Geneva Show debut for world’s first production road and air-legal flying car

Dutch company PAL-V is selling its three-wheeled Liberty flying car now, with a 99bhp driving engine and 197bhp flying engine.

07 Mar 2018 | 2431 Views | By Jimi Beckwith, Autocar UK

The PAL-V Liberty, the world’s first commercial flying car that can be ordered for around £425,000, has made its public debut at the Geneva Motor Show.

Dutch manufacturer PAL-V claims its Liberty is fully compliant with existing regulations and says it represents a “pivotal time in aviation and mobility history”. It expects to make first customer deliveries next year.

The flying car has launched with the Liberty Pioneer Edition, which is priced from €499,000/$599,000 on PAL-V's website, before taxes. This price includes some flight instruction sessions, power heating and personalisation options.

Only 90 will be sold, with around half of them headed to Europe, and after their delivery the manufacturer will start delivery of the Liberty Sport model.

That model is priced from €299,000/$399,000 (around £254,000) before taxes on the manufacturer’s website. 

It doesn’t have the same level of personalisation available as the Pioneer Edition but still comes with flying lessons, while options include power heating and carbonfibre detailing.

This isn't the first flying car attempt in recent years...

The Liberty has a three-wheel layout and rotor blades on the roof which fold away. It's effectively a gyrocopter aircraft with two engines. Its Rotax engine-based dual propulsion drivetrain includes one engine for driving and one for flying, with an unpowered large rotor on top that provides lift, while an engine-powered blade on the rear of the vehicle gives thrust.

It has lowered suspension and a tilting two person cockpit.

To convert the car from drive to fly mode or vice versa takes around 5-10 minutes, according to PAL-V. The rotor mast unfolds automatically, but the driver must pull out the tail section, unfold two rotor blades and take out the prop to ready it to fly.

You also need a license to fly, and you can’t just take off and land anywhere; PAL-V says the Liberty requires take-off space of around 90-200x200 metres without obstacles. It says that small airstrips, aerodomes, glider sites and ultralight airfields will be most appropriate.

The manufacturer says the noise that the Liberty generates in flight will be comparable to a small fixed wing aeroplane, saying it will be “much less” than a helicopter.

The drive mode engine has 99bhp and a top speed of 100mph/160kph, with 0-62mph/0-100kph sprint taking 9.0sec. Fuel economy is a claimed 31mpg/10.97kpl with a range of 817 miles/1,307 kilometres.

In the air, the Liberty can climb to a maximum altitude of 3500m, and its 197bhp flying engine can propel it up to a top speed of 112mph / 179kph. Its range is a claimed 310 miles / 496 kilometres.

The Liberty will be assembled in the Netherlands, with specific parts and systems manufactured by other companies in different countries.

PAL-V collaborated with Italian design agencies for the car and conducted test programmes with concepts in 2009 and 2012.

Flying car attempts come around every few years, take a look at another

Robert Dingemanse, PAL-V's CEO, said: "After years of hard work, beating the technical and qualification challenges, our team succeeded in creating an innovative flying car that complies with existing safety standards determined by regulatory bodies around the world."

 

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