A drone air taxi designed by Airbus has successfully completed 114 test flights in Pacific Northwest skies. Airbus, along with its rival Boeing and many others, is striving to make flying cars an option for your urban commute. The enthusiasm around the test flight hangar in Pendleton, Oregon, has to be leavened, though. Industry insiders said the technology is running years ahead of regulators and public acceptance.
You can imagine living life like the Jetsons cartoon family when you stand next to Airbus' electric, single-seat passenger drone.
"It's cool and it's real," said the head of flight testing, Matt Deal, as curious attendees from a regional drone industry conference admired the futuristic prototype in a hangar at the Pendleton airport.
"No crashes, no nothing. It's been great so far," Deal told public radio. "Over 100 takeoffs and landings, all self-piloted. So there is no pilot either on the ground or in the vehicle. From the very beginning, we were all autonomous."
Flight testing continues in the uncongested skies of the Pendleton Unmanned Aerial Systems Test Range.
Airbus named the eight-rotor prototype "Vahana," an allusion to Hindu mythology and flying carpets. The goal is to offer a faster option for short hops across highly congested big cities -- or from suburbs to city centers -- at a cost that is competitive with ground taxi fare over the same distance.
Deal said the prototype has a range of around 50 kilometers (31 miles) or about 20 minutes of flight time with fully charged batteries. He said the battery pack makes up almost 40 percent of the weight of the vehicle.
"Vahana was intended to be a technology demonstrator," Deal said in an interview. "So from the very beginning we just wanted to prove the viability of technology and we've done that. From vertical takeoff, through transition, to a cruise speed of over 100 miles per hour, we've demonstrated electrification in aviation is not only feasible, it's feasible now."
There was no human on board for any of Vahana's flights. In Europe, the company is flight testing a larger robo-air taxi dubbed CityAirbus. The learnings from both aircraft development programs will be combined into a next iteration. Deal said Airbus is proceeding methodically amid lots of competition worldwide.
For its part, Boeing is testing a two-seat robo-air taxi developed by its Aurora Flight Sciences subsidiary. The Boeing electric vertical-takeoff-and-landing (eVTOL) prototype made its maiden flight in January. It crashed onto a runway in June while flying unmanned at the Manassas, Virginia, airport, suffering substantial damage but causing no injuries to people, according to a preliminary report from the NTSB.
