The Star Malaysia

When cars fly: Japan firm says day is nearing

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TOKYO: It might seem like a flight of fancy, but a Japanese firm says it is one step closer to making flying cars a reality after testing a dronelike prototype.

Video from engineerin­g company SkyDrive shows its manned compact vehicle using eight propellers to hover into the air and make its way – with a few wobbles – around a test field.

But while the clip may excite fans of Blade Runner and Back to the Future, the test run leaves mankind far from a future of airborne vehicles whizzing into the sky to avoid traffic.

The company hailed “the first public demonstrat­ion of a flying car in Japan” and said the aircraft, around the size of two parked cars, had circled the testing field for four minutes.

“We want to realise a society where flying cars are an accessible and convenient means of transporta­tion in the skies,” SkyDrive CEO Tomohiro Fukuzawa said in a statement on Friday.

The firm said it wanted the vehicle to be available to buy in Japan by 2023, with reports suggesting it could cost upwards of US$300,000 (RM1.2mil).

The car is not the first step humans have taken towards a brave new world of airborne vehicles.

A German company tested a flying taxi in Singapore in October, saying it hoped its invention – also shaped like a big drone – would revolution­ise travel in trafficcho­ked cities.

Volocopter had already tested its battery-operated, two-seater taxi elsewhere around the globe but the Singapore trial was the first in the heart of a city.

Several other companies are working on similar projects, including Boeing, Airbus, Toyota and Hyundai.

 ?? —AFP ?? Air traffic: A driver manning SkyDrive’s SD-03 prototype during a test flight at Toyota test field in Toyota city, Aichi prefecture.
—AFP Air traffic: A driver manning SkyDrive’s SD-03 prototype during a test flight at Toyota test field in Toyota city, Aichi prefecture.

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