N601RX Posted January 10, 2013 Report Posted January 10, 2013 I came across this on Concords website. It will be interesting to see how this plays out. It will not be a direct replacement and will require some additional equipment. The trick will be keeping the price reasonable. It could possibly be 15lbs or so lighter. http://www.concordebattery.com/lion.php Quote
N177MC Posted January 10, 2013 Report Posted January 10, 2013 Bleeding edge techno - Did you hear about the fire on a 1 month old Dreamliner at Logan earlier this week ? Apparently it was a lithium-ion battery that is used to start the APU, if my info is correct. Quote
flyboy0681 Posted January 10, 2013 Report Posted January 10, 2013 I hate all the press the 787 has been getting. No aircraft placed into initial service has had 100% dispatch reliability. The 747 was plagued with a lot of problems when introduced into service in January, 1970, including Pan Am's delay of it's inaugural flight from JFK to London due to engine overheating. The media is just looking to stir the pot. Quote
N177MC Posted January 10, 2013 Report Posted January 10, 2013 The media is just looking to stir the pot. It's called sensationalism ! Quote
Rwsavory Posted January 10, 2013 Report Posted January 10, 2013 Looks like it's a replacement for ni-cad's, not our "lowly" lead/acid types. If Boeing couldn't keep theirs from catching fire that's not a good sign. Quote
N601RX Posted January 10, 2013 Author Report Posted January 10, 2013 The article said lead acid and ni-cads. I've been involved in the development of a couple of commercial systems at work that uses Lithium technology. The charging has to be very closely monitored and controlled. At the very least it would require a special voltage regulator with a lot of intelligence built into it. Quote
jetdriven Posted January 11, 2013 Report Posted January 11, 2013 When I flew the Beech 1900D they had a STC to remove the NiCad batteries and replace them with lead-acid batteries. They had one thermally runaway, melt out the wing battery box, and drop onto the ramp. After that, the extra 10 pounds the lead-acid battery weighed didn't matter so much. Two 747-400 freighters were lost last year due to a pallet of litihium batteries overheating and catching fire. Quote
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