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Flying Car Prototype Ready By End of 2017, Says Airbus CEO (venturebeat.com)

Airbus plans to test a prototype for a self-piloted flying car as a way of avoiding gridlock on city roads by the end of the year, the aerospace group's chief executive said on Monday. From a report: Airbus last year formed a division called Urban Air Mobility that is exploring concepts such as a vehicle to transport individuals or a helicopter-style vehicle that can carry multiple riders. The aim would be for people to book the vehicle using an app, similar to car-sharing schemes. "One hundred years ago, urban transport went underground, now we have the technological wherewithal to go above ground," Airbus CEO Tom Enders told the DLD digital tech conference in Munich, adding he hoped the Airbus could fly a demonstration vehicle for single-person transport by the end of the year. "We are in an experimentation phase, we take this development very seriously," he said, adding that Airbus recognized such technologies would have to be clean to avoid further polluting congested cities.

140 comments

  1. First crash in residential area by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By the end of 2018.

    1. Re:First crash in residential area by Errol+backfiring · · Score: 1

      Or sooner. If it were really "helicopter style", it would feature autorotation in case of an engine failure. If anything goes wrong with the depicted aircraft, it becomes a brick at too high altitude.

      --
      Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
    2. Re:First crash in residential area by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      O ye of little imagination, there are several companies designing/manufacturing whole airframe parachutes. About the only change you would really need for a small ducted fan/jet engine aircraft to accommodate one would be braking system so the engines didn't eat the parachute.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_Recovery_Systems

    3. Re:First crash in residential area by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Somebody in Qatar will order a 380SUV, but there won't be a lot of places wher eit can land.

  2. wake me up when elon musk announces this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that dude really knows what he is talking about
    he invented solar battery and was in iron man 2

    1. Re:wake me up when elon musk announces this by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      Elon Musk is unwittingly and unintentionally behind the rise (pun) of flying cars.

      Elon is partly and significantly behind the rise of electric cars.
      Electric cars threaten the manhood of the fossil fuel industry.
      Fossil fuel executives wonder how to save their beloved industry and provide a superior smog choking experience to everyone.

      DING! DING! DING! DING!

      I know! I know! Says one executive. Flying cars! They will use even more fuel. Provide more pollution. And they won't be powered by electric any time soon.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    2. Re:wake me up when elon musk announces this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bingo!

    3. Re: wake me up when elon musk announces this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have a Weiner!

    4. Re:wake me up when elon musk announces this by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      He's also a target of the Republican party... which I have NO idea why. I mean, aren't we supposed to celebrate entrepreneurs?

    5. Re:wake me up when elon musk announces this by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      He's also a target of the Republican party... which I have NO idea why. I mean, aren't we supposed to celebrate entrepreneurs?

      Is he? I can't recall ever hearing a Republican say anything cross about Musk. I will occasionally see libertarians roll their eyes at Musk fanboys because Musk relied so heavily on government subsidies, but that's about it. What are you talking about?

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    6. Re:wake me up when elon musk announces this by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      Here is a guardian article.. basically, they don't want green energy. I have no idea why they give a shit. This is capitalism at work. Of course, energy sector is old energy, and they got plenty of lobbyists who know how to grease politician hands, maybe green energy hasn't figured how to do that?

    7. Re:wake me up when elon musk announces this by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Well from the article, "they" being Republicans, don't give a shit. The article is about one fabricated online journalist from someone with a grudge against Musk, who appears to be trying to shill to get Republicans to oppose Musk, but I've seen no evidence it's worked. I am a Republican and general right-wing nutjob and on all my right wing blogs/sites/forums etc I don't think I've ever seen any significant negative sentiment towards Musk. If I had to gauge the general opinion of Musk among conservatives/Republicans, it would be "neutral to positive." The only negative things I've ever seen are some sidelong glances from staunch libertarians because subsidies, but since Elon has been so successful at making so many things profitable in the long run that argument has little traction.

      So I would say the idea that Musk is a "target of the Republican party" is pretty much false.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  3. It's about time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We were supposed to have Flying cars and Fusion power by Y2K!

    1. Re:It's about time... by GuB-42 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Only flying cars were supposed to be available by Y2K.
      The predictions for fusion power are remarkably accurate. 30 years ago, they told us it would be 30 years away, and indeed, 30 years later, it is still 30 years away.

  4. Yawn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Prototypes have been around for years. Production on any of them never really gets any closer.

    1. Re:Yawn... by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      We don't have flying cars for a number of reasons. Efficiency, reliability, user safety, public safety, supporting infrastructure (where to land), new complex regulatory requirements. eg, what about cars flying over your house.

      That said, see my post above about why Elon Musk is unwittingly responsible for flying cars. Spoiler: electric cars threaten fossil fuel industry which will push for flying cars that use even more fuel and won't be electric any time soon.

      And they have the lobbying power to make it happen despite all of the logical reasons why we don't have flying cars now.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    2. Re:Yawn... by Terwin · · Score: 1

      We don't have flying cars for a number of reasons. Efficiency, reliability, user safety, public safety, supporting infrastructure (where to land), new complex regulatory requirements. eg, what about cars flying over your house.

      Sure we do, they are called helicopters, they are just not practical for most people.

    3. Re:Yawn... by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      We don't have flying cars, but AeroMobil goes on sale this year (a road legal aircraft). I think Terrafugia, another road legal aircraft, you can already buy.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    4. Re:Yawn... by Spy+Handler · · Score: 1

      here's what happened when Airbus built a fully automated airliner (with no human inside) and have it land itself:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    5. Re:Yawn... by PvtVoid · · Score: 2

      here's what happened when Airbus built a fully automated airliner (with no human inside) and have it land itself:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      This was not an automated flight, and was not unmanned: there were 136 passengers on board. Three people were killed, and 34 required hospitalization. The cause was pilot error, and the flight crew was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for pulling a stupid stunt with a loaded plane.

    6. Re:Yawn... by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      Who the hell is going to be able to afford the insurance? Also, a couple of crashes and shit will hit the fan..

    7. Re:Yawn... by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      I bet that happened before you learned to read - which is why you totally misunderstood what either the caption or the in-video voiceover were saying, let alone actually doing any research on the event. Way to represent your generation!

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    8. Re:Yawn... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      "Road legal aircraft" are just prop planes that you can also use to drive to the airstrip.
      Why the fuck you would want to is unknown.

