17 comments

  • jmward01 10 hours ago

    I am really excited to se electric aviation start to enter the market. A lot of people point out the battery density / jet-A difference and it is valid, but it isn't the whole story. Jet-A has a much lower conversion to useful work than a battery, an electric power train (minus the batteries) has a lot of opportunity to shed weight (no bleed-air, fuel plumbing, less need to safety systems). There are a lot more opportunities to explore interesting airframes because electric can be placed in unique and more efficient ways (hence the eVTOL in this story). The basic physics change a lot too. We will see how high altitude flight shakes out but there is a big potential to go higher so that more efficiency can be gained, again needing less energy. The big point here is you can't simply compare electric to gas turbine and only swap the fuel for batteries. It is a totally different set of design parameters and it has so many amazing opportunities to be better.

    • jillesvangurp 6 hours ago

      Comparing battery energy density to fuel energy density usually ignores the fact that combustion engines aren't that efficient. A great counterpoint is that if you apply the logic to a 60kwh EV, it should have the range of a 2 gallon petrol car. Which of course is not the case. Most medium sized petrol cars would have at least 8-10x that for a similar range to that 60kwh EV.

      A more useful metric is $ per mile of range. Because if the vehicle can do the miles, that's all that matters. With the first generation of passenger drones their range isn't amazing. But their cost per mile is. And these Joby things have a useful enough range to do JFK to down town Manhattan.

      I've been following the market a bit. There are a few interesting vehicles moving through certifications. Beta Aviation was touring all the airshows last summer with their ALIA CX300. It's a simplified ctol model of their vtol where they kept the pusher prop but removed the other props to speed up certification. So it's more like a conventional plane. It has a range of around 300 nautical miles depending on the battery configuration (modular). They flew it coast to coast in the US and all around Europe. It should get through certification by 2027 or so. Their vtol version has been flying for a while as well but will take longer to certify. It has less range because landing and taking off vertically just eats a chunk of battery. But once it is up in the air it flies pretty much the same as the ctol.

      Of course the arrival of solid state batteries is going to shake things up. Everything that is close to being certified is flying without those. A potential doubling of energy densities is going to be a big deal. But certifying the batteries is going to take years.

      • pjc50 3 hours ago

        > Because if the vehicle can do the miles, that's all that matters.

        Unfortunately that's probably going to stay fossil for a while. What might matter is things like local ordinances prohibiting it on AQI grounds (especially things like leaded fuel in Cessnas!), as well as more dramatic questions like shortages.

        (we're probably never going to get a carbon tax on jet fuel, too much coordination required)

        • delfinom 2 hours ago

          You are ignoring the second variable on the consumption of energy dense materials. Weight.

          It correlates to the energy density of course, but, weight directly goes into the power consumption calculations for vehicles. Efficiency is just a multiplier afterwards.

          You can only ignore weight in non-mobile battery applications, i.e. grid applications.

          It is a multi-variate problem and petrol currently wins out by a wide margin.

          • mahsa32 4 hours ago

            >Comparing battery energy density to fuel energy density usually ignores the fact that combustion engines aren't that efficient.

            >>Jet-A has a much lower conversion to useful work than a battery

            • coredog64 1 minute ago

              Jet-A that has been combusted doesn't require any lift

          • bb123 5 hours ago

            I'm much less optimistic. Even when factoring in the poor thermal efficiency of gas turbines (~30-40%) compared to electric (>90%), the usable specific energy gap remains immense. Jet-A still delivers roughly 14 times more useful work per kilogram than modern batteries. Removing fuel plumbing and tweaking airframes won't overcome that fundamental physics. Also the issue with the high-altitude efficiency argument is that batteries, unlike liquid fuel, don't lose mass during flight meaning the aircraft to haul its maximum takeoff weight from departure to arrival. It's a double whammy.

            • ericd 46 minutes ago

              Well, in this case, we don’t need to argue about theory. The Joby has a tested range of 150 miles. They also tested it with hydrogen fuel cells and got >500.

