Detroit, Feb 8 : Elon Musk has long considered Tesla Motors Inc (TSLA) the bold,
nimble answer to the auto industry's cautious culture. Now the electric car
maker's top executive has extended his help to another industrial giant: Boeing
Co (BA).
In a January 26 message on Twitter, Musk said he was in talks
with the chief engineer of Boeing's 787 Dreamliner plane, which regulators have
grounded indefinitely after a string of malfunctions ranging from fuel leaks to
battery meltdowns.
"Desire to help Boeing is real & am corresponding
w 787 chief engineer," Musk wrote on the social media website.
Musk, who
is also the CEO of space transport company SpaceX, said in an email late that
SpaceX battery packs could be helpful for Boeing.
"We fly high capacity
lithium ion battery packs in our rockets and spacecraft, which are subject to
much higher loads than commercial aircraft and have to function all the way from
sea level air pressure to vacuum. We have never had a fire in any production
battery pack at either Tesla or SpaceX," Musk said in the email.
Boeing
declined to comment or confirm if such discussions were taking
place.
Boeing's chief 787 engineer, Mike Sinnett, has recently made
presentations about the plane and its battery technology to reporters and
industry leaders.
Musk's post came a week after his first dispatch to
Boeing on January 18: "Maybe already under control, but Tesla & SpaceX are
happy to help with the 787 lithium ion batteries."
U.S. and Japanese
authorities are investigating a fire and a smoke incident with lithium-ion
batteries on two separate Dreamliners in recent weeks. The 50 Dreamliners in
service cannot be flown until the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration is
satisfied that the problem with the batteries has been fixed. The U.S. National
Transportation Safety Board is still investigating what caused the first battery
to catch fire.
Lithium-ion batteries are widely used in phones and hybrid
cars because they are lighter and more powerful than traditional batteries. But
if managed improperly, lithium-ion batteries can explode or catch fire, and some
pose a greater risk than others depending on their chemical make-up.
The
787 is the first passenger jet to use lithium-ion batteries for back-up and
auxiliary power. Tesla began using lithium-ion batteries in its Roadster, a
two-door sports car that Tesla said could go from 0 to 60 miles per hour in
about 4 seconds.
In its Dreamliner, Boeing adopted a lithium cobalt oxide
chemistry similar to that used in the Roadster, which Tesla produced from 2008
until last year.
Musk, a serial entrepreneur who gained fame after
selling his Internet payment company PayPal to eBay Inc (EBAY) in 2002, has been
quick to criticize the cultures of major car makers like General Motors Co (GM)
and Ford Motor Co (NYS:F).
In a magazine interview with Esquire late last
year, Musk was similarly critical of Boeing. He was quoted as saying, "You know
the joke about Boeing: It puts the zero in being."
Musk later took pains
to dismiss the story, written by reporter Tom Junod. "Junod's Esquire article
had high fiction content," Musk wrote his January 26 tweet.
Junod said
Musk's dig at Boeing was on tape and his story was "more extensively reported
than any story on Elon that preceded it."
Ends
SA/EN
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Tesla CEO extends help to Boeing on battery issue
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