01 May 2025, 16:55 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 17 Dec 2024, 22:11 |
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Joined: 11/15/17 Posts: 1049 Post Likes: +544 Company: Cessna (retired)
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Username Protected wrote: Why electric...
Wires are easier to route.
Electric works when you pull the power back on descent.
Zero chance of having a bad turbo pollute the cabin air...
If you have a turbo let go and blow hot oil into the complex cabin pressurization ducting... you will never get all the smell out.
No need for a pressurization disconnect valve.
No need for a cabin air intercooler.
Alternators seem to be less costly and more reliable than Turbos. Modern brushless motors should run 5000+ hours, there are ZERO wear items beyond the main bearings.
Less load on the A/C system.
P.S. not all piston pressurization systems have a sonic choke. none on my Aerostar. The Factory 700's have chokes, the 601P does not. I am not familiar with modern brushless motors, but we looked into AC boost pumps with a built in inverter at Cessna. They cost quite a bit more and reliability is highly dependent on the quality of the inverter, as well as its power supply. We had a bad earlier experince with this on the A/T-37 IIRC. Main bearings on wet motor boost pumps are not significant wear items.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 18 Dec 2024, 01:30 |
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Joined: 11/15/17 Posts: 1049 Post Likes: +544 Company: Cessna (retired)
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Username Protected wrote: That fixed venturi bleeds a fixed percentage of the compressor airflow, a high enough percentage to be adequate even in the worst case (max altitude, min power, single engine, whatever). All the rest of the time, it's bleeding more air than necessary. That's not how it works. They are a sonic nozzles, so more or less once the pressure differential across the nozzle gets high enough a shockwave forms and the mass flow becomes constant. In the Malibu that's around 25" MAP. Above that MAP no additional bleed is taken from the motor. Below 25" the outflow valve does have to move with any power changes but it will keep it fully pressurized down to about 20". Like Chuck said no real performance lost due to the bleed air. My newly OH'd TSIO550C's critical altitude is 21,900, I doubt a TTx driver does any better with the same motor.
The mass flow does not become constant, it still varies with upstream pressure but not with exit pressure. Wikipedia has the formula: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choked_flow
Formula itself would not copy and paste correctly.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 18 Dec 2024, 17:48 |
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Joined: 03/03/15 Posts: 39 Post Likes: +27 Location: KJGG
Aircraft: PA46-310P
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Username Protected wrote: The mass flow does not become constant, it still varies with upstream pressure but not with exit pressure. Wikipedia has the formula: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choked_flowFormula itself would not copy and paste correctly. Yep, I was typing on my phone from memory while enjoying a beverage after work, and I was trying to avoid absolutes. Clearly I failed  ... Form the quoted site: Quote: ... Although the velocity is constant, the mass flow rate is dependent on the density of the upstream gas, which is a function of the upstream pressure. So let me say density is relatively constant as the pressure increases (PV=nRT), so does the temperature, so thus mass flow is relatively constant through the sonic nozzle... I was trying not to type in absolutes as nothing in real life follows the ideal gas laws. Experimentally, this can be seen by making relatively rapid changes in manifold pressure above the choked flow position and noting it has an imperceivable impact on cabin pressure/altitude. Below the chocked flow position (~25" on my plane) the response of the outflow valve becomes a factor and can be seen/felt by a temporary rise in cabin pressure when I pull power out, or a temporary reduction in cabin pressure if I apply power. It'll eventually settle back to the set value as long as the outflow valve doesn't fully close, but power changes below that choked flow does have a noticeable impact on the cabin altitude. Anyway back on topic...
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 18 Dec 2024, 18:41 |
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Joined: 12/10/07 Posts: 34620 Post Likes: +13248 Location: Minneapolis, MN (KFCM)
Aircraft: 1970 Baron B55
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Username Protected wrote: Anyway back on topic... Sorry, what is the actual topic now?
_________________ -lance
It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 18 Dec 2024, 21:57 |
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Joined: 10/18/11 Posts: 1096 Post Likes: +648
Aircraft: Seabee Aerostar 700
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We need to remember the basic rule to get investors is to make it as unusual as possible. Humans have the bias that if looks like what is already built it can't be an improvement.
a good example is Ecomotors which is a strange redesign of an opposed piston design. they got over $50,000,000 without one running as I remember. I think they got 25 million from Gates as I remember
so if you want to get investors make it as strange as possible using some fancy new mathematics etc.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 20 Dec 2024, 14:11 |
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Joined: 01/06/08 Posts: 5117 Post Likes: +2954
Aircraft: B55 P2
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From what I've seen, investors are not very good an evaluating risk beyond low / high. One something is "high" risk there seems to be little distinction between 20% chance of success and .000000001% chance. I've been paying a lot of attention to the nuclear fusion industry as part of my job, and I see huge investments in ideas that have microscopic chances of success - on the idea that it would be "really great if it worked". Username Protected wrote: We need to remember the basic rule to get investors is to make it as unusual as possible. Humans have the bias that if looks like what is already built it can't be an improvement.
