Dutch Startup Elysian Pursues Large Battery-Electric Airliner | Aviation Week Network
Subsidiary of Fokker owner Panta claims 90-seat aircraft is feasible on near-term battery technology.



90 seats is closer to a Dash-8 in size. It might work for hopping over the Channel or across the North Sea, routes of maybe 150nmi/300km.Dutch Startup Elysian Pursues Large Battery-Electric Airliner | Aviation Week Network
Subsidiary of Fokker owner Panta claims 90-seat aircraft is feasible on near-term battery technology.aviationweek.com
A long detailed article about an interesting project. Looks promising but building a large airliner the size of an Airbus A320 might be a bit too ambitious for a tiny startup like this.
I'm assuming that they're trying to save as much structure weight as possible because of how heavy batteries are.Instead of designing, put in production and certifying an entire new large commercial airplane... Why don't they refurbish and modify a DC-6?! I would say that it would be much cheaper to put in-service a dozen of such, test the hardware in real conditions and then raise more capital.
We have also Lockheed Orions all over the world being retired by the dozens. Why not rebuild some and start from there. An Orion is something like an Electra, an airliner... That has even the proper name!
Dutch Startup Elysian Pursues Large Battery-Electric Airliner | Aviation Week Network
Subsidiary of Fokker owner Panta claims 90-seat aircraft is feasible on near-term battery technology.aviationweek.com
A long detailed article about an interesting project. Looks promising but building a large airliner the size of an Airbus A320 might be a bit too ambitious for a tiny startup like this.
Big enough to handle 12-15megawatts at 450VDC... probably 4x cables each 15cm in diameter.To charge a 30 Ton battery @400-500 whr/Kg in say an hour, does anyone know what the power cable looks like?
~360wH/kg for this, hoping to get to 500.What sort of energy density are we up to now? Shame it can't get lighter as the charge lowers, perhaps they can eject the individual cells as they deplete and glide them down to collection points. Kinda joking about that but hey we have reusable rockets now...