            • Gravityloss 3 hours ago

              There's a hydrogen fuel cell version too that has been demonstrated.

              This is one potential pathway towards cleaner aviation.

              • sehansen 2 hours ago

                Hydrogen has a volume problem, though. A 1st generation Toyota Mirai contains 5 kg of H2, equivalent to 197 kWh. That would take up 55 m3 at atmospheric pressure which is why the Mirai stores it at ~700 atmospheres. That's still a 78 liter tank. AFAICT 200 kWh of petrol takes up 25 liters, i.e. a third. On top of that the high-pressure tank in the Mirai weighs 87 kg.

                • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                  Hydrogen also sucks in that it puts you in your own scaling lane. Relying on batteries means EVs, grid storage, et cetera drive down your costs for “free”.

                  • card_zero 32 minutes ago

                    Bertha Benz faced a similar problem in 1888, and had to refuel the Patent-Motorwagen by seeking out pharmacies. Drivers of the steam cars that were popular in France could just pick up a bag of coal from anywhere. (Wait, that doesn't sound right. A bottle of kerosene, then.)

            • neilv 42 minutes ago

              Looks like noise pollution.

              Wouldn't the city be better when the wealthy have to deal with the same services and quality of life as everyone else -- not (literally, in this case) elevating themselves above others, while making everyone else's life worse?

              • tootie 18 minutes ago

                They are supposedly quieter than helicopters and we already have a ton of helicopter noise.

              • gehsty 7 hours ago

                Clearly no Scottish people with oversite on naming! Loads of wee jobbies flying around!

              • tootie 14 minutes ago

                I'm very dubious. Primarily because this goes from landing pad to landing pad. You'll still need transportation from the pad to wherever you're going. A taxi goes door to door. And what's an extra 20 minutes if you're sitting the whole time?

                • CWwdcdk7h 4 hours ago

                  Aren't air traffic controllers already overworked and understaffed? How does adding hundreds of tiny helicopters fit in that picture?

                  • Gravityloss 3 hours ago

                    Also civilian air control needs to be handed over to Skynet

                  • ec109685 10 hours ago
                    • albert_e 10 hours ago

                      we cant view without a login anymore? i dont have a instal login but used tobe able to watch single videos shared directly with just a login nag

                      • Jblx2 9 hours ago
                        • Supernaut 5 hours ago

                          When I read the headline, I pictured something like the flying cars from "Blade Runner". What I see in the video is a helicopter with six rotors.

                          I get that the leap forward here is that it's battery-powered. Still, I can't help feeling underwhelmed.

                    • albertgoeswoof 10 hours ago

                      This so inefficient it’s painful to watch. It’s about 14 miles to go from jfk to manhattan. A train could do this in 20 minutes or so. A train could ship thousands of people in one go, supports millions of ordinary people in their daily lives, and doesn’t cause excessive noise pollution at street level (not to mention the climate, safety, and infrastructure benefits)

                      In London a new train line was built deep underground from Heathrow all the way through central London and out the other side. It stops all the way, travels further (19 miles) and still only takes 25 minutes, so don’t pretend it can’t be done.

                      Instead of supporting people we solve problems for the 0.001% who will give us a quick buck, while we pretend we’ll one day be rich enough to ride these things

                      • Leonard_of_Q 39 minutes ago

                        Back in the time when I frequented NYC I took the train to JFK, is that no longer a thing? the LIRR brought me a'clackity-clacking (haven't you Yanks learned about that new thing called welded rails?) past Rockaway to where those driverless shuttle things took over the ride. It did take a while but I rather liked the trip. I use public transport wherever I can, certainly over overpriced taxi 'services'. Once when in London I let myself be convinced by the press rep who insisted I take a taxi with her to the airport instead of the tube as I intended. Well, let's just say that if this were all part of her plan to corner me for a few more hours it worked because the non-unexpected traffic jam kept us from catching our flight. Great job, miss press rep, drinks are on you. In other words yay for public transport in those places where it is more or less reliable and not suicidally unsafe to ride.