      If you can afford a private plane then you can easily afford a Mercedes.
      Which would you rather drive on the highway?

    9. Re:Yawn... by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      Which is probably why, despite being out there, they haven't, ummm, had sales take off. The first flying cars, or roadable aircraft, are going to have major compromises, which is why they're very much a niche market.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
  5. Boeing or not going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think the autopilot is 100% hands up on the full line airplanes

    1. Re:Boeing or not going by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not but there are fully autonomous helicopters being used by the military. That said, there is hopefully still some substantive differences between your typical upscale American suburb and the backwoods of Afghanistan. Noise, the acceptance of a half ton of wrecked aluminum in your back yard, more noise - I just don't see it here in the US.

      Not to even get into the limited capacity that air corridors have compared to roads. That could possibly change as autonomous flight allows for closer aircraft spacing, but it's not going to happen quickly.

      And that noise... If you think the weeny little Phantom-class drones are going to be shotgun targets, wait until this thing tries to land in your neighbor's yard.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Boeing or not going by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 2

      I didn't read this article, but I read one from a different source. What I got from that was not that they were targeting casual residential owners, but rather fleets used as mass transit. I think they're targeting places like New York, Hong Kong, etc. Dense population centres where they would be used as a flying autonomous taxi. Cities where the added noise pollution might not be noticed all that much. I don't think they're even targeting having these flying over your peaceful house in the suburbs.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    3. Re:Boeing or not going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you think the noise of a jet engine won't be noticed much in a dense population center like NY or Hong Kong, I've got a bridge I'd like to sell you. Turns out 150 dB is noticeable in pretty much every environment. You can tell by when blood starts coming out of your ears.

    4. Re:Boeing or not going by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Cities where the added noise pollution might not be noticed all that much.

      Take another look at the picture. Those tiny little fans will drown out the gunfire.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    5. Re:Boeing or not going by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      Might even save some lives if it distracts the shooter.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    6. Re:Boeing or not going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they need a quieter motive source. Sing along:
      The wings on the bus go flap flap flap
            flap flap flap
            flap flap flap
      The wings on the bus go flap flap flap ...

    7. Re:Boeing or not going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken by a person who has no idea why all the airline baggage workers have mickey mouse ears on over their in-ear earplugs. (and they still suffer hearing damage after too much exposure).

      The noise (not the shock blast) of the Apollo rockets was loud enough to fracture bone inside animal muscle tissue. We use sonic knives to cut things. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-wRVzQxBqI should give you an idea. Without limitations and testing to assure the sounds are in a tolerable range, there's no limit to how much damage can be done.

    8. Re:Boeing or not going by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Funny you mention Hong Kong. It's where I live.

      I don't see flying cars/buses/whatever here any time soon. The reason: high-rise buildings (most city blocks here are anywhere from 50 to 480 meters tall) and mountains (the tallest being over 900 meters tall). With those high-rises there is almost no place for any aircraft to land safely, it's just too dense. There's a heliport at the harbour and a few super luxury hotels have helipads on the rooftop. That are about your only realistic options.

      Add to that the sheer volume of people that want to be moved. Trains are the more efficient way to go for that - the busiest line is operating 12-coach trains, 20 trains an hour, and it's actually not enough to handle rush hour traffic. The train network is being expanded steadily, with more lines being added. Mostly underground, out of the way of everything. Currently the trains handle some 3.5 million passenger trips every day, road public transport (buses, minibuses, taxis) handle at least that number of trips between them.

      Other dense population centres will have the same problems. Huge numbers of people that want to move around, basically limiting any air transport to just a fancy premium service. No space to land on the ground as you're always too close to buildings, one of the main issues after noise would be the unpredictable winds tossing your drone around.

  6. Emergency response by gnick · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't see these being marketed to the masses any time soon - Moving rush hour into the air seems like it would be inviting chaos. Ambulances, however, seem like a perfect fit for this - Skipping traffic could save lives.

    --
    He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    1. Re:Emergency response by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

      Did you see the drawing? Large houses, larger lawns. Those aren't the 'masses'. Think Tesla.

      Then think again.

      Nice try Airbus, but I can't image the local yard Nazis allowing giant mutant bumblebees to knock over the azaleas early in the morning. Those tiny-tiny ducted fans would just shriek.

      You think leaf blowers were bad....

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, the first piece of flying debris turned to shrapnel and takes out an eye, that's the end of that fantasy.

      Also, people simply can't afford these things, the economic model we have chosen seems to be in a downward spiral right now.

    3. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happens when these have mechanical problems and fall out of the sky, killing the passengers and unsuspecting people on the ground and damaging millions of dollars of buildings and infrastructure? That's the main problem with flying cars - there's plenty of cars on the ground that malfunction, but they usually don't do this kind of damage because of it and just come to a stop.

      Unless you have the kind of strict maintenance they do with current aviation - pricing vehicles with less passengers out of the market except for the rich with their private planes.

    4. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FTS: "The aim would be for people to book the vehicle using an app, similar to car-sharing schemes."

      The plan isn't to market them to the masses.

    5. Re:Emergency response by Smidge204 · · Score: 2

      We have those already. They're called "helicopters" and they are already in service as airborne ambulances at many metropolitan hospitals.

      It's a mature and proven technology, with plenty of well trained operators, service/support infrastructure in place, regulatory and safety mechanisms established and well enforced.

      "Flying cars" are a solution in desperate need of a problem.
      =Smidge=

    6. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are far fewer helipads than there are open patches of road/lawn.

    7. Re:Emergency response by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Just about anyplace you could safely land a "flying car" you could also land a helicopter.

      And that's assuming you actually have to land. If it's enough of an emergency you'd probably be winching the patient up and down while in flight.

      Solution in search of a problem.
      =Smidge=

    8. Re:Emergency response by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      Yes, but you could improve on this if the vehicle could steer itself and the only staff on board were for taking care of the patient.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    9. Re:Emergency response by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      Self-driving cars will be what kills any real demand for "flying cars". Who cares how long the trip takes when you're not forced to keep your attention glued to the road?

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    10. Re:Emergency response by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Ambulances, however, seem like a perfect fit for this - Skipping traffic could save lives.

      Indeed! And that's why we have those, they're called air ambulances and sometimes a prince will literally fly in and save you.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    11. Re:Emergency response by gnick · · Score: 1

      Who cares how long the trip takes when you're not forced to keep your attention glued to the road?

