Faradair's Bio Electric Hybrid Aircraft is intended for a wide variety
of applications and will have range of over 1,000 miles. (Image: Faradair)
FARADAIR RECRUITS PARTNERS TO BACK BIO ELECTRIC HYBRID AIRCRAFT PROGRAM
Faradair, the UK company developing
a hybrid-electric short takeoff and landing aircraft for applications including
regional airline service, has announced four new risk-sharing partners.
Honeywell, MagniX, Cambridge Consultants, and Nova Systems, have all signed up
to contribute to the development of the Bio Electric Hybrid Aircraft (BEHA),
which is expected to enter service in 2026.
Honeywell
will support Faradair in producing a turbogenerator based on its gas turbine
and generator technologies that is able to run on sustainable aviation fuel.
The U.S. aerospace group will also contribute to other systems for BEHA,
including avionics and flight controls.
MagniX
will contribute a pair of its Magni500 electric motors and the supporting
MagniDrive control system. The U.S. company is actively involved in several
other electric aircraft programs, including plans to convert existing Cessna
Caravan and de Havilland Beaver piston models, as well as new designs, such as
Eviation’s all-electric Alice fixed-wing model.
Research
and development group Cambridge Consultants, which is based close to Faradair’s
new headquarters at Duxford airfield in eastern England, will support the
program with expertise in hybrid propulsion architecture to determine the best
way to integrate the turbine with the electric motors. Nova Systems, which is
also based in the UK, will assist the Faradair team through the early stages of
prototype development and will also contribute to the certification process for
the BEHA family of aircraft.
“We are
honored to announce a collaboration with these leading organizations,”
commented Faradair founder and managing director Neil Cloughley. “Their input
will enable us to deliver the BEHA prototype by 2024 and subsequent Part 23
certification for operational trials from 2026. Gaining such support validates
our business model ancapability of the BEHA.”
The
start-up’s plans call for the BEHA to later be converted to all-electric
propulsion by replacing the generator under a supplemental type certificate. It
anticipates building three variants: an initial hybrid-electric model called
the M1H, a pilotless M1AT model to be operated autonomously for military roles,
and the all-electric E1 expected to be available by 2030. It expects to begin
flight testing a full-scale prototype in 2024.
The
aircraft is similar in size to the former British Aerospace Jetstream 31 twin
turboprop regional airliner, with a wingspan of 55 feet. The preliminary design
shows a rear ducted fan and a “triple box” wing consisting of three beams
joined together in winglets.
The
aircraft is being designed to carry 18 passengers or 5 tonnes of freight on
flights of up to around 1,150 miles. It would fly to a service ceiling of
around 14,000 feet and operate at speeds of up to 230 mph.
Faradair’s
business plan calls for it to build a portfolio of 300 BEHA aircraft that it
will own and operate itself. Around 75 of these would be for passenger and
cargo operations, with the ability to quickly change the cabin configuration. A
further 50 aircraft would be used for freight-only services and 150 for
fire-fighting operations. The company would offer the final batch of 25
aircraft for non-civilian government roles, including logistics, border and
fisheries patrol, and drug interdiction.
Cloughley
told FutureFlight that the company will essentially act as a
service provider, following a similar model to SpaceX with its commercial
rocket launches. "The BEHA is effectively our Falcon9 heavy and we will
operate many of the routes ourselves, with a very select group of operators
taking on the aircraft under dry leases," he explained. "The 300
aircraft portfolio will be deployed across the world to prove the viability of
the regional air mobility business model, from which we will then grow and
expand the portfolio in a manner that many of us within the company are
extremely experienced at."
According
to Faradair, it is in advanced talks with prospective investors and aircraft
finance organizations to put funding in place for its development timeline. The
company is expanding its executive and engineering teams and said it plans to
make further announcements early in 2021.
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