I Test Drove a Flying Car. Get Ready, They're Here
Posted3 months agoActive3 months ago
wsj.comTechstory
skepticalmixed
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Flying CarsEvtolAviation Technology
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Flying Cars
Evtol
Aviation Technology
The author test drove a flying car and reports on the experience, sparking discussion on the feasibility and implications of this emerging technology.
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Oct 17, 2025 at 11:44 AM EDT
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https://airandspace.si.edu/explore/stories/commercial-aviati...
There is just no way a public flying car infrastructure can be built in the US in the next 30-50 years you are alive.
Assuming appropriate sites can be found, there will also be a long permitting process to get construction approval. The latest eVTOL aircraft are quieter than conventional helicopters but still loud so anyone living and working nearby is going to complain. I'm sure they'll also raise environmental impact concerns in many areas because the noise will prevent the endangered yellow-footed salamander from laying eggs or whatever so working through the mandated mitigation process also takes years.
You might think it'll be very easy for flying cars to avoid crashing because they can just fly above and below each other, but that's also more directions for them to crash into each other from, more directions the drivers might have to rely on potentially faulty sensors where their vision is blocked. There might have to be invisible "lanes", maybe even with something like traffic lights, rather than having cars just flying every which way without external coordination.
Bots would admittedly be far more useful in helping with tons of various tasks (I'm sure each task will be a subscription), but eVTOLs would unlock new capability.
Scott is a sport pilot enthusiast and approached the evaluation from that perspective. I don't think there are many pilots, myself included, that believe we are on the verge of flying cars for mass transportation. They are expensive to purchase, maintain and impractical for many reasons.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wncRFPd69rg?t=1110
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wncRFPd69rg
Autopilots also can't handle VHF voice comms (with a very narrow exception for the Garmin Autonomí system in certain situations) or perform "see and avoid" traffic management in VFR.
We already do this with planes which have corridors they fly along.
Is what sets the lanes in the air are traffic controllers and flight plans? We're already short on traffic controllers. And there are already lots of near-misses (and not near-misses) even with the heavy regulation and control. Can't imagine having it as mass personal transit driven manually. There'd need to be a mass central system that controls everything, and in that case, might as well just keep it commercial
The energy efficiency isn't great either on personal aircraft
not an expert, just shooting the crap
[0] https://www.ehang.com/
A car. You'd just hop in to determine if it is drivable.
So no I wouldn't think flying a beater around is a good idea. People generally get away with flying unsafe planes now because they fly over unpopulated areas. They only kill themselves. Start flying over populated areas and you can wipe out a kids soccer game.
This is, essentially, an aviation hobby toy and not remotely practical for anyone even doing a short-hop urban commute as they would be banned in dense urban (class B,C, and D) airspace too.
The Pivotal BlackFly and similar aircraft are merely toys for wealthy thrill-seekers. Which is fine and could make for a viable niche industry. There is no viable path yet for "flying cars" to see widespread transportation use.
I'm not even sure you can take off or land in your own neighborhood. Is a neighborhood a settlement? shrug
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-14/section-103.15
See Simmons (2010 legal interpretation from the FAA chief legal counsel. https://drs.faa.gov/browse/excelExternalWindow/FAA000000000L...
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Also, no operations in common types of airspace: no bravo, charlie, or delta (or class e surface area). This may not be difficult seeing as they tend to exist over congested areas which must be avoided anyway.
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-14/section-103.17
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Part 103 ultralights are vehicles, not aircraft, therefore not general aviation. Therefore, I'm not sure who will insure these operations. It may be the realm of self-insured.
> A flying car or roadable aircraft is a type of vehicle which can function both as a road vehicle and as an aircraft
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_car
Often times the ground capability is limited but it means your landing strip doesn't need to be next to your hanger - you can drive it down the road a few miles (usually after folding the wings in).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PAL-V_Liberty
The future in Back to the Future part 2 was 2015-10-21.
Now we need to get cracking on Mr. Fusion, so we can produce 1.21 GW of power with beer cans and egg cartons.