Right...
Time for the OcUK man children to chip in all together to buy one and have a meet...
$45,000 AUD.....hmmmmm. Spie should buy one.

Right...
Time for the OcUK man children to chip in all together to buy one and have a meet...
$45,000 AUD.....hmmmmm. Spie should buy one.![]()
It's a real shame that you won't be able to 'drive' one without a pilots licence. That was the problem with that flying car which they developed a few years back.
Operation: With a 250lb-ish Kevlar & carbon fiber body that falls within the US’s “ultralight” parameters, the HB doesn’t require a pilot’s license to fly . . .
I can't see how anyone can learn to ride/fly that thing without sustaining serous injuries. You will have to learn all your moves at like 1m off the ground in case you fall off. They will also have to design in such a way that if you fall off, that thing isn't going to drop off from the sky and land on you or someone else.
It also can't just hover and stay there until it runs out of petrol and will need some sort of self landing mechanism.
It needs a lot more software to fly that thing.
With the words "Catastrophic Hoverbike Accident" etched on your gravestone, you'll be the coolest corpse (or collection of "bits") in the graveyard.![]()
Because cars, motorbikes, planes and helicopters all automatically control themselves and avoid killing people when the driver/pilot cocks up?
No, but you don't fall out of your plane do you?
Besides, both planes and helicopters are capable of landing without the engines being on. I highly doubt this will, the blades are not big enough.
Why would you fall off?
When can helicopters land with no power, one or two have a slight glide, but it's still a crash.
Helicopters autorotate when they lose power and fall, which does slow their descent.
Parachutes. With the hoverbike you have the choice to wear an emergency parachute and have two explosive parachutes attached to the airframe, with a helicopter you have no such choice. The hoverbike in it's current configuration cannot autorotate (with adjustable pitch propellers it can) but this should not be viewed as a discredit to the design. Engine failure in a helicopter or plane by no means assures you that you will survive a autorotation or glide, as air crash statistics show. The option of removing yourself from the vehicle and descending via parachute to the ground may well save your life
that's not deliberate, that's because the tailrotor can't supply enough force to counteract the rotation of the main blades, which effectively lessens the RPM of the main blades meaning that the helicopter loses thrust faster
Also, a spinning Helicopter is a lot harder to escape from![]()
right, the first person the mock one up like this wins everything:
B@[/QUOTE]
Everything isn't enough.
No, but you don't fall out of your plane do you?
Besides, both planes and helicopters are capable of landing without the engines being on. I highly doubt this will, the blades are not big enough.