                        • baxtr 8 hours ago

                          If you’re interested how some of these things got build in New York in the past I recommend the books of Robert Caro about Robert Moses.

                          Building new massive infrastructure requires a level of ruthlessness that is not socially acceptable these days.

                          • timcobb 7 hours ago

                            Op's example was underground. Moses built above ground, thereby requiring the ruthlessness. Not sure the same ruthlessness would be needed with tunnels.

                            • jtbetz22 2 hours ago

                              According to Bloomberg[1] construction of the first phase of the second avenue subway cost about 2.5B USD per mile.

                              At that rate, even if you just look at extending the A/C/E from Jamaica to JFK, you're talking about 15B or so USD. And compared to today's [subway|LIRR] -> airtrain system, you probably only cut about 25% of the travel time (from 60 minutes down to 45 minutes)

                              Compare that to, for example, the Gateway Tunnel, estimated to cost about 16B USD and double the daily commuter capacity from NJ to NYC (including traffic to and from EWR!), and it's hard to justify new infrastructure to make it easier to get to the airport.

                              1. In NYC Subway, a Case Study in Runaway Transit Construction Costs - Bloomberg https://share.google/SPcN8iRDZG7lNiwt9

                              • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                                > Not sure the same ruthlessness would be needed with tunnels

                                Still requires lots of cut and cover due to buried power and water mains being poorly documented. And stations will require razing buildings, as well as gentrifying neighborhoods.

                                • baxtr 7 hours ago

                                  It’s not only about underground vs evicting people.

                                  It’s also in large part about making sure that your project gets the required funding and other (social) projects don’t.

                              • billfor 9 hours ago

                                It would be expensive to build a new train to JFK. The unions and regulations in NYC make those projects very long and very expensive (look at the 2nd Ave subway line). There is an "AirTrain" to JFK but you have to take other trains to get to it first. There was supposed to be one to LGA but it got cancelled. We used to have a really nice water shuttle to LGA but that also stopped many years ago. People didn't want to travel to the water shuttle and pay $20 to get to the airport in 15 minutes. I'm hard pressed to see how a cheap quadcopter ride is going to be anything other than a novelty unless the FAA allows the heliports to be built inland -- we've had a bad history with blades flying through the streets.

                                • rsynnott 5 hours ago

                                  One thing that some cities have done where awkward infrastructure is required to get a train to the airport is to, essentially, borrow money to do it, and make the fares to the airport very high to compensate.

                                  Notably, getting to Brussels airport, which takes about 15 minutes from Brussels Nord, costs about 15 euro. For a 15 minute train journey. Hands-down the most expensive train per minute (or per km) I've ever been on. But, at least in theory, it's paying for this thing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabolo_project

                                  (That's by no means the only one; lots of airports are in awkward places so running rail to them is expensive, and it's common for it to be paid for by special, more expensive services. And people use them.)

                                  • SJetKaran 36 minutes ago

                                    Yep, Stockholm's Arlanda express train is costly as well

                                    • youngtaff 5 hours ago

                                      Even at 15 Euros I bet its way cheaper than a helicopter or electric VTOL aircraft

                                      • rsynnott 3 hours ago

                                        Oh, yeah, and it can and does handle a scale of traffic that a helicopter service obviously couldn't. I think each train takes about a thousand people and they're every ten minutes or something.

                                        The "use helicopters for airport access" thing seems, at best, extremely niche.

                                    • lmm 7 hours ago

                                      Funny how every other developed country manages to build more infrastructure cheaper despite having stronger unions and stricter regulations.

                                      • maccard 2 hours ago

                                        > Funny how every other developed country manages to build more infrastructure cheaper despite having stronger unions and stricter regulations.

                                        Every country says this about every other country. The UK has HS2, and we point to Germany. Germany has Stuttgart 21 and they point to Spain. Spain has the Sagrada Familia. Spain points to China, and China has the HZMB [0]

                                        This stuff is really really hard, and standards have evolved hugely. The london underground would never be built today, because of the ignored costs. HS2's massive problem isn't that we spent £100m on a Bat tunnel [1], it's that nobody was willing to say no because that decision is pinned to you but the blame absolving is "someone elses problem".

