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| 2015 Invention Award Winner | Category: Aviation |
|---|---|
| Inventors: | Å tefan Klein and Juraj VaculÃk |
| Company: | AeroMobil |
| Invention: | AeroMobil |
| Development cost to date: | Undisclosed |
| Maturity: | 2/5 |
After Czechoslovakia’s
communist regime fell, in 1989, designer Å tefan Klein began working on a
concept for a flying car. Inspired by his newfound freedom, he aimed to
translate that personal liberty to the skies. In 2010, he shared his
work with his friend Juraj VaculÃk, an entrepreneur. They joined forces
to found AeroMobil and develop a viable commercial product. “We wanted
to create a car and airplane
without compromises,” VaculÃk says, “to provide individuals with a new,
interesting option for door-to-door personal transportation.”
Others have attempted and failed to build flying
cars. But AeroMobil isn’t a car that can fly; it’s an airplane that can
drive. Its light weight, collapsible wings, and efficient design make it
precision-
tuned for flight. On the ground, it provides roadster-like handling.
Last October, Klein drove the fourth prototype,
AeroMobil 3.0, to a grassy airfield in Nitra, Slovakia, unfolded its
wings, and took off on the vehicle’s maiden flight. It soared in a
12-mile circle more than 800 feet off the ground and landed back at the
same airfield. Since then, AeroMobil has completed more than 40 test
flights. The company is now pursuing an airworthiness certification with
the Slovak Federation of Ultra-Light Flying to permit expanded flight
testing throughout the European Union. Meanwhile, further structural and
aerodynamic tests will help finalize the vehicle’s design.
Because the U.S. has stringent vehicle-safety
regulations, the current prototype is intended for countries with more
flexible road rules. The AeroMobil team hopes it will be classified as a
light-sport aircraft, which requires a pilot’s license. Future models
may inspire their own class. “At the beginning, we’ll need certification
for both airplane and car,” Klein says. “But this truly is a new
category.”
How It Works
- The adjustable wing can optimize its angle of attack for taking off or cruising. This allows for reduced speed and distance during takeoff.
- Light materials, including a carbon-composite body over a steel airframe and six-pound carbon wheels, keep weight low.
- The prototype’s 100-horsepower four-cylinder Rotax 912 engine runs on conventional gasoline, so drivers can fuel up at existing gas stations. (Production models may have a different engine.)
- A robust suspension will enhance on-road performance and enable takeoff and landing on relatively rough terrain.
- Avionics from Garmin will include a two-axis autopilot to control pitch and roll. In case of emergency, the vehicle will have a ballistic parachute safety system.
Advice For Inventors, From Bre Pettis
Be an early adopter. Try buying a bitcoin. Set up
a Raspberry Pi as an arcade machine. Doing things gets the juices
flowing and gets you thinking in new ways.
source:http://www.popsci.com



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