Posted on 04/21/2023 7:05:08 AM PDT by Red Badger
REGENT has revealed the full-scale mockup of its seaglider, an all-electric passenger vehicle with a range of 180 miles. (Photo: REGENT)
The company REGENT, which is developing a new kind of electric maritime vehicle called a seaglider, revealed the full-scale mock-up of its seaglider prototype today. REGENT also announced plans to expand its global headquarters for new manufacturing and test facilities. The expansion has the potential to enable fulfillment of $8 billion in commercial orders by 2025 at the headquarters in Rhode Island.
Last September, the company announced that its quarter-scale seaglider technology demonstrator completed its first flight. According to REGENT, its seaglider is the first vehicle to take off from a controlled hydrofoil to wingborne flight.
Billy Thalheimer, cofounder and CEO of REGENT, shared additional information about the company's progress in an interview with Avionics this week.
Avionics: What considerations related to safety and regulation are taken into account in the development of the seaglider?
Billy Thalheimer: Our first vehicle is projected to operate under Coast Guard jurisdiction, and we have been working closely with the agency to establish regulations for our vessels including design approval, inspection, construction and crewing. Our design basis agreement with the Coast Guard is in process, and we maintain a close line of communication with both the Coast Guard (Office of Engineering Standards) and FAA (Emerging Concepts & Innovation group).
The full-scale seaglider is designed with multiple redundancies in its all-electric distributed power system and automated flight software and sensor systems to provide operators with full situational awareness for navigation, object detection, and flight conditions.
REGENT co-founders Billy Thalheimer and Mike Klinker, pictured above, unveil the full-scale model of the all-electric seaglider. (Photo: REGENT)
Avionics: How has the $50 million in funding been used to advance the development of the prototype?
Thalheimer: These investments have significantly accelerated technological advancements of our human-carrying prototype—including building and flying the first ¼-scale seaglider prototype to prove out the float-foil-fly mission. We have also tested sensor systems in real environments on helicopters to validate flight operations. The cumulative learnings from more than a year of flight testing was used to inform the design of the full-scale seaglider.
As a result, we are on track to deliver our product to market by the mid-decade. These resources have proved instrumental in enabling us to tailor our vehicles to meet the diverse needs of our customers, including commercial transport, supply chain and logistics, and military defense applications.
How would you describe the current state of the industry and how REGENT’s seagliders fit into the competitive landscape?
40% of the world’s population live in coastal communities, and are in dire need of a fundamentally new method of transportation to efficiently move people and cargo through coastal routes. Through our seagliders, we aim to revolutionize sustainable, maritime transportation in these regions by offering a fast, efficient, and emission-free solution.
We see seagliders as a complementary addition, rather than a replacement, to traditional modes of maritime and airline transportation, which can be seamlessly integrated into our customers’ existing fleets. Our studies, based on publicly validated data, show that our seagliders serve an $11 billion market that we project to swell to as much as $25 billion as battery technology advances.
With the electrification of ferries, aircraft, rail, and other modes of transportation, we envision our all-electric seagliders as an integral part of the future of sustainable, multi-modal mobility.
REGENT's technical demonstrator, a 1/4-scale seaglider prototype (Photo: REGENT)
Could you describe how you envision the commercialization and deployment of the seagliders?
We envision our vehicles to act as a bridge between coastal city centers, facilitating multi-modal transportation through coastal airports. We have established a loyal customer base of major airlines and ferry operators such as FRS in Germany, Ocean Flyer in New Zealand, and Southern Airways/Mokulele Airlines—who we plan to deliver our first commercial passenger seagliders to, once they hit the market. Our vehicles will comprise the best features of both maritime and aviation transport, combining the speed and comfort of an airplane with the cost efficiency of a boat. This will enable us to service coastal communities such as New York City, the Hawaiian Islands, and Pacific island nations.
What capabilities will the new facilities/expansion in Rhode Island provide?
Our new facility expansion will support initial low-rate production and at-rate production to fulfill our $8B commercial backlog.
Aviation Ping!.......................
Electric battery technology has come a long way.
Can you say massive govt grants.
Nice looking toy.
Didnt we just learn some lesson about this from recent global warming events in coastal cities?
This concept has been around for years (in diesel and gasoline form).
None of them have been commercially successful even without electrification.
The future is more investments lost and more bankruptcies. By all means. Invest, but notice that all the various investments REQUIRE that you accept losses. Because a sure thing isn't....
Suicide plane.
Hey, it only takes a day-and-a-half (guessing) to recharge!
Saving the planet. Cause mostly leftists are going to burn up in these electric gadgets.
Looks to me like a solution in search of a problem. But they used “sustainable” three or four times in the short article, so it’s got to be good.
I think “sustainable” is the frosting on the “electric” cake. Or is it vice versa?
Between “sustainable” and “electric,” they’ve got an $8 billion order book. Having worked in a number of startup companies, I find that hard to believe. Maybe they talked to enough companies that COULD order $8 billion of product, but I seriously doubt they have $8 billion of orders. At $1 million per, that would be orders for 8,000 of the things. Even at $4 million each, that’s an order book of 2,000 units. And that would be across maybe a dozen markets? So each market ordered 170 units?
Electricity and seawater together,...what could go wrong?
Clean is another big winner for Communists.
WIG aircraft are pretty cool.
I am guessing they are probably really scary to ride in in rough seas and high winds.
. The expansion has the potential to enable fulfillment of $8 billion in commercial orders by 2025 at the headquarters in Rhode Island.
Potential...... 8 billion
I don’t even think it is an aircraft. I think is a hydro foil that uses ground effect.... But the foil never leaves the water.
Put a long neck in front and it can pass as a Klingon Bird of Prey.
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