                                        [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Kong%E2%80%93Zhuhai%E2%80.... [1] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9wryxyljglo

                                        • digital-cygnet 2 hours ago

                                          I'm not exactly sure the point you're making about each country pointing at another as a positive example. The chain you've listed (US->UK->Germany->Spain->China) is a pretty good list of countries in descending order of cost to build infrastructure (it's not a straightforward analysis, but see https://transitcosts.com/new-data/ for example). There are always boondoggles, but the scoreboard is pretty clear -- each country in that list is better than the country before at building rail infrastructure.

                                          Your analogy is like saying that everyone thinks someone else is a faster runner: amateurs point to collegiate athletes, collegiate athletes point to elites, elites point to Olympians. You can find someone in each of these categories who has run a bad race, but that doesn't invalidate the existence of the differences in ability.

                                          • maccard 1 hour ago

                                            No, my analogy is that everyone assumes that everyone else is an Olympic runner, when we’re all just college athletes.

                                          • rsynnott 1 hour ago

                                            I mean, I'm not sure that the Sagrada Familia is a good example. It taking a long time to build was arguably part of the _point_, and was planned from the start.

                                        • hakrgrl 7 hours ago

                                          Isn't it? Look up the California high speed rail. There is massive corruption, incompetence, and red tape.

                                        • orwin 3 hours ago

                                          I guarantee France have stronger unions and regulations, and still managed the GPE. 3 years late and with 20% cost overrun, sure, but to be fair, they had to deal with floods twice, which wasn't planned and broke equipment and reseted some tunnels.

                                          • cromka 2 hours ago

                                            20% cost overrun is nothing if you look at the typical cost overrun of a US infrastructure project. UES extension in NYC a prime example of that. And 3 years late? How about 50 years late?

                                            • jbxntuehineoh 38 minutes ago

                                              yeah lol, in NYC 3 years and 20% would be regarded as an unprecedented success

                                          • AngryData 6 hours ago

                                            I don't see how unions cause any of those problems. Corruption and incompetence comes through administration and management not the average worker wanting a decent pay and 2 weeks of vacation.

                                            • prasadjoglekar 5 hours ago

                                              NYC unions are not your average worker. In my north of NYC town the labor rate for a union worker is 3x that of non union..and state laws mandate govt projects must pay that rate.

                                              • bluGill 2 hours ago

                                                unions are often a form of corruption themselves. If, as is often the case, there's only one union that can do a job, that means that that union is a monopoly.

                                              • HWR_14 8 hours ago

                                                There's a free bus to LaGuardia from the subway.

                                              • ericd 39 minutes ago

                                                There is a train to JFK, it does not take 20 minutes.

                                                • JumpCrisscross 20 minutes ago

                                                  > There is a train to JFK, it does not take 20 minutes

                                                  An express train could. It would be a political non-starter since it does jack shit for the boroughs.

                                                  • tootie 16 minutes ago

                                                    Multiple trains. You can take LIRR to Jamaica and transfer to AirTrain. Or take the A subway line. LIRR is faster but still like 45 minutes to either Brooklyn or Manhattan.

                                                  • jonnybgood 5 hours ago

                                                    > A train could do this in 20 minutes or so.

                                                    There’s already a train that does this. It’s the express A train, which gets you to the AirTran. And as someone who has taken the train from Manhattan to JFK on multiple occasions, it most certainly does not take 20 mins or so. It takes at least an hour and that’s not including the highly likely delays.

                                                    I think it would be inefficient to have a dedicated train take up the line just for JFK.

                                                    • jbxntuehineoh 32 minutes ago

                                                      the LIRR also goes from manhattan to jamaica, and it does in fact take 20 minutes or so (21 according to google maps)

                                                      • piva00 4 hours ago

                                                        Stockholm with a bit over 1 million people has an express train from Arlanda airport to the center of the city, it goes at ~200km/h making the transit of ~40km in 20-25 minutes.

