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#31
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On Mon, Sep 23, 2019 at 04:45:38PM +0100, Someone Somewhere wrote:
But it seems obvious that the best solution would be some kind of (presumably) electrical tug that could take a plane from the gate to the point where it needs to switch to using its own engines for takeoff. Given that the engines (I believe) turn the generators that provide electrical power, that point is the point at which the plane is disconnected from ground power. They need electricity to power the radios that let them talk to the control tower, run air conditioning, make announcements to passengers, and so on. If you took the idea further then you could considerably optimise the airport - planes would only need to be at gates for when passengers were embarking/disembarking ... You just introduced a lot of complex ground movements. And while that might (might, not will) make more efficient use of the gates, it won't make more efficient use of taxiways, runways, or aircraft. -- David Cantrell | even more awesome than a panda-fur coat Longum iter est per praecepta, breve et efficax per exempla. |
#32
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In message , at 13:19:12
on Tue, 24 Sep 2019, David Cantrell remarked: On Mon, Sep 23, 2019 at 04:45:38PM +0100, Someone Somewhere wrote: But it seems obvious that the best solution would be some kind of (presumably) electrical tug that could take a plane from the gate to the point where it needs to switch to using its own engines for takeoff. Given that the engines (I believe) turn the generators that provide electrical power, that point is the point at which the plane is disconnected from ground power. They need electricity to power the radios that let them talk to the control tower, run air conditioning, make announcements to passengers, and so on. Which is why many aircraft had an engine (aka APU) in the tail to provide that. Failing that, batteries, like the much lamented lithium ones in Dreamliners. -- Roland Perry |
#33
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#34
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On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 13:29:42 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 13:19:12 on Tue, 24 Sep 2019, David Cantrell remarked: On Mon, Sep 23, 2019 at 04:45:38PM +0100, Someone Somewhere wrote: But it seems obvious that the best solution would be some kind of (presumably) electrical tug that could take a plane from the gate to the point where it needs to switch to using its own engines for takeoff. Given that the engines (I believe) turn the generators that provide electrical power, that point is the point at which the plane is disconnected from ground power. They need electricity to power the radios that let them talk to the control tower, run air conditioning, make announcements to passengers, and so on. Which is why many aircraft had an engine (aka APU) in the tail to provide that. Failing that, batteries, like the much lamented lithium ones in Dreamliners. Yes, airliners use the APU to power the lights, aircon, radios, etc when they're on the ground without main engines running if there isn't ground power. So even if the plane was towed to near the take-off point by an electric tug, the APU would still have to run. The APU also provides the power to start the main engines. |
#35
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David Cantrell wrote:
On Mon, Sep 23, 2019 at 04:45:38PM +0100, Someone Somewhere wrote: But it seems obvious that the best solution would be some kind of (presumably) electrical tug that could take a plane from the gate to the point where it needs to switch to using its own engines for takeoff. Given that the engines (I believe) turn the generators that provide electrical power, that point is the point at which the plane is disconnected from ground power. They need electricity to power the radios that let them talk to the control tower, run air conditioning, make announcements to passengers, and so on. Commercial aircraft have an APU (auxiliary power unit) that provides power for the things you mentioned when ground power is not available and the main engines are not running. These are small jet engines located in the rear of the fuselage. A few years ago there was a big industry focus on reducing ground use of jet fuel. The two main areas looked at were self propelled sysems (i.e. adding electric motors to the landing gear) and battery powered robotic tugs that would bring the aircraft to the runway. The problem with both approaches was economic. In the case of the electric drive motor, the cost of the system, reduction in overall reliability of the aircraft, and most importantly the cost of additional fuel required to carry the weight of the motor in flight far offset any ground fuel use savings. The robot tug had similar economic issues, as well as the operational issues already mentioned in this thread. |
#36
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![]() "Recliner" wrote in message ... https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/heathrow-congestion-charge-is-expected-to-raise-1-2bn-a-year-wv9qn2c36?shareToken=2e1812617e77460e9d40ce4f851b4 ca3 yes that's right charge all those people who live on the west side of the airport who have no choice but to drive there because the airport has three times reneged on its promise to build rail links in that direction and I bet they reengage on the current promise too FTAOD I am no longer an interested party here (having spent 35 years of my working life waiting for the links to be built) tim |
#37
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![]() wrote in message ... On Mon, 23 Sep 2019 14:07:52 +0100 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 11:15:51 on Mon, 23 Sep 2019, remarked: On Mon, 23 Sep 2019 10:37:29 -0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/h...harge-is-expec ted-to-r aise-1-2bn-a-year-wv9qn2c36?shareToken=2e1812617e77460e9d40ce4f851b4 ca3 Ah, greenwash at its finest. I'm sure reducing the number of vehicles going to and from the airport will really make up for the extra emissions from the aircraft using the new runway such as the A380 which burns half a ton of fuel just to get from the gate to take off position. If 300 of the passengers arrived by car, the extra congestion, let alone emissions, would be noticeable. I used to work near heathrow and the number of people travelling there by private car was a small percentage of the total. I don't see why that would change with a 3rd runway. And my office overlooked one of the parking pounds of one of the private parking companies. Anyone who had seen what those ****wits got up to with their prized possesion would never park at heathrow again. There are so many BAD reports of what the cheaper end of the market (where cheaper is still quite expensive) does with your car that I'm surprised anybody uses them but they do tim |
#39
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![]() "MissRiaElaine" wrote in message ... On 23/09/2019 16:32, wrote: I used to work near heathrow and the number of people travelling there by private car was a small percentage of the total. I don't see why that would change with a 3rd runway. And my office overlooked one of the parking pounds of one of the private parking companies. Anyone who had seen what those ****wits got up to with their prized possesion would never park at heathrow again. They should never have gone for a 3rd runway at Heathrow. they still haven't tim |
#40
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![]() "Recliner" wrote in message ... On Mon, 23 Sep 2019 15:27:05 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 15:06:09 on Mon, 23 Sep 2019, Someone Somewhere remarked: On 23/09/2019 14:58, Basil Jet wrote: On 23/09/2019 12:15, wrote: On Mon, 23 Sep 2019 10:37:29 -0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/h...-charge-is-exp ected-to-r aise-1-2bn-a-year-wv9qn2c36?shareToken=2e1812617e77460e9d40ce4f851b4 ca3 Ah, greenwash at its finest. I'm sure reducing the number of vehicles going to and from the airport will really make up for the extra emissions from the aircraft using the new runway such as the A380 which burns half a ton of fuel just to get from the gate to take off position. What we really need here is fuel per passenger. I believe the fuel costs about £1 per passenger. from the airline mag [1] I was reading yesterday, it apparently costs 150,000 to fly a 767 round trip Europe-USA (didn't specify East or West Coast) No mention was made about how that cost was apportioned between operation costs and capital costs. tim [1] As in the mag in the seat pocket on the aircraft, not one full of pretty pictures (or whatever) that you buy in a newsagents. |
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