| My Bonanza A36TN gets that mpg at over 200mph, with 6 total seats as well. Boston to Myrtle Beach area in 3.5 hours and ~60 gallons avgas vs 15 hours and 35 gallons of car gas; I find that tradeoff to be very much worth it. FAA regulations for certified aircraft are indeed a huge hurdle on progress, but are not at all a hurdle for experimental aircraft (which is where flying cars are today). (Side note: private aircraft owners flying under part 91 [roughly: not charter, not airline] are allowed to produce or cause to be produced "owner produced parts", so not all parts need to come from the OEM. It plays out that most engine parts do, but many airframe, interior, etc parts do not.) For me the flying car is a solution in search of a problem. When I fly somewhere, there are almost always rental cars (or rideshares) widely and easily available. I don't want to take my lightweight, expensive, and somewhat damage-sensitive airplane into traffic 600 miles from home where a fender bender leaves me unable to fly home. That's what a rental car is for. Would it be nice to land in my own "car" and immediately drive to my ground-bound destination without having to unpack/repack? Sure. Am I willing to accept the inherent compromises, expenses, and risks implied by that? Absolutely not. Do I think the market is? Nope. |
[1]: https://www.aopa.org/about/general-aviation-statistics/activ...
[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kia_Sorento#Sales