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Personal SUV of the Sky

BoomZilla writes "While we're all waiting for the personal jet packs we were promised in the magazines of our youth, another 'personal flying car' has entered the fray. The Taero 4000 will exist in the car/plane category, but will require a pilot's license and will operate from airports (...no lifting off from the back yard). The Taero has an interesting folding wing concept: '[the] wing fold system will enable automatic transformation from air to land travel with the wings folding to a position parallel with the fuselage'. The target base price for the Taero 4000, in assembly kit form, is $400,000 U.S. dollars (does not include assembly[!] or optional extras). According to the site, 'Taero is scheduled for first delivery in 2007'. The FAQ makes interesting reading. Competition for Moller International's SkyCar?"

27 of 253 comments (clear)

  1. How is this better? by ericspinder · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Looks like a delorian with a plank across the top and an airplane fin on the back. I clicked on the "more information" button and got a page with a "nice" flash animation. The caption says, "click on a name above to see and hear what the experts say.", I did, Dr Douglas Ikeler (the only expert) makes a couple of glowing statements, Of course he is the founder, so that is completely unexpected. The first line in the FAQ was "Is Aerospectives planning to become a publicly traded enterprise?" which tells you where their heart is.

    Really how is this more efficient than leaving you car at the airport and renting one at the other end? For 400,000 dollars you get the worst of both worlds.

    --
    The grass is only greener, if you don't take care of your own lawn.
    1. Re:How is this better? by mrgodzilla · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My thoughts exactly.. you pretty much nailed
      what my thoughts were as I read through the
      site -- and to top it off, the performance
      stats are really too good to be true for any
      folding design.

      I don't see how they can list a price if they
      don't even know how long it will take to
      assemble -- woudln't you need to know something
      basic like that to be able to price it out?

      -- godzilla

    2. Re:How is this better? by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're absolutely right. The design parameters for a road vehicle and an airplane are compeltely different. You might as well try to build a combination submarine/helicopter. Good freakin' luck. On the other hand, you could buy, say, a Mercedes SUV for like $50k, and then a nice used Cessna 172 for, say, $80k, and have both a good SUV, and a good airplane! What a concept!

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    3. Re:How is this better? by TwistedKestrel · · Score: 4, Funny

      You guys joke ... but this thing looks more likely to fly than the Taero or whatever.

  2. Amazing... by npistentis · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Skycar goes 350 mph, and yet still gets way better gas mileage than my escort.

    --
    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!
    1. Re:Amazing... by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 4, Funny
      The Skycar goes 350 mph, and yet still gets way better gas mileage than my escort.
      That's not the way that I'd use an escort, but it's your money. Have you tried complaining to the agency about her?
  3. I hope it can... by jpetts · · Score: 4, Funny

    ..stay up longer than the Taero web site!!!

    --
    Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
  4. Flying Cars.... by c_oflynn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People seem to have trouble driving while using a cell phone - do you think most people are ready for complete 3D navigation? I guess thats why this thing needs a pilots license...

    I really don't see whats so great about this. Seems like a homebuilt aircraft, as you still need all the normal things (pilots license, airport, etc).

    1. Re:Flying Cars.... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are right though, people are such goons with automobiles. I can only imagine that they'd just kill themselves within 30 days for not doing proper pre-flight checks and not paying attention

      These projects AREN'T going to happen, I doubt anyone would be able to actually be able to legally use one in any developed country. IMO, Moeller is at best a fraudster, I think he has been just blowing hot air about his aircraft projects for longer than most slashdotters have been alive.

      The FAA is basically on to him, he can't demonstrate the stability of the Skycar so it cannot be operated without a tether. If you want an airplane, just get an airplane, if you want a car, get one, if you want both, just rent a car at the airport wherever you land.

  5. OSQ by xao+gypsie · · Score: 4, Funny

    did anyone else instantly think of the Canyonero?
    Unexplained fires are a matter for the courts!!!!

    xao

    --


    xao
    http://TheHillforum.hopto.org
  6. Flying cars? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most people can't handle a car that stays on the ground. I shudder to think what would happen if personal airplanes became common for commuting.

    Fortunately, this looks more like a half-assed grab for investment money than anything else. I rather doubt we'll ever be seeing one of those things barrelling through the sky. The future of transportation is improved mass transit, not flying cars.

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  7. Taero vs. Moller by mikeophile · · Score: 4, Funny

    Dueling vaporware.

  8. extras? by slobber · · Score: 4, Funny

    does not include assembly[!] or optional extras

    Wait a second... you mean parachute is an extra???

    --
    "You mortals are so obtuse." -Q
  9. Flightpaths? by IANAL(BIAILS) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wonder what kind of FAA regulations there would be for such a vehicle. Even if you did have your own personal landing strip for the car/plane/thing, I can't think that you'd be able to fly it just anywhere anytime. There would be flightpaths from other (commercial) airports to worry about... would you have to file a flight plan anytime you wanted to take off?

