
Makers of a detonation ramjet engine say a test at 20,000 meters and Mach 4 speed (5,000 km ph – 3,100 m ph) has been successful, and they want the engine to be used in a new class of commercial airliner they are already testing, that can travel at that speed.
https://newatlas.com/aircraft/space-transportation-mach-4-ramjet-detonation-engine-success/

8 Comments
Submission statement
This technology isn’t new, it’s been tested in various forms around the world for decades. However adapting it to a feasible commercial airliner is still a tall order.
Although details appear to be still under wraps, a Chinese company claims it has also successfully tested the airframe that would go with such an airliner using a ramjet engine. The same company says it [“aims to have a full-sized supersonic passenger jet ready for its maiden flight in 2027.”](https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3284206/chinese-plane-designed-travel-twice-fast-concorde-completes-test-flight)
The problem is the same problem as always.
Is it efficient?
Are there routes it can fly where the loud as fuck sonic booms don’t matter?
Sign me up for it. 14 hours in a plane feels like shit even if you sit business class.
As I understand the problem with these engine types is that they require extremly fast speed to perform with higher efficiency then normal turbojets. I remember reading about that a while ago. An engineer of some company I can’t remember said that there is a need for additional turbojets for low speeds while taking off and landing. Is this problem solved? If so that seems extremely promising. Interesting news OP, thanks!
For me to fly on that plane, they gotta rebrand the name from “detonation engine”
Propellant via explosion.
Can’t wait to see the marketing behind that.
Sounds great. What could possibly go wrong?
Who wants to go first lol?
Mach 4 commercial flights would be insane – NYC to London in under an hour. Though I’m curious how they’re dealing with the heat and noise issues that killed the Concorde. Ramjets are notoriously loud at those speeds