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		Hydrogen-powered flying vehicle touted as 
		Southern California traffic tonic 
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		 [May 30, 2019] 
		By Omar Younis and Steve Gorman 
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Developers of a 
		multi-rotor hover craft billed as the first flying vehicle to be powered 
		by hydrogen fuel cells unveiled a full-scale model on Wednesday in 
		Southern California, in a show-and-tell that raised some eyebrows but 
		never left the ground.
 
 A mockup of the futuristic aircraft, dubbed "Skai" by its inventors, was 
		put on exhibit for investors, the news media and other invited guests 
		outside the BMW Group's Designworks studio in Newbury Park, a suburb 
		north of Los Angeles.
 
 Engineering and avionics for the drone-like vehicle were developed by 
		Alaka'i Technologies, a privately held company based in Massachusetts 
		but named for a tropical forest in Hawaii ranked as one of the wettest 
		spots on Earth. The BMW unit contributed to the craft's design.
 
 The company touts the Skai craft as a promising new zero-emissions mode 
		of personal airborne transport ideal for Southern California, a region 
		long plagued by smog and renowned for traffic gridlock of epic 
		proportions.
 
		
		 
		
 While several car makers have struggled to bring hydrogen fuel cell 
		technology into the automotive mainstream, Alaka'i describes its 
		invention as the "world's first hydrogen fuel cell-powered air mobility 
		solution."
 
 The mock-up displayed on Wednesday, about the size of a minivan, 
		resembles a sleek, five-seat SUV with landing skids and an array of six 
		horizontal rotors attached at the end of arms protruding from the roof 
		of the craft. It was all for looks.
 
 The display model is a replica of the company's only full-size 
		operational prototype, which is expected to begin remote-controlled test 
		flights soon at the firm's Massachusetts lab, said Chief Executive 
		Officer Steve Hanvey.
 
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 "We're going to get off the ground imminently," he told Reuters, adding 
		that assembly was completed weeks ago and that initial Federal Aviation 
		Administration certification is pending.
 
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			Alaka'i Technologies unveils a model of a working prototype of Skai, 
			a hydrogen fuel cell powered multi-rotor aircraft the company 
			designed to carry up to five passengers, during an event in Newbury 
			Park, California, U.S., May 29, 2019. REUTERS/Andrew Cullen 
            
 
            He said the relative simplicity of the aircraft and its operation 
			compared with conventional helicopters should ease the FAA approval 
			process as development progresses from experimental to commercial 
			production.
 Hanvey said he expects to win FAA certification for initial 
			production vehicles by the end of next year, and to make its first 
			aircraft available for sale in early 2021, before ramping up 
			production.
 
 In the long run, the company foresees producing more than 10,000 
			vehicles a year, with a sticker cost that would "approach the price 
			of a luxury car," Hanvey said. They will be built in three basic 
			configurations - for taxi or personal passenger flights, for 
			emergency medical transport and for cargo delivery.
 
 Powered by six hydrogen fuel cell batteries - one for each rotor 
			engine - the aircraft are designed for a range of 300 miles but are 
			envisioned mainly for short urban hops or flights between nearby 
			cities.
 
 For safety, they will be equipped with a redundant autopilot system, 
			a propulsion design that can fly with the loss of at least one 
			motor, and a parachute attached to the vehicle's airframe.
 
 Although FAA rules will require pilot operation, developers expect 
			the vehicles ultimately will be flown autonomously by pre-programmed 
			guidance systems.
 
            
			 
			(Reporting by Omar Younis and Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing 
			by Bill Tarrant and Alistair Bell) 
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