Saturday, September 16, 2017

The SkyRunner Flying Car Chosen for the Cover of the 2017 Hammacher Schlemmer Holiday Catalog

    SHREVEPORT, LA, September 15, 2017 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Every year, Hammacher Schlemmer, the catalogue firm long known for featuring one of a kind, quality products goes all out for the holidays. This year, the prestigious catalog is showcasing SkyRunner on its holiday 2017 cover, arriving in homes September 15th. SkyRunner is the unique all-terrain vehicle that brings the dream of flight as well as heart-pounding on-ground adventure to a broad American market for the first time.

Delivering 75 MPH off-road performance, SkyRunner not only conquers grass, sand, dirt and pavement, it conquers gravity as well. Developed and refined over years of testing, with input from some of the leading authorities in the world, SkyRunner makes flying easier, safer and more affordable than ever, and combines the practical benefit of owning a world-class ATV.

SkyRunner is as big as a Denali, as strong as an ATV, but uniquely, it also flies. Stewart Hamel, the developer of SkyRunner say s everywhere he goes SkyRunner draws a crowd. "People love the look of this serious machine, the minute they see it--it's a world-class ATV, but bigger. And then when they learn that it also flies, the first question they ask, is can I try this?"

SkyRunner has two patents pending and is FAA approved as a Light Sport Aircraft. It can carry two adults, a pilot and passenger, and up to 580 pounds of useable weight in the air. SkyRunner has been designed to be easy to fly, and provides a pilot with an intuitive flight system comprised of foot pedals for right and left steering and a throttle quadrant for controlling the aircraft's takeoff and landing. Its 38'-wide para-wing provides lift from a 75-inch, 4-blade propeller that powers the SkyRunner at up to 45 MPH in the air. An optional 160 HP engine provides even greater lift and performance.

On the ground, it operates like a NASCAR version of an ATV. It provides drivers with inverted double wishbone suspension and optimal c hassis control for handling rough roads and sharp corners with sports car like precision.

Requiring only 12 hours of flight training, the cost of which is included in the price, SkyRunner makes flying easier and more accessible than ever. And while it is priced at $139,000, a special financing program means it can be purchased the way many families buy a boat or car of the same price.

Michael Rybarski, the CMO at SkyRunner said, "Whether you are an off-roader, a rancher, a business exec who needs to oversee property, a hunter, or someone who just always wanted to fly, SkyRunner can deliver an experience that is unique, that's why Hammacher Schlemmer chose us for their holiday cover."

SkyRunner, LLC. is a privately-owned company with production facilities located in Shreveport, LA. It is committed to the highest quality, and safety in the products it builds--making the dream of flight both real and practical for businesses, individuals, and enthusiasts.


Source: The SkyRunner Flying Car Chosen for the Cover of the 2017 Hammacher Schlemmer Holiday Catalog

Friday, September 15, 2017

Flying trucks, giant hearts: 3 bizarre (but cute) Russian ways to show one’s love

If it comes to mind that hoisting a truck with a crane to your beloved's window on the 5th floor in order to give her a birthday present is a good idea, you certainly are Russian at heart.

Love makes people do strange things for romance - and it is an international thing. All around the world people sometimes expose their feelings in unusual ways, starting from proposing by writing: "Will you marry me?" on a cow and finishing with giving a 2-storey mansion in an L.A. suburb as a present, wrapped in paper.

Of course Russia is no exception and here we have lots of creative and passionate people eager to express their love not just with flowers or chocolates. Here are several stories that will impress you - and maybe you would try these ways of expressing feelings yourself?

Hoist a truck

There is nothing stronger than love. Well, except for an automobile crane that can lift a two-ton truck up to the 5th floor, thought one romantic guy in the city of Biysk (1,900 miles east of Moscow). So he decided to hoist a vehicle right to his girlfriend's window in order to say "Happy Birthday!" in an original way.

And that was what he did on September 13, 2017, early in the morning (with the help of a crane operator he hired). The truck, decorated with pink balloons and a "Happy Birthday, my love!" banner, appeared right before the girl's window with her boyfriend proudly sitting in its cab.

The birthday girl looked quite shocked, but certainly happy while accepting the gift and a bouquet her cavalier passed to her through the window. "Only you, Sashka (short for Alexander) could make up such a thing!" she said, laughing out loud.

Her neighbors were not as happy - maybe because in addition to a flying truck Sashka hired a saxophonist to play rather loudly at 7:30 am. They even called the police but officers found nothing criminal in the situation and left the scene after the car was lowered.

