FAA Crafts Special Rules for Electric Airplane Engines
Published Date: 3/18/2026
Rule
Summary
The FAA has set new safety rules for ZeroAvia’s Model ZA601 electric engines, which use a unique electric system to power airplane propellers. These special conditions make sure the engines meet high safety standards since current rules don’t cover this new tech. The rules take effect March 18, 2026, and affect airplanes certified under certain categories, helping ZeroAvia move forward with their innovative electric engines.
Analyzed Economic Effects
6 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 6 costs, 0 mixed.
DO-254 Verification for Hardware/Software
ZeroAvia must develop and verify software and complex electronic hardware used in programmable logic devices using proven methods to ensure accuracy and reliability, referencing RTCA DO-254 (dated April 19, 2000) as guidance for distinguishing complex hardware. The FAA requires data from functional assessments to prevent software errors that are not observable by code inspection.
New Durability, Testing, and Lifing Rules
The special conditions impose multiple new testing and lifecycle requirements: engine ratings and duty cycles, stress analyses (mechanical/thermal/electrical), endurance and durability demonstrations, vibration surveys, overtorque and overspeed demonstrations, calibration testing, teardown or non‑teardown evaluations, rotor-locking demonstration, containment analysis, and life-limited parts management. These tests and plans must demonstrate safe operation and establish maintenance and life limits.
Special Conditions Effective March 18
The FAA's special conditions for the ZeroAvia Model ZA601 electric engine take effect March 18, 2026. They apply to ZA601 engines intended for airplanes certificated under 14 CFR part 23 in the normal category, level 3 and higher, and initially apply only to this model but would apply to other models with the same novel electrical propulsion feature under Sec. 21.101.
Arc-Fault Protection Required
The rule requires ZeroAvia to protect the high-voltage electrical wiring that connects the controller to the motor against arc faults. An arc fault is a high-power discharge that can break down insulation and start electrical fires, and the special condition explicitly requires arc-fault protection as part of fire-protection measures.
Controllers Must Be Self-Sufficient
The FAA requires the engine controllers to be self-sufficient and isolated from other aircraft systems so that loss, interruption, or corruption of aircraft-supplied data does not create hazardous engine effects. The rule also requires ZeroAvia to show that loss of electric power from the aircraft will not cause hazardous engine malfunctions (though total loss may cause shutdown).
Cooling, Fire, and Monitoring Rules
ZeroAvia must meet fire-protection standards (Sec. 33.17) and cooling requirements (Sec. 33.21) adapted for electric engines, including documenting cooling-system monitoring features in the engine installation manual if cooling is required. The special conditions note loss of cooling can cause rapid overheating and abrupt engine failure.
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