The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Flying car can hover above the ground for about one minute

- By Hannah Denham Washington Post

It’s like “Back to the Future,” but real: A prototype of a flying car hovered 10 feet above the ground for about a minute in Japan last week.

Designed for autonomous delivery flights, the early prototype looks more like a large drone than a typical car. Made by NEC Corp., a global technology company based in Tokyo, it’s battery-powered with four propellers and designed for self-flying deliveries.

According to news reports, the vehicle hovered about 10 feet off the ground inside a cage without passengers at a company facility in Abiko, Japan, a Tokyo suburb.

“We at NEC believe that a revolution of travel centered on flying cars will occur,” NEC Corporatio­n Vice President Norihiko Ishiguro told the Associated Press.

“When that time comes, we want to provide technology and services as a management base.”

The technology still has a few kinks to work out, like battery life, safety and regulation. But the EVtol — or “electric vertical takeoff and landing” — technology is supposed to be cheaper, quieter and more accessible than helicopter­s, and could be used to bypass traffic in heavily congested cities, transport cargo or just offer recreation­al travel.

“You may think of ‘Back to the Future,’” Fumiaki Ebihara, a Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry official who is overseeing the country’s developmen­t, told CBS News in 2018. “Up to now, it was just a dream, but with innovation­s in motors and batteries, it’s time for it to become real.”

The Japanese government has already built a test course for flying cars in Fukushima, a site that hit in 2011 by a tsunami, earthquake and nuclear accident, according to the Associated Press. It’s part of the country’s infrastruc­ture plan to use the technology to deliver goods starting in 2023 and for everyday travel by the 2030s, Ishiguro told the Associated Press.

It’s the latest developmen­t in the global race to create autonomous flying vehicles, which also includes Uber, Airbus, Volocopter and Boeing.

The technology still has a few kinks to work out, like battery life, safety and regulation.

 ?? KOJI SASAHARA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? NEC Corp.’s prototype vehicle with propellers hovers at the company’s facility in Abiko near Tokyo. The Japanese electronic­s maker says that its “flying car,” a drone-like machine, floated 10 feet above the ground for about a minute.
KOJI SASAHARA / ASSOCIATED PRESS NEC Corp.’s prototype vehicle with propellers hovers at the company’s facility in Abiko near Tokyo. The Japanese electronic­s maker says that its “flying car,” a drone-like machine, floated 10 feet above the ground for about a minute.

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