Flying car now closer to reality
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.