      Me - Albeit less than when I'm actually sitting and waiting behind the wheel. Traffic will always be a nuisance and reducing/avoiding it will always be a motivator.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    12. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      regular people being unable to afford one of these makes it all the more valuable as status signal

    13. Re:Emergency response by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      Self driving cars will also help alleviate congestion, when there are enough of them. They can drive bumper to bumper. At intersections they can just keep going at speed, passing each other after a short negotiation and small speed adjustment to create and time the right gaps in the flow of traffic, with the traffic lights turned off. (The traffic light would need to be smart as well; it would turn on again when a manually driven vehicle approaches)

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    14. Re:Emergency response by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      Helicopters? Expensive to run and they certainly cannot land everywhere. This vehicle looks like it can land in most places where there are no overhead obstructions, and if the cost can drop to where it becomes a viable mode of public transport, hospitals could replace their one helicopter with a whole fleet of these.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    15. Re:Emergency response by Somebody+Is+Using+My · · Score: 1

      At intersections they can just keep going at speed, passing each other after a short negotiation and small speed adjustment to create and time the right gaps in the flow of traffic, with the traffic lights turned off.

      Thank God the only things that use intersections are cars, and none of those pesky pedestrians or bicyclists, which we wisely exterminated in the Great Purge of 2021.

    16. Re:Emergency response by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 2

      Take a look at the image credits. It's from Shutterstock. If that was the concept flying car from Airbus then I would expect the image credit to be from Airbus, or their subsidiary, and the car to have branding on it.

      I do agree with you about the noise of the fans on the car in the picture. I wouldn't want those things flying around my house.

    17. Re:Emergency response by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      The flying car, as it could be made with today's technology, is just a novel alternative to a helicopter, as you point out (or perhaps a "roadable aircraft"). They'll suffer from all the same problems of the aircraft that people aren't already using, including the cost to own and run one.

      But most people don't think of it that way. Most people think of the flying car as a poorly thought out idea from a cartoon. It'll be just like a regular car except you can get away from traffic by moving up or down! It would solve the problem of traffic congestion!

      Unfortunately this idea is so far from attainable with today's technology that nobody alive today will live to see it. They'll need Star Trek batteries to carry a large amount of affordable power running affordable motors, first and foremost. The average person is already struggling to buy and run a small number of relatively very pedestrian combustion engines, they can't afford anything that has multiple exotic forms of the damn things ferociously guzzling precious fuel.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    18. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I predict it will be a terrible car. Also, it will be a terrible plane. Cars and planes (or helicopters, or VTOL, or whatever) are like oil and water. The design parameters you optimize for are very different.

      - With all flying devices, weight is paramount. You take all kinds of extraordinary measures to save weight. In particular you use exotic alloys, elaborate machining processes, and really fancy design concepts (even if they don't seem so fancy anymore, due to widespread deployment). This makes flying devices expensive and limits production runs, which drives up costs even more;
      - With cars, costs are paramount. Weight is far less of an issue, no matter what the car makers say. Safety is important, but nowhere near as important as it is in a plane. With a car, safety issues are often a big deal primarily because of the large production runs, which exposes more citizens to the safety issue. And lots of car quality issues result in: A Dead Car Not Moving. Which is a big customer relations problem, but it rarely kills people.

      All flying cars thus far have been bad planes and bad cars. It's literally the worst of both worlds.

    19. Re:Emergency response by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Nice try Airbus, but I can't image the local yard Nazis allowing giant mutant bumblebees to knock over the azaleas early in the morning. Those tiny-tiny ducted fans would just shriek.

      You think leaf blowers were bad....

      Maybe that's why they have wheels, so they drive a to a suitable location where they can lift off.

    20. Re:Emergency response by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Upscaled, computer-controlled drones with redundant blades and motors. Sounds like a plan.

      You won't even need a thing like a small plane chute, which exists, as computer-controlled emergency landings will be safer.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    21. Re:Emergency response by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      You don't need strict maintenance, just strict altitude limits. A vehicle falling from twenty feet off the ground, assuming it is bottom-heavy and lands on the tires, almost certainly won't kill you. At fifty feet, it probably won't. At a hundred feet, you'll probably have a low survival rate unless you have a whole-car airbag or something.

      As long as self-driving cars fly over existing motorways, and as long as cars underneath are smart enough to avoid being landed upon, you should be fine. And even if they do, there's probably some safe height where everyone would survive. Assuming the flying far is designed to be extremely light (for obvious reasons), I'd imagine twenty or thirty feet would probably be fairly safe.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    22. Re:Emergency response by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Just about anyplace you could safely land a "flying car" you could also land a helicopter.

      Not true. A helicopter can't be moving horizontally when it lands. A flying car with wheels could potentially be moving at 70+ MPH horizontally when it lands. Assuming they can avoid any blades that stick out beyond the sides of the vehicle, that design difference completely changes the equation.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    23. Re:Emergency response by William+Baric · · Score: 1

      Maybe we could invent some kind of signal that a pedestrian could turn on with the push of a button to stop traffic and allow him to cross the street. I suggest we call them "pedestrian crossing signals". I even envision some kind of logos like a "walking man" when it's safe for pedestrians to cross the street and a "hand" when pedestrian should wait. Do you think I should patent this idea?

    24. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just about anyplace you could safely land a "flying car" you could also land a helicopter.

      Not true. A helicopter can't be moving horizontally when it lands. A flying car with wheels could potentially be moving at 70+ MPH horizontally when it lands. Assuming they can avoid any blades that stick out beyond the sides of the vehicle, that design difference completely changes the equation.

      Ok,, why do you think a helicopter with wheels couldn't land with a forward momentum of 70 MPH? It's obviously possible for them to go forwards while descending, I've seen it.

    25. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everything scales perfectly. A toy helicopter is made of cheap plastic, while a full sized helicopter can't be made of cheap plastic, it requires heavier materials, which requires more energy to lift. Energy density of fuel and engine is poor, which requires even more energy to lift and limits flying time, while fuel costs are very high. Economics of operating a helicopter haven't changed much even if you replace the pilot with a robot it is still prohibitively expensive. Making a more expensive helicopter with redundant rotors won't really solve that and doesn't really address the safety issue of loss of power, which is what is going to go wrong most of the time.

