Meh. The physical act of levitation and an elevated sightseeing point themselves are not what drew me to flying. There were utilitarian elements of that act that are part and parcel of why I fly. I'm sure there are others like me. To each their own. Glorified hang-gliding wasn't my hook....
Six motors all too small to autorotate?
What could possibly go wrong?
Lose one and you'll flip pretty quickly with a lever arm that far out. That's gotta be at least 50 lb of thrust apiece. 250 ft-lb flipping torque sounds very messy with all those rapidly moving parts.
My first thought was what happens during a rough landing and the pilot is tossed into the Bass-O-Matic?
That's you and me and the rest of the people already in GA. For GA to grow and attract more people, you have to be able to fly from home to the store.
Actually, from the sounds I heard it sounds like they are redundant on each post, one being able to meet the requirements of both to get you down on a failure.
Odd. Your post looked like you were calling him a rude name but the quoted post doesn't read that way. See the attached picture for what I saw.
Back on topic, if you have enough lift and it has the programming of a drone, the engine out will be handled by the other engines. As it starts to flip, the gyros/accelerometers will detect it and reduce power to the appropriate motors to keep it upright.
I still prefer a plane though.
Yeah, on the iPad sometimes I hit the m instead of the space bar and it autocorrects it into the weirdest crap.
But you didn't this time. Look at the quoted text. I quoted it 3 or 4 times just in case you edited it because I thought it may have been an autocorrect thing you fixed. Android is just as bad on the autocorrect.
Edit....I see the fix you made finally showed up. It just took a really long time to update in the thread.
How long does that thing fly? I can see some people giving it a try.
That my friend is the $64,000 question. If you can only fly it for a few minutes, not very useful. Personally I think it'll need a 75 mile range to be a success, maybe 50.
Meh...I would have used articulating ducted fans.
Maybe a 15 to 20 minute ride is sufficient. But it need to be ready to fly again fairly quickly. Really depends on the purpose of the flight.
Nobody has "ignored" it. The golden age of GA is over because of liability. Whatever new form of flying machine is invented, it will not be immune to accidents. We can't keep an umbrella on our patio from blowing away, yet we are supposed to be able to have multiple people in close proximity landing in a Walmart parking lot? You can't get someone to take responsibility for stepping on the gas instead of the brake. If anything happens that brings down one of these machines, the pilot and the people on the ground are going to sue the manufacturer.This is probably the most important thing that the "old hats" keep forgetting about or just have ignored for decades. Aviation HAS to be a regular old boring form of every day transportation first, THEN we can start to build "toys" and "recreational aircraft" for fun.
If we don't change this and make is reality very very quickly, GA will die before you do.
That's you and me and the rest of the people already in GA. For GA to grow and attract more people, you have to be able to fly from home to the store.
If some of the Tesla car guys' stuff sees the light of day practically, it might be possible. It'd be fun to have one of those out at the family ranch to run out and do stuff.That would likely be sufficient for an entertainment industry setting. Since these will be stabilized by software, there's a good chance the learning curve will be minimal and they could be rented to novices like jet skis. In that setting turn around is just a matter of having enough spare batteries on hand that you can always have a charged one ready.
If they only make it 20 minutes though, I don't think it will make them practical as transportation unless they are way faster than I think they'll be. That's always been the problem with the flying car/cycle concept, energy density.
Have you seen all the dents and scratches on the average joes car? Their opinion of mx?
Guess if the masses start flying we all better get some heavy duty walls and windows installed, it's gonna be raining idiots.
Have you seen all the dents and scratches on the average joes car? Their opinion of mx?
Guess if the masses start flying we all better get some heavy duty walls and windows installed, it's gonna be raining idiots.
Sling the cockpit underneath the rotors in the Superman position, throw the controls out front so you actually lie Superman with hands ahead, slap a single pusher prop (above, maybe on the rear shaft) and you have the absolutely coolest toy ever. You'd have limited / no sight of the blades and complete freedom of movement ... think hang glider position with the sail replaced by 3/6 rotor contraption they built.
I want one, just not the "sit on top of the blender" style they have now.
If that is the future of GA, I'd rather live in the past. That does not look like anything I would want to fly.
And this brings up a question I have often wondered- For GA to truly prosper and costs to come way down, we need far more of John Q Public to owning and operating aircraft. To get more of the general public into general aviation, the aircraft themselves have to provide greater utility and much simpler learning curve. Technology will likely be able make this so in the near future. Would today's pilots accept this new future?
What if it were super easy to travel across country with your family in all weather, like say 8 hours of training and you're off? Much like the Google self driving car, the GA plane of the future could be nearly all self flying. The "pilot", or driver of the aircraft would simply be there to monitor the progress and have very basic emergency skills. Would the pilots today accept this way of flying, or would they quit flying altogether in disgust?
I think a good comparison might be how R/C model airplane flying has been around forever, but the introduction of super simple to fly quad copter drones has caused more people to fly R/C than ever in history. It's an example of how a technology can be disruptive and create wide spread adoption.
I doubt that a proliferation of human sized quadcopters would have an impact on the cost of flying more conventional GA aircraft. So I see no benefit to those of us who fly real airplanes.
No matter how advanced the planes get the FAA still impedes the creation of new pilots by requiring very expensive and time-consuming training. And the aging baby boomers that created the spike in GA in the 70s are now too old to pass a medical exam...and on fixed incomes so they have no money or energy to buy and fly new planes.
Like other high end hobbies, GA is going to get a LOT smaller. Other examples of in declines are golf, new home purchase, motorcycle sales. Things in ascent are senior housing, medical system use, RV sales, coffin sales, and cruises.
A self-flown aircraft that hits mass-market numbers will not be seen in our lifetime.
The public (and govt) has to accept self-driving cars first, and that's a long way off.
The certification costs for such a plane vs the sales volume would be a "chicken and egg" roadblock.
A self-flown aircraft that hits mass-market numbers will not be seen in our lifetime.
The public (and govt) has to accept self-driving cars first, and that's a long way off.
The certification costs for such a plane vs the sales volume would be a "chicken and egg" roadblock.
Drones will fly with or without FFA approval. It is simply too easy to do so. Human carrying quad cycles will also be cheap (outside of FFA regs using off the shelf parts) , easy to fly, an impossible to hold down. The FFA will make rules that will be ignored. Those who grew up with the freedom of the Internet will ignore any attempt to curb their freedom to fly.
And it will happen very quickly - - by year 2020.
It may not be that far off. Technologically, we could build this plane today as it is many magnitudes simpler than the self driving car, however ATC would have to be completely overhauled to support this future flight.