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By

Bailey Johnson /

CBS News/ April 4, 2012, 2:26 PM

American flying car soars in test flight

Terrafugia Transition roadable aircraft Terrafugia

(CBS/AP) - Flying cars are all the rage these days. Earlier in the week came word of a Dutch flying car, the PAL-V. Now, an American car-plane is making headlines for completing a successful test flight just days after its European competitor.

Woburn, Mass.-based Terrafugia Inc. said Monday that its prototype flying car has completed its first flight, bringing the company closer to its goal of selling the flying car within the next year. The vehicle - dubbed the Transition - has two seats, four wheels and wings that fold up so it can be driven like a car.

Last month, it flew at 1,400 feet for eight minutes. Commercial jets fly at 35,000 feet.

Around 100 people have already put down a $10,000 deposit to get a Transition when they go on sale, and those numbers will likely rise after Terrafugia introduces the Transition to the public later this week at the New York Auto Show. But don't expect it to show up in too many driveways. It's expected to cost $279,000.

And it won't help if you're stuck in traffic. The car needs a runway.

The flying car has always had a special place in the American imagination. Inventors have been trying to make them since the 1930s, according to Robert Mann, an airline industry analyst who owns R.W. Mann & Co. in Port Washington, N.Y.

But Mann thinks Terrafugia has come closer than anyone to making the flying car a reality. The government has already granted the company's request to use special tires and glass that are lighter

than normal automotive ones, to make it easier for the vehicle to fly. The government has also temporarily exempted the Transition from the requirement to equip vehicles with electronic stability control, which would add about six pounds to the vehicle. The Transition is currently going through a battery of automotive crash tests to make sure it meets federal safety standards.

Mann said Terrafugia was helped by the Federal Aviation Administration's decision five years ago to create a separate set of standards for light sport aircraft. The standards govern the size and speed of the plane and licensing requirements for pilots, which are less restrictive than requirements for pilots of larger planes. Terrafugia says an owner would need to pass a test and complete 20 hours of flying time to be able to fly the Transition, a relatively low hurdle for pilots.

The Transition can reach around 70 miles per hour on the road and 115 in the air, spokesman Steven Moscaritolo said. It flies using a 23-gallon tank of automotive fuel and burns 5 gallons per hour in the air. On the ground, it gets 35 miles per gallon.

Mann questions the size of the market for the Transition. The general aviation market has been in decline for two decades, he said, largely because of fuel costs and the high cost of liability for manufacturers. Also, fewer people are learning how to fly.

"This is not going to be an inexpensive aircraft to produce or market," he said. "It has some uniqueness, and will get some sales, but the question is, could it ever be a profitable enterprise?"

Mann sees the western U.S. as the most likely market, where people could fly instead of driving long distances.

Terrafugia has been working on flying cars since 2006, and has already pushed back the launch once. Last summer the company said it would have to delay expected 2011 deliveries due to design challenges and problems with parts suppliers.

With the appearance in New York, the company hopes to attract the eye of customers as well as investors.

"We are introducing ourselves as a viable company to the automotive world," Moscaritolo said.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
22 Comments Add a Comment
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jared131 says:
It's not really a flying car. It's a driveable plane.
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audemus says:
Great, just what we need, a bunch of George Jetsons' flying around.
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dgammons says:
Air bags?
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parisdakar says:
Why would the Government exempt or relax any rules for a company making an extremely limited production vehicle that has almost no practical use, benefit or hope for success?
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nancy_naive says:
The average American (many of whom could afford this) can barely drive in one dimension, and cannot think in two, let alone in three.
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Ah2flyhigh replies:
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Isn't this the type of thinking that has kept America in the dark ages and has allowed Europe to progress far beyond us in innovative design ?
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Jaylah54 says:
Imagine being in the right lane at a stop light, wanting to make a right turn, and having one of these to your left. Just wait until they light turns because there's no way you're going to be able to see if anything is coming.

And you know how much you hate it when you return to your car to find that some big van or truck or SUV has parked right next to you so that you can't see if anybody is coming as you back out of your space until your back end is already way out there to get crashed into?
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rwsmith29456 says:
If it's dangerous on the road now I hate to see people driving flying cars.
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aubfmet says:
How does it glide when the engine stops?
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The_REAL_Arbuckle_Doc says:
"I have GOT to get me one of these!!!" - Will Smith, in the movie "Independence Day"
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jtdev1 says:
great!

Texting and driving and flying...
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