Originally published Sunday, November 8, 2009 at 12:18 AM
Comments (10)
E-mail article
Print view
Share
Sunday Buzz
Boeing fighter to run on biofuel; Mastro bankruptcy trustee keeps job
Boeing is testing whether biofuels can power the F/A 18 Super Hornet jet fighter. Also, Seattle developer Michael Mastro's "Friends & Family" creditors fall short in vote to replace the bankruptcy trustee.
Boeing is opening another front in the war against global warming, according to the company's marketing machine.
Enter the "Green Hornet."
Boeing and the Navy plan to enable the death-dealing F/A-18 Super Hornet jet fighter to run on sustainable biofuel, and will eliminate ozone-depleting halon in its fire-suppression system.
Company employees learned this past week that the U.S. Navy has conducted the first test of an F/A-18 Hornet jet engine running on biofuel derived from the camelina plant.
The internal news item quotes Carrie Traven — Boeing's "alternative fuel/green lead" for the jet-fighter program — as saying that Boeing and the Navy have also made environmental improvements on the newest version of the jet, the Super Hornet.
This includes the removal of halon as the principal fire-suppressing agent on the aircraft, she said. (Production of halon has been banned by the United States for 15 years and only recycled halon is legal, so finding an alternative makes sense.) Still, outside the Boeing marketing department it might seem a stretch to laud the "green" contribution of a jet fighter that blazes skyward with afterburners glowing like twin suns from its rear end.
The two-seater F/A-18 is powered by two GE engines that each provide 14,000 pounds of thrust at cruise speed and 22,000 pounds with afterburners on.
While firing its afterburners, the Super Hornet consumes 1.74 pounds of fuel per pound of thrust every hour, according to the Jet Engine Specification Database jet-engine.net.
That translates into the plane guzzling almost 1,300 pounds of fuel, or about 190 gallons each minute it's traveling at top speed. That's three gallons per second.
In a speech last month at Jackson State University, in Jackson, Miss., U.S. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus laid out the Navy's plans to go "green" and threw out the new marketing nickname for the Boeing jet, which he said would fly with biofuel within three years.
"We're about to test the first Green Hornet, our attack aircraft, the F/A-18," Mabus told his audience, the Jackson Free Press reported. "The Green Hornet will fly on alternative fuels, and I'm particularly proud of that, because cellulose-based ethanol can be grown here in Mississippi.
"The new generations of alternative fuels can be rotated with wheat in Mississippi and throughout the Upper Midwest, all the way down to the Gulf Coast. ... We don't have to be dependent on the more volatile areas of the world," Mabus said.
![]()
The Super Hornet can carry almost 18,000 pounds of missiles and bombs on 11 external weapons stations, including conventional and guided weapons for air-to-air and air-to-ground combat.
If Boeing's green push succeeds, at least that deadly rain from the sky will flow from an aircraft that pays some respect to the planet's atmosphere.
— Dominic Gates
Mastro bankruptcy
trustee keeps job
A bid by some of bankrupt Seattle real-estate developer Michael Mastro's "Friends & Family" creditors to replace the court-appointed trustee — a key player in the case — suffered a serious setback this past Friday.
In Chapter 7 bankruptcy — the kind Mastro's involved in — the trustee oversees liquidation of the debtor's assets.
Some of the Friends & Family, who had invested tens of millions with Mastro, wanted to replace veteran trustee James Rigby with Brian Ward, also a lawyer, who until last year ran a real-estate investment fund.
They didn't like Rigby's acquiescence to moves by many of Mastro's banks to foreclose on his properties. Rigby said the law gave him no choice, but Ward said he'd try to hang onto the properties in hopes that a real-estate revival would bring higher prices — and perhaps some return for the Friends. Ward's backers requested an election when creditors met Oct. 28 — a highly unusual move — and the court office that oversees trustees conducted one.
But in a report filed Friday, that office said that attorney Jerome Shulkin, a Ward backer who voted the proxies of 80 Friends & Family creditors, had violated court rules, including those limiting the solicitation of proxies, and so those votes shouldn't be counted.
Without them, the number of creditors requesting an election didn't meet the legal threshhold, the report said. And even if they were counted and the election deemed valid, Rigby got more votes.
This fight isn't over yet, though. Shulkin said he'll ask Judge Samuel Steiner to overturn the report. Among other things, he contends the ballots of Mastro's bank creditors — who voted overwhelmingly for Rigby — shouldn't be counted.
— Eric Pryne
Comments? Send them
to Rami Grunbaum: rgrunbaum@-
seattletimes.com or 206-464-854
E-mail article
Print view
Share
Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
Sunday Buzz: Expedia, Intelius, Classmates slapped by Senate report
Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
Your Funds: Money for nothing: Some investors pay for advice they never get
LA Galaxy's David Beckham
Los Angeles Galaxy's David Beckham talks about the upcoming MLS Cup final during after a team practice.

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new sedan? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- Italian lead prosecutor argues Knox motive was hatred
- Man shot in chest on E. Union Street in Capitol Hill
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
- Mariners Blog | A Mariners-Tigers swap makes a whole lot of sense for both teams
- Italian prosecutors request life sentence for UW student
- Craigslist adoption ad: A plea by young mother-to-be? A scam?
- Mariners to try Dustin Ackley at second base
- Genetics anti-bias law takes effect
- Mariners Blog | Dustin Ackley to move to second base; Mariners add six to 40-man roster
- Senate vote clears hurdle
194 - First key vote today on Senate health bill
166 - Mariners add six to 40-man roster
140 - Man shot in Capitol Hill
91 - Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
87 - Italian lead prosecutor argues Knox motive was hatred
73 - Saturday links
50 - Bye week answers, volume four
49 - Prosecutor requests life in prison for Amanda Knox
43 - Historic health care bill nears key Senate vote
37
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Nonprofits get creative using Twitter and Facebook to make donation easier
- Great places to cross-country ski for free (or almost) in the Methow
- Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
- It's possible to recover a life lost to hoarding
- UW provost tapped for Nike's board
- 175 foster kids in Washington get 'forever families'
- Recipes: Sesame Pork Roast, Sour Cream Mashed Potatoes, Gingerbread with Lemon Sauce and more
- BofA moves to take control of Mastro building in Fremont
- Food-bank donations pour in after theft in Rainier Valley









