Australia's first electric aircraft
has begun test flights at Perth's Jandakot Airport, amid hopes the plane will
be flying to nearby Rottnest Island within months.
The two-seater single-engine Pipistrel Alpha Electro has two
batteries that can keep the plane in the air for an hour, with an extra 30
minutes in reserve.
The team behind the plane says while there are environmental
benefits in doing away with jet fuel, electric planes are also safer and easier
to fly.
"Electric propulsion is a lot simpler than a petrol
engine," Electro.Aero founder Joshua Portlock said.
"Inside a petrol engine you have hundreds of moving parts.
The engine is powered by two lithium-ion batteries, similar to
those used in the Tesla electric car.
There is no gear box or multiple moving engine parts —instead
the plane's motor attaches directly to the propeller.
Rather than a fuel gauge, a panel tells the pilot the amount of
power left in the battery, and estimated minutes of flight time, based on the
throttle position.
The batteries are re-energised in about an hour by a
supercharger based at the Jandakot airfield.
Mr Portlock claims electric planes will prove a safer
alternative to conventional fuel-powered aircraft because of their simplicity.
"You are dealing with 50 years (of) engine technology in
aircraft, so that complexity adds to the risk of flying and the time it takes
to learn to fly," he said.
But although they are constantly improving, batteries remain
limited in the amount of energy they can store.
The batteries in this plane are expected to be viable for about
1000 flying hours.
But the cost of flying and maintenance is significantly cheaper.
It costs about $3 an hour to run the plane's engine, one-tenth
the cost of a fuel engine.
The plane uses 60
kilowatts of power to take off and 20kW to cruise.
But once it is gliding, the motor switches off — and like an
electric car, it is almost silent.
"It's more comfortable," pilot Robert Bodley said.
In mid-January Mr Bodley will begin training local pilots to fly
the single-engine electric plane, with registered pilots required to complete a
familiarisation flight before flying solo.
Mr Portlock said the group had held discussions with the
Rottnest Island Authority to install a supercharger to tap into its solar
array, allowing pilots to fly the plane to the island.
Future plans include electric air-taxis capable of carrying up
to five people to the holiday destination.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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