Anthony
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Anthony
Yea, we've been talking about it for months, where have you been?
http://www.pilotsofamerica.com/forum/showthread.php?t=25472&highlight=Flying+car
And the looks grow on you the more you stare at it.
Ahhhhhh...........
Flying.
And thinking about Rosie.
Are you making Gastons this year????
If you I'm going to beat you with a wet noodle.
It is neat. I think the bigger problems they'll have will be with the NHTSB and DOT than the FAA. Making it pass crash safety standards seems pretty much impossible, but I suppose it'd count as a kit car.
The price doesn't seem too bad for what it is. The problem I have with it is the slow cruise speed. Sure, you're flying (and it's pretty efficient - 100 mph on 5 gph), but 100 mph is a lot slower than, say, Jay's Zodiac, which is still an LSA. I'd like to see something that can actually push that LSA speed limit and do everything else.
Are you making Gastons this year????
If you are I'm going to beat you with a wet noodle.
The problem they've got is that they're pushing a lot of frontal area (quoted cabin width is 52 inches!), and a lot of wetted area, through the air - much more than the Zodiac or other comparable LSA airplanes. They're using the same 100 HP Rotax engine as the rest of them, too. They've got useful load issues as it is, so going to a more powerful engine, with its attendant higher fuel usage, would cause other problems. Where they are is probably the best overall tradeoff.The price doesn't seem too bad for what it is. The problem I have with it is the slow cruise speed. Sure, you're flying (and it's pretty efficient - 100 mph on 5 gph), but 100 mph is a lot slower than, say, Jay's Zodiac, which is still an LSA. I'd like to see something that can actually push that LSA speed limit and do everything else.
Jay pretty much nailed the problem all these flying cars have. None of them are good at being a car nor an airplane. Even with the rounded, polymer configuration, its still a flying brick.
In fairness, the Terrafugia comes a lot closer than the attempts people have made in the past. This leaves me hopeful that, someday, someone will be able to produce something that's both a fine car and a fine aircraft, instead of the compromise that's all anyone's been able to achieve so far.Jay pretty much nailed the problem all these flying cars have. None of them are good at being a car nor an airplane. Even with the rounded, polymer configuration, its still a flying brick.
Yea, we've been talking about it for months, where have you been?
http://www.pilotsofamerica.com/forum/showthread.php?t=25472&highlight=Flying+car
In fairness, the Terrafugia comes a lot closer than the attempts people have made in the past. This leaves me hopeful that, someday, someone will be able to produce something that's both a fine car and a fine aircraft, instead of the compromise that's all anyone's been able to achieve so far.
It seems to me the biggest advantage of this thing is that, when you get to your destination, you have a car. Very nifty if you want to go check out a restaurant or something that's off-airport. No need to get a taxi if there's no loaner car available.
Months??? Years. First time I saw an article on it I was living in Melbourne Aus and that was 3 years ago. My question still stands, with the back wheels where they are, how fast will you have to be to rotate, and you'll need a mouth guard to keep you from breaking your teeth on landing.
Edit, ahhh, I see they did some major changes from the early drawings.
Not problems for a pilot that knows what they're doing...