Oil Find Reported In Arctic Sooner Than ExpectedBy Andrei Fedyashin Oil fever could strike the Arctic sooner than expected and is likely to be accompanied by a ... Analysis | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 34 | Comments Read more |
India Re-Calibrating Af-Pak StrategyAs the US seeks to pull out of Afghanistan and evidence of Pakistani collusion with the Taliban becomes clearer, India ... Analysis | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 40 | Comments Read more |
After Mubarak: Egypt And The Succession IssueBy Riad Kahwaji and Dr. Theodore Karasik All eyes are turning towards Egypt and who will succeed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. ... Analysis | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 53 | Comments Read more |
China's Climate Change Policy: Domestic And Global ImplicationsBy D.S.RajanThe People’s Republic of China (PRC) deserves full credit for its pro-active approach towards combating global warming and climate ... Analysis | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 110 | Comments Read more |
India Misses Opportunity For Humanitarian Intervention In Gilgit-BaltistanThe Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) area of Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK) was one of the first and worst to be affected by the ... Analysis | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 64 | Comments Read more |
The Upcoming Nalanda UniversityBy P. K. GautamThe new Nalanda University now being planned to be rebuilt will soon provide momentum to the systematic ... Analysis | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 82 | Comments Read more |
New Developments In Military AutomationAs thousands of US soldiers leave the Iraqi battlefield, the US military ramps up efforts to increase unmanned and automated ... Analysis | Wednesday, 1 September 2010 | Hits: 83 | Comments Read more |
Yet Another Great Game In Afghanistan: The US And ChinaBy Sriparna PathakThe United Nations (UN) Human Development Report of 2009 rated Afghanistan as the world’s second most impoverished country. ... Analysis | Wednesday, 1 September 2010 | Hits: 131 | Comments Read more |
Defining The Obama Doctrine, Its Pitfalls And How To Avoid ThemBy Kim R. Holmes, Ph.D. and James Carafano, Ph.D. American Presidents become known for “signature” statements and responses to foreign policy ... Analysis | Wednesday, 1 September 2010 | Hits: 106 | Comments Read more |
Â
By Kane Farabaugh
"Vehicles that can be both driven and flown have long been a fantasy in the realm of science fiction. But advances in technology have paved the way for just such a vehicle to enter the realm of fact.
Moreover, it could be available to the general public as early as next year. Some of the concept vehicles were recently on display at the Experimental Aircraft Association's AirVenture in the Midwest state of Wisconsin.
Aviator Steve Saint comes from a flying family. His father was a bush pilot in South America, where Saint spent much of his childhood.
"I grew up down in the Amazon jungle in the country of Ecuador where there are no roads, and down there, you either fly or you die," he said.
Saint is the founder of a company called "Indigenous Peoples Technology and Education Center," or "I-Tec," which serves people in remote areas isolated from most technology. To get him in and out of some of the roughest terrain on the planet, he turned to an old concept that has remained largely in the human imagination - a flying car. Saint's innovation is called the "Maverick."
"This is primarily a car, but you can also fly it, and it only takes a couple of hours to master the flying," he said.
It might not be very high or very fast, but Saint says the Maverick's function was the driving force behind its development. "People in frontier areas, humanitarian use, mission use, that's our primary focus, but we need to find a commercial market up here [in the United States]," he said.
Chief Operating Officer Anna Dietrich of the aircraft company "Terrafugia" believes there is such a market in the U.S. for her company's experimental concept vehicle, called the "Transition." "We wanted to show that the same vehicle platform could fly, could drive, could fold up its wings in a reasonable amount of time under a minute, and would be able to park in your garage," she said.
The Transition is still an experimental concept vehicle, but it has flown during test flights.
I-Tec's Maverick has also achieved flight during testing.
While both are considered major innovations toward bringing the flying car out of the imagination and onto the highways and runways, some pilots and aviation enthusiasts are less than excited about the current design concepts.
"They never will be a really neat-looking car, and they will not be a real efficient airplane. We're asking too much," says John Monnett, the founder of Sonex Aircraft, which is developing an electric-powered sport airplane. He says the flying car concept still has major technological and aesthetic hurdles to overcome.
"It's a novel idea, and time will tell really," he says. "Aircraft have to be built to a different standard than cars, and when you mix the two, what have you got? Something that's mediocre."
Terrafugia's Dietrich disagrees. "We feel like we have hit on a compromise that still meets the needs of our customers, still allows you to do more than you would be able to with either a plane or a car as two distinct vehicles," she says.
Dietrich says Terrafugia is moving forward into the next phase of developing the Transition. The first commercially available Transition is scheduled for delivery in about 18 months, and the cost to purchase the flying car when it hits the market is estimated at about $200,000.
The Maverick can travel at speeds up to 150 kilometers per hour on a traditional roadway. When it deploys a wing, that looks something like a parachute, it takes off, and can travel up to 100 meters in the air at 65 kilometers an hour.
VOA - Voice of America
When Markets FailOne of the great mantras of the modern economics profession is that markets know best, and that the ... Read more |
Black Civil Rights Mafia Betrays Black AmericaI am a black man alerting my fellow Americans about a tremendous evil which is going on in our great ... Read more |
The War Of ClimateThermometer measurements show that the earth has warmed by about 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit since the Industrial Revolution, when humans began ... Read more |
Qaddafi's Remarks On Preventing A 'Black Europe' UnacceptableIn the 41 years since Muammar Qaddafi seized power in Libya, he has earned himself a reputation for political views ... Read more |
Interview With Lev PonomarevRussia-watchers are no doubt aware of the recent arrest of my good friend Lev Ponomarev. Lev is one of ... Read more |
New Orleans, Mr. O And Mr. GoFive years ago this week, a beast drowned New Orleans. Don't blame Katrina: the lady never, in fact, touched the ... Read more |
Burning Down The US House MarketThe howls of surprised economists were everywhere last week as the government reported on Tuesday that July had the sharpest single-month plunge in existing home sales on ... Experts | Thursday, 2 September 2010 | Hits: 20 | Comments Read more |
Are The Millennium Development Goals Counter-Productive?By Oladiran Bello The EU’s discourse on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) remains unhelpfully inward-looking. Heavy on chest-beating reassertions of Europe’s unmatched development spending, the official rhetoric falls short on concrete ... Experts | Wednesday, 1 September 2010 | Hits: 92 | Comments Read more |