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To: WALT REISCH who wrote (2196)8/28/1998 4:56:00 PM
From: Metacomet  Respond to of 8393
 
More on solar powered airplane. Now they need batteries that can operate in the cold.

Copyright 1998 Times Mirror Company
Los Angeles Times
August 24, 1998, Monday, Home Edition
SECTION: Part A; Page 3; Metro Desk
LENGTH: 1220 words
HEADLINE: CALIFORNIA AND THE WEST; SKY'S THE LIMIT;
EXPERIMENTAL PLANE COULD SOAR UP TO 100,000 FEET IN ALTITUDE POWERED SOLELY BY THE RAYS OF
THE SUN
BYLINE: COLL METCALFE, TIMES STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: SIMI VALLEY
BODY:

Fifty years ago, in the heyday of aviation development, pilots such as Chuck Yeager used to talk about "pushing the envelope."

These days, a team of engineers and designers in Simi Valley is pushing the envelope by constructing and testing Centurion--the latest in a line of pilotless aircraft designed to fly at the very edge of space using nothing but the sun's energy.

"One of the most exciting things for me is watching a plane take off that you've seen go from just a concept to reality," said William Parks, a senior engineer at the AeroVironment research facility, who has headed the Centurion project. "But I'll admit that it always frightens me I keep wondering if there's some major design flaw that we've overlooked."

Commissioned by NASA as part of its Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology, or ERAST program, Centurion will begin test flights in October from Edwards Air Force Base--the same base where Yeager broke the sound barrier in the sleek orange plane he affectionately dubbed "Glamorous Glennis."

However, this time no speed records will be broken.

With its 206-foot wingspan and thousands of coal-gray solar cells, the pilotless Centurion will fly at speeds under 100 mph but at an altitude of up to 100,000 feet.

It is the latest in a string of solar-powered aircraft that AeoVironment engineers hope will allow them to build planes capable of flying at those altitudes for months at a time.

"The goal is to get a plane that can fly for a couple of thousand hours," Parks said. "The technology is pretty much there, but we have some more work to do before we get to that point."

NASA hopes to use the planes for atmospheric experiments and observations that the agency is now unable to do because of aircraft limitations.

Sampling gases from the upper atmosphere to check for pollutants is now done using high-flying aircraft like the U-2 spy plane, but because it flies at high speeds and for a limited time, scientists cannot get the kind of data they need to analyze everything from climatic change to ionization above thunderstorms.

A plane like Centurion, however, will give those scientists the ideal way to make those kinds of observations, designers said.

"It's really the ideal platform to that kind of work," said David Nufer, marketing director for the Monrovia-based company. "Right now, we're almost at a point where we meet all those requirements."

Though the program is geared toward achieving scientific objectives, Nufer added that it has vast commercial possibilities as well.

The company has been in contact with several communications firms that are interested in replacing portions of their satellite networks with the planes at a fraction of the cost.

Where a satellite costs upward of $ 100 million to design, build and launch, the same equipment could be loaded onto a solar-powered plane and used for as little as $ 3 million.

Another benefit, designers said, is that equipment on board a solar plane can be upgraded to match the ever-evolving sophistication of modern communications technology.

A satellite, however, generally becomes obsolete in five to 10 years, requiring companies to invest greater sums to maintain their service.

Another benefit, and perhaps the greatest, is that should any malfunction occur in the scientific or communications equipment, the plane can be landed and the problem corrected.

With a satellite, that isn't so easy.

"If something goes wrong with a satellite or the equipment, well, you might as well just wave goodbye," said senior electronics engineer Earl Cox. "With a plane, a malfunction isn't that great of a problem--you just land and fix it."

Other uses, Nufer said, include agricultural monitoring, storm tracking and battlefield surveillance.

Despite the prowess and promise of Centurion and predecessors like the Pathfinder Plus, which recently set an altitude record for a propeller plane after reaching 71,000 feet, they are rather gangly contraptions that appear far too fragile to venture into the coldest and most inhospitable reaches of the atmosphere.

But looks are deceiving.

Pieced together from five separate wing sections, Centurion was crafted from carbon composite materials that while lighter than a pencil are stronger than steel.

Essentially just one long wing, the plane is designed to carry as much as 1,000 pounds of equipment depending on the altitude. While flying at a lower altitude, the plane can carry more weight, but as it rises and the air becomes thinner, the payload capacity decreases substantially.

Designing a plane that can carry payloads into the atmosphere's farthest reaches provided some interesting challenges for AeroVironment's team of two engineers.

But for the company that astounded the world with the human-powered Gossamer-Albatross that crossed the English Channel in the late 1970s and the Sunraycer solar-powered car, challenge is what feeds success.

Founded in 1971, AeroVironment has been propelling the development and advancement of highly efficient and environmentally safe machines for government and civilian use.

But since winning the contract to perfect a solar-powered plane, AeroVironment has dedicated most of its research staff to getting a plane to fly 20 miles high for months at a time running only on sunlight.