Propose by cars

While Sashka used only one, though big, car to make a surprise for his girlfriend, Artyom Doroshev from Veliky Novgorod (300 miles north-west of Moscow) needed 65 vehicles to impress his. On the other hand, his goal was bigger - he proposed to her.

Doroshev's life was connected with cars as he worked on a local TV show concerning traffic and auto industry. So he decided to write, "Marry me" with cars. For weeks Doroshev searched for a parking lot big enough for such an adventure - and found it near a supermarket.

Members of staff were happy to help the romantic, as were dozens of car owners (whom he found through social media). On February 12, 2014 he asked the girl to close her eyes - and when she opened them they were on the roof of supermarket with a giant "Marry me" message down below. The girl immediately said "yes" and cars started to honk and flash lights happily.

Make a skyscraper your letter

Anton Vaganov, a photographer from St. Petersburg, was not proposing or wishing his girlfriend Elena happy birthday, but wanted to express his feelings anyway. That's why in 2016 he found a building with big facade - the Azimut Hotel in the center of city - to pledge his love. Both hotel managers and the visitors agreed to help him, lighting some windows and darkening others to form a giant heart.

On January 24, 2016Vaganov took Elena to the hotel and the heart lit up in the dusk of a St. Petersburg's evening. The girl was more than impressed. "You can't put his presents in a box or something, you just can just keep it in your heart, through your whole life" she wrote on social media.

Read more:Want to know the truth about what worries Russians the most?Why do people get married in Russia, apart from love?Russians mocking stereotypes will make you miss the good ol' Soviet times6 Russian habits you should adopt – asapHow to meet a girl on the Moscow Metro?
Source: Flying trucks, giant hearts: 3 bizarre (but cute) Russian ways to show one's love

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Toyota-backed flying car getting development bases

TOKYO -- A volunteer organization backed by Toyota Motor and others to develop a flying car is making headway, announcing Thursday two development bases for efforts to have the vehicle ready for the capital's Olympic year of 2020.

Founded in 2012, the Cartivator project is spearheaded by young engineers from the Japanese automaker and elsewhere. Roughly 100 volunteers use their time off to get their shared dream, the Skydrive, off the ground.

The new development bases will be located in Tokyo and Toyota City. The carmaker, Fujitsu and the Aichi Prefecture city will help equip them.

Cartivator's new Aichi Prefecture base, in Toyota City's new Sentan manufacturing-innovation facility, will open its doors Sunday. Engineers there will focus on the development of the Skydrive chassis.

The Tokyo base will be located at a manufacturing facility of a membership-based workshop run by a Fujitsu subsidiary. Cartivator volunteers will build prototypes of parts for the vehicle.

Cartivator said it has completed design specifications for a full-scale prototype, releasing an image of how the Skydrive will look.

(Nikkei)


Source: Toyota-backed flying car getting development bases

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

AeroMobil Flying Car Lands In Frankfurt

AeroMobil 4.0 © Motor1.com AeroMobil 4.0

Up to this point, we've yet to experience the futuristic, flying-car filled society that shows like The Jetsons had promised. Still, AeroMobil out of Slovakia is convinced that it will be the first company to take to the skies with its latest prototype, which made its debut at the Frankfurt Motor Show this past week.

AeroMobil 4.0 © Bereitgestellt von The Motorsport Network AeroMobil 4.0

The 4.0 aircraft is a heavily updated version of the original 1.0 prototype that was first presented back in 1990. The latest in the prototype series was first unveiled in April, and reportedly comes with "hundreds of improvements" over the 3.0 concept that made its debut in 2014. 

Though completely new, the 4.0 shares a number of similarities with the many prototypes before it. Its exterior design surrounds a new monocoque chassis – similar to something you might find on a McLaren supercar – and features pyrotechnic seatbelt technology (whatever that means) in conjunction with dual-stage airbags. It's even said to come with an emergency parachute.

Power comes courtesy of a 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine, with power sent to the front wheels via an electric drive system. The advanced drive system incorporates an electronic differential and an adaptive transmission, as well as a fully autonomous digital electronic control unit, or FADEC for short. Considering the outgoing 3.0 version produced 100 horsepower (74 kilowatts), we expect the new model to be somewhere in the same neighborhood.

