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eVTOL Cabins: Luxury or Everyday?

As the eVTOL indus­try devel­ops, so does the design of the air­craft. Already, Archer Avi­a­tion has left an indus­try mark­er with its bold, brave and breath­tak­ing exte­ri­or of its Mid­night Air­craft. There­fore, should the inte­ri­or cab­in of an eVTOL, the area where pas­sen­gers may spend a min­i­mum of ten min­utes or more on each flight, be ele­gant and lux­u­ri­ous and reflect a strength of the impend­ing green avi­a­tion rev­o­lu­tion or, should the seats and inte­ri­or be as mun­dane and pro­sa­ic as that of a con­ven­tion­al train, air­lin­er or bus?

The poten­tial of the for­mer is reflect­ed by Archer Aviation’s Mid­night Air­craft. evtolinsights.com inter­viewed Julien Mon­tousse back in Jan­u­ary, the company’s Vice-Pres­i­dent of Design and Inno­va­tion, where he explains the phi­los­o­phy behind the cabin’s cre­ation. For him, it should be clos­er to a spir­i­tu­al expe­ri­ence.

Julien Mon­tousse

In the inter­view he remarks, “Mid­night is a com­mut­ing plane that is not only prac­ti­cal and com­fort­able, but also awak­ens the human spir­it. We want our cus­tomer to ful­ly embrace the fly­ing expe­ri­ence. We designed the seat to wrap around your body, so you can feel the move­ment of the craft and become one with the plane. We wished to cre­ate pri­va­cy for the pas­sen­ger by design­ing a par­tial divider between seats, as well as offer­ing indi­vid­u­al­i­ty. As you step onboard, we intend to project core flight infor­ma­tion into this divider such as your assigned seat, your name, along­side the booked des­ti­na­tion point and take-off time. Then there are the large panoram­ic win­dows. This was a design pri­or­i­ty, so at 2,000 ft the pas­sen­ger can clear­ly engage with the city below.”

Imme­di­ate­ly, you won­der whether Montousse’s vision is a one-off. Is it prac­ti­cal, hum­drum and ordi­nary enough for the aver­age pas­sen­ger to embrace? Or is this some­thing the pub­lic will desire and expect?

Cer­tain­ly, in the ear­ly days at least, the cost of rid­ing in a fly­ing taxi won’t be cheap. While company’s like Archer hope the tick­et price to be sim­i­lar to an Uber black, this is unlike­ly until eVTOLs become ful­ly autonomous, and that sure­ly, won’t be for some years, as the pas­sen­ger psy­chol­o­gy must adapt to a con­cept that such air­craft will fly with­out pilots, leav­ing aside all the ini­tial safe­ty issues.

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, a fly­ing taxi will be more for the wealthy in the begin­ning, espe­cial­ly those who reg­u­lar fly on them, where lux­u­ry is to be expect­ed. Who wants to sit in a bus or sec­ond class train-type seat sur­round, when you are pay­ing a lot of mon­ey for a ride? Com­fort, ele­gance and style is, sure­ly, the neces­si­ty.

More, per­haps, down-to-earth are the seats. Mon­tousse con­tin­ues, “Mate­ri­als used in the aero­space indus­try tend to be tra­di­tion­al. They are not eco-friend­ly. We need to evolve. So with sus­tain­able elec­tric flight, it is impor­tant to inte­grate mate­ri­als that are also sus­tain­able. We chose the mate­r­i­al of flax fibre for the back of our seats. The plant is high­ly absorbent of CO2 and requires lit­tle irri­ga­tion. Leather is the base­line for a pre­mi­um look and feel in the auto­mo­tive indus­try.

“For Archer, the mass prop­er­ty of leather with­in Midnight’s low weight allowance pushed us to rethink an alter­na­tive solu­tion aligned with our brand ethos. We are study­ing a syn­thet­ic leather par­tial­ly com­posed from recy­cled plas­tic bot­tles. It has a sim­i­lar dura­bil­i­ty to leather and feels great to touch. We describe our cab­in as ‘pur­pose­ful com­fort’.”

This, the envi­ron­men­tal-friend­ly can ful­ly under­stand and applaud along­side the aim of the eVTOL indus­try to use improv­ing tech­nolo­gies to damp­en the pro­pel­lor noise in the cab­in via the use of advanced sound-proof­ing mate­ri­als. Mon­tousse believes the tech­nol­o­gy will be avail­able to achieve this with­in five years.