    26. Re:Emergency response by cstacy · · Score: 1

      Just about anyplace you could safely land a "flying car" you could also land a helicopter.

      Not true. A helicopter can't be moving horizontally when it lands. A flying car with wheels could potentially be moving at 70+ MPH horizontally when it lands. Assuming they can avoid any blades that stick out beyond the sides of the vehicle, that design difference completely changes the equation.

      Ok,, why do you think a helicopter with wheels couldn't land with a forward momentum of 70 MPH?
      It's obviously possible for them to go forwards while descending, I've seen it.

      Yes, helicopters can take off or land while moving forwards. There is at least one helicopter that requires this if it is more heavily loaded. You usually don't see helicopters doing this because the big feature of a helicopter is vertical take off and landing! (Duh)

    27. Re:Emergency response by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      _Nothing_ scales linearly.

      It's a very old Engineering truism. I don't know of a single counterexample...dev/null does scale linearly.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    28. Re:Emergency response by lgw · · Score: 1

      When Paving Day comes, pedestrians and bicyclists will be relegated to their proper role as pit slaves, providing fresh road-food and clean bathrooms while the rest of us cruise the Paved Earth in our atomic hypercars under the light of the chromed moon.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    29. Re:Emergency response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An uncontrolled fall, without a vehicle results in a LD-50 at about 30 ft.

      Helicopter failures at take off are an excellent idea of what a low altitude crash landing might look like, every helicopter pilot I know that had an uncontrolled (crash) emergency landing at low altitude required extensive recovery for back and spinal issues. At higher altitudes, they can auto-gyrate the blades to build up enough momentum to provide braking just before the ground, and often they manage to land the craft without as-severe injuries.

      Height, in an air vehicle, is your friend. Dropping uncontrolled, at a horizontal traveling velocity, even in a vehicle that can take a dead drop at that height, will not result in a vehicle travelling on the ground at traveling velocity. The vehicle will likely flip.

    30. Re:Emergency response by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Not true. A helicopter can't be moving horizontally when it lands. A flying car with wheels could potentially be moving at 70+ MPH horizontally when it lands.

      1) Under what situation would such a maneuver be necessary, or even advantageous, and

      2) Given the relative difficulty if making a "flying car" in the first place, it seems the last thing you'd want to do is add more weight and complexity with a second drivetrain (Indeed this has so far been a major failing in flying car concepts), and

      3) Landing at 70+MPH is anything but safe, which is why it's typically only done on access-controlled runways under the supervision of air traffic controllers and ground crews.

      Flying cars to not address and real problem. People are fixated on them for the same reason they're fixated on "hover boards" and personal jet packs - it's a cool fantasy concept that's been romanticized in film and TV, but has absolutely zero practicality or advantage outside of fiction.

      You want a personal flying vehicle? They're called "ultralight aircraft" and you don't even need a license to fly them in most cases.
      =Smidge=

    31. Re:Emergency response by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      I did say, "assuming it is bottom-heavy". If it tends to land upside-down, IMO, the entire design is a non-starter. if it lands upright, the tires would take some of the impact when they explode, and the axles would take a little more as they bend/shear. So it wouldn't be as serious an impact as in a helicopter falling from the same height. Plus, if you design it right, you could potentially handle a single-rotor failure without crashing anyway.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    32. Re:Emergency response by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Under what situation would such a maneuver be necessary, or even advantageous

      Landing on a freeway with other vehicles around you moving at 70 MPH. If this is designed to replace cars, it can't require you to land in an empty field or in a parking lot. It has to be able to land on a road in the presence of other traffic and be a normal car when not flying. If you have to land in an empty field or in an empty parking lot and then push it on tiny wheels into a parking spot, it isn't a flying car; it's a helicopter.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    33. Re:Emergency response by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      OP has obviously never had to commute by train, bus or plane.

      I want to lie, shipwrecked and comatose, drinking fresh mango juice. Goldfish shoals nibbling at my toes. Fun, fun, fun.

      I was watching a re-run of RD (9 IIRC) a few days ago, and thinking of snagging that line for my .sig collection.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    34. Re:Emergency response by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Expensive to run and they certainly cannot land everywhere.

      Anything that goes into the air is expensive. I noticed that the world-wide fleet of Sikorsky 92 was just shut down for 11 hours of boroscope inspection per aircraft following the catastrophic failure of a tail rotor on the West Franklin just before New Year. Anything that has (and needs) this level of after-sales support is going to remain expensive. (AAIB report ; particularly fig 1 on p3 if you're into engineering pr0n.).

      Looking at the solitary image (of a "concept"), this is going to require hard surface to land on and then drive away (slick tyres, I note ; very low suspension) ; I doubt that they'd be able to land on more than 10 degrees of slope (without the wings/ bumpers/ airframe contacting the ground before the wheels do - a rather important point). That's a tighter constraint than the helicopters I've used (including the S-92s).

      Oh look! New! Shiny!

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  7. I am not interested by NEDHead · · Score: 1

    If yellow is the only color choice...

    1. Re:I am not interested by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      I do not believe that Trump's hotel party in Russia will significantly influence color choices of vehicles.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  8. Not in the real world by mykepredko · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't see an autonomous flying car in neighbourhoods, except in locales where there aren't:
    - Power lines
    - Trees
    - Pets (and children) that will be blown around lift jets
    - Shingled roofs (see previous)
    - Anything that can be blown around
    - Anything that could come into impact with the flying vehicle

    Don't these "futurists" know that their creations won't be allowed to fly/land anywhere aircraft can't fly/land now?

    1. Re:Not in the real world by swb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This isn't for you, citizen.

      This is for your betters to move between their gated community, private clubs and corporate headquarters, and for essential security personnel to help ensure your safety and political hygiene.

      Now move along, citizen.

    2. Re:Not in the real world by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      - Pets (and children) that will be blown around lift jets

      - Pets (and children) that will be blown into lift jets

      . . . wood-chipper-ed pets (and children) . . .

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    3. Re:Not in the real world by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      Flying cars are a superior, fast and efficient approach to decreasing the global population.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    4. Re:Not in the real world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to see a feature where you can put it in 'park' and the flying car will suddenly throttle up the lift jets when the neighbor's chihuahua tries to pee on it.

