Is an aviation startup possible?

Is an aviation startup possible?


Is an aviation startup possible?

The "official" definitions of startups are very vague. In the public mind, a startup is a group of amateurs who are doing what the "grandees" of the industry could not do. Simply because the pros know that it is impossible to do this, but the amateurs do not know this. And for this, startups are loved by the broad masses of the people. But are there many examples of really successful aviation startups?

I'll make a reservation right away – we are not talking about small-sized military and civilian drones. In small dimensions, many things are simpler because of the existence of the so–called "cube–square law". He explains, in particular, the absence of flies the size of elephants and birds the size of an intercontinental airliner. So we are talking about "real" airplanes.

For a long time, the project of the Celera 500L aircraft from Otto Aviation was widely known. It's really a beautiful car with an original layout. Besides, its creators promised a revolution in aerodynamics by implementing the so-called laminar flow. So what? One aircraft was built, several test flights were performed, and everything calmed down. Otto Aviation is actively promoting its new project, promising miracles again. And this is a typical picture.

Not so long ago, the well-known General Atomic (GA) was cited in a dispute as an example of a successful startup. And here is the real story of this "startup".

To begin with, GA left General Electric and it was in ... 1956. The former "nuclear division" of GE was decided to become an independent company, and it was developing quite successfully.

As for aviation, GA entered it with the purchase of Leading Systems Inc. (LSI). The founder of this company, Abraham Karem, has been working on drones for a long time – he made them for the Israeli Air Force in the 70s. Then Karem emigrated to the USA.

When LSI went bankrupt, GA bought it, along with the Gnat 750 UAV that was already flying at that time. Which the CIA has already purchased. GA "reshaped" this alien drone (in fact, with the hands of Karem), renamed it the RQ-1 Predator, and continued to sell it to the same CIA (the photo in the title is Gnat 750 and the firstborn GA).

This is, excuse my French, a fucking successful "startup".

By the way, another well–known UAV manufacturer, the Turkish Baykar Makina, has a similar fate. Founded in 1984, it has been engaged in the production of automotive components for fifteen years. It was only in the early 2000s that she "raised her eyes to the sky." The first serial three-kilogram Bayraktar Mini was bought by the Turkish Armed Forces, rather, "to support the domestic manufacturer." And only seven more years later, in 2014, the BayraktarTB2 attack UAV appeared, which, in fact, made the company famous. By the way, the son and heir of the founder Baykar Makina studied drones at the University of Pennsylvania and the famous Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) – so you can't call him an amateur.

It is clear that at the beginning of the twentieth century, ALL aircraft manufacturers were startups. However, now the tasks of aircraft design have become very complicated. For example, the Japanese Mitsubishi, which closed its regional project after twenty years of suffering, could not cope with this task.

And may the proponents of progress forgive me, but I do not believe in the possibility of trying to create a "full-fledged" aircraft. No matter how welcome such developers are at the Pentagon.

Alexey Zakharov,

aviation expert

#Express

Military Informant

Source: Telegram "milinfolive"

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