Paul Moller has been trying to get his Skycar off the ground for three decades and now he’s asking the public for a lift. The Moller International founder and developer of a novel “flying car” concept ...
Normally, we at The Drive like to write our stories for as broad an audience as possible. But in the case of this story, we’re quietly hoping it’ll be read by one person in particular: Steph Curry, ...
In the world of real-life flying cars, back before the days of Terrafugia or AeroMobil, there was the Moller Skycar. Although the vehicle has still yet to reach production, the original four-seater ...
James Bond's favourite inventor, Q, would probably approve of the Parajet Skycar, but even 007 might think twice about the hazardous mission that awaits it. At 10am today the vehicle that can "drive ...
July 14, 2008 The race is well and truly on to develop a functional flying car, and innovators around the world are finding several different ways to accommodate the needs of a road-registerable ...
“The M400 is a flying car that promises to let you take off from your backyard and fly to your destination at 350 mph, ignoring, if not gazing condescendingly upon, land-bound commuters stuck in ...
Not sure what to get for that special someone this holiday season? How about a flying car? Neiman Marcus is now listing the Moller Skycar M400 in its online catalog, just in case you have an extra ...
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is transportation editor with 10+ years of experience who covers EVs, public transportation, and aviation. His ...
A U.K. company with a flying car prototype announced late last year that it would undertake an epic journey south from London across the Straits of Gibraltar and then the Sahara Desert to Timbuktu, in ...
While it may not have been the first, the Moller Skycar has become widely known as the original flying car, partly because of the vast marketing hype surrounding its 30-plus-year development. Now ...
The historians once pontificated that we'd all be cruising about in flying cars right around the year 2000, and while that whole Y2K fiasco threw us a tad behind schedule, it looks like the future may ...
Lifelong risk-taker Neil Laughton plans to travel from London to Timbuktu in a dune buggy, a trip that will take him an estimated 42 days. Oh, and that dune buggy? It can fly. Laughton’s journey will ...