    5. Re:Not in the real world by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 2

      So it's not all bad then.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    6. Re:Not in the real world by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      - Pets (and children) that will be blown into lift jets

      Only if they change the laws of physics. Lift jets push something up by blowing air downwards. They suck from the top. I mean, I suppose if you have pets and children in jetpacks, it might be a concern, but if your kids and pets are doing that sort of thing, you have bigger things to worry about then them getting sucked into my (hypothetical) flying car's engines. Just saying. :-D

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    7. Re:Not in the real world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because helicopters (the only other comparable aircraft) have such a tendency of sucking and dicing up in surrounding people/animals. No doubt you wouldn't want to rush towards one as it was landing but you teach kids/pets to avoid running at moving cars/trucks for roughly the same reason (only in the case of them you get ran over not blown away).

    8. Re:Not in the real world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tendency to dice: (NSFW) https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      Now this is a small helicopter. The "flying car" is going to be even smaller. If the rotors are low to the ground as depicted in the article then I can totally see a flying meat grinder.

    9. Re:Not in the real world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Such people already have solutions.

      There are communities with airstrips in the backyard, instead of golf courts. Each house has a small hangar, and they have their Cessnas / Piper Cubs already in place. It's hard to understand how this "car" is going to upset this ecosystem, as the car is likely to be an inferior car compared to their already-existent six-figure cars (if you can afford a plane, you tend to have the money for a rather nice car).

    10. Re:Not in the real world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's more, YOU don't get to "fly" the thing at all - you're just a passenger, and you can NOT be trusted at all.
      The flying taxi has a greater civil and legal responsibility to the scum below, so you will request a taxi or a fully controlled corridor entry for your priivate car, and the system will get you there. You can sleep, eat, fuck, shave, read or just watch.
      But you won't be "driving" your flying car.
      Ever.

    11. Re:Not in the real world by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      But that will put the established Zyklon-B manufacturers out of business.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  9. Oh great by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 2

    With the way I see so many people driving, this is good news for the makers of bandages and burn units.

    Seriously, take a short trip down the freeway and watch people drive...then ask yourself, "Would I want these people flying a car near me??"

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    1. Re:Oh great by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      That's why nobody will be flying or driving them. They'll be autonomous from the start.

  10. Photo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So is there an actual picture of what they're going for with the prototype or just a meaningless stock photo for space filling purposes?

  11. A helicopter-style vehicle? by quonset · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Which can carry multiple riders? You mean like a helicopter?

  12. This is clearly for CEOs and the other .01% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No you plebs, you won't be riding in this. But a CEO that needs to quickly get from his penthouse to his office suite? He'll pay for this.

  13. Is it a car or a drone by another name? by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Airbus plans to test a prototype for a self-piloted flying car as a way of avoiding gridlock on city roads by the end of the year, the aerospace group's chief executive said on Monday.

    If it doesn't drive on the roads then it is not a flying car. It's basically a form of a drone that happens to carry people.

    I'm curious how they think they have repealed the laws of physics sufficiently to allow a car that is robust enough to survive travel on normal roads AND still remain airworthy. All the so-called flying cars anyone has come up with so far lack power plants with sufficient energy to avoid massive compromises in design. A car that is light enough to get off the ground is too fragile to survive a collision of any consequence. I'm not aware of any breakthrough in propulsion technology that would enable a normal car to get aloft or a single person aircraft to drive like a normal car.

    1. Re:Is it a car or a drone by another name? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      A car that is light enough to get off the ground is too fragile to survive a collision of any consequence.

      I think the key phrase is "Self-driving". If there's any significant collision risk, the car could simply go straight up to avoid it. Surviving on-ground collisions should be basically a non-goal at that point.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  14. Meh. by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    Wake me up when one costs less than $50k.

  15. Not a crazy idea by wjcofkc · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Lets go back a few short years...

    This whole idea that all electric cars are ever going to be practical or affordable is a pipe dream. I can see hydrogen powered cars being practical in a few decades though. And self-driving? Won't we have to repave all the roads with sensors and put sensors all along the shoulder? That's just dumb, that's just dumb because you can't make a car smart enough to navigate daily traffic with all onboard sensors. What's next, first stage rockets that can fall back from space and land vertically? Right... let's throw in an autonomous electric powered flying bus while we are at it.

    --
    Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
    1. Re:Not a crazy idea by sir-gold · · Score: 1

      That's just dumb, that's just dumb because you can't make a car smart enough to navigate daily traffic with all onboard sensors.

      This is exactly how Tesla does it, and while it isn't perfect, it's mostly usable and still improving. It's silly to say something is impossible when we are already most of the way there.

    2. Re:Not a crazy idea by PvtVoid · · Score: 1

      That's just dumb, that's just dumb because you can't make a car smart enough to navigate daily traffic with all onboard sensors.

      This is exactly how Tesla does it, and while it isn't perfect, it's mostly usable and still improving. It's silly to say something is impossible when we are already most of the way there.

      Parent was being ironic.

    3. Re:Not a crazy idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just dumb, that's just dumb because you can't make a car smart enough to navigate daily traffic with all onboard sensors.

      This is exactly how Tesla does it, and while it isn't perfect, it's mostly usable and still improving. It's silly to say something is impossible when we are already most of the way there.

      Parent was being ironic.

      GP was quoting /. discussions from just a few years ago.

  16. Maybe in a free country, not here... by kbonin · · Score: 1

    Between zoning, permits, licensing, environmental impact reports, HOA restrictions, FAA overreach, liability, NIMBY, and a myriad other issues, this is highly unlikely to happen in the modern USA within our generation. Most potentially society changing inventions are not feasible to test or deploy outside of closed corporate labs in this regulatory environment, at least not without the support of some Congress critters and the DOD...

    1. Re:Maybe in a free country, not here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm always curious about people who make these kinds of remarks about how our "regulatory environment" and how un-free the US is. What kind of nation do you envision as a better place? Somalia? Should it be allowed to fly aircraft over populated areas without any regulations as to how the safety of those craft is determined? Should we drop regulations around aircraft safety in general? Who cares if airlines maintain their aircraft, right? The market will sort it out (never mind that airliners could just be owned and operated by some shell company and if one crashes then that entity goes bankrupt and business could go on as usual. who cares about the dead passengers anyway?)

      People sometimes do bad things, we have laws in place to discourage that and punish those who commit crimes anyway. In the same way, the people who run corporations sometimes do bad and/or irresponsible things, we have laws and regulations in place to discourage and punish that. Neither makes us less "free".

