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Flying cars

49 点作者 qqn将近 6 年前

11 条评论

blunte将近 6 年前
Most people are lucky to drive a year without a costly mistake. Put them in the air, and their mistake (or a self-driving mistake) means death.<p>And even if we can make personal air travel safe, how ever are we going to coordinate it?<p>I appreciate the advances we gain from the <i>crazy&#x2F;idealistic</i> people who invest time or money on flying car ideas, but it is just never going to happen. The earth will burn and humans will die before that becomes a thing.<p>Some HN readers are working for auto driving companies, and they know how hard it is to be safe on the ground. Now add the whole of vertical space, plus aerodynamics, to the equation. These people might as well put their energy into teleportation (not really a pun intended, but it&#x27;s kind of there).<p>s&#x2F;trans&#x2F;tele
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dreamcompiler将近 6 年前
True flying cars exist. I watched one go from car mode to plane mode, fly around, land, and drive off the runway in car mode again at EAA in 2013. They work and they meet all the expectations we had when we were kids. Except one: They cost over a quarter million dollars. Everybody said we&#x27;d have flying cars, but nobody told us only rich people would be able to afford them.
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vtrips将近 6 年前
&quot;We have flying cars today, they&#x27;re called helicopters&quot; - Neil deGrasse Tyson
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hestipod将近 6 年前
I remember the Moller Sky Car ads that were in every Popular Science magazine of my youth 35-40 years ago. That beautiful, deep red, futuristic machine with the rotating engine pods was something little me was sure I&#x27;d be flying around in some day. Life disappoints.
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qqn将近 6 年前
Thanks for the commentary guys, it’s been fascinating churning over all this even more. Thoughts:<p>- Safety is the same issue as always, only it’s being ironed out faster than before. Controlled vertical landings, 3D space, and redundancy help a lot. I don’t foresee many flying high enough to get really hurt. Maybe things like undercarriage cushions or redirected waterways underneath major traffic flows could help even more.<p>- Noise cancellation tech is already out there, as well as near-silent aircraft without moving parts: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=boB6qu5dcCw" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=boB6qu5dcCw</a><p>- Main arteries will be less condensed, but much more, much smaller traffic will appear and that’s going to be a new problem. The death knell for intracity public transport?<p>- Well-made points about “actual” flying cars not actually being used. Maybe it would have been the same for cars if someone made motorized horses instead of the automobile?<p>Thank you for all the resources. I really liked the random touchdown point, underlining how exact our tech already is. I&#x27;ve polished the post quite a bit, adding a lot of these extra things to it. If anyone can clarify the paper bag problem @brownbat mentioned and what @blunte meant by &quot;s&#x2F;trans&#x2F;tele&quot; I&#x27;d really appreciate it.
thomasdd将近 6 年前
In our small town Nitra&#x2F;Slovakia&#x2F;EU, there is one very motivated and intelligent inventor, who created a Car (that can actually drive on public roads)... Also the car can transform into plane... and fly 700km.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=kzYb68qXpD0" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=kzYb68qXpD0</a><p>Actually now, He struggler&#x27;s after investors took all the IP and removed the him self from the company. Very interesting story! Part of there sorry is &quot;He&quot; crash-landed the plane and survived! That&#x27;s something you can&#x27;t test on real person :) in fact very interesting story about a person who dedicated his life to a vision of flying car.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;AeroMobil_s.r.o._AeroMobil" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;AeroMobil_s.r.o._AeroMobil</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.aeromobil.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.aeromobil.com&#x2F;</a>
dvh将近 6 年前
Do you want your neighbors to own flying car?
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mettamage将近 6 年前
For people who are into this, also check out the goflyprize.com<p>It was pretty fun to see what designs people came up with. I think some of these companies even had YouTube videos with prototypes already working.
gkfasdfasdf将近 6 年前
I wonder what a typical sky would look like in any semi populated area if flying cars take over. Seems like open blue sky would become another luxury of rural living.
coldtea将近 6 年前
