Roadable aircraft

Jess Dixon's flying automobile c. 1940
Fulton Airphibian FA-3-101
The Mizar by Advanced Vehicle Engineers, August 1973

A roadable aircraft (also referred to as a flying car) is a hybrid vehicle that combines the flying capability of an aircraft with the option of being driven as an automobile on the ground. The roadable aircraft is typically recognized as a small plane with retractable wings that has both the freedom to fly in the open sky and drive conveniently and flexibly along roads.

Most roadable aircraft fall into one of two styles; integrated (all components can be carried in the vehicle, or on a trailer attached to the vehicle), or modular (some aeronautical sections are left at the airport while the vehicle is driven).

In the U.S., the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has shown an interest in the concept with a $65 million program called Transformer to develop a four-person roadable aircraft by 2015.[1] The vehicle is required to take off vertically, and have a 280-mile range. AAI Corporation and Lockheed Martin were awarded contracts in late 2010 for the Phase 1 program.[2] Lockheed Martin's design was selected to continue to Phase 3.[3]

In April 2012, the International Flying Car Association was established to be the "central resource center for information and communication between the flying car industry, news networks, governments, and those seeking further information worldwide.".[4] Because flying cars need practical regulations that are mostly dealt with on a regional level, several regional associations were established as well like the European Flying Car Association (EFCA), representing its national member associations on a pan-European level.[5]

History

Glenn Curtiss, the chief rival of the Wright brothers, was the first to design a roadable aircraft. His large, three-wing Curtiss Autoplane was able to hop, but not fly.[6]

In 1935, inventor Constantinos Vlachos built a prototype of a 'tri-phibian' vehicle that caught fire after the engine exploded, while Vlachos was demonstrating it in Washington, D.C. Vlachos' prototype is most notable for a newsreel that captured the incident,[7] which left him in hospital for several months.[8][9] The Autogiro Company of America AC-35 was an early attempt at a roadable aircraft. On March 26, 1936 the AC-35 was flown by test pilot James G. Ray with counter rotating propellers. These were later replaced with a single conventional propeller arrangement. On October 2, 1936, Ray landed the AC-35 in a downtown park in Washington, D.C. where it was displayed, On October 26, 1936 The aircraft was converted to roadable configuration.[10] Ray drove it to the main entrance of the Commerce Building where it was accepted by John H. Geisse, chief of the Aeronautics Branch. Although it was successfully tested, it did not enter production.

The first roadable fixedwing aircraft actually to fly was built by Waldo Waterman. Waterman was associated with Curtiss while Curtiss was pioneering amphibious aircraft at North Island on San Diego Bay in the 1910s. On March 21, 1937, Waterman's Arrowbile first took to the air.[11] The Arrowbile was a development of Waterman's tailless aircraft, the Whatsit.[12] It had a wingspan of 38 feet (11 m) and a length of 20 feet 6 inches (6.25 m). On the ground and in the air it was powered by a Studebaker engine. It could fly at 112 mph (180 km/h) and drive at 56 mph (90 km/h).

In 1942, the British army built the Hafner Rotabuggy, an experimental roadable autogyro that was developed with the intention of producing a way of air-dropping off-road vehicles. Although initial tests showed that the Rotabuggy was prone to severe vibration at speeds greater than 45 miles per hour (72 km/h), with improvements the Rotabuggy achieved a flight speed of 70 mph (113 km/h).

However, the introduction of gliders that could carry vehicles (such as the Waco Hadrian and Airspeed Horsa) made the Rotabuggy superfluous and further development was cancelled.[13]

Although several designs (such as the ConVairCar) have flown, none have enjoyed commercial success, and those that have flown are not widely known about by the general public. The most successful example, in that several were made and one is still flying, is the 1949 Taylor Aerocar.

One notable design was Henry Smolinski's Mizar, made by mating the rear end of a Cessna Skymaster with a Ford Pinto, but it disintegrated during test flights killing Smolinski and the pilot.

