be the successful
demonstration of simplified vehicle operations, which essentially is about
making the aircraft more intuitive and flattening the learning curve to safely
fly them," commented Stephane Fymat, vice president and general manager,
UAS/UAM, Honeywell Aerospace.
Also
back in January, Vertical Aerospace said that it was seeking fresh sources of
investment. Speaking more than two months ahead of the Covid-19 lockdown in the
UK, Cervenka told FutureFlight that the company expects
to spend more than $100 million to achieve type certification by late 2023 or
early 2024.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.