Yet, Archer takes this anoth­er step fur­ther by what Mon­tousse refers to as “the emo­tion­al con­nec­tion”. He explains, “Until now aero­space is all para­met­ric. In Japan where I lived for 8 years, I learned about the trans­fer­ence of ener­gy. It became evi­dent to me, a craftsper­son can pass over human ener­gy through their design. The more a cre­ation comes from a person’s abil­i­ty and tal­ent rather than a machine, the more pos­si­ble this is. We con­scious­ly put this prac­tice into Midnight’s cre­ation. We have not­ed this emo­tion­al con­nec­tion with those who have been up close to the Air­craft. They want to touch it, feel it and get close to it. This con­nec­tion can be a pow­er­ful expe­ri­ence.”

When asked about the expe­ri­ence of WW2 Spit­fire pilots feel­ing at one with their air­craft, Montousse’s face lights up. “Yes. We want that con­nec­tion to hap­pen. Even if the flight is only for 10 min­utes, we want pas­sen­gers to be in the present and love the act of fly­ing. To be ful­ly con­nect­ed and engaged with Mid­night and not feel desen­si­tised in a com­mod­i­ty trans­port. We want to recre­ate the 1950s and that gold­en era of flight, when peo­ple loved to fly.”

It is hard to imag­ine a train pas­sen­ger on the Brighton to Lon­don run or a City bus rid­er “feel­ing at one with their trans­porta­tion”, but, per­haps, this is where eVTOLs will thrive. Not only can they her­ald an avi­a­tion rev­o­lu­tion, but cre­ate a whole new emo­tion­al con­cept of trav­el?

Lil­i­um Pio­neer Edi­tion Jet Inte­ri­or on dis­play at EBACE2023

flightglobal.com pub­lished a fea­ture this week enti­tled ‘Are eVTOL cab­ins the next big oppor­tu­ni­ty for cab­in sup­pli­ers?’

The arti­cle first refers to Lil­i­um, who recent­ly unveiled its cab­in inte­ri­or for the Ger­man-based company’s four seat Pio­neer Edi­tion Lil­i­um Jet, at the Gene­va-locat­ed EBACE2023 Exhi­bi­tion, to much social media excite­ment. The com­pa­ny has cho­sen two sup­pli­ers it intends work­ing with for the air­craft’s inte­ri­or: Diehl Avi­a­tion and Paris-based Expliseat.

Diehl, which has also been work­ing with rival eVTOL devel­op­er Volo­copter on its inte­ri­or design, is to pro­vide a wide-rang­ing work pack­age for the Lil­i­um Jet cab­in, includ­ing pro­vid­ing ceil­ing and floor pan­els, walls and par­ti­tions, and the lug­gage com­part­ment. The Ger­man inte­ri­ors’ spe­cial­ist will also sup­ply the light­ing sys­tem and air con­di­tion­ing ducts, the lat­ter man­u­fac­tured from light­weight com­pos­ites such as foam gran­u­lates.

Expliseat is a new com­pa­ny known for its light­weight air­lin­er seats that replace tra­di­tion­al alu­mini­um with car­bon­fi­bre and tita­ni­um, and main­tains the prod­uct it is design­ing for Lil­i­um will be “one of the first seri­al­ly pro­duced eVTOL seats”.

Mar­tin Schuebel, Lilium’s Senior Vice-Pres­i­dent, says, “Expliseat’s exper­tise with light­weight and durable mate­ri­als will help us reach weight and dis­tance tar­gets while ensur­ing a pre­mi­um pas­sen­ger expe­ri­ence”. Expliseat has built a pro­to­type seat that has already “passed sev­er­al devel­op­ment mile­stones”, includ­ing a cru­cial crash test.

Anoth­er is Wisk Aero, now whol­ly-owned by Boe­ing. Direc­tor of Prod­uct Design­er, Uri Tzarnot­sky, is inter­viewed. He explains what hap­pened when mem­bers of the pub­lic were shown two cab­in con­cepts – one with four seats fac­ing inward, often called camp­fire or par­ty seat­ing, and the oth­er a con­ven­tion­al two-by-two lay­out with all pas­sen­gers fac­ing for­ward.

