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Page added on May 18, 2010

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MIT Team Unveils Airplane that Uses 70 Percent Less Fuel

MIT Team Unveils Airplane that Uses 70 Percent Less Fuel thumbnail

NASA is calling this government-funded initiative the “N+3″, signifying that the planes are meant to revolutionize the aircraft industry in three generations. MIT, Boeing, GE Aviation and Northrop Grumman were given the task of rethinking the subsonic commercial aircraft market while teams from Boeing and Lockheed-Martin were entrusted with creating supersonic commercial aircraft — passenger planes traveling faster than the speed of sound! NASA’s goals were to reduce fuel consumption while taking into account that in 3 decades air traffic is set to double. Now that the designs have been revealed the teams are awaiting news in the next few months of which designs will receive funding to go on to the second phase of the program.

MIT designed their D-series as a 180 passenger aircraft meant to replace the domestic 737 market. Conventional airplanes utilize a single fuselage design, while the D-series uses two partial tubular shapes placed beside each other — which accounts for the bubble nickname. The plane utilizes a host of technological advances to decrease its fuel consumption. It has thinner longer wings and a smaller tail and engine placement at the rear of the plane instead of on the wings. All of these features account for part of the reduction in fuel usage. The MIT team also unveiled their H-series — a “hybrid wing body” plane that seats 350 passengers and could replace the 777 overseas market. NASA expects designs from this program to take flight in 2035.

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2 Comments on "MIT Team Unveils Airplane that Uses 70 Percent Less Fuel"

  1. Poopypants on Tue, 18th May 2010 8:34 am 

    “…in 3 decades air traffic is set to double.”

    Ba Ha Ha Ha, oh man that’s a good one.

  2. Scott on Wed, 19th May 2010 10:59 am 

    Increase in efficiency of 70%, increase in travel of 100%, over 30 years equals an efficiency gain of 2% a year.

    Hardly sounds like sustainability considering we’ve reached peak oil, while China builds an equivalent American middle class every ten years, or three more America’s, sucking up the world’s resources, over the same time frame given in this study.

    Technology isn’t going to get us out of this one. Only a complete cultural change can.

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