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Electric Air Travel Arrives... At 270 MPH

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Sun, Oct 27, 2019 07:11 PM

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Why isn't this electric airplane blowing the doors off its competition the same way its ground-borne

Why isn't this electric airplane blowing the doors off its competition the same way its ground-borne counterparts are? Why isn't this electric airplane blowing the doors off its competition the same way its ground-borne counterparts are? The answer is simple: weight. This company has a technology that could change that. You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Energy and Capital. [Click here]( to manage your e-mail preferences. [Energy and Capital logo] Electric Air Travel Arrives... At 270 MPH By Alex Koyfman Written Oct. 27, 2019 Dear Reader, Back in July of this year, Israeli aerospace firm Eviation unveiled the world's first electrically powered executive transport/commuter aircraft for the mass market. Behold, the Alice: [electric plane] I'm not sure what the backstory is on the name for this little airplane, but if the idea was to allude to a lost, frightened child in a terrifying, unfamiliar world, they pretty much nailed this one. Eviation's first commercially available model, which is expected to hit in 2022, will be an unpressurized, short-range aircraft aimed at the air-taxi market. The following year, its executive model will carry nine passengers for up to 650 miles at 10,000 feet at a speed of 276 mph (440km/h). Not impressed? There's more. More than 7,600 pounds, or roughly 60% of the aircraft's empty weight, is battery. TIME IS RUNNING OUT An internationally successful company is set to explode in the U.S. markets. This company is more powerful than the U.S. government. It just struck a $54 million deal and has dozens more on the table. This is the opportunity of the decade, and the window is closing fast. It’s still hidden from the majority of investors, but that could change any day. It’s already seen a 14,000% increase in trading activity! Lucky for you, I can still get you in on the ground floor... for less than a dollar. Interested? You should be. [Click here now before the window of opportunity closes for good.]( Kind Of... Underwhelming So the question is: What the hell is going on here? Wasn't the Tesla one of the fastest cars on the road? Aren't there trains out there that can go 300 miles per hour? Why is this electric airplane barely breaking 270 mph while every commercial jet airliner out there can easily go twice as fast and up to eight times as far? The answer is simple: weight. While electric motors are superior, pound for pound, in torque and horsepower to piston engines like the kind that power 98% of the cars out there, they still cannot compare to jet engines in the power-to-weight category. Consider this: If you hook the Pratt & Whitney F119, which powers the F-22 Raptor, up to a shaft to drive a propeller or rotor, you would produce in the neighborhood of 52,000 horsepower. The Raptor, which can cruise at supersonic speed and top out at 1,500 mph, carries two of these. The F119 weighs about two tons, meaning that its power-to-weight ratio is roughly 10 times that of a modern Ferrari. Still the One to Beat But let's look at something smaller: the General Electric T700, which powers the U.S. Army's UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter. The Black Hawk carries two of these engines, each producing 3,000 horsepower at the shaft. They weigh just 500 pounds. Now, imagine how big of a piston engine or electric motor you would need to crank out over 52,000 horsepower? Or even 3,000? How many pounds of batteries would you need to produce that kind of power for hours and hours on end? This is a primitive comparison, of course, but it illustrates quite well why the Alice is so slow — and why, based on these initial examples, it will not be able to compete with turbofan and turboprop technology. Not in terms of speed and range. Not yet. This Could Replace Oil, Coal, and Natural Gas Within the Next 10 Years Late last year, a team of Army scientists discovered the secret to "endless clean energy." It's cheaper than oil, coal, and natural gas (NG) and also more efficient than solar, wind, geothermal, or any other alternative energy you could think of! With companies like Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook already investing billions of dollars in it, it could easily become the dominant fuel source on the planet in less than a decade. And there's [one tiny $4 company leading the charge]( in this energy revolution, which primes it for 1,587% gains! [Click here for the full story!]( The Missing Pieces Electric motors have two major advantages right now: ease of maintenance, and, for those who care, a much smaller carbon footprint, even when considering the source of the electricity that charges those batteries. What Alice needs is highly improved batteries and, more importantly, a motor that is more energy-efficient, more reliable, and capable of producing more power. Given those two elements, the aviation industry will be transformed. It's not a matter of if at this point, or even a matter of when. It's how soon. Eviation's Alice is a pioneer, but she's hardly alone. Boeing recently invested in Seattle-based startup Zunum Aero, whose initial concept aircraft will have a 12-passenger capacity. [electric plane] Future concepts will be bigger, faster, with longer ranges, and, of course, more reliable. For those future plans to come to fruition, though, the solution will have to come through the same two elements: improved batteries and motors. The race is already on, and there are tons of competitors and theories out there, but [this is one company that stands apart](. What it's done to improve upon the electric motor is an engineering first and considered by many to be the only true change in classic motor design since Faraday's first prototypes almost 200 years ago. The company is now working toward doing the same thing with batteries. [Click here to learn more.]( Fortune favors the bold, [alex koyfman Signature] Alex Koyfman [[follow basic]@AlexKoyfman on Twitter]( Coming to us from an already impressive career as an independent trader and private investor, Alex's specialty is in the often misunderstood but highly profitable development-stage microcap sector. Focusing on young, aggressive, innovative biotech and technology firms from the U.S. and Canada, Alex has built a track record most Wall Street hedge funders would envy. Alex contributes his thoughts and insights regularly to [Wealth Daily](. To learn more about Alex, [click here](. Enjoy reading this article? [Click here]( to like it and receive similar articles to read! Browse Our Archives [Lithium Outlook 2020: Bottoming Prices Signal a Bullish Future]( [Pot Stocks Are Officially Dead!]( [The Day the Ships Stopped Moving]( [Trump: "We Now Control Middle East Oil"]( [Coin Roll Hunting]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This email was sent to {EMAIL}. It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you've received this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, you may [unsubscribe here](, and view our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. To ensure that you receive future issues of Energy and Capital, please add newsletter@energyandcapital.com to your address book or whitelist within your spam settings. For customer service questions or issues, please contact us for assistance. [Energy and Capital](, Copyright © 2019, [Angel Publishing LLC](. All rights reserved. 111 Market Place #720 Baltimore, MD 21202. The content of this site may not be redistributed without the express written consent of Angel Publishing. Individual editorials, articles and essays appearing on this site may be republished, but only with full attribution of both the author and Energy and Capital as well as a link to www.energyandcapital.com. Your privacy is important to us -- we will never rent or sell your e-mail or personal information. Please read our [Privacy Policy](. No statement or expression of opinion, or any other matter herein, directly or indirectly, is an offer or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell the securities or financial instruments mentioned. While we believe the sources of information to be reliable, we in no way represent or guarantee the accuracy of the statements made herein. [Energy and Capital]( does not provide individual investment counseling, act as an investment advisor, or individually advocate the purchase or sale of any security or investment. The publisher, editors and consultants of Angel Publishing may actively trade in the investments discussed in this publication. They may have substantial positions in the securities recommended and may increase or decrease such positions without notice. Neither the publisher nor the editors are registered investment advisors. Subscribers should not view this publication as offering personalized legal or investment counseling. Investments recommended in this publication should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company in question.

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