Wisk Aero Inte­ri­or

“In the stu­dio, where we are all co-work­ers and friends, there was a strong pref­er­ence for camp­fire seat­ing. How­ev­er, when we put four strangers in those mock-ups, as would be the case in a real-world sce­nario of ride-shar­ing, we realised how grave a mis­take that direc­tion would have been. Peo­ple were avert­ing their eyes, dis­play­ing ner­vous body lan­guage, pulling their feet in tight, and strug­gling to get com­fort­able in a cab­in with poor­ly defined bound­aries of per­son­al space.”

Accord­ing to Tzarnot­sky, “sanc­tu­ary” has been the “over­ar­ch­ing theme” in design­ing the lat­est Gen 6 ver­sion of its eVTOL plat­form. “We looked at a lot of design lan­guages from mod­ern and high-tech to colour­ful and friend­ly in the inter­est of estab­lish­ing a wel­com­ing and inclu­sive envi­ron­ment in the cab­in. Sanc­tu­ary was ulti­mate­ly the one that allowed for focus and pro­duc­tiv­i­ty as well as rest and relax­ation.”

Wisk will use cer­tifi­cat­ed heli­copter seats, but is work­ing with its unnamed seat ven­dor to “ensure it aligns with expec­ta­tions regard­ing com­fort and styling that rein­forces our design lan­guage”. Pas­sen­gers will enjoy wi-fi, per­son­al device charg­ing, and air con­di­tion­ing, with the cab­in designed to reach a set point tem­per­a­ture with­in a minute of the door clos­ing. Addi­tion­al­ly, Tzarnot­sky says, pas­sen­gers will be able to con­trol air­flow from their per­son­al vent, as they do on an air­lin­er.

Voloc­i­ty Inte­ri­or — the Cab­in to be Used for Flights over Paris in 2024?

How­ev­er, one of the more dif­fi­cult deci­sions Tzarnot­sky and his col­leagues had to make was over the win­dows, and not just because of the trade-off with cost and weight. He said, “Flight at low­er alti­tudes is not some­thing peo­ple get to expe­ri­ence very often. We struck a good bal­ance between hav­ing large panoram­ic win­dows to pro­vide an excep­tion­al field of view, with­out com­pro­mis­ing the sense of safe­ty and secu­ri­ty in the cab­in.”

Mean­while, Eve Air Mobil­i­ty, unveiled a “fifth gen­er­a­tion” con­cept inte­ri­or for its under-devel­op­ment 100km-range eVTOL air­craft at last year’s Farn­bor­ough Air­show. The mock-up revealed a sin­gle pilot seat with four pas­sen­ger seats – two fac­ing for­ward and two rear­ward, split by a dou­ble arm­rest. The seats and inte­ri­or fit­tings use many nat­ur­al mate­ri­als such as cot­ton and cork.

So, already, we are see­ing some com­mon themes amongst the eVTOL devel­op­ers, although Archer’s Mid­night remains ahead of the pack and, per­haps, is more imag­i­na­tive and dar­ing than its present rivals. Which then offers up an obvi­ous ques­tion. Will this mean the cost to con­struct each Mid­night Air­craft be more than its rivals, where a less uncon­ven­tion­al approach reduces the over­heads?

Mean­while, Mon­tousse feels strong­ly about his per­son­al con­cept. “I want design­ers to see eVTOLs as the next fron­tier of cre­ativ­i­ty. We have an oppor­tu­ni­ty of chang­ing the way the pub­lic view fly­ing.”

Sad­ly, as time goes by, and the cost of eVTOL trav­el­ling is reduced, pre­sum­ably, like oth­er new trans­port indus­tries from the past, con­for­mi­ty becomes the norm amongst those com­pa­nies who sur­vive. So, make sure you take a ride on Mid­night in the ear­ly days, enjoy the lux­u­ry and ele­gance, while feel­ing at one with the air­craft, before eVTOL inte­ri­ors become sim­i­lar to the 8.45 am pas­sen­ger train leav­ing Brighton for Lon­don.

For more infor­ma­tion

https://www.archer.com

https://lilium.com

https://wiskaero

(News Source: https://www.flightglobal.com/)

(Top image: Archer Avi­a­tion)

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