(...) the American imagination has frozen up solid around the unworkable fantasy of the flying car.<p>Listen to most discussions of flying cars on the privileged end of the geekoisie and you can count on hearing a very familiar sort of rhetoric endlessly rehashed. Flying cars first appeared in science fiction—everyone agrees with that—and now that we have really advanced technology, we ought to be able to make flying cars. QED!<p>The thing that’s left out of most of these bursts of gizmocentric cheerleading is that we’ve had flying cars for more than a century now, we know exactly how well they work, and—ahem—that’s the reason nobody drives flying cars.<p>Let’s glance back at a little history, always the best response to this kind of futuristic cluelessness. The first actual flying car anyone seems to have built was the Curtiss Autoplane, which was designed and built by aviation pioneer Glen Curtiss and debuted at the Pan-American Aeronautical Exposition in 1917. It was cutting-edge technology for the time, with plastic windows and a cabin heater. It never went into production, since the resources it would have used got commandeered when the US entered the First World War a few months later, and by the time the war was over Curtiss apparently had second thoughts about his invention and put his considerable talents to other uses.<p>There were plenty of other inventors ready to step into the gap, though, and a steady stream of flying cars took to the roads and the skies in the years thereafter. The following are just a few of the examples. The Waterman Arrowbile on the left, invented by the delightfully named Waldo Waterman, took wing in 1937; it was a converted Studebaker car—a powerhouse back in the days when a 100-hp engine was a big deal. Five of them were built.<p>During the postwar technology boom in the US, Consolidated Vultee, one of the big aerospace firms of that time, built and tested the ConVairCar model 118 on the right in 1947, with an eye to the upper end of the consumer market; the inventor was Theodore Hall. There was only one experimental model built, and it flew precisely once.<p>The Aero-Car on the left had its first test flights in 1966. Designed by inventor Moulton Taylor, it was the most successful of the flying cars, and is apparently the only one of the older models that still exists in flyable condition. It was designed so that the wings and tail could be detached by one not particularly muscular person, and turned into a trailer that could be hauled behind the body for on-road use. Six were built.<p>Most recently, the Terrafugia on the right managed a test flight all of eight minutes long in 2009; the firm is still trying to make their creation meet FAA regulations, but the latest press releases insist stoutly that deliveries will begin in two years. If you’re interested, you can order one now for a mere US$196,000.00, cash up front, for delivery at some as yet undetermined point in the future.<p>When people insist that we’ll have flying cars sometime very soon, in other words, they’re more than a century behind the times. We’ve had flying cars since 1917. The reason that everybody isn’t zooming around on flying cars today isn’t that they don’t exist. The reason that everybody isn’t zooming around on flying cars today is that flying cars are a really dumb idea, for the same reason that it’s a really dumb idea to try to run a marathon and have hot sex at the same time.<p>Any automotive engineer can tell you that there are certain things that make for good car design. Any aeronautical engineer can tell you that there are certain things that make for good aircraft design. It so happens that by and large, as a result of those pesky little annoyances called the laws of physics, the things that make a good car make a bad plane, and vice versa. To cite only one of many examples, a car engine needs torque to handle hills and provide traction at slow speeds, an airplane engine needs high speed to maximize propeller efficiency, and torque and speed are opposites: you can design your engine to have a lot of one and a little of the other or vice versa, or you can end up in the middle with inadequate torque for your wheels and inadequate speed for your propeller. There are dozens of such tradeoffs, and a flying car inevitably ends up stuck in the unsatisfactory middle.<p>Thus what you get with a flying car is a lousy car that’s also a lousy airplane, for a price so high that you could use the same money to buy a good car, a good airplane, and a really nice sailboat or two into the bargain. That’s why we don’t have flying cars. It’s not that nobody’s built one; it’s that people have been building them for more than a century and learning, or rather not learning, the obvious lesson taught by them. What’s more, as the meme above hints, the problems with flying cars won’t be fixed by one more round of technological advancement, or a hundred more rounds, because those problems are hardwired into the physical realities with which flying cars have to contend. One of the great unlearned lessons of our time is that a bad idea doesn’t become a good idea just because someone comes up with some new bit of technology to enable it.<p>JMG
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reggie44将近 6 年前
Most people cant handle driving on the road, let alone in the sky. Especially if there are more people in the air. Wait until the cars start falling out of the sky killing people.