Business Standard

We’ll get flying cars to go with 140 characters

It’s just a matter of when. The question is whether anyone will need one

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Nothing illustrate­s the divide between science fiction and reality better than the flying car. In movies, books and cartoon shows from the mid-20th century, people hop in their car, lift off and fly to work. In reality, we’re still enduring traffic jams or commuting by bus or train. We have supercompu­ters in our pockets, and deaf people can hear, but the flying car has consistent­ly eluded us. As venture capitalist and PayPal Holdings Inc. founder Peter Thiel famously griped, “We wanted flying cars, instead we got 140 characters” — a reference to the length of a Twitter post.

It’s not that hard to see why the flying car never became the standard mode of transporta­tion. For one thing, the basic technology of vertical take-off and landing — which is required in order to avoid long runways — is fairly hard. Inventors such as Paul Moller have been working on VTOL cars since the 1960s, but made only slow progress — at least until recently.

Flying is also very expensive. It takes a lot more power to lift something into the air than it does to roll something along the ground. Commercial air travel is energy-efficient because we pack tons of people into the same airplane, but if everyone had their own flying car, it would cost a lot of money for the fuel.

A third issue is safety. As the world saw on September 11, the fuel used in a plane — because of its high energy content and volatility — can make a potent weapon. Flying cars also might attain high speeds, making them potentiall­y dangerous should people decide to crash them into things. We’re already seeing how much damage normal cars and trucks can do when wielded by terrorists — flying cars would add an order of magnitude to the danger.

But inventors are slowly whittling away at these issues. Low-cost accelerome­ters and gyroscopes, as well as better software and processors, have made it far easier to stabilise a hovering vehicle. Advanced lithium-ion batteries have created a safe way to power them, while electric motors have become much more efficient. And incrementa­l progress in lightweigh­t materials has both made it cheaper to fly, and limited the damage that a hurtling vehicle can do.

As a result, there has been an explosion of commercial interest in flying cars. A new crop of start-ups hopes to finally make the 1960s vision a reality. These include Lilium, Kitty Hawk, Terrafugia, China’s Ehang, Slovakia’s Aeromobil, and Larry Page’s secretive Zee.Aero. Even large companies like Uber and Airbus are plowing money into the idea. Dubai is working on offering a hover-taxi service using a prototype built by Germany’s Volocopter. Unless these all turn out to be vaporware or white elephants, the dream of the Jetsons future seems inevitable.

There are still a number of serious problems to overcome, of course. One of these is noise. Hoisting a car into the air creates a huge discharge of sonic pressure as rotor blades or jets chop through the air. That’s why even tiny drones are really loud.

The safety problem hasn’t been completely solved, either. Even if a flying car can’t be used as a bomb, it seems fairly easy to use it as a bomber. Having a huge number of high-speed moving objects flying through the air seems like a recipe for crashes of some sort.

A third remaining issue is existing infrastruc­ture. Flying cars will have trouble finding places to park. They’d be too big for normal parking spaces, and their inevitable wobble would require some room between parked vehicles.

Of course, people are working on solving these issues as well. Inventors are already claiming to have designed flying cars that are extremely quiet. And other companies are working on software that would — if it could be secured against hacking — prevent a terrorist from using a vehicle for anything other than transporta­tion.

But even the best engineer, corporate executive or political leader will have a lot of trouble getting cities to change their whole layout and infrastruc­ture to accommodat­e flying cars. The demand for the vehicles would have to be absolutely enormous to get government­s to pony up public funds to reshape the modern cityscape. Which brings up the question — do we need flying cars in the first place?

Flying cars could shorten commutes a fair amount. That’s useful, but ultimately a marginal benefit for a very high cost. And since terrestria­l self-driving cars are getting closer to being a reality the need to shorten commutes is about to become less urgent. When people are able to do work in their cars, spending 20 more minutes in a car isn’t that inconvenie­nt. That makes it less urgent to spend billions of dollars to rebuild cities to accommodat­e flying cars, not to mention the cost of the flying cars themselves.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A new crop of start-ups hopes to make the flying car a reality. These include Slovakia’s Aeromobil
REUTERS A new crop of start-ups hopes to make the flying car a reality. These include Slovakia’s Aeromobil

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