The Futuristic PAL-V Liberty Will Let You Fly-Drive Your Way To Work

This isn't the first attempt we've seen involving building a flying car, but it's the newest. A Dutch firm will let qualified pilots strap themselves into a machine that can fly between airstrips before driving to a final destination
The Futuristic PAL-V Liberty Will Let You Fly-Drive Your Way To Work

Move aside, plebeians in your archaic motor cars. A fly-drive commute is so much more now, if you believe the latest firm to announce an attempt at a flying car.

For a mere £425,000, Dutch company PAL-V will sell you the Liberty flying ‘car’, which, to be fair, is more of an enclosed tricycle with rotor blades attached. Apparently it’s fully road legal in the EU, as long as the overhead rotor isn’t spinning as you’re mooching down the M1.

The blades collapse and fold away into a bundle over the roof and tail end. A Rotax ‘dual-propulsion’ drivetrain has one engine for the road and one for the sky. The power goes to a blade at the back, which drives the vehicle through the air courtesy of lift generated by the unpowered overhead rotor.

The Futuristic PAL-V Liberty Will Let You Fly-Drive Your Way To Work

PAL-V is aiming to have its first car-slash-microlight delivered to customers by the end of next year. The launch model will be named the Liberty Pioneer Edition. With weight reduction a priority it’s not very well equipped, though. For your purchase price you’ll get some flight instruction sessions (oh good) and a heater. Apparently some aspects of the build can be personalised, but that’s about the end of the standard kit list.

Only 90 are being made, with about half staying in Europe in the hands of rich businessmen flying over busy main roads attempting to slice precious minutes off their commutes. The conversion between car and ‘copter takes 10 minutes.

The Futuristic PAL-V Liberty Will Let You Fly-Drive Your Way To Work

You’ll need a small airstrip or at least 90 square metres to take off; preferably closer 200, says PAL-V. In the air its 197bhp engine can manage 112mph and a range of up to 310 miles, with a flight ceiling of 3500m. On the road the 99bhp engine can manage 100mph, 0-62mpg in 9.0 seconds and fuel economy of just 31mpg, although a large fuel tank means that its theoretical range is 817 miles.

Oh, and by the way: before you reach for your wallet, you’ll be needing a flying licence. That’s if the project ever actually leaves the ground in the first place…

Comments

Anonymous
02/13/2017 - 17:45 |
9 | 2
Joshua Lue

CT news has been like a bus today. Nothing for ages then 2 come along at once!!

02/13/2017 - 17:50 |
30 | 1

I was thinking to myself, “Is it Sunday today? Has my body clock broken that CT staff hasn’t posted anything the whole day?” LOL

02/13/2017 - 20:30 |
3 | 0
Nissan 420sx

I already see someone drifting this thing 🤔 It’s rear wheel drive, isn’t it?

02/13/2017 - 17:53 |
2 | 1

Even if it isn’t, people find a way

02/13/2017 - 19:01 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

Hopefully in the future there will be that one car manufacturer who will make cars that you can drive.not cars that drive you

02/13/2017 - 18:02 |
4 | 1
Anonymous

I just realized why does it say 0-62mpg instead of mph

02/13/2017 - 18:10 |
3 | 0
Roadster / Tail Red

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Because measuring speed is too mainstream

02/13/2017 - 20:05 |
3 | 0
Valanti Demetriades

Still waiting for those top comment of the week haha

02/13/2017 - 18:31 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

0-60 mpg in 9 seconds, but it only gets up to 31? Ok then…

02/13/2017 - 20:00 |
6 | 0
Ali Mahfooz

How much does it cost for a pilot’s license? I’d like to get my own. :P

02/13/2017 - 20:21 |
1 | 0

Are you a Pilot?

02/14/2017 - 13:44 |
0 | 0
P5 Ford

CT staff can’t even write. So many spelling errors..

02/13/2017 - 20:51 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Some drivers when there’s traffic be like

02/13/2017 - 23:27 |
2 | 0

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