The company says that it expects to begin taking orders as early as this year, with deliveries expected by 2020… pending no major setbacks. The AeroMobil 4.0 doesn't have a price as of yet, but rumors suggest that it could cost as much as $1.5 million if and when it does debut.

Source: AeroMobil

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Blue Porsche 911 GT3 Touring Package Looks Stunning In Frankfurt


Source: AeroMobil Flying Car Lands In Frankfurt

Monday, September 11, 2017

Will flying cars ever take off?

ARE WE close to a new era of commuting to work in personal air and land vehicles (that's flying cars to you and me)? It is an appealing idea: the freedom of the skies, no traffic jams and maybe no vehicle tax. There has been a flurry of news suggesting it is about to come true.

A Dutch firm, PAL-V, has developed a road-going gyrocopter with foldaway rotors — the kind of machine James Bond would use to evade his pursuers. On land the 'copter will hit 62mph from standstill in less than nine seconds. When you run out of road, it simply transforms into an autogyro, seating two in tandem. With an eye on the American market, the manufacturer has set up a flying school in Utah for a new generation of upwardly mobile drivers who can afford the basic machine's £324,000 price tag.

Meanwhile, Larry Page, co-founder of Google, has announced the launch of a single-seat machine called the Kitty Hawk Flyer. Battery-powered and designed to take off and land on water, it skims along in the manner of a giant toy drone. Its cost has not been revealed, but Page promises it will be affordable when it is launched later this year.

Browse NEW or USED cars for sale

Then there is the Transition, a light plane with wings that tuck away so you can drive it home from the airport at motorway speeds and park it in your garage. Terrafugia, the company that makes it, was recently bought by Geely, a Chinese car manufacturer that already owns Volvo. If nothing else, it suggests there is serious money behind flying cars.

In fact, search the internet and you will find dozens of hopefuls. They range from crowdfunded start-ups based in sheds to ideas hatched in the laboratories of tech giants or aerospace companies. The proliferation of wonderful contraptions is reminiscent of the early years of powered flight. Some of the new machines use wings to provide lift, some rotor blades; some are equipped with mini-jet engines, others with giant fans.

All come with the same promises: to revolutionise personal travel, cut congestion and liberate swathes of unused airspace. The problem is, the idea has been around for decades but, if you'll pardon the expression, never taken off. As far back as 1940 Henry Ford wrote: "Mark my word. A combination airplane and motorcar is coming. You may smile. But it will come."

Nine years later he was proved right when Moulton "Molt" Taylor, an American inventor, launched the Aerocar. It had a road speed of 60mph, flew at 110mph and was a wonder of engineering. One flew Raul Castro — Fidel's brother and now the Cuban president — around Cuba. The same machine was used from 1961 to 1963 as a traffic-watch aircraft for the KISN radio station in Portland, Oregon. For a while it seemed as though the age of the flying car had arrived, and the concept was popularised on television and in film, notably by Buck Rogers, Supercar and The Jetsons.

Taylor Aerocar flying car

But it remained an invention in search of a market. Only six Aerocars were built. In reality, the automobile remained the fastest way to get around on the ground, and pure aircraft ruled the skies. The flying car was an awkward and expensive hybrid that became the butt of jokes and shorthand for unrealistic predictions about the future, as in: "Yeah? So where's my flying car?"

Recently, though, there have been advances in three key areas. The first is strong, new materials such as carbon fibre and alloys — the key to making lightweight aircraft that are "roadable", to use an American expression. Second, powerful batteries — a spin-off of electric car development — plus the sort of compact jet engines that deliver more thrust from less fuel. Third, intelligent electronics for flight control and navigation that make self-flying cars or aero taxis a real possibility.

Plenty of drivers struggle to control vehicles in two dimensions, let alone speeding around in three

The cars that skimmed over the Los Angeles of 2019 in Blade Runner were referred to as "spinners" — flying cars that used thrusters for vertical take-off and landing (VTOL). The real-life equivalent made its maiden voyage at an airfield near Munich this year. It's called the Lilium Jet, though it has no jet engines. Instead it flies using 36 electrically powered propellers. The test flight lasted just a few minutes, with no one in either of the two seats and a pilot controlling it from the ground, but, if it makes it into production as the world's smallest VTOL craft, it could revolutionise air transport (though it won't be equipped for driving).

A German competitor called Volocopter has received €25m (£23m) from the vehicle manufacturer Daimler to help develop another two-seater VTOL craft. It looks more like a conventional helicopter — in contrast to the Lilium, which resembles a flying computer mouse — but, like its rival, it is battery-powered.