At the 2014 Pioneers Festival at Wien (Austria) AeroMobil presented their version 3.0 of their flying car. The prototype was conceived as a vehicle that can be converted from an automobile to an aircraft. The version 2.5 proof-of-concept took 20 years to develop, and first flew in 2013. CEO Juraj Vaculik said that the company planned to move flying cars to market: "the plan is that in 2017 we’ll be able to announce… the first flying roadster."[14]

List of roadable aircraft

Type Date/Era Description Designer/Developer Status
Curtiss Autoplane 1917 Modular airplane Glenn Curtiss / Curtiss-Wright Prototype
Skroback Roadable Airplane 1925–1942 Integrated airplane Frank E. Skroback Prototype
Autogiro Company of America AC-35 1935–1942 Integrated autogyro Autogiro Company of America Flying prototype
Waterman Arrowbile 1935–1957 Integrated airplane Waldo Waterman / Watermann Arrowplane Co. Flying prototype
Gwinn Aircar 1935–1938 Modular airplane Joseph M. Gwinn, Jr. / Gwinn Aircar Company, Inc. Flying prototype. Crashed
Southernaire Roadable 1939 Ted Hall / Southern Aircraft Co. Flown
Jess Dixon's flying auto 1940 Integrated copter Jess Dixon Flying prototype, patent
Hafner Rotabuggy 1942–1944 Integrated autogyro Raoul Hafner / R. Malcolm Ltd Flying prototype
Airmaster 1944 Modular airplane Herbert & Helen Boggs Concept
Fulton Airphibian 1946 Modular airplane Robert Edison Fulton, Jr. / Continental Inc Prototype
Convair Model 116 ConVairCar 1946 Modular airplane Ted Hall / Convair Flying prototype
Convair Model 118 ConVairCar 1947–1948 Modular airplane Ted Hall / Convair Flying prototype
Aerauto PL.5C 1946–1953 Integrated airplane Luigi Pellarini / Carrozzeria Colli Prototype
Aerocar 1946–1960s Modular airplane Moulton Taylor / Aerocar International Flying prototype
Bryan Autoplane 1953–1974 Integrated airplane Leland Bryan Flying prototype. Crashed
BelGeddes 1954 Modular airplane Norman Bel Geddes Concept
Halsmer Aero Car 1959 Integrated airplane Joseph Halsmer Flew
Wagner Aerocar 1965–1971 Integrated helicopter Alfred Vogt / Wagner Flying prototype
AVE Mizar 1971–1973 Modular airplane Henry Smolinski / Advanced Vehicle Engineers Crashed. Killing developer
Lebouder Autoplane 1973-1977 Modular airplane Robert Lebouder Flew successfully, won prizes until damaged in landing accident
AviAuto 1981–1990s Integrated airplane Harvey Miller / Aviauto Corp / Florida Tech Concept

Current development examples

Parajet Skycar prototype seen at the Sport and Leisure Aviation Show (SPLASH), Birmingham, UK, November 2008.

A number of companies are developing vehicles, although few have demonstrated a full-sized vehicle capable of free flight.

Flying

Partially flying

Road functional, or scale models flying

Concepts

In popular culture

See also

References

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  3. Olivarez-Giles, Nathan. "Lockheed Martin Building a Car-Transporting Drone for DARPA". The Verge. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  4. "IFCA Announces Flying Cars About To Hit World Market". Various. 2 April 2012. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  5. "European Flying Car Association". EFCA. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
  6. Thomas Vinciguerra (April 11, 2009). "Flying Cars: An Idea Whose Time Has Never Come". New York Times.
  7. Newsreel of flying car on fire on YouTube
  8. "News Cameras Film Thrilling Rescue". Popular Science. January 1936: 29.
  9. "Hard-Luck Vlachos". Special-Interest Autos. July 1974: 44.
  10. Dawson, Virginia; Mark D. Bowles (2005). Realizing the dream of flight: biographical essays in honor of the centennial of flight, 1903–2003. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA History Division, Office of External Relations. p. 70. ASIN B002Y26TM0.
  11. id=WScDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA52&dq=Popular+Science+1932+plane&hl=en&ei=TYpLTZ3EM8L38Abb2pmzDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CC4Q6AEwATge#v=onepage&q&f=true "Plane Sheds Wing To Run On Ground" Popular Science, May 1937
  12. "Tailless Flivver Plane Has Pusher Propeller" Popular Science,May 1934, rare photos in article
  13. Zaloga, Steven J. (2005). Jeeps 1941–45. Osprey Publishing. pp. 37–38. ISBN 1-84176-888-X.
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  30. Video
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  44. Carplane, A Roadable Aircraft Designed For Drivability Gallery Archive
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  48. Seattle Times: Tired of the commute? All you need is $3.5 million, September 2006

Further reading

External links

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