                                                        I don't understand why it would be inefficient for one of the busiest airports in the world to one of the largest cities in the world to have a similar setup.

                                                        • jonnybgood 3 hours ago

                                                          Do you know where JFK is? JFK does not sit outside the city like Arlanda. JFK is in the NYC Queens borough surrounded by highly dense urban sprawl. That setup makes sense for an airport that sits far outside the city.

                                                          No track to JFK can support anything near a 200km/hr train and building a track for such a train is a nonstarter.

                                                          • rsynnott 58 minutes ago

                                                            It'd likely have to go largely underground. This is the approach being taken for Dublin Airport (again, a far, far smaller city than NYC); it'll be served by a largely underground metro line, running every 3 minutes each direction, taking about 20 minutes from the city centre.

                                                            Now, the catch there is that this metro isn't going to the airport, it's going _through_ the airport. Even without the airport it would be justifiable, so the airport kind of gets it for free. That's probably the only scenario where you can justify this sort of thing; it would be comically overkill if it was just to serve the airport (it will be able to move 20,000 people per hour per direction, which is... a lot more than the airport can move.)

                                                            That said, you'd think something along these lines might be justifiable; as you say, the area surrounding JFK is dense.

                                                        • d--b 3 hours ago

                                                          I always counted 50 minutes from midtown to JFK, taking the E train to Jamaica station and the air train.

                                                          But I think GP's point is that it could be done in 20 minutes. The A train is a subway, it's nowhere near the speed of the Heathrow Express.

                                                        • Jblx2 10 hours ago

                                                          Interestingly enough, I posted this as a follow on to a comment I made on yesterday's derailed Waymo-in-Portland discussion, where I wondered when will personal (flying) quadcopter vehicles have more annual passenger miles than every passenger rail combined (subways/light rail/Amtrak) in the U.S. I'm could see it happening within my lifetime.

                                                          https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47943360

                                                          • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

                                                            > where I wondered when will personal (flying) quadcopter vehicles have more annual passenger miles than every passenger rail combined (subways/light rail/Amtrak) in the U.S.?

                                                            I had a similar thought a few days ago in respect of Waymos specifically: "Americans take about 34 million public-transit trips a day. Assuming 25 rides per day, that's about 1.4 million self-driving cars to rival public transport's impact. Waymo has "about 3,000 robotaxis deployed nationwide." Doubling fleet size annually–Waymos and non-Waymos, though currently they have no peers–would get us to parity in less than 10 years. (A more-realistic 35% growth rate puts us around 20 years.)"

                                                            https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47915937

                                                            • llbbdd 9 hours ago

                                                              I'm very much in agreement. All of the pitches for more passenger rail have a for-the-greater-good tint to them that glosses over the fact that point-to-point private vehicles are better in every other conceivable way, more so if they're autonomous. I'd be comfortable betting that any serious passenger rail projects breaking ground right now today are going to be legitimately antiquated by the time Waymo and/or Flying Waymo and their equivalents are commonplace and cheap. More desirable, more convenient, easier infrastructure build out, less disruptive maintenance, better capacity allocation. I hope I live to see the day I can summon a car to my house, hop inside, and it travels automatically to a designated VTOL zone, docks into a fixed-wing harness and takes me anywhere I'd like to go. I'd get fat as hell.

                                                              • jbxntuehineoh 15 minutes ago

                                                                > better in every other conceivable way

                                                                except for being like 10x more expensive, of course

                                                                > easier infrastructure build out

                                                                lol yes we should just replace Amtrak with 40 lane highways full of waymos. great idea

                                                                • Jblx2 9 hours ago

                                                                  Keep in shape my friend! The smaller/sportier flying cars will probably have more weight restrictions.

