The Independent on Saturday

Flying car now closer to reality

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SLOVAKIA’S Transport Authority recently issued a certificat­e of airworthin­ess for flying car model AirCar, a first step towards commercial production of the invention.

“AirCar certificat­ion opens the door for mass production of very efficient flying cars,” said Stefan Klein, the founder and chief executive of KleinVisio­n, a company that designed and manufactur­ed the prototype of the dual-mode car-aircraft vehicle.

“It is an official and final confirmati­on of our ability to change mid-distance travel forever,” Klein said.

AirCar completed its first intercity flight in June last year.

The vehicle is powered by a 1.6-litre BMW engine and needs a runway only 300m long to take off.

It has a flight speed of up to 170km/h and a flying distance of about 1 000km.

The process of transformi­ng from car to plane takes less than three minutes.

Everything is automated, so a single button command is all it takes to change it.

Before certificat­ion, the Slovak flying car had to complete 70 hours of flight testing, with more than 200 take-offs and landings, KleinVisio­n said.

“Based on the fact that the aircraft

met the conditions of national regulation­s set for individual­ly manufactur­ed aircraft and the required level of safety was demonstrat­ed, the Slovak Transport Authority (STA) has issued a special certificat­e of airworthin­ess,” STA director Rene

Molnar said.

Molnar said that after STA had issued the certificat­ion, AirCar could apply for aircraft-type certificat­ion.

“After obtaining the type certificat­e, it can manufactur­e the aircraft commercial­ly,” he added.

 ?? ABACAPRESS.COM VIA ?? THE AirCar prototype is a car that can transform into an aircraft. | REUTERS.
ABACAPRESS.COM VIA THE AirCar prototype is a car that can transform into an aircraft. | REUTERS.

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