"The entire plane was designed around power," Cox said. "We knew how much we'd be able to get, so that was the unbending requirement that forced us to design it the way we have."

Though the engineers tweaked existing technologies and avionics concepts to design the plane, they were forced to blaze new trails in other areas to get the idea to work.

One of which was to redesign the propellers.

According to Parks, as a plane increases its altitude, there is less air to keep the plane aloft. So as it gets higher, a plane must fly faster.

However, with such a finite amount of energy available--about enough to run two dozen hair dryers--engineers had to redesign the propellers to be able to push more air, more efficiently.

What they came up with was a large, football-shaped propeller that has since begun revolutionizing the ceiling fan industry.

"What we found in designing the propellers was that ceiling fans are really not very efficient," Parks said with a chuckle. "It's one of those spinoff kind of things."

Though they have proven that a solar-powered plane can be built and flown at very high altitudes, engineers have yet to make the kinds of long-duration flights NASA and commercial firms said they need.

And that problem hinges solely on designing an energy storage system capable of operating in the cold, low-pressure environment of the Earth's upper atmosphere.

"That's the next challenge for us," Cox said.

With Centurion ready to begin testing, another plane, christened Helios, is slowly being built, piece by piece, in the company's Simi Valley facility.

Designers said it will be a more refined version of Centurion that will incorporate newer design ideas that engineers hope to learn from the October tests.

"I do tend to get a little nervous when a plane takes off for the first time, but nothing has ever happened," said Parks, who added that he's already getting anxious. "But I scare easy."





To: WALT REISCH who wrote (2196)8/28/1998 4:58:00 PM
From: Tom Hoff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8393
 
All of the cd-rw drive manufactures have recently announced increase
read speeds from 6x to 24x. This improvement has led to announcments
like the one below. However it is meaningless to us because the
manufactures of the disks do not have a license yet. Our licensee's
for cd-rw Sony,TDK and 3M are not making the disks they are selling and are telling the company to get the royalties from the manufactures. The company has assured my over and over that they have a strategy in place, but i'm growing impatient. I welcome anyone to put some shareholder pressure on them. I believe that this is the most important issue facing this company. Believe me when I say that there are millions of these disks being sold for which we are recieving nothing.

Gateway Offers Clients Next Level of Compact Disc Technology

NORTH SIOUX CITY, S.D.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 28, 1998--

CD Rewritable drives provide convenient storage capabilities and

compatibility

Gateway (NYSE: GTW), a global leader in the direct marketing of PCs, today announced the availability of CD Rewritable drives on its G, GP, and E-Series desktop systems. The next generation of CD technology, CD Rewritable drives offer state-of-the-art data storage for home and business environments.

"Nearly all PCs manufactured today have DVD-ROM or CD-ROM drives, making CDs ideal for personal data storage, system backups, exchanging or moving large files, archiving information, and even producing your own music CDs," said Jim Collas, Gateway's senior vice president of product development and management. "With approximately six times the storage capability of other removable storage devices, CD-RW drives offer a cost-effective, easy way for our clients to save, exchange and transfer their data."

Gateway's CD Rewritable drives are manufactured by Philips, a leader in compact disc technology, and come with one CD-RW (rewritable) and two CD-R (write once) discs. Each disc has a capacity of 650MB and offers enhanced reliability over other removable storage devices. Also included is Adaptec's DirectCD and EZ CD Creator software, allowing clients to create CDs as easily as copying files to a floppy disk. The drive is available as an upgrade on G, GP, and E-Series desktop computer systems for $225.

"CD-RW has become a highly desirable option for more and more PC buyers as CDs start to replace floppies and become the medium of choice for sharing data and programs," added Aaron Goldberg, executive vice president for ZD Market Intelligence. "In addition, this one device acts as more than storage media, as many CD-RW customers also use it for backup. Given these trends, CD-RW is becoming a very highly valued peripheral."

For more information regarding CD Rewritable drives on Gateway(TM) systems, visit www.gateway.com or call 1-800-GATEWAY(SM).

About Gateway

Gateway (NYSE: GTW), a Fortune 500 company founded in 1985, is a leading global direct marketer of PC products. The company has manufacturing facilities in the United States, Ireland and Malaysia and employs more than 13,000 people worldwide. Gateway products and services consistently win top awards from leading industry publications. Revenue for the year 1997 was $6.3 billion. For further information, visit Gateway at gateway.com.

Many Gateway products are engineered to Gateway specifications, which may vary from the retail versions of the software and/or hardware in functionality, performance or compatibility.

All prices and configurations are subject to change without notice or obligation. Prices do not include shipping and handling and any applicable taxes.

CONTACT:

Gateway, North Sioux City

MEDIA CONTACTS:

David Pendery, Marketing Communications, (605) 232-1433

david.pendery@gateway.com

or

Greg Lund, Corporate Communications, (605) 232-1757

greg.lund@gateway.com

KEYWORD: SOUTH DAKOTA

BW1142 AUG 28,1998

10:03 PACIFIC

13:03 EASTERN