EFTA00811565.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 1.3 MB • Feb 3, 2026 • 6 pages
9/14/2017 Is the flying ear ready for takeoll'?1TechnologylTheGuardian
Is the flying car ready for takeoff?
At least six developers have retail road-air vehicles in the pipeline, so it's time to watch
the skies
Tori Blakeman
Sunday 10 September 2017 04.30 EDT
little white winged pod lifts itself off the ground and glides off into the
A 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 $9orn (£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
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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
GOMM
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-
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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
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,
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
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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 $lm, 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.
Since you're here ...
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Topics
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