Northwest Aerospace News February | March 2019 Issue No. 7 | Page 26

B atteries will be a major challenge; powering an aircraft requires a completely different level of battery power, endurance and reliability than powering a car, plus the airplane’s systems will need electricity too. Zunum also has competition in the electric aircraft space. Airbus has teamed with Siemens and Rolls Royce on an electric-powered jet and they’ve announced their intention to have a hybrid-electric demonstrator plane flying by 2020. Eviation Aircraft of Israel is flying a three-engine electric turbo prop prototype. Start-up Wright Electric has teamed with British budget airline EasyJet to develop a short-range electric aircraft with 180 seats. Ampaire is trying to get FAA certification for retrofitted electric engines. And United Technologies has announced plans, once it completes its merger with Rockwell Collins, to begin de- veloping technology that will allow it to enter the electronic aircraft market, either as a major supplier of critical compo- nents, or as an OEM itself. 26 NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS However, this can be a confirmation of things to come and Zunum has some momentum. The company just inked an engine supplier deal with French manufacturer Safran last year. Safran plans to modify helicopter engines for Zunum, which the company hopes to trial in a flying testbed in 2019.