Terrafugia's experimental concept vehicle called the 'Transition'. |
"I grew up down in the Amazon jungle in the country of Ecuador where there are no roads, and down there, you either fly or you die," he said.
Steve Saint |
To get him in and out of some of the roughest terrain on the planet, he turned to an old concept that has remained largely in the human imagination - a flying car. Saint's innovation is called the "Maverick."
"This is primarily a car, but you can also fly it, and it only takes a couple of hours of training to learn how to master the flying," he said.
I-Tec's 'Maverick' |
It might not be very high or very fast, but Saint says the Maverick's function was the driving force behind its development.
"People in frontier areas, humanitarian use, mission use, that's our primary focus, but we need to find a commercial market up here [in the United States]," he said.
Chief Operating Officer Anna Dietrich of the aircraft company "Terrafugia" believes there is such a market in the US for her company's experimental concept vehicle, called the "Transition."
Anna Dietrich |
The Transition is still an experimental concept vehicle, but it has flown during test flights.
I-Tec's Maverick has also achieved flight during testing.
While both are considered major innovations toward bringing the flying car out of the imagination and onto the highways and runways, some pilots and aviation enthusiasts are less than excited about the current design concepts.
"They never will be a really neat-looking car, and they will not be a real efficient airplane." John Monnett is the founder of Sonex Aircraft, which is developing an electric-powered sport airplane. He says the flying car concept still has major technological and aesthetic hurdles to overcome.
He says: "Aircraft have to be built to a different standard than cars, and when you mix the two, what have you got? Something that's mediocre."
Terrafugia's Dietrich disagrees.
"We feel like we have hit on a compromise that still meets the needs of our customers, still allows you to do more than you would be able to with either a plane or a car as two distinct vehicles," she says.
Dietrich says Terrafugia is moving forward into the next phase of developing the Transition. The first commercially available Transition is scheduled for delivery in about 18 months, and the cost to purchase the flying car when it hits the market is estimated at about $200,000.
(來源:VOA 編輯:陳丹妮)