With this rate of progress, surely it won't be long before we're flying to the supermarket. Unfortunately, while the technology may have caught up with science fiction, air traffic regulations have not. Any machine that can lift itself off the ground and stay aloft must fly under Civil Aviation Authority rules in the UK and Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) laws in America. That alone is enough to ensure flying cars do not become commonplace soon.

Anyone wanting to fly from home to work, for example, would for a start need a pilot's licence, which usually takes about 70 hours of flying and months of part-time ground school. If their journey took them through controlled airspace used by commercial or military traffic, they would need air traffic control permission. Flying cars such as the Dutch gyrocopter would be classed as a single-engine helicopter, which means it would have to stick to air corridors — along the Thames in London, for example. So nipping to the shops or lifting off from a traffic jam would be a non-starter. The Transition is a single-engine plane, which means it has to steer clear of cities in case the engine fails.

You don't need a pilot's licence to operate Page's Kitty Hawk in America because it weighs so little, but its lightness is due to it having floats instead of wheels, so it can't provide ground transport. In the UK there's no similar ultra-light category, so only qualified pilots will be able to fly it. There is little chance of these rules being relaxed. Plenty of drivers struggle to control vehicles in two dimensions, let alone speeding around in three. Indeed, as airspace becomes more congested, the bar is likely to be raised. Air traffic systems in the UK are already almost at full capacity, without hundreds of flying cars doing short, unscheduled hops. One limiting factor is the number of air traffic controllers. Another is the number of flights that a radar-based TCAS (traffic collision avoidance system) can handle at any one time.

Imagine the scale of complaints provoked by machines clattering overhead, with all the implications for noise and prying eyes

Then there's the cost. For the price of a PAL-V you could buy a Robinson R22 helicopter (which has a longer range) plus a car to take you to and from the helipad. Likewise the Transition. Its projected price in 2011 was almost $280,000 (£218,000 at today's rates). With production not due until 2021, that's almost certain to increase.

Finally, there's the problem of privacy. One technology expert recently said: "I love the idea of being able to go out into my back yard and hop into my flying car [but] I hate the idea of my next-door neighbour having one." Imagine the scale of complaints provoked by machines clattering overhead, with all the implications for noise and prying eyes.

A more realistic vision of the future appears on film in The Fifth Element, set in a futuristic New York City, with a wisecracking Bruce Willis driving a flying taxi through congested air traffic. Being a passenger in an air taxi flown by a qualified pilot will become a reality much sooner than the use of personal air vehicles.

Bruce Willis's flying taxi in The Fifth Element,

Bruce Willis's flying taxi in The Fifth Element (1997, Luc Besson, Columbia/TriStar pictures)

Uber has signed deals with five companies that are developing electric VTOL aircraft, including the Pentagon-backed Aurora Flight Sciences and Bell Helicopter. The idea is that, as with Uber's car service, you could summon your air taxi with a phone app. A new range of pilotless aircraft — effectively drones — that would fly passengers from A to B could bring the costs down further (though UK air traffic rules require a human pilot to be on board to take over the controls). In Dubai the authorities have announced trials of an air taxi service using a Chinese-made remote-control drone 'copter, the EHang 184. According to the EHang's manufacturer, it can fly passengers across the city on journeys of up to 23 minutes, or 31 miles.

One solution to overcrowded skies could be aerial "motorways" that users would follow using GPS. Engineers at Liverpool University, along with counterparts at Swiss and German institutions, have started mapping a network that would let the PAL-V and its ilk fly safely along designated routes. These would be kept away from cities and airports and would fly at 100ft-1,500ft, below the altitude of passenger jets.

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Mike Jump, of Liverpool University, said it would be a while before such routes were up and running. "Concept flying cars are often shown flying with clear blue skies [in places such as Dubai or California], but it is not clear to me what would happen in bad weather. "

His German research colleague Heinrich Bülthoff, of the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, estimates that flying cars are five to 10 years away — still tantalisingly out of reach.

In the immediate future it's more likely that the first flying cars will be like the Kitty Hawk — for recreational use. That's how the automobile started out.

Moller Skycar M 400

Before you rush to invest in what seems to be a new and lucrative technology, however, take a moment to search on eBay. The website is an online scrapyard for great ideas that never quite made it. One is the Moller M400 Skycar (above), which received widespread publicity the last time flying cars were said to be just around the corner, in the 1990s. It never flew without a tether or won FAA approval.