                                                                  • mmooss 8 hours ago

                                                                    > All of the pitches for more passenger rail have a for-the-greater-good tint to them that glosses over the fact that point-to-point private vehicles are better in every other conceivable way

                                                                    You must not live in a dense city. Rail doesn't have traffic and is usually faster, and much faster in heavy traffic, including rush hour, sporting events, airports, bridges/tunnels across the river, parades, marathons, etc. etc.

                                                                    Also, there's no advantage to Waymo that doesn't apply to rideshare and taxi. I doubt people will care that Waymo vehicles autonomous, beyond the initial novelty (and despite SV's attempted marketing that their robots are better than people).

                                                                    Finally, despite SV trying to ridicule any attitude that threatens their profits, most people like the greater good.

                                                                    • llbbdd 5 hours ago

                                                                      I do live in a dense city with rail and it's slower, especially accounting for last-mile transit. Rail does have traffic, they just sit next to you and you have to navigate around them on foot.

                                                                      It's also not true that there's no advantage to Waymo; I take rideshare and taxis everywhere, and it will be a massive draw turning that into a pure transaction with a robot instead of it being a potentially social experience based on the whims and social malfunctions of the driver you get that day. As soon as Waymo or equivalent is available everywhere I will never choose to take a human-driven car again. And that's before getting into the many traffic advantages afforded to a fleet of cars that act as a collaborative swarm.

                                                                      To me that does describe the greater good. For all its real benefits, passenger rail is inflexible and bulky in comparison.

                                                                    • fragmede 9 hours ago

                                                                      Why drive to a VTOL zone? Just take off from your driveway!

                                                                  • mvkel 10 hours ago

                                                                    The infrastructure requirements to get a train into operation, let alone travel to a destination twenty minutes away, takes decades of development and billions.

                                                                    This needs a 20x20ft approximately flat surface.

                                                                    • sho_hn 10 hours ago

                                                                      I haven't done the math, but I wouldn't be surprised if cost/passenger over useful lifetime still shakes out better for the trains, and that's before you consider that people developing and building a train line get to eat and put their kids through schools.

                                                                      I can't believe seriously arguing for oversized quadcopters as a mass transport alternative.

                                                                      • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

                                                                        > haven't done the math, but I wouldn't be surprised if cost/passenger over useful lifetime still shakes out better for the trains

                                                                        In Manhattan? I honestly would. If it were a nation, it would be the 22nd-largest economy. Any disruption to that system is massively expensive.

                                                                        I'm not saying we shouldn't do the math. But we also shouldn't be reaching conclusions without attempting it.

                                                                        • timcobb 7 hours ago

                                                                          People disrupt Manhattan for novelty (eg. marathon) and civic/political (eg. no car zones) purposes all the time. Manhattan is hardly a purely reasonable place, in fact it's far from it. All kinds of nonsense takes place in nyc all the time. If nyc was driven by cold economic reason it would be boring and lame compared to what it is today.

                                                                          • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

                                                                            > People disrupt Manhattan for novelty (eg. marathon) and civic/political (eg. no car zones) purposes all the time

                                                                            This isn’t in the same category as burying a new train line. I lived around just the Hudson Yard water and electric expansions when those happened. It was years of increased noise, traffic and litigation.

                                                                            • djeastm 35 minutes ago

                                                                              Sure it was bothersome, but it didn't seem to cause the city to collapse into itself, either.

                                                                              • JumpCrisscross 22 minutes ago

                                                                                > it didn't seem to cause the city to collapse into itself

                                                                                Straw man. Nobody claimed these were existential threats.

                                                                                OP said "I wouldn't be surprised if cost/passenger over useful lifetime still shakes out better for the trains." I'm saying I wouldn't be surprised if the opposite came out–take the costs of the disruption and time value of money into account, and building a new train line anywhere in Manhattan is a worse use of resources than (a) increasing capacity on existing lines, a veritable forest of low-hanging fruit or even (b) eVTOLs.

                                                                        • fragmede 9 hours ago

                                                                          Do the people who run the helipads not also get to eat and put their kids through school though? Where are you that makes the parents pay directly for school such that not having a job at the train station means their kids go hungry and unschooled? What horrible place is that? (Wait, don't tell me, is it the USA?)

