The Columbus Dispatch

Rolls-Royce joins race to develop flying car

- By Peter Holley

Autonomous vehicles have only just begun to navigate our streets, and already the world’s innovators are setting their sights on the next big transporta­tion trend. Flying taxis. Uber plans to create a network of flying taxis in the Dallas area and in the Persian Gulf nation of Dubai by the year 2020. Kitty Hawk — a flying-car startup created by Google co-founder Larry Page — is already offering test flights to potential customers.

This week, Rolls-Royce entered the fray, unveiling a concept electric verticalta­keoff and -landing vehicle at the Farnboroug­h Internatio­nal Airshow in England. The vehicle could carry as many as five passengers at speeds up to 250 mph for approximat­ely 500 miles, according to Rolls-Royce.

Rolls-Royce said the vehicle could be airborne as soon as the early 2020s, but the company said it plans to create a vehicle prototype within 18 months.

“Building on our existing expertise in electric technologi­es and aviation, Rolls-Royce is actively exploring a range of possible markets and applicatio­ns for electric and hybrid electric flight,” said Rob Watson, who heads Rolls-Royce’s electrical team, in a news release. “We are well-placed to play a leading role in the emerging world of personal air mobility and will also look to work in collaborat­ion with a range of partners.”

The British-based company makes commercial jet engines. Referring to Rolls-Royce as “pioneers,” Watson added that the company was among the first to develop turbo-prop and jet engines.

Rolls-Royce Motor Cars — a company owned by German car manufactur­er BMW — is not associated with the effort to create flying taxis.

The company said its concept vehicle would be powered by six electric propulsors “specially designed to have a low noise profile.” To take off or land vertically, the company said, the vehicle’s wings would rotate 90 degrees. Once the craft reaches its cruising height, its vehicle propellers would fold away, and the craft would rely on several rear propellers for thrust.

Rolls-Royce said the vehicle would fill a niche created by overtaxed transporta­tion systems in increasing­ly crowded cities. Watson told Agence France-Presse that he envisions an electric version of the vehicle moving passengers around a city, but a hybrid propulsion system carrying passengers longer distances, such as between London and Paris. The company noted that the vehicle could be adapted for military purposes as well, although no details were provided.

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