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Hartzell Propeller Boosts Green Flight

Universal Hydrogen Chooses Hartzell Props for Test Aircraft

On the morning of 02 March 2023 Universal Hydrogen—the California energy concern about the commendable endeavor of making hydrogen-powered commercial flight a near-term reality—flew a De Havilland Dash 8-300 regional airliner under partial, hydrogen fuel-cell propulsion. The test aircraft—dubbed Lightning McClean—lifted off from central Washington State’s Grant County International Airport (MWH) at 08:14 PST and flew for 15 minutes, reaching an altitude of 3,500-feet MSL.

In preparation for the test-flight, Lightning McClean’s conventional, jet-fuel-burning, number-two (starboard) engine was replaced by a hydrogen-electric powertrain comprising Plug Power’s ProGen fuel-cells specially modified for aviation use, and Everett, Washington-based MagniX’s megawatt-class Magni650 electric propulsion unit. The Dash 8’s left engine, however, remained the 2,380-shaft-horsepower Pratt & Whitney PW123 turboprop mill originally envisaged for the aircraft by Bombardier. The conventional turboprop engine’s proven reliability offset the variables of the experimental hydrogen-electric architecture, thereby affording the endeavor a key degree of safety-critical redundancy.

The hydrogen-electric engine was mated to a custom-built Hartzell 91-inch-diameter, five-blade, swept airfoil, carbon-fiber propeller. Though smaller than the standard Dash 8 propeller, Hartzell’s unique screw—which comprised blades, hub, and retention components deriving of an existing 14 CFR Part 35 certified propeller—produced thrust enough to keep Lightning McClean airborne when the aircraft’s jet-fuel-powered portside engine was throttled back during flight.

Hartzell, which also customized a propeller-governor for Lightning McClean—continues to develop governor advancements for green-powered aircraft.

Hartzell Propeller President J.J. Frigge stated: “This project with Universal Hydrogen is one of many programs where Hartzell Propeller is working with and supporting advanced air mobility manufacturers. Hartzell Propeller has been around for over a hundred years, and carbon-free flight can power our next century.”

Mr. Frigge added: “We’ve been working with this team for almost two-years as we step up our investments working on future new aircraft design opportunities. Hartzell Propeller is pleased to be a part of this historic first flight of a hydrogen fuel-cell-powered regional airliner.”

The test-flight was conducted under an FAA Special Airworthiness Certificate and occasioned the first sortie of a flight-test campaign Universal Hydrogen expects to culminate with the 2025 entry into passenger service of an ATR-72 regional airliner converted to run on hydrogen. Representatives of the U.S. and European launch customers for the hydrogen airplanes—Connect Airlines and Amelia, respectively—were on-hand to witness the historic flight.

The milestone flight was piloted by Universal Hydrogen and former U.S. Air Force test pilot Alex Kroll, who stated: “During the second circuit over the airport, we were comfortable with the performance of the hydrogen powertrain; so we were able to throttle back the fossil fuel turbine engine to demonstrate cruise principally on hydrogen power. The airplane handled beautifully, and the noise and vibrations from the fuel-cell powertrain are significantly lower than from the conventional turbine engine.”

Among the unique aspects of Universal Hydrogen’s powertrain design is the fact it utilizes no batteries. Rather, fuel-cells drive the electric motor directly—drastically reducing system weight and operational costs.
AeroTEC, a Seattle-based engineering concern specializing in the development, testing, and certification of new aerospace products, assisted with test aircraft’s conversion to hydrogen fuel-cell power. The company designed Lightning McClean’s modified nacelle structure and performed numerous additional alterations by which the Dash-8 was successfully retrofitted with Universal Hydrogen’s powertrain. The entirety of the conversion work was completed in less than 12-months.

The test flight followed a successful December 2022 demonstration of Universal Hydrogen’s modular hydrogen logistics system. Subject demonstration was conducted at the company’s engineering center in Toulouse, France.

Universal Hydrogen co-founder and CEO Pal Eremenko set forth: “Our business model resolves the chicken-and-egg problem between hydrogen airplanes and hydrogen infrastructure by developing both in parallel and with a uniquely low-cost approach. The airplanes are converted to hydrogen using an aftermarket retrofit conversion kit, tackling the existing fleet rather than developing a brand new airplane. And hydrogen fueling uses modular capsules compatible with existing freight networks and airport cargo handling equipment, making every airport in the world hydrogen-ready.”

Universal Hydrogen is backed by GE Aviation, Airbus Ventures, Toyota Ventures, JetBlue Ventures, and American Airlines, as well as several of the world’s largest green hydrogen producers and top-tier financial investors. Ultimately, Universal Hydrogen plans to adapt its hydrogen technology to single-aisle airliners, and to expand hydrogen deliveries—by dint of its modular logistics network—to mobility applications outside the aviation sector.

To date, Universal Hydrogen’s books contain orders totaling over $1-billion from 16 worldwide customers seeking a collective 247 aircraft conversions. In addition to the aircraft conversions, Universal Hydrogen’s customers have contracted over $2-billion in hydrogen fuel-services over the first ten-years of hydrogen-powered flight operations.

FMI: www.hartzellprop.com

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