  17. Already? by jdharm · · Score: 1

    I thought April 1 was still a couple months away.

  18. FAA wil not allow it by houghi · · Score: 1

    We have issues with a 1 pound quadcopter and now we are getting flying cars that will be several hundred pounds. And look how some people drive and are unable to see in two dimensions to see what goes on around their car. Now you add a third dimension. And all this in an space that is not regulated/overseen by the FAA.

    So it might be possible that they are allowed to fly on some places. I can imagine that they still need to drive to the airport, take off and land at another airport and drive again with a licensed pilot while in the air,

    So it will take a while till we see Fifth Element situations in NYC if that will ever happen.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    1. Re:FAA wil not allow it by mccrew · · Score: 1

      And look how some people drive and are unable to see in two dimensions to see what goes on around their car. Now you add a third dimension.

      Agree. And it's worse than that. Cars live in a 2D world where there are 2 degrees of freedom (forwards-backwards and left-right). A flying vehicle adds 4 additional degrees of freedom (up-down, pitch, roll, yaw)... so much more that can go wrong.

      When it comes to flying cars, I am not as pessimistic as everyone else here seems to be, but I don't see how Joe Public can be entrusted with one. I think there either needs to be a trained and licensed pilot, or the vehicle needs to be self piloting.

      --
      Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.
    2. Re:FAA wil not allow it by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      or the vehicle needs to be self piloting.

      You mean like it says in the first sentence of the summary?

    3. Re:FAA wil not allow it by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      A flying vehicle adds 4 additional degrees of freedom (up-down, pitch, roll, yaw)... so much more that can go wrong.

      Current flying vehicles have those extra degrees of freedom because of their design, but in principle, you could design a flying vehicle that has only one additional degree of freedom (altitude), keeping the vehicle approximately horizontal at all times and using horizontally oriented secondary fans to steer. And arguably, you should, because at that point, it would be much more practical for a driver to take control if needed.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  19. We'll have flying cars any day now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just ask Paul Moller.
    Moller Skycar

    1. Re:We'll have flying cars any day now by AntiSol · · Score: 1

      Yup, I'm sure I read somewhere that the Moller Skycar was coming out in 2017 too.

  20. You could always get a "flying car" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is called a helicopter. You do not really plan to take your "flying car on the roads when it can fly, do you?
    The problem is that everyone who wants a flying car is not a pilot and has no intention of becoming one. They want to yap on their hands free cell phone while updating facebook and flying. This a "death hails down from the sky" scenario and every pilot knows that. Your average moron was never going to get to fly a car with their driver's license.
    So with autonomous cars it may be possible to use that tech finally give everyone a "flying car".. if the car is electric and the people are rich.

  21. We lack the power supply by sjbe · · Score: 2

    We don't have flying cars for a number of reasons.

    Actually we don't have them primarily for one reason. We don't have an energy supply of sufficient power to weight (including fuel) to enable a robustly built vehicle to get off the ground and travel. Basically we need something like Tony Stark's fictional arc reactor to make a flying car feasible. We can build a "car" that flies but with the state of the art in power plants there are simply too many engineering trade offs to make something more than a crude prototype.

    All the other problems you mentioned are to a large degree already solved today. They would require large economic investments but they are possible. The only problem that so far is intractable is the power supply for the vehicle. Our current ones are FAR too heavy even if you don't include the fuel.

    1. Re:We lack the power supply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, then we must already be living in a "Tony stark's fictional arc reactor" universe then since there are droves of flying car prototypes out there and even a few that have went to (limited) market. Sure they aren't the Sci-Fi ones that can magically hover in the air but many can fly and drive on the road. The Terrafugia Transition has a 23 gallon tank and under normal circumstances can go over 450 Miles. There are even a few prototypes in the works that have some short runway/vertical takeoff capabilities.

    2. Re:We lack the power supply by PvtVoid · · Score: 1

      The Terrafugia Transition has a 23 gallon tank and under normal circumstances can go over 450 Miles.

      The Terrafugia is a fixed-wing aircraft. Get back to us when you can do that with lift coming from ducted fans.

  22. Just wait for my teleporter prototype by jmcwork · · Score: 1

    I am working it in stages. I have the first part done: Converting matter into energy. Now I just need to work out how to send it someplace and re-integrate it and no one will need these fancy flying cars!

  23. So... Moller sold his designs to Airbus? by Jawnn · · Score: 1

    I didn't read that, but it's the same, held-aloft-by-four-fans design that Moller has been hawking for decades, which means that just like Moller's "Skycar", it's going to fly just slightly better than a grand piano if even one of those engines goes out. Not over my neighborhood, thank you.

    1. Re:So... Moller sold his designs to Airbus? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      I didn't read that, but it's the same, held-aloft-by-four-fans design that Moller has been hawking for decades, which means that just like Moller's "Skycar", it's going to fly just slightly better than a grand piano if even one of those engines goes out.

      Moller's original design had 12 ducted fans, 3 at each corner, specifically to be able to tolerate the engine-out scenario. They were also supposed to be small enough and light enough to be manually removable by a single mechanic. The quoted weight was 60 pounds. I think I still have that issue of Popular Mechanics in a box in the basement.

      What Moller didn't know was that no group of small gasoline engines is responsive enough at the throttle for stable powered-lift flight. If he'd just tried electric motors in the 70s or 80s, the world might be a very different place. It would have had to trail a power cord, and the tilt sensors would have been the size of a shoebox, but it would have worked.

  24. Nothing new here by taustin · · Score: 1

    A flying car is also called "an airplane," and light aircraft have been around for a century. Curtiss never flew his Autoplane, but given that he was Glen Curtiss, there's no reason to believe he couldn't have if he hadn't been distracted by World War I. The Pitcairn PCA-2 was a production aircraft in 1923.

    The History of Flying Cars.

    The reasons this will be a non-event, like all previous attempts are as follows:

    1. Flying vehicles must be built to higher standards for safety reasons - not just of the pilot and passengers, but if everyone. This means they are a lot more expensive.

    2. Flying in three dimensions is more complicated than driving in two, and requires far more training. Most people simply can't handle the demands.

    3. Ground traffic can be monitored and governed by simple rules and automated systems, like traffic lights and signs. Air traffic requires human controllers, and there is a limit to how many planes one controller can monitor. Automation can increase that limit, but not replace human judgment. The cost of replacing traffic lights with millions of air traffic controllers is . . . not feasible.

