Flying Cars: The True Story.
By Andrew Glass. Clarion. $17.99.
The cry of “where are the
flying cars?” is a common one from people complaining that the future isn’t
turning out the way they thought it would. Some people lament that instead of
getting flying cars, we get lawn chairs lifted by balloons, or maybe someone
using multiple drones to get up in the air, or perhaps we simply get substitute
technologies that we never asked for (to the extent that “asking for” future
technology means anything), such as Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest and Facebook.
Or we move past flying cars to self-driving ones, which do exist but do not
have the emotional appeal of ones that leap from the ground into the air.
It is certainly true that
flying cars have been a staple of science fiction for a century – how many pulp
magazines featured “cities of the future” with cars zipping about? TV cartoons
such as The Jetsons featured them,
and they made their way, sometimes incidentally, into non-science-fiction
movies as well: for example, It Happened
One Night features a character arriving in an autogyro. But wait – that five-Academy-Award-winning
1934 film was a romantic comedy, not a drama, much less science fiction, and
was character- and script-driven, not pushed by special effects. Does that mean
autogyros really existed?
Well, yes. Amelia Earhart
flew one. Autogyros were flown twice onto the White House lawn (1931 and 1936),
with President Herbert Hoover presenting a trophy to the pilot the first time.
Later models of autogyro were “roadable,” as Andrew Glass explains in his
thoroughly enthralling Flying Cars.
“The rotors folded neatly back for driving, and the entire machine fit easily
into an average-size garage.” But like so many of the fascinating inventions
discussed in this first-rate blend of science, technology and history, the
autogyro hit a series of bumps, some literal (Earhart crashed hers, claiming
she was hit by a tornado) and some figurative (the autogyro’s inventor and
financer died at age 41 – in the crash of a conventional airplane).
Flying Cars is not a story of what might have been – it is a story
of what really was. And therein lies its fascination. Flying cars do, and did, exist, but despite some
heavyweight interest in developing them for the mass market, they never became
commercially viable. Glen Curtiss, who received the first-ever official pilot’s
license and was founder of what became the aircraft company Curtiss-Wright,
created an “autoplane” with encouragement from telephone inventor Alexander
Graham Bell. Auto magnate Henry Ford ordered his engineers to make an
affordable airplane that could be sold for the price of a Model T, and the
result was the Sky Flivver (1926); but production was stopped after a pilot
died during a promotional tour, although Ford continued to believe in “a
combination airplane and motorcar.” Buckminster Fuller designed, but never
tried to build, a flying car that would require inflatable wings and jet
engines – which did not exist at the time (1928).
The storied names are only
part of the tale of flying cars. Far more of the dreamers and inventors who
have been intrigued by this concept are very little known: Waldo Waterman,
Theodore P. Hall, Daniel Zuck, Moulton B. Taylor and others. What is amazing is
to realize is how much success flying-car advocates had: a number of their
creations were built, really did work, and were put into limited use, at least
for a time. The old argument against combining an automobile (whose parts
requirements make it heavy) with an airplane (whose flight requirements mean it
must be light) surfaces again and again in these stories, and is laid to rest
again and again by success after success – only to be revived the next time
someone comes up with a flying-car concept. Flying cars also ran repeatedly
into geopolitical obstacles: the first wave of them in modern times had to be
set aside so the focus could shift to military planes to be developed for World
War I, and the second wave lost out to the equally war-focused development of
helicopters in the run-up to World War II. In more-recent times, ever-increasing
safety regulations have required cars to have more and more equipment that
weighs them down and increases their complexity, making integration of an
automobile with an airplane harder than ever – although backyard tinkerers
still try and sometimes succeed, as Glass points out.
Nor are tinkerers the only
ones interested in flying cars. Glass’ final chapter tries to look “Into the Future” from the
standpoint of today, discussing a modern aircar built around a $30,000 Lotus, a
Massachusetts firm that says it has a design that switches from car to airplane
in 30 seconds, a “carplane” being developed in Germany that is designed to
switch from electric-car mode to internal-combustion-engine-powered airplane,
and more. None of these is a mass-market vehicle along the lines envisioned by
Henry Ford or autogyro pioneer Harold Pitcairn, and as safety regulations
become ever more extensive and worries grow about the use of airspace (by
drones as well as aircraft containing humans), the likelihood of “a plane-car
in every garage” looks more and more like a never-to-be-realized dream. Still, “never
say never” would be a pretty good motto for the innovators profiled in Flying Cars, since they were repeatedly
told a car-plane combination could not possibly work, and repeatedly proved the
doubters wrong, even if these amazing vehicles never did make it into general
use. Yet.
No comments:
Post a Comment