German urban air mobility pioneer Volocopter has released
new details of a vision for a future network of hubs and ports for air taxis
that mainly relies on re-using existing infrastructure to reduce upfront
capital costs and ease the path to airspace integration over gridlocked city
streets.
Volocopter
in 2016 first staged manned flights of its 18-rotor, two-seat VC200 air taxi
prototype in Germany, followed by public demonstrations in Dubai in September
2017 and in Las Vegas this January.
Although
the company’s electric-powered, autonomous aircraft concept is well known, its
concept for building up infrastructure in cities to support the launch of
point-to-point air taxi flights within a decade was less understood.
A
4min, 8s documentary posted on Volocopter’s YouTube channel on 17 April marks
the company’s first attempt to detail how it plans to achieve a goal of flying
100,000 passengers per hour over cities by 2028 in brief hops up 14.6nm (27km)
and carrying two passengers.
“Our
ambitions do not end with developing the aircraft,” says Volocopter chief
executive Florian Reuter. “We are here to develop the entire ecosystem making
air taxi services a reality across the world. This includes the physical and
digital infrastructure to manage unmanned systems.”
Set
in New York City, Volocopter’s documentary video envisions operations
concentrated in enclosed “Volo-hubs”, each supporting landings every 30s. As
each aircraft arrives on an exterior landing pad, it is moved by a conveyor
belt inside an adjacent enclosure, where passengers can alight. Meanwhile, a
robotic system replaces the vehicle’s depleted battery with a fully-charged
power system.
“We
expect any air taxi transport system to begin with a point to point connection
and over time grow into a system of dozens of Volo-Hubs in a city,” says Volocopter
co-founder Alex Zosel.
The
concept includes an additional network of smaller Volo-ports. These would use
mainly existing heli-pads with minimal modifications and offer direct access to
major destinations, such as shopping malls, large offices and train stations.
The
system also depends on a new approach to air traffic management, according to
Volocopter’s video, but it offered few details about how it would be developed.
But
Volocopter’s production partner isn’t waiting. DG AeroTec announced on 4 April
the launch of serial production of the Volocopter 2X, featuring an improved
fuselage and rotor system. The first batch of components have passed static
load tests, DG AeroTec says, and the second serial aircraft is now in
production。
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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