The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Air taxis could fly people across cities soon

- By Peter Holley

IN TRAFFIC-clogged cities such as Houston, Atlanta, New York and Los Angeles, it can take hours to drive a few miles during rush hour.

For years, inventors have been working toward a potential solution: vertical take-off and landing aircraft. Though some know them as “flying cars,” early prototypes more closely resemble a hybrid version of an airplane and a helicopter with a hint of drone, rather than a convention­al automobile.

Among the most awaited examples of an air taxi is the Bell Nexus, an “urban air mobility vehicle” that debuted at this year’s CES technology show in Las Vegas. Bell Helicopter, which created the prototype, said the idea behind the technology is simple: Instead of idling in traffic, a commuter could order a flying taxi to shuttle them across town from above, bypassing the congestion below.

Uber, which has unofficial­ly partnered with Bell Nexus, has said its fleet of air taxis would be able to travel 150 to 200 mph, allowing the company to whisk passengers across a sprawling metropolis such as Los Angeles in minutes instead of hours.

“It won’t be like an Uber that you order and it comes to your driveway,” said Robert Hastings, Bell’s executive vice president of strategic communicat­ions, noting that the company instead foresees using an app to figure out the location of the closest skyport, where you’ll rendezvous with your aircraft. “We believe this will be for short hops across a metropolit­an area.”

“Getting to the Dallas/Fort Worth airport from the suburbs can be an hour-and-a-half drive, and we think these aircraft can make the same trip in eight minutes,” he added.

Hastings said the company believes the Bell Nexus is more than just a commuter aircraft.

It won’t be like an Uber that you order and it comes to your driveway. We believe this will be for short hops across a metropolit­an area. – Robert Hastings, Bell’s executive vice president of strategic communicat­ions

When cargo needs to be moved from a Walmart on one side of town to the other, he said, the company’s aircraft could be put to use.

The Bell Nexus seats up to five passengers, not including the pilot.

The craft is powered by a hybrid-electric propulsion system featuring six tilting fans. Those fans, the company said, would allow the vehicle to take off vertically and cruise at high speed when they’re positioned at 90 degrees.

The fans are being tested in a wind tunnel, Hastings said, and the company is confident that the flight controls can be designed to operate autonomous­ly. The biggest challenge air taxis face, he said, is in building infrastruc­ture and navigating regulatory issues and certificat­ion challenges through the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. Inside the industry, experts think the FAA won’t certify vertical take-off and landing aircraft for commercial transporta­tion until they’re proved safe. Once that happens, experts say, a new wave of alternativ­e transporta­tion is likely to emerge quickly.

“We believe a very successful project would get an aircraft certified and manufactur­able by the mid-2020s,” Hastings said. “The technology, for us, is not extremely difficult.”

Part of the local regulatory battle air-taxi companies will face involves persuading cities to tolerate even more overhead air traffic than they already do.

In addition to designing its 6,000-pound aircraft to be resistant to wind, rain and birds, Hastings said, the company has focused heavily on implementi­ng a design that is as quiet as possible. They’ve done this, he said, by making the rotor blades smaller and by encasing the ends of the eight-foot blades - where most of the noise is created - inside circular ducts. The result, Hastings said, is that the blade’s sound changes from a “whop whop whop” to a “whoosh whoosh whoosh.”

The question for cities will be whether creating more traffic, this time from above, is an acceptable price to pay for relieving congestion.

“Everything is just getting more crowded and dense, and everybody is trying to solve that problem, and we think there’s one dimension that’s not being addressed - and that’s up,” Hastings said. — Washington Post.

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top left) An attendee plays the Samsung Galaxy jumping fitness game at CES 2019 consumer electronic­s show in Las Vegas. • Trying out a console allowing the customisat­ion of exterior car lights at the Audi exhibit. • Companion robot Kiki the cat learns human behaviour over time and can identify its surroundin­gs, remember people and track an individual by moving its head. • Taking a virtual reality tour at the Intel booth. • Attendee Jose Narvaez dances in the Samsung Galaxy Orbit as a Samsung Note 9 tablet continuous­ly films him while spinning around him on a spiral track. — AFP photos
(Clockwise from top left) An attendee plays the Samsung Galaxy jumping fitness game at CES 2019 consumer electronic­s show in Las Vegas. • Trying out a console allowing the customisat­ion of exterior car lights at the Audi exhibit. • Companion robot Kiki the cat learns human behaviour over time and can identify its surroundin­gs, remember people and track an individual by moving its head. • Taking a virtual reality tour at the Intel booth. • Attendee Jose Narvaez dances in the Samsung Galaxy Orbit as a Samsung Note 9 tablet continuous­ly films him while spinning around him on a spiral track. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Checking out an Urban Air Taxi at the 2019 Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas. — Bloomberg photo by David Williams
Checking out an Urban Air Taxi at the 2019 Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas. — Bloomberg photo by David Williams

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