http://www.gizmag.com/skyrider-one-thomas-senkel-flying-electric-scooter/42544/
Flying electric scooter aces 46-minute maiden test flight
March 29, 2016  Loz Blain

[images  / Skyrider One
http://img.gizmag.com/skyrider-one-flying-electric-scooter-12.png?auto=format%2Ccompress&ch=Width%2CDPR&fit=crop&h=394&q=60&rect=355%2C159%2C1231%2C693&w=700&s=59e5b0d7b82e548dab5513581408bdf7
Thomas Senkel flies Skyrider One on its maiden test flight at La Palma in
the Canary Islands

https://gizmag-images.imgix.net/skyrider-one-flying-electric-scooter-2.JPG?auto=format%2Ccompress&ch=Width%2CDPR&fit=max&h=700&q=60&w=700&s=130b3adfebf03dfad78ed2444f127b65

https://gizmag-images.imgix.net/skyrider-one-flying-electric-scooter-6.JPG?auto=format%2Ccompress&ch=Width%2CDPR&fit=max&h=700&q=60&w=700&s=475a5288f0273527e889886c8baf57cc

http://www.gizmag.com/skyrider-one-thomas-senkel-flying-electric-scooter/42544/pictures
gallery


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_CukSzts_Y&feature=youtu.be
Skyrider One - Very First Flight of the Electric Scooter & Paraglider
forschungsbuero  Mar 29, 2016
Skyrider One is the first prototype of an electric scooter, which is also an
electric paraglider. It is the easiest way, to have something like a flying
car. You can drive to your airstrip, fly to somewhere, and drive home after
landing. With all electric drive, it is quiet and does'nt make any pollution
...
]

The German physicist behind the Evolo manned multicopter and the Volocopter
2-seater has just taken his first flight aboard another remarkable aircraft:
a flying electric scooter. Thomas Senkel flew his Skyrider One prototype for
some 46 minutes in the idyllic surroundings of the Canary Islands, marking
what he believes is the first electric, road-registerable two-wheeler to
take to the sky.

If flying car proponent Dezso Molnar is on the money, we should be thinking
less about flying cars, and more about roadable aircraft. Simple,
single-seat designs that can straddle the gap between the road and the sky
to achieve multi-mode transport in the most efficient way possible.

On that axis, Thomas Senkel's Skyrider One scores very highly as a
practical, simple and elegant design. It's a simple two-wheel electric
scooter, with a 6-kW (8-hp) hub motor to drive the rear wheel, and a 13-kW
(17-hp) motor driving a large rear-mounted propeller. A regular tandem
paraglider canopy can be unfurled when you want to fly, and then it's a
matter of gaining enough speed in scooter mode to fill up the 'chute,
lifting off, then engaging the propeller drive to give you power in the air.

Flying prototype aircraft – especially hybrid designs like this one – must
be a nerve-wracking experience. Indeed, as Senkel told us, "I was very
nervous in the beginning and at the landing. I have some experience with
powered paragliders," said Senkel, "but the behavior of the Skyrider One was
unknown. After landing, I was relieved that everything went really fine. The
next flight would be a lot easier."

Senkel sees simple designs like the Skyrider One as the quickest and easiest
way to achieve flying car-like capabilities.

"You can drive to your airstrip, fly to somewhere, and drive home after
landing," he says. "With all-electric drive, it's quiet and doesn't make any
pollution. It can be used in areas where combustion engines are not allowed.
And two wheels are enough, no need for more. Take off and landing is easy
with some help from your feet."

Skyrider One can take off on any flat terrain or airstrip. The rider needs
to face into a slight headwind; crosswinds aren't suitable. Once in the air,
it's possible to switch the motor off altogether and ride thermals to keep
yourself aloft for potentially hours at a time without draining the battery.

The prototype has just two small 3 kWh lithium polymer batteries, giving it
a total range up to 120 km (75 mi) on the road with a maximum speed around
60 km/h (37 mph) or 30 minutes of powered flight if you run the propeller
constantly.

Senkel believes it's the world's first flying electric two-wheeler: "All
other powered paragliders I know come with three or four wheels and a
combustion engine," he tells us. It's also extremely light, weighing in at
just 108 kg (238 lb).

Senkel is now looking for production and marketing partners to take Skyrider
One to the market. The production version will use a folding prop with no
surrounding cage in order to make it easier to ride on the road, and
Senkel's already thinking about what other improvements can be made between
now and then.

Even though we're just at the dawn of the electric aviation age, Thomas
Senkel has already built himself a pretty astounding CV. He's on the
bleeding edge of the manned multirotor movement with the Evolo and
Volocopter projects, and now with this small, practical electric flying
scooter he's broken new ground in the multi-mode transport segment. Not to
mention his work on the Hendo hoverboard and anti-gravity devices. We're
officially putting him on our list of inventors to watch out for!
[© GIZMAG 2016]
...
http://www.skyrider.one


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