    4. Self flying cars are even more ridiculous than self driving cars, given that self driving cars cannot handle streets that have not been mapped to millimeter precision, or road constructions, or bad weather, or any of a million other real life conditions. Flying is geometrically more complicated than driving, and there's no reason to believe anyone alive to day will live to see true self driving cars.

    This is, in the end, simply an announcement that Airbus is going into the personal aircraft business with a high-tech helicopter for the obscenely wealthy. But I'm happy they're getting a lot of free publicity for it.

    1. Re:Nothing new here by sir-gold · · Score: 1

      4. Self flying cars are even more ridiculous than self driving cars, given that self driving cars cannot handle streets that have not been mapped to millimeter precision, or road constructions, or bad weather, or any of a million other real life conditions. Flying is geometrically more complicated than driving, and there's no reason to believe anyone alive to day will live to see true self driving cars.

      Airbus A380s can already fly the ENTIRE ROUTE completely by autopilot, including the takeoff and landing (auto-landing requires an airport with ILS, which most major airports already have, not sure of the requirements for auto-takeoff)

      While flying is technically more difficult than driving, there are far less things to run into, and a lot of aircraft already have a system similar to v2v, so the computer already knows where all the other aircraft are in the sky. Radar detection/avoidance also works much better in the air, because there are less obstructions.

      Just because flying is harder than driving for a human to do, doesn't mean it's also harder for a computer to do.

    2. Re:Nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can fly an entire route, but that also makes some big assumptions that are true right now, but wouldn't be true if the flying car ever became common. Right now it doesn't have to deal with traffic, and it flies high enough that weather isn't problematic during flight. It's never required to react quickly in other words. In an urban environment, trying to fly in a crowded sky would be insanity.

      Even assuming AI control better than any human could ever hope to be, good to the level where we might call it perfect, what happens if an unexpected wind gust hits and you get tossed in the direction of a building or another vehicle? Friction is virtually non-existant, and 360 degree thrust with enough power to stop you quickly isn't really feasible. You really can't have massive thrusters pointed in every direction because of weight constraints, and changing directions of fewer thrusters quickly enough would be impossible because mounts that can handle that kind of force tend to be bulky and cumbersome.

    3. Re:Nothing new here by taustin · · Score: 1

      There aren't 100 million A380s in the air every rush hour. "Flying cars" will never be more than a toy for the wealthy.

    4. Re:Nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming the self-flying car doesn't hit any air pedestrians (aka skydivers, balloonists, etc.)

    5. Re:Nothing new here by lgw · · Score: 1

      given that self driving cars cannot handle streets that have not been mapped to millimeter precision, or road constructions, or bad weather, or any of a million other real life conditions.

      That's ... not how self-driving cars work. They rely on onboard sensors to follow the lane and deal with a variety of hazards. They aren't ready yet because the bar is so high, but they already work most of the time, even in bad weather with road construction.

      there's no reason to believe anyone alive to day will live to see true self driving cars.

      They're already here. Volvo will have 100 around the world this year (a few are already on the road in Sweden). General availability will be a few more years, but Volvo won't release them until they're safe (unlike Tesla). Self-driving functionality is a big chunk of Volvo's "no deaths in a new Volvo in 2020" plan.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    6. Re:Nothing new here by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      You missed the far more stringent maintenance requirements and cradle-to-grave monitoring by the manufacturers. See this incident of 28 December 2016 at 0844 hrs. Does your car manufacturer have such timely recall-to-base procedures?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  25. nope by supernova87a · · Score: 1

    Highly unlikely for this to happen (at least in any meaningful numbers for the average person).

    If you think about the level of safety performance required for aircraft today to be approved, and the inspections that have to be conducted before every single flight ---

    Just imagine, those same regulations that govern aircraft would permit a road vehicle (which gets beaten up by road hazards, rattled around by potholes, and is built to consumer automotive safety multiples of reliability) to just fly at a moment's notice? With people at the wheel who get driver's licenses by barely missing some traffic cones?

    Nice idea, but never going to happen. Or at least the sci-fi future that people envision with a car extending some wings and taking off from the highway -- laughable.

  26. Pollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Airbus, please just take your idiotic concept and stuff it!

    We don't need the insane level of noise pollution that this would create nor do we want the visual pollution.

    We spend billions of dollars building 'Sound Walls' to try to contain the noise and sight of freeways BECAUSE PEOPLE FARKING WELL DON'T WANT THEM STUFFED IN THEIR FACES!

    So what the fark makes you think that we want them in 3D?

    1. Re:Pollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they're in 3d we can program them with farking XML, mate!

  27. Airbus is the one to do it. by sir-gold · · Score: 1

    No company has more experience with computer controlled flight than Airbus. The A380 is already capable of tarmac-to-tarmac autonomous flight, treating the human pilots more as a fail-safe than as real pilots. (For example, if the human pilot tries to do something stupid, like fly upside down or intentionally crash, the autopilot is designed to fight back).

  28. Re:Flying coffins by MooseTick · · Score: 1

    "If I'm flying somewhere I want a human pilot" "and if I'm driving somewhere, I want to be in ultimate control of the vehicle."

    You don't trust a vehicle with 20+ sensors that can react 100 times faster to all those concurrent inputs, but you do trust a random cab/bus/train/plane/blimp driver to always make the right call? Those same people who are at fault in 99% of fatal accidents. Those same people who tend to fall asleep, show up at work drunk, have emotional issues, have undisclosed health issues, etc?

  29. Re:Flying coffins by sir-gold · · Score: 1

    Don't fly in an Airbus A380 then, because they are already autonomous.

  30. Please mod parent poster up! by mmell · · Score: 2

    It's all about energy density. Has been ever since Orville conned Wilbur into riding that damned fool contraption back in the twentieth century. You need to carry enough juice to continuously counter the weakest of four fundamental forces and have a highly reliable power plant that's efficient enough to release that energy fast enough while not being so heavy as to ground yon flying death trap. Oh, and not running into stuff along the way would be nice to have, too. AI might do the stunt, but your average automobile driver can't even manage a groundcar safely. Who's going to insure these things?

  31. People, read the article... by CaptnCrud · · Score: 1

    they are talking about using it like a taxi service.

