HWM (Singapore)

Kitty Hawk Flyer

The Kitty Hawk Flyer is like a big drone for humans.

- By Alvin Soon

Let’s go on a thought experiment: drones are popular, right? Drones are easy to y, especially the smart ones that automatica­lly hover and avoid obstacles. They also run on electricit­y and produce zero emissions. Wouldn’t it be cool if you could create a big drone, then — one that could y people around?

That’s what Silicon Valley company Kitty Hawk is trying to do. It’s unveiled the Flyer, an all-electric single-seater that packs 10 sets of rotors and two control sticks. It’s still very much a work-in-progress; the Flyer goes up to 20MPH and ies up to 20 minutes. But it works.

The Flyer uses software and smart sensors to stabilize the ying experience. The aim, lead engineer Todd Reichert explained to CNN, was to “take everything hard out of ying.” In fact, CNN’s Rachel Crane, who doesn’t have a pilot’s license, piloted the Flyer only after an hour of training.

Kitty Hawk, named after the town where the Wright brothers ew the rst airplane, is funded by Google co-founder Larry Page. Sebastian Thrun, a self-driving car pioneer who helped to launch Google’s autonomous car unit, leads Kitty Hawk. The company has conducted over 1,500 test ights with the Flyer, and it’s now open to interested business partners to try.

There’s no doubt that personal ying vehicles are in their earliest stages at the moment. Reichert describes the Flyer as being in the “recreation” part of an arc from “recreation to exploratio­n to transporta­tion.” But if these things take off (ahem) then one day we might all be ying in the skies.

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