Comment by inhumantsar
11 hours ago
> Airbus is also assessing shielding the area of the fuselage closest to the engines to minimize the risk of a blade off — one or more composite blades breaking, which could dent or puncture the fuselage and, in the worst-case scenario, strike a passenger.
sightly terrifying
The cowling of the current turbines serves the same purpose, but needs to cover 360 degrees of rotation, so it's heavier and draggier. The blades have a bit more angular momentum in the propfan than in a high bypass turbofan, but there's fewer of them.
Instead of reinforcing the fuselage, I wonder if just having a 1/4 nacelle that shields the passenger side would work.
The impact area of the fuselage looks much larger than an unrolled cowling, and thus significantly heavier to reinforce. The smaller cowling will save drag through.
It might hit the fuselage at a flatter angle than it would hit a nacelle, which would help.
>The cowling of the current turbines serves the same purpose, but needs to cover 360 degrees of rotation
this doesn't make sense. if you are not worried about fan blades flying off in directions other than the fuselage, why cover 360 degrees? (and if you are worried 360, then why open rotor?)
The cowling is its own structural support, so needs to be strong all around, otherwise it would fail on the other side and you'd get blade+cowling approaching the fuselage at high velocity.
not more terrifying than sitting in any turboprop airplane.
I had a sharp intake of breath after reading this and then clicking through to see the header image of the article.
Reminded me of this: https://youtu.be/j973645y5AA?si=QJrNJe0gT-zwpElD
Seems like quite an engineering challenge with this new design...
High bypass turbo fans do this as well, it's just in the fan/engine housing, not the fuselage.
Yeah I'd think you'd need some serious shielding to prevent a puncture