  10. No taking off from your backyard unless by doormat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    you live in a fly-in community. Where people have aircraft hangars as a part of their houses, and a 3500 ft runway is their door to the world.

    --
    The Doormat

    If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
  11. I'll believe it when I see it fly by l810c · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This is a pipe dream.

    I've been following the Moller skycar for over 20 years.(I'm not kidding, he gets an articale in Popular Science every couple of years). We should have been expecting a flying prototype each year in the past 20 years, still nothing more than short hops and tethered jumps.

    So these people are going to build a prototype next year sometime when they find facilties and have this thing working in a year or two? yea right, next...

  12. Pfft.. by Wigfield · · Score: 4, Funny

    Looks like something from Spaceballs.

    What next? A tacky van with wings driven by a dog?

  13. At last! by quantaman · · Score: 5, Funny

    Darwin will finally take care of SUV owners!!

    --
    I stole this Sig
  14. The SUV of the sky? by duckpoopy · · Score: 4, Funny

    What could be more annoying? The jetski of the sky, perhaps?

    --
    word.
  15. General aviation by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Interesting

    At this time, general aviation aircraft do not have to file a flight plan - just stay out of certain volumes of the sky. I have a friend who has a hangar attached to his garage, and a runway out back.

    Just last weekend the weather was unusually nice, and he said "Let's get Mr. Cessna's aluminum kite out" - so we hopped in the 182 and took off - buzzed another friend's farm, flew around, practiced stalling, and so on.

    We just had to make sure we stayed out from the airbase's airspace.

    So, this would be little different than owning a Cessna in that regard.

    However, unlike a car, an aircraft has to go in once a year for its annual inspection, where they tear the thing down and make sure all is well. I would assume that this thing would be no different.

    So the question is, can you do without your car for a couple of weeks of the year?

  16. hang gliders by mks180 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I once got a change to meet Francis Rogallo, the inventor of the hang glider. He told me that he envisioned it originally as a wing for cars that you'd deploy, fly where you needed to go, then stow it after you land and park the car.

  17. Re:Moronic by calebb · · Score: 4, Informative

    Diesel fuel can actually give you a higher fuel eficiency than POUG (plain old unleaded gasoline).

    According to this article, the volkswagon 4-door Jetta with a volkswagon turbo diesel engine gets ~50 mpg.

    This site discusses what makes a good diesel vehicle a good diesel vehicle - and when a POUG engine is better. With the correct differential, todays diesel engine will have a 10%-30% higher fuel efficiency. Of course, modern diesel engines have a higher intial cost, but the A4000 is already $400,000, so I don't think an extra $5K-$10K for an efficient diesel engine is an issue.

  18. I find SkyRider's approach much more interesting.. by jcr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    VTOL, robotic piloting with GPS, fly point-to-point, etc.

    The thing that convinced me that they're on to something is that they drive the fans electrically from an inboard generator.

    That saves the horifically complicated transmission that something like the Moller SkyCar needs to make all the engines drive all the fans.

    http://www.macroindustries.com/website/files/sky ri der/sr-index.htm

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  19. Why call it an "SUV" of the sky? by DogIsMyCoprocessor · · Score: 4, Funny

    I get it - just like SUV owners never take their vehicles off-road, owners of these will never actually fly them.

    --

    "And this is my boy, Sherman. Speak, Sherman." "Hello." "Good boy."

  20. aerocar of 1968 by bender-high · · Score: 5, Informative

    Looks awfully similar to the "aerocar" of 1968:
    http://www.museumofflight.org/collections/craftdis play.html?ID=3
    Manufacturer: Aerocar
    Model: Model III
    Year: 1968
    Serial No.: 1
    Location: Museum of Flight
    Viewable? Yes

    Span: 34 feet
    Length: 26 feet
    Wing Area: 190 square feet
    Empty Weight: 1,500 pounds
    Gross Weight: 2,100 pounds
    Cruise Speed (Road): 60 mph
    Cruise Speed (Air): 135 mph
    Service Ceiling: 12,000 feet
    Range: 500 miles

  21. Proof that it's vaporware by Goldenhawk · · Score: 4, Informative

    IAAAE (I AM an aero engineer)...

    It's impossible to state the range (1200nm), and then later in the same paragraph, to state that the usable fuel capacity is "to be determined". Fuel capacity determines the range. (Gee, thanks, Sherlock... that's true of any vehicle.) But in an airplane, it's even more critical, because fuel capacity determines structural weight (more fuel requires more structure, which in turn demands more fuel to move it, which demands more structure, etc.). Until they've nailed down the fuel load, this thing is hardly an aerodynamically developed system.

    This thing is a pipe dream - if you read the FAQs, there are far more "to be determined" than details.

    --
    --Brandon / Split Infinity Music

  22. 4000 lbs of Hype ? by zymano · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This thing doesn't look safe at all. Very heavy also. I don't trust Kits . The website is sparse like it was made by one person company. No one should faith in what that website is saying . Seems like alot of exagerations .