It looks kind of like the pilot is sitting in a high-end basketball shoe in the sky, with two pontoon floats either side. The suggestion is clear: please fly this thing over water, where at least if you crash you’ve got a chance.
The Flyer runs 10 electric fans with no prop guards, each one looking roughly three feet (1 m) long, arranged across a hash-shaped airframe measuring 8 x 13 ft (2.4 x 3.9 m).
Flight time is somewhere around 12 to 20 minutes, depending on pilot weight and the speed you’re flying at. In terms of safety, Kitty Hawk has currently decided to limit altitude to between 3 to 10 ft (0.9 to 3 m), and maximum speed to 20 mph (32 km/h).
The company says you can learn to fly it in “less than an hour,” and fly it without a pilot’s license as an ultralight aircraft, meaning you’ll need to keep it away from populated areas.
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