                                                                          I don't know how the economics in the electric VTOL era works out, but the thing about air travel vs train travel is that in order for the train to be useful, you have to build tracks from every train station to every other train station to have perfect routability, which is expensive. However, for a helipad, once you've built the helipad it automatically connects to all other helipads in range.

                                                                          • dzhiurgis 10 hours ago

                                                                            EVTOLS supposed to be less complex than cars and cars are already cheaper than trains.

                                                                            • Jblx2 9 hours ago

                                                                              Call me skeptical on being less complex than cars. I suppose this must be referring to parts count compared to an internal combustion engine car?

                                                                              • dzhiurgis 2 hours ago

                                                                                Suspension, steering, brakes, airbags, body...

                                                                                Of course on a serious EVTOL you got variable pitch props and tilting rotors (basic 4 rotor design is inefficient just doesn't scale).

                                                                                Avionics vs modern AEB, ESP, etc likely on par. Inverter redundancy way more important on EVTOL, but EVs have redundancy too.

                                                                            • signatoremo 9 hours ago

                                                                              NYC already have a functional mass transit system. Why does any transport discussion on HN become train focus? Why it's so hard to understand there still is the need for other modes of transportation. At the very least, tourists want to view the city from above, or those who wants a quick hop from JFK to Manhattan. This is not a replacement for mass transportation.

                                                                              At least try to show curiosity about what they want to solve.

                                                                              • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago

                                                                                > Why does any transport discussion on HN become train focus?

                                                                                Hypothesis: people aren't familiar with New York's trains. It's a world-class network the likes of which we don't otherwise have in North America. (Sorry Toronto.) So when they see eVTOLs, they emotionally map it to their local trainless context.

                                                                                • sho_hn 9 hours ago

                                                                                  I don't fit the hypothesis - the two cities I've lived in (Berlin, Seoul) have excellent trains. So it's perhaps overfitting in the other direction.

                                                                                  • bluGill 1 hour ago

                                                                                    Both of those cities are not in North America. In North America, New York City is by far our best example of a transit system. It is terrible by world standards, but is still the best example we have in North America.

                                                                                  • rsynnott 5 hours ago

                                                                                    ... I mean, no. It's more that it is weird that there is no train to the airport (it looks like you can take ~3 trains from Manhattan). New York is likely the only really big city in the developed world where this is the case.

                                                                                    In Ireland, everyone thinks it's pretty ridiculous that there's no train to Dublin Airport (all going well, it will finally have one in 2036 or so, after _many_ false starts). Dublin's a city of about 1.5 million people. It's pretty incomprehensible that a city ten times the size wouldn't have one.

                                                                            • albertgoeswoof 10 hours ago

                                                                              You state that like decades and billions is a long time.

                                                                              You have 10000 people who need to do this trip every hour, how will you manage that with this? It can’t scale.

                                                                              In the end normal people will be stuck without proper transport, while a tiny majority will fly around in comfort.

                                                                            • dzhiurgis 10 hours ago

                                                                              They are not mutually exclusive you know?

                                                                              • hakrgrl 8 hours ago

                                                                                This argument always comes up. "Why not public transit? It's so efficient, look at country X". Well, country X has people who respect public property and are orderly, so they can have nice things.

                                                                                The US is filled with people who don't. And who do drugs. And who rob. So people retreat to places like a Joby aircraft or self driving Waymo, which don't have those issues.

                                                                                • albumen 7 hours ago

                                                                                  Other countries with good systems also have such people. America’s crime rate is far lower than the 1990s; the impression that you live in a crime-infested world is likely increased media coverage.

                                                                                  I think the real reason the US has poor public transit is that its transport landscape has been shaped by years of planning and funding decisions that have put the car first, and cities rebuilt accordingly. America’s enormity also makes nationwide PT more difficult (but not impossible).

                                                                                  Then add the meritocratic attitude that if you can’t afford a car it’s somehow your fault, and you end up with little political and societal interest in a good public transit system.

