Forbes

Your Flying Car Is Finally Here

Secretive JOBY AVIATION , with nearly a billion dollars in funding from the likes of Toyota and Laurene Powell Jobs, promises to have its air taxis aloft by 2023.

- By Jeremy Bogaisky

Joby Aviation, with funding from Toyota and Laurene Powell Jobs, promises to have its air taxis aloft by 2023.

JoeBen Bevirt first thought about building an airplane that could take off and land like a helicopter in second grade while trudging up the 4.5-mile road to his family’s home in an off-grid hippie settlement among the redwoods in Northern California. “It was a lonnnnng hill,” Bevirt says, laughing. “It made me dream about a better way.”

Four decades later, Bevirt is closing in on that goal. On a ranch outside Santa Cruz, the surfing mecca near where he grew up, Bevirt has secretivel­y developed an electric airplane with six tilting propellers that he says can carry a pilot and four passengers 150 miles at up to 200 miles per hour, while being quiet enough to disappear among the hum of city life. He envisions the asyet-unnamed aircraft, which experts speculate could cost $400,000 to $1.5 million to manufactur­e, as the foundation for a massive rooftop-torooftop air-taxi network—one he plans to build and run himself. His aspiration is to free urbanites from snarled roads and save a billion people an hour a day at a cost (he hopes) of $2.50 per mile, the current rate for an UberX ride.

It sounds crazy, but Bevirt, 47, has some powerful believers. Toyota pumped roughly $400 million into his Joby Aviation in January, joining investors including Laurene Powell Jobs and Jeff Skoll’s Capricorn Investment Group, which was also an early Tesla backer. In all, Joby has raised $745 million, most recently at a valuation of $2.6 billion. Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda told Bevirt he hopes, through Joby, to realize the flying-car dreams of his grandfathe­r Kiichiro, Toyota Motors’ founder, who developed aircraft before World War II.

Joby is the best-funded and most valuable of an explosion of startups leveraging advances in batter

ies and electric motors to try to wean aviation off fossil fuels and create new types of aircraft, including autonomous ones, to serve as air taxis. No one knows how big the industry could get—or if it will get off the ground at all—but Wall Street is spitballin­g some big numbers. One report from Morgan Stanley estimates the category could generate $674 billion a year in fares worldwide by 2040.

“If we can fly, we can turn our streets into parks and fundamenta­lly make our cities much nicer places to live in,” Bevirt says.

Dreamers have been trying (and failing) to build flying cars for 100 years. Skeptics think Joby and its competitor­s are still at least a decade too early: Today’s best batteries pack 14 times less usable energy by weight than jet fuel. Given how much brute power is needed to propel an aircraft straight up, they say, until batteries improve, electric air taxis will have too little range and carrying capacity to make business sense. Then there’s the tough task of convincing regulators they’ll be safe to fly.

Bevirt says he can produce a viable, safe aircraft now with the top-of-the-line lithium-ion battery cells that currently power electric cars. And Joby is the only startup to commit to Uber’s ambitious timeline of launching an urban airtaxi service in 2023. Bevirt says he’s on track to win safety certificat­ion from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion that year, which would likely make Joby the first electric air-taxi maker to clear that daunting hurdle.

Bevirt was raised in a back-to-the-land community in which he got an early education in engineerin­g, helping fix farm equipment and building homes alongside his father, Ron Bevirt, who was one of the LSD-tripping Merry Pranksters back in the 1960s. (JoeBen is named after a character in Sometimes a Great Notion, written by Pranksters ringleader Ken Kesey, famous for One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.)

As an adult, Bevirt re-created that community with a decidedly capitalist­ic twist on his secluded 440 acres of woodlands and meadows overlookin­g the Pacific. The property, which he purchased with the proceeds from selling earlier businesses—such as Velocity11, which built liquidhand­ling robots used for testing potential drugs, and the company behind GorillaPod, a flexible camera tripod—includes a former quarry where Bevirt conducted test flights. Employees have lived in small cottages on the property and built houses nearby. Before locking in on developing an aircraft, he incubated other startups there, with everyone working together in a cavernous barn. Bevirt started an organic farm to feed them, with chickens and bees yielding eggs and honey, and hired a chef to prepare it all.

“It’s a high-fiving, hugging culture, and that really flows from JoeBen,” says Jim Adler, managing director at Toyota AI Ventures, who convinced his colleagues to invest in Joby in 2017. “He’s high-energy, and it’s contagious.”

While Joby is participat­ing in Uber’s aerial ridesharin­g plans, a big part of Bevirt’s business model involves running his own ride-sharing network. That helped attract investors. “If it was just a vehicle, I would not have been moved to invest if there wasn’t a service wrapped around it,” Adler says.

Building the required landing pads, booking software and other infrastruc­ture, though, will require a lot more cash—and patience—from investors. Joby has no plans to sell its aircraft outside of building its own fleet, further delaying the day when investors can recoup the billions required to scale up.

Joby’s five-seat design boosts its revenue potential for ride sharing compared to the smaller, more mechanical­ly simple two-seat multicopte­rs being developed by Germany’s Volocopter and China’s EHang. The downside of Joby’s size: weight. A big part of that heft comes from the batteries, and it’s unclear if they’ll have enough juice to do the job, according to modeling by the lab of Carnegie Mellon battery expert Venkat Viswanatha­n, based on aircraft specs Bevirt shared with Forbes.

For Joby to achieve the 150-mile range it says the 4,800-pound gross weight aircraft is capable of (but has yet to achieve in flight testing), plus FAA-required reserves, Viswanatha­n’s team estimates it needs a 2,200-pound battery pack. Subtractin­g 1,000 pounds for five passengers leaves only 1,600 pounds for the airframe, seats and avionics—a slim 33% of gross weight. That’s 35% lower than any certified production airplane. The upshot: Either Joby has built an unpreceden­tedly light and efficient airframe, as Bevirt maintains, or its range will turn out to be lower. Another concern: Getting approval from the FAA might require safety tweaks that weigh it down.

“What we’re doing, it’s an insanely hard undertakin­g,” Bevirt says. “Not only the technical challenge of the aircraft [but] then changing the way everyone on Earth moves around on a daily basis.”

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Joby Aviation founder JoeBen Bevirt with the final prototype of his electric tiltrotor aircraft, the product of 11 years of work, nearly all of which was engineered in-house.
Man and Machine Joby Aviation founder JoeBen Bevirt with the final prototype of his electric tiltrotor aircraft, the product of 11 years of work, nearly all of which was engineered in-house.
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