If nothing else, it is a handy reminder that just because something is possible, it does not mean it is going to happen. For anyone interested, the Skycar is still looking for a buyer — suggested price tag $5m.

Flying cars coming to the skies near you PAL-V Liberty   PAL-V Liberty

Price £520,800On sale Late 2018How fast can it fly? 112mphHow far can it fly? 310 milesHow fast can it fly? 112mphTop speed on the road? 100mphHow far can it drive? 817 miles

Kitty Hawk Flyer

Kitty Hawk FlyerOn sale Late 2017What's under the bonnet? Eight electrically powered rotorsWill it fit in the garage? SnuglyHow high can it fly? A few feet off the water

Terrafugia Transition

Terrafugia TransitionPrice £310,000 (estimate)On sale 2019How fast can it fly? 100mphHow far can it fly? 400 milesTop speed on the road? 70mphHow far can it drive? 805 miles

Ehang 184

Ehang 184 flying carOn sale Late 2018What's under the bonnet? Eight electrically powered rotorsHow fast can it fly? 62mphHow far can it fly? 23 milesHow high? 11,500ft

Life is imitating art with the DeLorean Aerospace DR-7 flying car

"Where we're going, we don't need roads"

delorean aerospace flying cars

When Doc Brown uttered this memorable line in Back to the Future, he was in a DeLorean flying car powered by a Mr Fusion garbage disposal unit. Spool forward in time and fiction could soon be fact. A prototype DeLorean DR-7 all-electric flying car is scheduled to fly next year, according to Paul DeLorean, nephew of John DeLorean, the man behind the sports car of the 1980s.

DeLorean Aerospace, his company, has built two scale models: a small drone-sized one to test the concept and a larger, one-third scale version. Both are said to perform exactly as Doc Brown would have wanted. The prototype will be capable of vertical take-off, so won't need to reach 88mph on the ground, as the original version of its film namesake did, or require as much as 1.21GW of electricity. Battery-powered propellers, resembling fans, at the front and rear will swivel to provide downdraft for take-off and landing and propulsion during flight, as well as rudderless steering.

With room for two passengers, it will have an estimated range of 120 miles at 150mph, and a top speed of 240mph. The wings will tuck away so the car can fit in a large garage. The craft can be flown manually or by remote control.

The prototype, being built in California, will be 19ft 6in long, with an 18ft 6in wingspan, foldable to 7ft 6in. Sadly it will not have gull-wing doors like the one in the 1985 film, or an OUTATIME numberplate.

Forget Back to the Future's DeLorean: here are six real flying cars


Source: Will flying cars ever take off?

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Is the flying car ready for takeoff?

An artist's impression of Lilium's flying cars in action. Photograph: Lilium.com

A little white winged pod lifts itself off the ground and glides off into the distance. The whole movement looks effortless. It's like watching Luke Skywalker's Landspeeder – except we're in a nondescript airfield in Germany, not the planet Tatooine. Echoes of Star Wars perhaps help explain why last week the pod's maker, Lilium, secured $90m (£69m) investment from, among others, Chinese tech giant Tencent – although the company states its aim has more to do with solving transport problems: "We have highly congested cities and we can do things to improve matters," said Lilium's Remo Gerber. "We're trying to move from a niche transport vehicle to a mass-transport one".

Lilium is not flying solo. Prototypes by rival ventures are also passing their test flights. So the prospect of flying cars may not be all that far away. Here are six projects working towards bringing Back to the Future into the present.

Lilium

This German aviation startup, founded in 2014, is working on a five-seater air taxi jet, with the aim of making the first manned test flight in 2019.

Top speed 186mph (300 kilometres per hour).

Power Electric.

Takeoff and landing Vertical.

They say Users will be able to access city centres by calling the air taxi at the push of a button.

We say Creating the large network of landing pads on top of city buildings, as envisioned by Lilium, will take considerable time and money. With no advanced on-ground driving feature, can we even class this as a flying car?

Terrafugia: The Transition

Terrafugia's "roadable aircraft", in development since 2006, drives like a typical car on the ground and fits in a standard single-car garage. It can be pre-ordered now for $300,000.

Top speed 100mph.

Cruise range 400 miles.

Power Unleaded petrol.

They say To drive it you need a US sport pilot certificate that can be "earned in as few as 20 hours".

We say: OK, it can fit into a garage, but what if there's no runway next to the garage?

