First distributed electric-driven flying car. Official: China unleashes first flying car with distributed electric-driving: Kunpeng No.1 soars into history.
Credit: Southeast University
Kunpeng No.1 soars into history.
Southeast University has unveiled its first-ever distributed electric-driven flying car, the Kunpeng No.1, marking a bold leap into the future of everyday transport. Developed by a cutting-edge research team at Southeast University in Jiangsu Province, China, this incredible vehicle promises to drive and fly into a new era of mobility.
Flying cars are officially here: Get ready
The Kunpeng No.1 isn’t your average flying contraption. It boasts a ‘full steering and all-wheel drive’ setup, ensuring it zips along the roads as effortlessly as it soars through the skies. Forget your standard flying drones or electric vertical take-off and landing aircraft – this flying beast fuses the best of both worlds, blending ground and aerial capabilities seamlessly.
Yin Guodong, the project leader and professor at Southeast University’s School of Mechanical Engineering, described the creation as “China’s first flying car based on distributed electric drive technology, using a car as its primary carrier, rather than relying on drone technology.” Unlike drone-based concepts, the Kunpeng No.1 uses an actual car chassis, delivering smooth transitions between road and air travel.
What’s under the bonnet of the Kunpeng No.1 flying car?
The Kunpeng No.1 is powered by four coaxial rotors and a high-capacity battery, giving it an impressive dual-mode performance:
In the air: The vehicle has a maximum take-off weight of 500kg, can fly for at least 20 minutes, and soars to heights of over 300 metres.
On the ground: It achieves a top speed of 60 km/h, cruising roads as a futuristic all-terrain vehicle.
But hold on to your hat Marty – back-to-back iterations might extend the flight endurance to over two hours, making that 20-minute limit look like child’s play.
A transport revolution?
Yin claims the Kunpeng No.1 is just the beginning. The project aims to contribute to the new low-altitude economy, envisioning a world where cars take to the skies to cut travel times and traffic jams. Pie in the sky to reality.
This sky-high innovation isn’t just about engineering. The Kunpeng No.1 represents a perfect storm of expertise from mechanical, vehicle, electrical, and control sciences, making it a wonder of multidisciplinary collaboration.
When you can buy a flying car
While the flying car is currently a prototype, it heralds a new dawn for transport. Will flying cars become as common as a Ford Fiesta? The Kunpeng No.1 has lifted the lid on a world of possibilities.
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