As I indicated in my first post on this, the weight of a jet engine per KW of energy it produces is substantially less than the weight of the electric motor that would replace it "a typical turbofan is 10KW/kg while a Prius motor is less than 2KW/kg"I am far from an expert on planes. Hell I've never even flown in one, but I was wondering -- are there any large weight savings from going electric that would partially offset the increase in weight from the batteries? Certainly the battery itself is a massive weight, but are there any significant (in weight) savings from components that would be unnecessary in an electric plane? I'd imagine the jet engines themselves are rather heavy, but I haven't a clue what the weight of an electric engine would be to deliver similar performance (could it be less?). There may be other components as well (ex an electric car doesn't need a transmission). Another key aspect to this is that traditionally battery technology has been focused on making it cheaper, denser, faster to charge, this kind of thing. Perhaps there's a less focused on battery technology that is horrible for speed of charge and energy density, but is rather good on weight. What about hydrogen rather than batteries for the energy storage? Just some things this thread made me think about.
More importantly, how the heck have you managed to never fly on an airplane!

