Soaring Above Traffic In a Flying Car Sooner Than You Think.
By Chuck Squatriglia December 04, 2007 | 6:49:39 PMCategories: Air Travel, 
Travel   
 The flying car has been a dream pursued by inventors since the dawn of 
aviation and a fantasy long held by commuters wishing they could soar above 
traffic like George Jetson.

Engineers and eccentrics have patented more than 70 designs since 1918, and 
even the U.S. government and Henry Ford tried to build flying cars. But success 
has been elusive, the challenge too great, and such machines have remained the 
stuff of science fiction. 

Until now.

An aeronautical startup called Terrafugia has developed a small airplane called 
the Transition that it says can take to the sky as easily as the road. It is 
about the size of a large SUV and features innovative folding wings that 
collapse with the press of a button. Terrafugia calls it a "personal air 
vehicle."


The team behind the Transition still has to design a drivetrain to propel the 
craft and a mechanism to transfer power from the propeller to the wheels, but 
it expects to begin flight tests late next year.

Production could begin as early as 2009, and Terrafugia says it's already 
received more than 30 orders.

Not long after Henry Ford started building cars and the Wright brothers proved 
we could fly, an inventor and aviator named Glenn Curtiss built the first 
flying car in 1917. The Curtiss Autoplane wasn't much to look at and it barely 
got off the ground, but it proved that it was possible to merge automobile and 
airplane into a single machine.

 Still, the Autoplane and most of the "roadable" aircraft that followed had the 
same problem - combining the mechanics of an automobile with those of an 
airplane created something that didn't work well as either. It also proved 
exceedingly difficult to design a machine light enough to fly but robust enough 
to drive without being blown off the road. There were some that worked - most 
notably the Airphibian and the original Aerocar, the only flying cars certified 
by the Federal Aviation Administration - but most were unstable cars and clumsy 
airplanes.

 Advancements in composite materials and metal alloys have addressed many of 
those problems, and Terrafugia is in a race with several other companies to 
bring a flying car to market. They include Moller International, Aerocar and 
Urban Aeronautics.  

The Transition isn't so much a car you can fly but an airplane you can drive, 
and it is meant to be an alternative to driving for trips between 100 and 500 
miles.

"This is not going to replace your Toyota Camry," company founder Carl Dietrich 
told the Boston Globe. "You could take it to the store, but it doesn't have the 
trunk space of your SUV."

The preliminary specifications calls for an aircraft 19 feet long and 80 inches 
wide with the wings folded (the wingspan is 27 feet). It will have a 
100-horsepower engine powered by unleaded fuel and a propeller at the rear. The 
airplane will cruise at 115 mph and have a range of about 460 miles, and it 
will have room for two people and 550 pounds of cargo. It will weigh 1,320 
pounds.


 The self-folding wings make the Transition unique, as past flying cars used 
wings that had to be removed or folded manually. The idea was to make the 
transition from airplane to automobile as quick and seamless as possible. The 
design team unveiled the folding wing design in July at the annual AirVenture 
aviation festival, where they opened and closed the wings more than 500 times 
without a problem. The wings feature several mechanical and electrical locks to 
ensure they don't collapse in flight.

"Going into this, we knew our two biggest design challenges to make it 
practical would be the wings and the powertrain," Anna Mracek, an engineer and 
chief operating officer at Terrafugia, told Technology Review. "By validating 
the durability of the wing's construction and engineering, we've checked on 
major design challenge off the list, and now our focus is on the second."

But the greatest challenge may be getting the Transition certified by the 
Federal Aviation Administration and the National Highway and Transportation 
Safety Administration. The aircraft will be classified as a light sport 
aircraft, and a sport pilot license will be required to fly it. Such licenses 
generally require less time to obtain than traditional licenses.

Mracek says the company has been working closely with the two agencies "to make 
working with them as painless as possible" and has made inroads toward 
certification. The FAA says "the concept of airplanes as personal 
transportation" is on its radar, so to speak.

Dietrich founded Terrafugia - Latin for "escape from land" - three years ago 
while still pursuing a doctoral degree in aeronoautical and aerospace 
engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He got his pilot's 
license at 17, and even as a boy dreamed of building a flying car, and his 
design for the Transition was among a portfolio of ideas that earned him the 
prestigious Lemelson-MIT Student Prize last year.

He and the rest of the Terrafugia team believe the time is right for a flying 
car. They note that there are 5,296 public airports in the United States, and 
most people are within 20 miles of one. With many of those airports being 
underutilized and several studies, including the annual Urban Mobility Report, 
showing traffic congestion getting worse nationwide,  Dietrich believes 
personal air vehicles may be the transportation of the future.

Maybe Henry Ford was right after all when he said in 1940, "Mark my word - a 
combination airplane and motor car is coming. You may smile, but it will come."

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