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A short first hop for ‘drone taxi’ in Vienna

A Norwegian journalist waits for a short flight in an Air Taxi EHang 216 at Generali Arena in Vienna, Austria on April Thursday. Photo Joe Klamar/AFP

It was more of a small step than a giant leap, but the first public outing of a pilotless "drone taxi" in Vienna on Thursday nevertheless offered a glimpse into the possible future of urban travel.

Several big companies such as Boeing and Airbus are working on their own versions of the technology but it was the Chinese firm EHang that unveiled its aircraft to assembled journalists in the Austrian capital's Generali Arena football stadium.

But anyone expecting to see it gliding over the Danube was to be disappointed — it is as yet not certified for Austrian airspace and stayed firmly within the confines of the stadium after a vertical hop of around 10 metres.

Being inside the two-seater EHang 216 was "funny, soft and surprisingly noisy," said AFP photographer Joe Klamar, one of the first journalists to climb aboard, adding that the cabin was "very cramped".

"The rotors are scary but we got used to it," he added.

The EHang 216 is equipped with eight sets of rotors which emit a noise level of 90 decibels, below a normal helicopter but still easily loud enough to be uncomfortable. The firm says it hopes to get the noise level down to 75 decibels.

Resistant 'mentalities'

EHang says it eventually hopes to use to the drone to carry passengers at low altitude over distances of up to 35 kilometres but for now still needs to be cleared for use by aviation authorities.

"Our biggest challenge is not technology, it's not regulation, it's people's mentality," says EHang's chief marketing officer Derrick Xiong, referring to possible reticence on the part of passengers towards the new vehicle.

The company says it has received "thousands" of pre-orders and that is working with Austrian aeronautics company FACC to start mass production as of next year.

Xiong says early interest has come from "oil and gas companies who want to transport engineers from one platform to the other" as well as tourism companies and firms transporting organs for transplant. He said the EHang is expected to cost around €200,000 but would not be available for private buyers.

"Technically speaking its not a dream, its a reality," FACC CEO Robert Machtlinger told reporters, adding that the project had already carried out 7,000 flying hours, of which 2,000 have been manned.

The Austrian company, which has a turnover of around €800 million ($900 million), supplies aerospace giants including Airbus, Boeing, Bombardier and Embraer. It said it hopes to produce around 300 of the drone taxis by mid-2021.

Hybrid technology

EHang has been carrying out most of its testing in China, as well a test flight in February 2017 in Dubai which was closed toRead More – Source

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