a good example is Ecomotors which is a strange redesign of an opposed piston design. they got over $50,000,000 without one running as I remember. I think they got 25 million from Gates as I remember
so if you want to get investors make it as strange as possible using some fancy new mathematics etc.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 20 Dec 2024, 16:15 |
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Joined: 11/15/17 Posts: 1049 Post Likes: +544 Company: Cessna (retired)
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Username Protected wrote: We need to remember the basic rule to get investors is to make it as unusual as possible. Humans have the bias that if looks like what is already built it can't be an improvement.
a good example is Ecomotors which is a strange redesign of an opposed piston design. they got over $50,000,000 without one running as I remember. I think they got 25 million from Gates as I remember
so if you want to get investors make it as strange as possible using some fancy new mathematics etc.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 20 Dec 2024, 17:03 |
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Joined: 12/18/07 Posts: 20814 Post Likes: +10012 Location: W Michigan
Aircraft: Ex PA22, P28R, V35B
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Username Protected wrote: I've been paying a lot of attention to the nuclear fusion industry as part of my job, and I see huge investments in ideas that have microscopic chances of success - on the idea that it would be "really great if it worked".
Well, success is only a decade away (been there for 50 years).
_________________ Stop Continental Drift.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 21 Dec 2024, 18:13 |
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Joined: 08/26/15 Posts: 9917 Post Likes: +9803 Company: airlines (*CRJ,A320) Location: Florida panhandle
Aircraft: Travel Air,T-6B,etc*
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Username Protected wrote: AI guesses 20 cfm required per person at 25,000 ft and the power required for a 6 person plane to be 3 hp drawn from the alternator. That's about 80A for a 28V system- quite a lot more than a parasite load though still something you can realistically design around. Multiply that by an appropriate safety factor to not only cope with normal wear and tear, but also a moderate leak lasting several minutes (i.e. time to descend from cruise to 10,000'). Other than sizing the air pump appropriately, consider the electrical budget and systems architecture, like what are the other electrical "pigs" (i.e. electric anti-ice, lights, flaps, landing gear).
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 21 Dec 2024, 18:42 |
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Joined: 11/22/12 Posts: 2813 Post Likes: +2766 Company: Retired Location: Lynnwood, WA (KPAE)
Aircraft: Lancair Evolution
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Username Protected wrote: what are the other electrical "pigs" (i.e. electric anti-ice, lights, flaps, landing gear). Landing lights, flaps and landing gear all draw power at low altitude, not at pressurization altitudes.
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 21 Dec 2024, 19:56 |
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Joined: 08/26/15 Posts: 9917 Post Likes: +9803 Company: airlines (*CRJ,A320) Location: Florida panhandle
Aircraft: Travel Air,T-6B,etc*
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Username Protected wrote: what are the other electrical "pigs" (i.e. electric anti-ice, lights, flaps, landing gear). Landing lights, flaps and landing gear all draw power at low altitude, not at pressurization altitudes. That's a fair point and one I thought about as I was writing my comment.
I still wrote it that way to keep the questions open-ended. Rather than specifically about Raptor or any other type, but what drag device(s) does the airplane have to help get down from way up there, expeditiously but without overspeeding the airframe? What are the different ways a manufacturer might write an emergency descent procedure in the operating manual?

(And I might be stretching the argument a bit, but what about high-elevation airports where you might run modest delta-P and run the pressurization system at a more modest setting and corresponding share of the electrical budget- with appropriate restrictions and limitations documented in the manual?)
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Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die Posted: 21 Dec 2024, 22:25 |
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Joined: 12/10/07 Posts: 34620 Post Likes: +13248 Location: Minneapolis, MN (KFCM)
Aircraft: 1970 Baron B55
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Username Protected wrote: AI guesses 20 cfm required per person at 25,000 ft and the power required for a 6 person plane to be 3 hp drawn from the alternator. Inlet air at -20°C into the compressor would exit the compressor at 36°C, per AI. I don't think the number of people onboard would have any effect on the airflow required beyond meeting their oxygen requirements. If that's what's driving the airflow requirement I think it would be more like 1 cfm per person since that would provide 5 lpm of O2. Other than that I think the cfm needed would mostly be a function of how big the leaks are.
_________________ -lance
It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.
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