Voli supersonici commerciali: importante passo avanti di FAA


Seaking

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Lo scorso 30 Marzo la FAA ha pubblicato una NPRM (Notice of Proposed Rulemaking) relativa al processo di noise certification dei futuri aerei supersonici commerciali.

https://www.faa.gov/news/press_releases/news_story.cfm?newsId=24796

Questa pubblicazione segue una analoga rilasciata da FAA nel 2019 e relativa ai requisiti per chiedere autorizzazione al volo sopra MACH 1 sopra territorio il territorio americano.

In prima linea nello sviluppo di un aereo commerciale supersonico c’è Boom che dovrebbe far volare il prototipo in scala 1:3 Baby Boom proprio nel 2020.

Di Boom ne avevamo parlato tempo fa qui:

https://www.aviazionecivile.it/vb/showthread.php/141446-Due-chiacchiere-con-Boom-Supersonic
 
Speriamo in questa vita terrena che possa esserci un successore del Concorde anche con prestazioni inferiori. Così per noi appassionati potrebbe essere un bel regalo oltre magari/forse la possibilià di viaggiarci!?
 
Non mi pare esattamente il momento storico più adatto per questi lanci di fantasia. Poi è vero che serve pure sognare in questa situazione...
 
Lo scorso 30 Marzo la FAA ha pubblicato una NPRM (Notice of Proposed Rulemaking) relativa al processo di noise certification dei futuri aerei supersonici commerciali.

https://www.faa.gov/news/press_releases/news_story.cfm?newsId=24796

Questa pubblicazione segue una analoga rilasciata da FAA nel 2019 e relativa ai requisiti per chiedere autorizzazione al volo sopra MACH 1 sopra territorio il territorio americano.

In prima linea nello sviluppo di un aereo commerciale supersonico c’è Boom che dovrebbe far volare il prototipo in scala 1:3 Baby Boom proprio nel 2020.

Di Boom ne avevamo parlato tempo fa qui:

https://www.aviazionecivile.it/vb/showthread.php/141446-Due-chiacchiere-con-Boom-Supersonic

Non è esattamente così:

FAA Proposes Noise Standards for Supersonic Aircraft
by Kerry Lynch- April 1, 2020, 10:11 AM

In a move that brings the reintroduction to civil supersonic flight closer to reality, the U.S. FAA is proposing new noise standards for certification of supersonic aircraft.

Announced on Monday, the notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) would address a key stumbling block for bringing such aircraft to market: the lack of noise standards for civil supersonic aircraft other than the Concorde. Since regulations require aircraft to meet noise standards for certification, the absence of such standards effectively prevents new supersonic aircraft from receiving type approval. “There is renewed interest in the development of supersonic aircraft, and the proposed regulations would facilitate the continued development of airplanes by specifying the noise limits for the designs,” the agency said in the NPRM.

The proposal would establish subsonic landing and takeoff cycle standards for supersonic airplanes with a maximum takeoff weight no greater than 150,000 pounds and a maximum operating cruise speed of Mach 1.8. This category of aircraft would constitute “Supersonic Level 1,” accommodating most of the current development activity, the agency said. The FAA does envision future rulemaking of designs that advance beyond that category but said more research needs to be conducted first.

Based on studies performed by NASA, work at the International Civil Aviation Organization, and industry research, the proposal would establish takeoff and landing cycle limits that would exceed Stage 4, which most aircraft currently meet. However, the standards are different than those of Stage 5, the FAA said, adding, “This difference reflects the need to take into account the unique technological and design requirements for supersonic aircraft to maintain long-distance supersonic flight.”

Design requirements such as fuselage and wing shape, along with variations in engine characteristics, have different effects on airplane noise than that of typical subsonic aircraft, the FAA said. The standards provide for use of airplane-specific noise abatement technical equipment and procedures such as variable noise reduction systems.

This is designed to provide “allow maximum flexibility for manufacturers,” the agency said, adding it is striving “to allow the maximum latitude for these designs while they are still in their infancy.”

This proposal would provide a means to certify the aircraft for noise for subsonic operation domestically, the agency said. But it does not change the current ban on the creation of sonic booms over land, nor does it address noise associated with normal flight at cruise altitudes or supersonic speeds.