Kitty Hawk: The Flyer

Kitty Hawk, backed by Google co-founder Larry Page, has created this open-seated, propeller-driven machine for recreational use. The retail version will be available by the end of this year. Power Electric.

Maximum flight time 22 minutes.

Takeoff and landing Vertical on water.

They say Anyone in the US can drive the Flyer as a pilot's licence isn't required.

We say The launch in April was anti-climactic: the Flyer looked more like a hovering jet-ski than a flying car. If you have a spare $5,000-10,000, it might be a bit of fun during the summer but it's not a practical transport option.

Uber: Elevate

Uber has hired a long-serving Nasa researcher and plans to take its ride-sharing to a vertical level with Elevate, though it's tackling market feasibility barriers such as certification, battery technology and infrastructure first.

Power Electric.

Takeoff and landing Vertical.

They say Using distributive electric propulsion (DEP), ie, multiple small engines, the vehicle will be "barely audible", thus suitable for urban areas.

We say Uber seems to be taking a considered approach, working alongside regulators, Nasa, air traffic control and even governments before jumping in to the flying car market.

Airbus: Pop.Up

Best known for its double-decker A380 jet, Airbus premiered its solution for urban transit at Geneva international motor show in March. The Pop.Up consists of a carbon-fibre passenger capsule that functions as a two-seater electric car when attached to a chassis, or as an aircraft when a drone is summoned by smartphone to remove the capsule from the chassis.

Power Electric.

Travel distance per charge 62 miles. Capsule dimensions 2.4 x 1.4 metres.

They say A "multi-modal vehicle", rather than a flying car, Pop.Up will enables passengers to select the fastest, cheapest route through advanced AI.

We say Pop.Up requires technologies such as electric propulsion that are not yet advanced enough – so it's unlikely we'll be seeing this project turn into reality soon.

Aeromobil

Converting from a car to a plane in three minutes, this is the closest we come to the sci-fi dream. Certified for use in the EU and US, Aeromobil's Slovakian makers are accepting pre-orders for $1m, with plans to deliver the first models in 2020.

Power: Electric on road, conventional aircraft fuel in flight.

Top speed 99mph.

Takeoff and landing Vertical.

They say: It's a real flying car.

We say: It really is a real flying car! It might need a runway to take off and land, but the prospect of being able to fly somewhere and continue the journey in a viable, not-too-silly looking vehicle, is exciting.


Source: Is the flying car ready for takeoff?

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Anatomy of an eVTOL modular Flying Car

SE Vehicles

Sep 09, 2017

Lots of text in my previous two blogs to assess the prospect of a flying car that can takeoff and land vertically, with the use of battery power. Time to recap what's essential. 'New iSetta' offers pictural suggestions how an eVTOL modular Flying Car concept might work by taking 'elements' separately, instead of rightaway presenting an integrated aircraft design.

'New iSetta' does not make claims or sidestep things, like some eVTOL developers seem to be doing to convince investors. Here is an overview of the eVTOL concepts that have been covered in the media - click. My suggestions are threefold.

1. To begin with, the suggestion is to use an airfoil, so no energy is wasted on keeping the craft up in the air, during which only the rear rotor will be used in a push-capacity. This in itself will be beneficial to range.2. The three rotors that you see on the picture are primarily used to VTOL the craft. But they also replace an airplane's traditional control surfaces; roll and pitch can either be kept in check or actively induced.3. Why not put the traditional fuselage to good use by turning it into a streamlined, lightweight road vehicle, in which you can straightaway drive off upon landing? What the benefits are, have been described in my previous two blogs: cut costs, eliminate pre- and post-flight. Click here for a quick overview. There is just no way of ignoring the two complicating factors that make or break an eVTOL design: batteries (energy density and weight) and the sheer power that is required to VTOL. To start with the airfoil, what should it be shaped like to maximiz e lift, to minimize drag and to be able to function as a container for the batteries? Secondly come the rotors. What diameter should they have in order to be able to airlift the whole craft? How should they be integrated into the airfoil? The fuselage that constitutes a road vehicle will obviously need tinkering to make it as slippery as possible. Serious attention must be given to the connecting & disconnecting mechanism with which the road vehicle is attached to the airfoil, if only for the passengers' ease of mind. A single pylon may not suffice. Last but certainly not least, what is the maximum takeoff weight? What range will be possible at what (economic) cruising speed?

Ralph Panhuyzen, sevehicle@gmail.com

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Source: Anatomy of an eVTOL modular Flying Car