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Enrique Dans

On the effects of technology and innovation on people, companies and society (writing in Spanish at since 2003)

IMAGE: Cheskyw — 123RF

Flying cars: will they ever take off?

3 min readFeb 9, 2017

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The flying car has been part of the popular imagination for many decades, and has even been seen by some as the paradigm of technological deception (’s “”) and has slowly been moving from fantasy toward attracting the attention of idealistic investors or millionaires determined to see it become a reality, with little success so far.

However, there are signs of progress, and when I see that type of signals, I like to write an article about it, even if it is just to save and categorize some links about it, so here we go.

A lengthy Bloomberg Business Week article entitled “” details the history of the so-called Vertical Take Off and Landing () for civilian use that mentions the I wrote about in Spanish , the prototypes I have been hearing about (link in Spanish), and on to that it will launch . The article, as the title indicates, charts the adventures of Google co-founder in this area, using his own money, in facilities close to Google’s headquarters and working pretty much in secret with companies such as or , in what sounds like a bid to ruin himself financially. Except we’re talking about Larry Page here.

In addition to initiatives of this type, there are some issues that seem to point to further development. According to a , the development of VTOLs depends on the advancement of certification systems and control systems for flying artifacts, the development of electric motors and battery technology to keep emissions low, advancement in variables such as efficiency, performance and reliability, deployment of infrastructure for landings and take-offs, shorter training time for pilots using autonomous systems or advanced flight assistance, and of course, central issues such as cost or security. According to the report, .

This is little more than speculation about a platform — an important word, because that is the model Uber has always used — for a system of relatively low-cost air transport. The company has since announced it is , a who authored on the possibilities of , looking at the requirements vehicles of this type would require to be viable.

The idea of ​​a platform is important because it is the best way to take VTOL from the transport for multimillionaires willing to acquire their own vehicle to the possibility of rapid urban transport at prices that could attract broader demand based on high occupation. Obviously, as with the future of self-driving cars, nothing prevents the rich from buying their own vehicles, as is the case with private jets today, but operating costs and a clearly suboptimal level of use would act as disincentives.

The future of flying cars might depend on a company like Airbus working with disruptive startups in the context of a platform requiring reasonably priced vehicles: that is starting to sound like something that might just get off the ground.

(En español, )

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Published in Enrique Dans

On the effects of technology and innovation on people, companies and society (writing in Spanish at since 2003)

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Written by Enrique Dans

Professor of Innovation at IE Business School and blogger (in English here and in Spanish at )

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