“Sufficient data are not currently available that would support rulemaking to develop such standards for supersonic airplanes,” the agency said. “Before any changes to the operating rules could be proposed, more research is needed on the production of noise at supersonic cruise speeds and the regulatory approaches that would be appropriate.”

As for aircraft that may exceed Supersonic Level 1, the FAA said the proposed standards will “serve as a launching point for adopting appropriate standards for future classes that could encompass, for example, heavier maximum takeoff weights and faster-operating cruise speeds...The FAA does not intend for today’s proposal to be a one-size-fits-all approach to emerging supersonic technology,”

The agency said manufacturers have been indicating a need for reasonable, achievable standards for more than a decade. In addition to manufacturers' requests, the NPRM is spurred in part from a congressional directive for the FAA to take a leadership role in supersonic policy, the agency said. The NPRM marks the next step toward providing the necessary regulatory basis, following the release of a proposal last summer to enable the issuance of special flight authorizations for certification testing of supersonic aircraft.

While not yet scheduled for publication in the Federal Register, the latest NPRM will be open for comment for 90 days from the date it is published
 
Non mi pare esattamente il momento storico più adatto per questi lanci di fantasia. Poi è vero che serve pure sognare in questa situazione...

sto leggendo il meraviglioso IN AMERICA di Terzani; sono al periodo in cui l'uomo scende sulla luna, cosa che porta l'intera attenzione della nazione e del mondo su questo fatto...mentre si sta insediando Nixon, gli USA sono infognati in Vietnam, il paese e' spaccato, i democratici sono allo sbando, Wallace infiamma gli stati del sud, McCarthy fomenta la new left, le Black Panthers si armano asserragliati alla Cornell University, i riots mettono a fiamme e fuoco interi quartieri di Chicago e Los Angeles, ma anche Oakland e New York stessa. La polizia arresta indiscriminatamente, Dulles con la CIA imperversa in centro e sud america, Hoover fa quel che vuole con l'FBI...etc etc...

Ma il mondo ammira e guarda agli USA come leader della geopolitica; e ora anche dello spazio.

Miliardi di dollari investiti per questo...mentre quasi un quarto della popolazione americana muore letteralmente di fame...
 
Grazie, molto interessante.
E chiaramente una proposta tagliata su misura per l'As2, sia come velocità che come peso. La stessa esistenza di questa bozza, sembra lasciare intendere che il progetto, per quanto incerto, stava iniziando ad ottenere una certa credibilità. Il virus come minimo ha spostato tutto in avanti di qualche anno.
Interessanti anche il limiti di rumore concessi al supersonico, superiori a quelli degli altri aerei.
 
Intanto possiamo dare l’estrema unzione all’Aerion...

Boeing and Spirit withdraw engineers from Aerion AS2 supersonic business jet
Yves Le Marquand
25th June 2020, 10:58
The “long business” of supersonic business jet development can wait one or two more years, according to Richard Aboulafia, Vice President, Analysis, Teal Group Corporation.

Referring to the announcement that Boeing and Spirit Aerosystems are dismantling their engineering teams assisting development of Aerion’s AS2 project, Aboulafia told Corporate Jet Investor: “If you look at the long history of SSBJ [supersonic business jet] concepts and Aerion, ironically, time ceases to have any meaning.”

Aerion recently announced its first flight of the AS2, due in 2024, had been delayed until 2025. Aboulafia said the idea of a supersonic business jet has been around for years, indicating that any extra time required in development would not come as a surprise.

“The idea has been around for decades, as has Aerion. They’ve attempted to work with Airbus and Lockheed Martin. Boeing is more promising, but hardly a guarantee of success. And many other companies have looked at the concept too. One or two years won’t matter. In other words, either this works or it doesn’t. We’ll see.”

Nicolas Jouan, aerospace and defence analyst, GlobalData, offered his view on the announcement: “Boeing and Spirit Aerosystem’s decision to seemingly abandon their Aerion AS2 supersonic business jet programme may be hasty, as even if commercial airlines suffer from a lack of demand from the general population of travellers, it is likely that high-end business travel will recover as soon as the global economy restarts. Supersonic business jets, unbothered by new social distancing regulations and cheap oil prices, could be a rare glimpse of hope in the commercial aviation industry.”
 
Se non fosse “too big - and too strategic - to fail” l’estrema unzione la rischierebbe anche la stessa Boeing