The first flying car. It’s here. It’s real. And it’s spectacular.
“We believe personal transportation is about to change forever,” said AeroMobil chief executive Juraj Vaculik at a press conference. “We think it’s time to make transportation more emotional and more personal.”
The car was designed by Stefan Klein, founder and head of the Department of Transport Design at the Academy of Fine Arts in Slovakia. Klein had been tinkering with the concept as far back as 1989.
The car needs very little runway to take off, and it can be refueled at any standard gas station when the wings are retracted. AeroMobil believes it will be attractive for countries that don’t have billions of dollars to spend building a modern transportation infrastructure.
The body is built from advanced composite materials that keep it lightweight but also durable. Under the hood, it has autopilot and an advanced parachute deployment system. The cockpit can carry two people, and in the air the flying car can reach top speeds of 200 km/h. It has a 27-foot wingspan and is 19.7 feet long.
No word on the price tag.
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