    I could see designated skylanes for a limited sectors and city departments like fire and ambulance services, along with taxies. I can actually see this being insurable if its limited in that capacity. And maybe just like planes if you complete a certification you can you have your own private version but im guessing the inital cost would be so prohibitive that not everyone is going to be able to do it, just like a commercial pilot's license.

    With designated skylanes that avoid densely populated areas I don't see how flying cars are that much of a fantasy. If you don't follow the rules I could see an emergency override to automatically safely land and shut down by the computer. Which doesn't sound to ridiculous if you're several miles from the nearest house and you have 20 seconds to comply or something.

    These wont be traveling through a city but rather around it.

  32. Daddy! Look it's the White House! by nanospook · · Score: 1

    Hold on son! Let's just swoop over and take a peek!

    --
    Have you fscked your local propeller head today?
  33. Moller Skycar by istartedi · · Score: 1

    They're late. Moller has been at it for 50 years. I'm really late, but why not? I promise to release my flying car prototype next year too. I plan to take a different approach.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  34. Not technically reasonable by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

    The 3d image shows a vehicle with small ducted fans for lift, and minimal aerodynamic lifting surfaces.

    Helicopters use very large blades because (for very basic physics: momentum goes as MV, power goes as MV^2) it is more efficient to move a lot of air slowly than a little air quickly. So it will need more power than a helicopter which will make it less efficient, noisier, and the down-wash will be more damaging.

    There may be a few applications where the lack of exposed blades will help, but not many. Even if the blades are enclosed, the very high power downwash will prevent landings near anything even slightly fragile.

    Helicopters look the way that they do because that is the best design.

    Small quad-copters make sense in applications where efficiency and noise are not critical.

    Self flying is great, but that technology is mostly available now anyway

    1. Re:Not technically reasonable by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      Ignore the picture. Notice it has the tag line "Image Credit: Shutterstock"? That picture didn't come from Airbus. It's just a stock picture the author pulled off the net. The article says almost nothing about how the actual vehicles will work, except that one concept they're considering is "a helicopter-style vehicle".

      I think it's safe to assume Airbus knows how to make things that can fly.

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    2. Re:Not technically reasonable by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      Airbus knows how to make things fly, but that doesn't mean that there are not groups at Airbus that are clueless. NASA knows about conservation of momentum but has a group working on what is essentially an inertialess drive.

  35. Better link by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    http://www.airbusgroup.com/int...

    Most of what's in the (originally) Reuters blurb is in the airbus link, except the 2017 date to get a prototype in the air, and doesn't contain that silly Shutterstock photo that has nothing to do with the Airbus group at all.

    If I could afford one of these, I'd definitely get on, even if it had limited takeoff/landing allowables. Now, that's partly because the nearest gen aviation airport is ~1 mile from my house, and partly because I live in the mountains where the air miles to a mid-range destination (30-100 miles) can be less than half the road distance. But, alas, not being in the 0.1% means it's likely I will not be able to afford one.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  36. parachutes and rockets by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

    what altitude do they work from?Oh, that's right 1000ft. So, your ridiculously heavy solution wouldn't work most of the time a taxi style flying car was operating

  37. Computer controlled by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Moving rush hour into the air seems like it would be inviting chaos.

    If they are for mass transportation, they'll probably have to be computer controlled. And they'd need some redundancy such they can land in a controlled manner if something goes wrong.

  38. stop cheating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Working with transportation organisation has alot to do with me travelling .i have never doubted my husbands sincerity until i noticed few changes in his character and receently he changed the password to his phones.i was worried and i spoke to colleague at work who introduced me to a hacker(SEVENTY7HACKER@HOTMAIL.COM).i found out that my husband already had a kid outside our marriage.I was pleased with his professionalism and thoroughly satisfied with how he handled it.he does all sought of hack jobs like facebook,gmail,yahoo,hotmail,school score upgrade,whatsapp,cloning phones.....

  39. Only 4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I see in this supposed innovation is this. Before, when you had a single engine plane, you had to worry about your single engine malfunctioning. Even so, you might have a good chance of gliding to a place to land, even a road would do. If you had a twin engine plane, you now probably had one backup engine to get you to an airport, so you cut your risk by 50%. Now with this thing, you have 4 engines (actually motors). But if only one of these motors goes out, down you go. So you have actually increased your risk by 300% (or is that 400, never was good in math) and without the ability to at least try to glide back to earth. As far as I am concerned, these things are death traps.

  40. Is anybody else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Starting to feel like these companies and individuals should be sued into oblivion for fraud with all of their hype and beta bullshit? Old timey carnival barkers were less disengenuous. 'Step right up, folks, and see the AMAAAAAZING weightless car!!!'. Pblpblpbl. The bearded lady would be infinitely more interesting.

  41. State of the art by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Um, then we must already be living in a "Tony stark's fictional arc reactor" universe then since there are droves of flying car prototypes out there

    "Droves of flying car prototypes"? Hardly. There are a few light airplanes that technically can be driven on a road in good weather at modest speeds. Get in a fender bender and they instantly are no longer air worthy. None are safe to drive in bad weather. None are practical in any sense of the word. None have ever become viable products that could be sold in meaningful quantities because there are WAY too many engineering trade offs. None are operable without a runway and a pilot's license. None are going to be sold to the general public in quantity any time soon because they are utterly useless in real life. It's more economical to have a car and a plane than a single vehicle that does both badly.

    There are even a few prototypes in the works that have some short runway/vertical takeoff capabilities.

    There always are "a few prototypes in the works". That's a LONG way away from saying they are actually viable products. We don't have a power source of sufficient energy density to make a useful flying car. End of story. Until we do a flying car will remain a mythical beast.

  42. Self driving != accident free by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I think the key phrase is "Self-driving".

    Self driving isn't equivalent to accident free. Self driving vehicles will still get in accidents. They MIGHT get in fewer accidents but the number will not be zero. And the fewer accident notion is a very big IF at this point. Until we get such vehicles on the road we won't know if their accident rate is better or worse under real world conditions.

    If there's any significant collision risk, the car could simply go straight up to avoid it.

    I think you've been watching too many movies. Real world physics doesn't work like that. Some obstacles simply cannot be avoided. Some road conditions will prevent collision avoidance. Good luck going up when you have power lines overhead for instance. Sometimes obstacles appear faster than it is possible to maneuver to avoid them.