I lost faith in moller a long time ago
Can't imagine the nightmare of "traffic control" with every Tom, Dick and Jane flying one of these everywhere.
Clearly, some sort of electronic "lanes" type of infrastructure will need to be built.
Do they have any add on accessories such as air to ground missiles? Asking for a friend.
I’ll get one when I get back from my Mars trip.
only 789k to beat the traffic
I’m guessing it’s gonna be around $11,000 or so?
Looking forward to having one.
Overlay road infrastructure with magnetic strip. Equp vehicles with nuclear maglev capability, collision avoidance, and gps. Max speed 400 mph. Manual override capable, but mostly hands free. Your choice of transparent, translucent, or opaque, each availble on command. Interior and exterior colors/patterns also available and changeable on demand. Comes with module to navigate small entrances and steps- wherever the magstrip goes. Your choice of music and various scents on demand, too. Rubber tires ought to be museum pieces before long. Like steam engines today, so will internal combustion engines be. They are noisy, heavy, smelly, too many moving parts. Fun, yes, but cheaper and better is the future. Better includes quieter, smoother, safer, easier to repair or replace.
Does that look like missiles on it? If so, I want one.
Only US$789,000. Goes into production in 2026, so you’ve got a few years to save up.
Note: the figure cited above is in today’s dollars, not the dollar value when Traitor Joe gets done with his massive spending and the high inflation to follow.
I won’t even fly commercial anymore - you think I’m getting in that thing?
Whutta kludge
The Long, Weird History of the Flying Car
https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/g2021/history-of-flying-car/
Top 10 Attempts to Build a Flying Car
https://www.popularmechanics.com/flight/how-to/g803/top-10-attempts-to-build-a-flying-car/
Since Glenn Curtiss patented a flying car in 1917, perhaps 100 different designs have been analyzed and widely discussed. Only about a dozen concept vehicles flew and drove on roads, and three designers died trying to prove their own concepts. Because of the incredible design, engineering, legal, and licensing challenges of building a flying car, just two designs have ever been certified by the CAA (now FAA) as aircraft—and the Taylor Aerocar of 1959 is the only one that was ever produced. Six Aerocars were built, sold, and flown.
Wow, all those props and close to the street. What could go wrong?
How do I search for this post with keywords?