The Boston based Spike Aerospace
first is in the middle of preparing first S-512 supersonic private jet. The
expected take off date is Dec 2018, and you’d be amazed to find on every other
passenger aircraft windows. The firm is
taking advantage of latest advancement in video recording, live streaming, and
display technology with a lovely interior that will replaces the windows with
giant high-definition screens. The jet exterior will be line with small cameras
sending footage to tinny, curved displays lining the interior walls of the
fuselage. That will provide unbroken super panoramic view of the outside world.
But if passengers like to sleep or take rest themselves from ominous
rainclouds, they can darken the screen or select the assortment of ambient
images. Whereas windows are indispensable for keeping claustrophobia in check,
they need engineering workarounds that compromise a fuselage’s modest
structure. And that goes two-fold for a supersonic aircraft, also maintain
cabin pressure and resist cracking while flying 500 mph at 35000 feet. It would
be much safer and simpler to have level skinned, window-fewer fuselages, but repeated
fliers have become accustomed to a calming view of the clouds and tiny cities
during takeoff and landing.
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