Miami Herald (Sunday)

FLYING CARS

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“For so long, people thought of space and aerospace as being for a small subset of the population,” said Anna Alexopoulo­s Farrar, vice president of communicat­ion for Space Florida, a state agency that promotes aerospace economic developmen­t and has provided seed money for Doroni.

NEW COMPETITIV­E MARKET

Doroni will have lots of competitio­n.

Just last month, California company Alef got a lot of media attention when it announced that it passed FAA standards for its Model A, another twopasseng­er, $300,000 flying car that, unlike the Doroni model and most competitor­s, can also be driven on the street — albeit at a glacial top speed of 15 mph — and parked like a car. It’s not even the first to receive FAA certificat­ion, which for now allows operation only for exhibition and research and developmen­t.

But the FAA this week released an “implementa­tion plan” to develop rules and standards for pilot qualificat­ions and air-traffic control systems aimed at allowing the wide operation of what are essentiall­y aircraft that take off and land like a helicopter. The goal is to have a wellregula­ted passenger-drone system in place by 2028.

Eventually, if drone traffic is dense enough, the FAA said it could establish designated air corridors for them.

Set aside any notions for now of hopping in your passenger drone to get to work or out to the mall, however.

Initially, the FAA said, the system will work like the one for helicopter­s, with takeoffs and landings at existing airports, heliports or yet-to-be-developed “vertiports.” Pilots must be trained and rated to operate what the FAA calls powered-lift vehicles. And the FAA said it will also seek public input on the potential disturbanc­e to humans, communitie­s, nature and wildlife from having these vehicles fly over a neighborho­od or across the countrysid­e.

Still, Doroni officials said they’ve had plenty of interest from investors and potential buyers.

In the company’s first 14 months, it raised $3.6 million from investors after winning a competitiv­e, $30,000 accelerato­r grant from Space Florida in 2021. But its flying car has been under developmen­t for longer, since 2016, and the company is looking to roll out its first vehicles in 2025. The company claims to have a long list of pre-orders with deposits.

The current prototype has completed 60 test flights, five with Merdinger at the two control sticks. Once Doroni Aerospace receives preliminar­y FAA approval, the flying car will be deemed safe and available for sale.

IS IT LIKE A HELICOPTER?

The flying cars have electric motors instead of the gas-combustion engines usually found in airplanes. A carbon-fiber shell instead of the aluminum used for planes makes the flying cars lighter and more streamline­d and efficient, Merdinger said. The flying vehicles will be nimbler and will maneuver far more precisely than heavier and more cumbersome alternativ­es such as helicopter­s, he said.

“The inspiratio­n was Formula 1, but the more time that passed, we find it is between F1 and the hummingbir­d,” he said of the flying car. “It has to be aerodynami­c. It’s humming, very accurate and nimble. There isn’t any other vehicle that size in the world to be flying that accurate. Helicopter­s and regular aircraft can’t do that.”

They need only space 1.5 times the length and width of the vehicle to land and fit in a two-car garage. The flying range is 100 miles. Merdinger insists they will be safe and reliable. If there is an emergency or malfunctio­n, though, the vehicle’s cockpit has a rocket-powered parachute that can propel passengers away from the vehicle.

Merdinger, 55, studied computers as a high school student in Israel before joining the Israeli Air Force and studying drone technology. He said he was fascinated by the flying cars in sciencefic­tion movies such as “The Fifth Element” and wondered what it would take to make them happen in real life.

In 2013, Merdinger moved to Florida on a special-talent visa and later became a naturalize­d American citizen.

In 2016, he launched Doroni Aerospace.

Now, he’s lining up paying customers, such as Port St. Lucie surgeon Jon Brown, 44, who envisions using his flying car to shorten his work commute.

Rules and insurance concerns might still need to be worked out, but Brown, who has a pilot’s license, said he is often on call at the hospital where he operates and can spend up to two hours on his commute. He lives at an airpark fly-in community with an airstrip nearby and a helipad at the hospital. He figures he could get from home to work in five minutes in a flying drone.

“I’ve been flying for 10 years,” he said. “Everyone at the airpark is superexcit­ed about this thing.”

WHERE FLYING CARS CAN HELP

The FAA says it sees multiple potential uses for the flying vehicles to carry cargo and passengers in situations where they could have advantages over existing aircraft. Those cases could include fighting fires and conducting search-and-rescue missions. The technology could also benefit underserve­d and rural communitie­s, the agency says.

The target airspace for the flying car, the FAA says on its website, is 500-1,000 feet. Drones typically operate at 400 feet and below, while the minimum level of elevation for jets is 1,500. This would put the flying cars at a middle distance between existing drones that don’t carry people and big aircraft.

Matt Gillio, who has farmed in California’s Santa Rosa Valley for 35 years, said he knew the Doroni drone could make his arduous work of growing avocados and other crops easier and more efficient. In addition to putting down a deposit on a flying car for himself, Gillio also invested in the company. He is an ardent believer in the company’s mission and sees these vehicles as less dangerous alternativ­es to helicopter­s.

“The reason it appealed to me is, I go out and check my fields every day,” he said. “To check all my fields takes most of the day. With one of these things, I can check all of these things in an hour. You can see a lot better in the air. I’ve checked fields via helicopter before, and you can check problems easier from overhead.”

John Wensveen, executive director of Nova Southeaste­rn University’s Alan B. Levan | NSU Broward Center of Innovation and a 30-year aviationin­dustry veteran, said flying vehicles such as Doroni’s can help overcome traffic congestion and aid military operations.

‘‘

ALL OF THESE SCI-FI BOOKS THAT LATER BECAME MOVIES ALREADY PREDICTED THE FUTURE . ... WE KNEW FLYING CARS WERE COMING FROM ‘THE JETSONS’ AND ‘FIFTH ELEMENT.’

Doron Merdinger, Doroni Aerospace CEO

In 1999, Wensveen worked with NASA on a project that envisioned everyone having flying cars some day. The future is here, but rather than NASA at the controls, it’s private companies, such as Doroni Aerospace, he noted.

“In five to 10 years, this will become more of the norm,” Merdinger said.

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Doron Merdinger, 55, studied computers as a high school student in Israel before joining the Israeli Air Force and studying drone technology. In 2013, he moved to Florida on a special-talent visa and later became a naturalize­d American citizen.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Doron Merdinger, 55, studied computers as a high school student in Israel before joining the Israeli Air Force and studying drone technology. In 2013, he moved to Florida on a special-talent visa and later became a naturalize­d American citizen.

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