Antarctic Support

  • Upload
    morty

  • View
    41

  • Download
    3

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Group C Dickson Chan / Brett Johnson / Kaman Lau / Bertha Luk / Josefa Wivou. Antarctic Support. Aircraft Evaluation & Design Appraisal Project. Tuesday, 24 October 2006 Lecturers: Mr. John Page Mr. Zoran Vulovic. Antarctic Support. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

  • Antarctic SupportGroup C Dickson Chan / Brett Johnson / Kaman Lau / Bertha Luk / Josefa WivouAircraft Evaluation & Design Appraisal ProjectTuesday, 24 October 2006Lecturers: Mr. John Page Mr. Zoran Vulovic

  • Antarctic Support

    Aim: Investigate the possibility of providing specialist air support to activities in the Antarctic...

    Support the Tourist Trade and Scientific Exploration

    Provide Search and Rescue & Medivac Capability

    Select aircraft capable of operating in the extreme environment

  • Antarctica In Brief

    Market Research

    Mission Requirements

    Regulatory Requirements

    Aircraft Analysis

    Planned Aircraft Operations

    Financial Projection

    QuestionsPresentation Outline

  • Terrain

    5th largest continent

    Terrain: 98% thick continental ice sheet2% barren rock

    Average elevations: 2000 to 4000 m

    11% of Antarctica are Glaciers and floating ice shelvesAntarctica in brief

  • Weather / Climate

    - Coldest, Windiest and Driest Continent

    Antarctica in brief

  • General Facts

    Home to various national scientific research base

    11 ice runways and 22 skiways

    These facilities do not meet ICAO standards

    Very few transport systems within Antarctica

    Antarctica in brief

  • Our Focus 2 Key Areas

    Look at existing air support for Antarctica

    Examine Scientific and Tourist Market

    Market Research

  • Existing Air Operations to Antarctica

    Market Research

  • Scientific Market

    Examined Australia, Japan, New Zealand & USA science bases

    Opportunities to serve Australias Research Activities (Australian Antarctic Division - AAD)

    Identified AAD needs: high speed service from Antarctica to Australia

    Market Research

  • Tourist Market consists of:

    Airbourne / Over-flight Tourism (by air, no landing, e.g. Qantas)

    Vessel Trips (tourists stay onboard shipping vessels)

    Actual Landings (mostly via shipping vessels)

    Limited Accommodations Available on Antarctica

    Market Research

    Cost of tour packages rangefrom $19,000 to $59,000usd

    Majority of tours are ship-based

  • Antarctic Tourism Data (1 of 2)

    Market Research

  • Antarctic Tourism Data (2 of 2)

    Market Research

  • Base of Operation (Australian Mainland)

    Examined various locations selected Hobart

    Benefits

    Location (closest major Australian city to Antarctica)Existing base of Antarctic community + organisationsExisting infrastructures (e.g. ports / research centres)

    Market Research

  • Base of Operation (Antarctic Mainland)

    Examined various Australian bases selected Casey

    Benefits

    Location (closest to Hobart)Purpose built blue-ice runway for larger aircraftHub of all Australian Antarctic bases

    Market Research

  • Our Operating Model

    Tourists will:

    Travel by Air on one sector to or from Antarctica

    and then

    travel on the remaining sector by sea on shipping vesselMarket Research

  • Air Operator Certificate (e.g. aerial work to and from Australian Antarctic Territory)

    Environmental Restrictions

    Crew Provisions (3 flight crew required)

    ETOPS

    Regulatory Requirements

  • Inter-continental

    The Aircraft should be able to:

    Improve existing capability for urgent / critical re-supply missions

    Compliment the AADs existing air support capabilities

    Mission Requirements

  • Major requirements (Inter-continental)

    Range (at least 3443km; preferably > 7000km)Speed (Hobart Casey in less than 6hrs)Payload(2 to 5 tonnes)Capacity(5 to 10 passengers; scientists given priority to fly)Weather(operate at -30C; max cross-wind limit > 20 knots)Fuel(Jet B grade fuel)

    Mission Requirements

  • Search and Rescue / Medical Evacuations

    Very different requirementsSAR requires STOL / VTOL capability + trained ground staffMedical Evacuations requires fast aircraft with good ground access, and also enough space for medical equipments / stretchers on board

    Conclusion: Not feasible to provide Search and RescueFocus will be on providing Medivac services

    Mission Requirements

  • Other requirements (Inter-continental)

    Navigation instruments

    Ground accessibility (e.g. for convenient loading)

    Noise footprint (the smaller the better!)

    Aircraft with more than 2 engines (avoid ETOPS restrictions)

    Mission Requirements

  • Inter-continental mission

    Examined potential candidates for the missionExisting inter-continental aircraft:Lockheed LC-130F HerculesIlyushin IL-76Lockheed C-5 GalaxyToo large for our mission requirement

    Selected Dassault Falcon-900EX

    Aircraft Analysis

  • Falcon 900EX Summary

    Designed as a large intercontinental business jet

    16 -18 passengers

    3 x Honeywell TFE731-60 Turbofan engines

    Max fuel capacity: 11,865 Litres

    2 man cockpit

    Aircraft Analysis

  • Falcon 900EX Summary

    Ground turn radius of 14.55m

    Tri-cycle type landing gear with anti-skid system

    2 independent hydraulic systems (3000 lb/sq in)

    3 engine-driven pumps

    Heated bleed air anti-icing for wing leading edges, intakes and centre engine ductAircraft Analysis

  • Falcon 900EX Dimensions

    External

    Length: 20.21m

    Height: 7.55m

    Wingspan: 19.33m

    Baggage Door: Height 0.75m / Width 0.95m

    Passenger door: Height 1.72m; Width 0.8m

    Aircraft Analysis

  • Falcon 900EX - Dimensions

    InternalCabin: Length 10.11m; Height 1.88m; Width 1.91mRear Baggage Compartment Volume: 3.8 m3

    Aircraft Analysis

  • Falcon 900EX Performance

    Long range cruise: Mach 0.75Range: 8334kmPayload: 2796kgMTOW: 21,900kgMax Cruise altitude: 51,000ftOperating Temp: -54C to 50C Take-off run: 1,590mLanding run: 724m (thrust reverser on centre engine)V approach approx. 109 kts

    Aircraft Analysis

  • Falcon 900EX Benefits

    Meeting all the mission requirements

    Operates more efficiently and effectively than larger aircraft

    Reduced reliance on long-range weather forecasting

    Environmental benefits: only requires refuelling in Antarctica by exception, reducing costs of transporting fuel

    Ability to be used in emergency response or medivac

    Ability to carry small amounts of time-critical cargo

    Aircraft Analysis

  • Airfield + additional requirements

    Casey (Wilkins Aerodrome)

    Glacial blue ice runway surface

    Airfield: 4000m long & 200m wide

    Elevation: 750m ASL

    Requires backup ground-based APU and fuel stockpile

    Planned Aircraft Operations

  • Flight Schedule

    Return flights take 1 day

    Depart Hobart at 1700, Arrive Casey by 2300 (day light)

    Depart Casey at 0100, Arrive Hobart by 0500

    43 return flights (Summer 2007-2008) for tourists / scientists6 return flights (Winter 2008) for scientists

    Planned Aircraft Operations

  • Financial Projections

  • Financial Projections

  • Antarctic Air-link: Hobart - Casey

    Most suitable aircraft: Falcon 900EX

    Enhance existing air-transport capability

    Expect Growth in Scientific and Tourist Markets

    Profitable Operations

    Questions?

    Conclusion & Questions