21 November 2024

Australian company conducts successful first flight of zero-emission passenger aircraft

| Andrew McLaughlin
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AMSL Aero Vertiia first flight

The AMSL Vertiia during its first untethered flight in early November. Photo: AMSL Aero.

An Australia-designed zero-emission passenger-carrying aircraft which can take off and land like a helicopter but travel at conventional aircraft speeds has made its first successful flight.

The Vertiia is the first Australian-designed vertical take-off and land (VTOL) zero-emission passenger aircraft, and made its first untethered flight in western NSW in early November.

Dubbed by manufacturer AMSL Aero as the most complex civil aircraft ever developed in Australia, the Vertiia is designed to fly more than 1000 km on hydrogen fuel at 300 km/h with a load of up to four passengers and a pilot.

The aircraft is a staggered biplane configuration, with wings below and forward, and above and behind a central pod. Each wing has four four-bladed propellors with nacelles which rotate for horizontal or vertical flight. The only emissions from its planned hydrogen-fuelled engines is water vapour.

The first flight was conducted by remote control using battery power, and was overseen by officials from the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA). Sine then, it has conducted more than 50 successful take-offs and landings.

Prior to the untethered flight, the aircraft had made several tethered flights, and it is scheduled to make its first hydrogen-powered flight in 2025.

To date, AMSL Aero has received orders and deposits for 26 Vertiia aircraft, including 20 from Aviation Logistics, which operates the Air Link, AirMed and Chartair brands covering passenger services, aircraft charter, air freight and aeromedical flights across Australia.

READ ALSO Flight data shows Canberra is still being taken for a ride

The company hopes to achieve certification and regulatory approval in 2027, after which the Vertiia can commence commercial operations.

A Vertiia was also displayed at September’s Land Forces 2024 conference and exposition in Melbourne configured in a camouflaged aeromedical configuration, but no military orders have been announced.

AMSL Aero Co-Founder, chief engineer and Vertiia inventor Andrew Moore said watching the Vertiia take to the sky in free flight was a breathtaking experience for him and his engineers.

“This landmark is proof that the design we pioneered seven years ago works, and it moves us closer to our goal of improving the lives of remote, rural and regional communities in Australia and around the world with an aircraft that conquers the tyranny of distance with zero emissions,” he said.

AMSL Aero CEO Max York added, “Today marks a huge milestone on AMSL Aero’s journey and places the company on a very short list of global leaders in advanced eVTOL development.

“Very few aircraft companies build a full-scale aircraft and get it safely off the ground,” he added.

“What AMSL Aero has achieved with a small focused team is incredible and shows what can be done when you have a clear vision and amazing talent.”

AMSL Aero Vertiia

A Vertiia mockup in its proposed production configuration. Photo: AMSL Aero.

Original Article published by Andrew McLaughlin on PS News.

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Tom Worthington4:07 pm 25 Nov 24

The claim of a 1000 km range on hydrogen with five people on board is hard to believe. The problem is how to store enough hydrogen in a light enough container. Perhaps the cylindrical twin booms double as fuel tanks. The availability of “green” hydrogen is less of an issue. This could be made at the airport by electrolysis of water, using surplus renewable energy from the grid. There is a green hydrogen refueling station in Canberra for vehicles, which works this way.

Capital Retro8:53 am 26 Nov 24

The “green” hydrogen refueling station in Canberra which was initially built by ActewAGL for an estimated cost of $3m has now been quietly on-sold to Pacific Energy. It only services about 50 motor vehicles.
It is unlikely that small, council owned regional airports across Australia where the new aircraft will mainly go will be able to justify the expenditure required to provide a “green” hydrogen refueling facility at their airports.

Capital Retro2:24 pm 25 Nov 24

This is a real “staggerwing”.
Note it has to dodge wind turbine hazards immediately after take-off.
https://www.australianflying.com.au/videos/it-s-staggering-beechcraft-staggerwing-in-flight

Capital Retro2:06 pm 25 Nov 24

I note it is proposed to power it with hydrogen.
Already billions of dollars have been thrown at “green hydrogen” but there are few reports of progress.
Meanwhile, it was powered by battery electricity on its first unmanned, untethered flight.
The developers would be aware that meaningful flight with batteries is impossible at this stage so unless a big breakthrough is made with “green hydrogen” the project will end up on the scrapheap.

Capital Retro1:25 pm 25 Nov 24

The aviation bureaucrats in Australia will take 10 years to examine and certify this contraption. Meanwhile, if it is any good overseas interests will snap it up and lock it in a shed like what happened to the Sarich orbital engine.

An amazing machine. But you have to wonder with the Luddite attitudes of some how humans have progressed at all.

Having the attitude that everything that’s different or new or god forbid clean energy should be shouted down solely because of the political team you support is just dumb.

Capital Retro2:15 pm 25 Nov 24

Seano, just wondering if you did work experience recently in a consumer goods factory because you seem to have experience in putting labels on everything.
What career are you aiming for after you finish primary school?

Futureproof: How many passengers does the plane you built carry?

I think it’s great, but what about a family of five all travelling together? Two trips?

4 passengers! Come back to me when you can carry 100 passengers and fly Sydney to Brisbane or Melbourne non stop

You get that passenger planes had protypes right? That those early planes didn’t go from the Wright brothers straight to commercial air travel right? You do understand that right?

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