San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Contest may let personal flying machines soar

- By Zach Wichter Zach Wichter is a New York Times writer.

Since at least the ancient Greeks, people have dreamed of soaring like a bird from place to place. Leonardo da Vinci’s sketches of personal flying machines were ahead of their time and remain ahead of our own. Most people who want to fly today can do so only with an airline ticket and a valid form of identifica­tion.

But some inventors, designers and engineers have continued to tinker, and now a contest called GoFly is encouragin­g them. It aims to have working prototypes next year.

“We’re at the brink of a legitimate shift in the way we travel and interact with one another,” said Gwen Lighter, chief executive of the contest. A group of inventors and engineers organized the competitio­n, and Boeing is the sponsor. Other aerospace and research firms are supporting the effort.

Lighter said she expected that people would one day be able to fly for trips that they now take in cars, and that flying machines would develop along a path similar to the one automobile­s followed 100 years ago.

“Once these have been built and we can show people we can make them fly, it will be up to the world and the consumer to decide what is best for their needs,” Lighter said.

Boeing is interested in seeing what innovation­s develop, said Greg Hyslop, the company’s chief technology officer. Boeing has no plans to build personal flying machines of its own, he added, but it does want to stay on top of new ideas.

“The industry from its inception has thrived on good competitio­n and innovation that is fueled by that competitio­n,” Hyslop said. “We need things like this to really spark the imaginatio­n of folks and encourage them.”

He also said that taking to the air could help solve some modern inconvenie­nces, although he did not foresee flying machines as a complete replacemen­t for ground transporta­tion.

“In developing countries, we have nonexisten­t or inadequate terrestria­l infrastruc­ture, and in developed cities we have creaking terrestria­l infrastruc­ture that can’t keep up with the demands of society,” he said. “It begs for something to get things up in the air.

Whether it’s packages, cargo, people, we’re going to have to use the space that’s above us to meet those needs.”

The GoFly competitio­n is taking place in three phases, with the final “flyoff ” scheduled for 2019. The 10 winners of the first phase, who submitted their designs on paper, were announced Thursday. More than 100 entries were submitted, and the winning teams each received $20,000.

Some of the designs looked like giant airboats. Others looked more like motorcycle­s with propellers attached. One looked like a miniature airplane. Texas A&M University had one winner, essentiall­y an open pilot’s capsule, shaped like an egg, with rotor blades near the base.

 ?? Texas A&M University ?? This design from Texas A&M University is one of the 10 finalists in the GoFly contest.
Texas A&M University This design from Texas A&M University is one of the 10 finalists in the GoFly contest.

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