Flying Car… For Real?
from the where-are-the-flying-pigs? dept
We’ve been promised flying cars for years, and they always seem to come up a bit short, but the folks over at Silicon Beat have a post claiming that one of their readers emailed them saying he actually managed to commute to work last week by gyroplane — including driving the gyroplane on the road from his house to the airport and from the airport to his office. It would be nice to have a little more proof that this really happened — but for the sake of this post, we’ll trust the Silicon Beat guys that they trust their email correspondent. It apparently took quite a bit of red tape to get the device approved to both fly and travel on the road, but after a month or so of negotiating he received approval. Next up? Making more of them and selling them. So perhaps the flying car isn’t so far off after all… Though, of course, it’s not entirely clear how happy the FAA (or airports) will be with lots of little gyroplanes flying the friendly skies. Perhaps the next big infrastructure investment will be in creating gyroplane takeoff and landing facilities. Update: In researching the story further, it appears the intrepid reporters are now questioning the overall story, as it’s not quite as impressive as it was originally made out to be. It does work… sort of. But, the car can only drive very slowly and over short distances, and it takes quite a bit of time to make the car switch modes.
Comments on “Flying Car… For Real?”
Flying Incendiaries
Now 16-year-olds can drop Molotov cocktails on, say, the dry hills of California, and watch hundreds of million-dollar homes get roasted.
Re: Flying Incendiaries
I find that comment offensive… you seem to imply that we are all reckless and careless, and that we enjoy burning expensive homes… I find a charcoal forge and a chunk of steel much more to my liking, but that’s beside the point… where do adults get off assuming that us teenage guys just want to hurt people and break things? -.-
same mistake the insurance companies made when they charge us twice as much as our female counterparts…
Problem with flying machines
Coming from my morning commute, I sincerely think that flying cars are a bad idea.
Most of the morons on the road can barely handle 2 dimensional navigation. I shudder to think what they’d do with 3.
Re: Problem with flying machines
I don’t see how the flying car, if it’s the one in the picture, can drive on the roads. It has no front license plate, no headlights, and apparently no tail lights. That’s assuming it can get away with driving without a front bumper, etc. I think this is bogus.
The graphic is kinda interesting — most of the guys who commute by air really don’t save that much time unless it’s a 160+ mile commute.
Re: Re: Problem with flying machines
Maybe it could become street-legal in poor countries. Then we’d have illegal Mexican immigrants raining from the sky.
Re: Re: Re: Problem with flying machines
Mexicans are nice people. Perhaps the one crossing the borders are troublemakers and that’s why you americans hate them? I don’t know… maybe it’s like with colombians here (Venezuela). I’ve never been in Colombia, but my friends say it’s pretty and the people are awesome. But all my experiences with colombians here are bad (ranging from crooks to thieves).
Colombian girls are stunning, though.
Re: Re: Problem with flying machines
I don’t see how the flying car, if it’s the one in the picture, can drive on the roads.
I believe the picture is of a generic gyroplane, not the one in question…
Mobile Phones
So, are we allowed to use mobile phones, while we are in one of these contraptions ?
No Subject Given
The tech for “flying cars” has existed since Molt Taylor in the 1950s. And, so has the resistance from our goverment agency that’s formally chartered to “Promote and regulate civil aviation”.
To be more blunt: The FAA has always resisted anything that would take the number of light aircraft up by a step function. In fact, they once told Molt that they would do anything necessary to stop it…
flying car
If it was in Texas and made by Butterfly LLC …
Him and about twenty other customer vehicles did.
Techno matter…in 40 of the 50 states anything with
three wheel up 65ft long X 13.5 ft high X 9ft wide is a motorcycle.
The first flying car to be built in 1935 was Pitcairn and
is on display in Washington DC’s aviation musuem.The government was rationing steel and other materials and didn’t think his prototype was worth pursuing in production.
You can see Larry Neal and Carter on Utube.
cars
i think flying cars are real and when they will be in use it will be realy cool
flying car
yeaa flying car baby