Caught him on 5 live this morning suggesting that aircraft should be towed to a "starting grid" at the end of the runway rather than burning jet fuel the whole way there. See here for details.
The full VS press release is also here
Regards
Originally posted by AtlanticFlyer
Boeing is currently studying the use of an electric motor in the nose wheel for taxiing - achieving the same benefit. Sounds slightly more efficient and safer than towing aircraft with a tug.
WRT u/s APUs, one engine of the 4 (or 2) would have to be started on a GPU or ground electrical power before pushback, or else they wouldn't be able to start the engines out near the holding point, let alone power a/c for the pax. Starting engines on batteries is not a good idea.
With Boeings electrical motor to remove all taxiing on engines both before take off and after landing (great for places like CDG and AMS where there are very long taxi distances) the other main green things that could be done in aviation are the forever talked about modernisations of the ATC systems (national borders/GPS based point to point navigation etc) and much better departure management at airports such as JFK that don't currently have it.
But that involves governments agreeing on things so don't hold your breath.
AF
Originally posted by VS045
On the whole, I think this is a good idea but the electric wheel would be better as you wouldn't have tugs spewing out their fumes as well;)
VS.
Originally posted by radar
Saw successful trial of this, either in news, magazine, or on Discovery. Excellent idea, not just for emmissions, but also noise!
On the APU issue, I hope I'm not about to start a war with someone who knows more about them than me, but these were originally introduced on B707 or B727 to allow them, amongst other things, to operate at fields without GPU. AFAIK, most, if not all APUs should be capable of starting engines, powering A/C etc. That is what they are for. Any ETOPS plane, which a great many are these days, must be able to start APU from cold, even in flight. Thus the Boeing solution is perfect - taxi to an engine start grid (from where it can return to the terminal in case it goes tech) on battery nosewheel motors, starting the APU en-route, then start and check main engines before proceeding to the runway threshold.
Mind you, you could probably cut far more emmisions by getting cabies and coach drivers to turn off their engines when on ranks!
Originally posted by VS045
Whatever the best solution is, I doubt it'll make much difference;)
The much bigger problems need to be addressed, like aircraft in the air, for example[:I]
VS.
Modern aircraft in the air are actually very clean and efficient - far more so than most, if not all other forms of transport. And current and future developments will only make them cleaner, more efficient, and quieter.
Originally posted by VS045Modern aircraft in the air are actually very clean and efficient - far more so than most, if not all other forms of transport. And current and future developments will only make them cleaner, more efficient, and quieter.
They may be efficient for what they do, but still produce loads of pollution.
VS.
Originally posted by vs_itsallgood
Boeing has a good idea (my brother's a Boeing engineer, so I'm getting both sides of this), but there are other things which could be done on the ground to be greener, and it doesn't have to be saving on only jet fuel.
Ramp vehicles are numerous, and not all of them are green. The sheer wastage of fuel for incinerators is staggering - look at the after-flight needs of readying a plane for its next cycle. Since so many items are now throwaway for security reasons, it's creating an even bigger mountain of trash to be dealt with. If it's not burned it's dealt with in other manners, few of them green.
I applaud wholeheartedly with green ideas - I'm a Puget Sound native, and we get recycling in our blood, I think! But just taking care of one issue (taxi) will not fix the problem. It's a great start, but it can only be the beginning.
For instance, think of all the vehicles in the garages. What do most of them run on? How much wastage is that, for one passenger? If the parking fees are raised, it may make some of the holdouts from public transit (or even group limo service) change their mind.
Does someone pick us up at the airport? Do they pay to park, meet us at an off-site location, or circle endlessly until we arrive at the curb? Think about it. All those thousands of vehicles, adding to the smog at each airport, around the world. How many can be eliminated? The bus or the train might not be chic, but it will get at least 50 travelers there with minimal pollution, and might even run on alternative fuel! Getting a CDC? Know someone on the same flight? Go together!
SRB has a wonderful idea, yet we must all do our part too.
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