                                                                                  *https://ourworldindata.org/us-crime-rates

                                                                                • renewiltord 6 hours ago

                                                                                  I don’t get it. Did they use the MTA budget or something? If the train is better then just build the train. Certainly these guys aren’t stopping you.

                                                                                  • moomoo11 8 hours ago

                                                                                    Yeah but I don’t want to travel on a train packed with randoms, some of whom are unpleasant or dangerous.

                                                                                    Have you taken public transit? Either it is good or it is awful.

                                                                                    The only country whose public transit was actually good is Japan, and why is deeper than just having a good transit system.

                                                                                    The privacy convenience and comfort are why I prefer Waymo over a bus/rail or even uber.

                                                                                    I will pay for an air taxi if it’s a good service.

                                                                                    • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

                                                                                      > It’s about 14 miles to go from jfk to manhattan. A train could do this in 20 minutes or so

                                                                                      I used to live on 30th & Madison. Blade was about 30 minutes door to door. LIRR was 50 to 55 minutes. Car 45 to 120 minutes. Helipads are cheaper to build and site than train stations; for most people, eVTOL will almost always be faster than the train. (I mostly take the train.)

                                                                                      > Instead of supporting people we solve problems for the 0.001% who will give us a quick buck

                                                                                      Blade cost $200 a trip. Assuming that's only affordable for someone making $50k a year or more, that covers the top 80% of Manhattan, 30% of New York City and America and about 5% of the world.

                                                                                      I'm not arguing we don't need better rail (and ferry) connectivity between our airports and urban cores. But you're always going to have a need for time-efficient travel options. And eVTOL has significant applications outside luxury transport. This complaint lands like someone complaining that the original Tesla Roadster was "inefficient and painful" as it was only affordable to the rich.

                                                                                      • dghlsakjg 10 hours ago

                                                                                        People making $50k a year in Manhattan are going to pay $200 to get to the airport while also having access to a helipad anywhere near where they can afford rent?

                                                                                        This suggestion lands like someone suggesting that people making $25 an hour in the most expensive city in America are going to consider throwing away $190 to save 15 minutes. In other words: incredibly out of touch with reality.

                                                                                        As a side note: the Tesla Roadster sales figures completely support the idea that it was a complete flop of a car that didn’t even appeal to impractical rich people or anyone else. 2,450 sold for the entire production run. A failure for any purpose except publicity. The model S is the one that changed things, and it was never widely criticized as impractical or only for rich idiots.

                                                                                        • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

                                                                                          > People making $50k a year in Manhattan are going to pay $200 to get to the airport while also having access to a helipad anywhere near where they can afford rent?

                                                                                          Regularly? No. Most people aren't regularly taking helicopters anywhere, in part because their ability to fly around New York usually requires VFR conditions.

                                                                                          Occasionally? Yes. If you live in Harlem and need to get to JFK, you're paying an outsized time tax to get to and through Grand Central or Penn Station compared with taking the West Side Highway down to the 30th Street heliport. If eVTOLs take off, it's way more realistic to site a helipad uptown than dig a new rail tunnel.

                                                                                          (I'm ignoring the outer boroughs and New York's surrounding suburbs, for whom this could actually be a game changer.)

                                                                                          > the Tesla Roadster sales figures completely support the idea that it is a dumb car for rich people

                                                                                          Without which we wouldn't have any EVs in the West, and globally be years behind where we are in EV adoption.

                                                                                          • project2501a 8 hours ago

                                                                                            > If eVTOLs take off, it's way more realistic to site a helipad uptown than dig a new rail tunnel.

                                                                                            We will see what happens the first time one of them crashes.

                                                                                          • rsynnott 5 hours ago

                                                                                            > Without which we wouldn't have any EVs in the West, and globally be years behind where we are in EV adoption.

                                                                                            ... Eh? The very successful Nissan Leaf (for quite a long time the best-selling electric car in the world) came out the year after the Tesla Roadster. The Renault Zoe (again, quite successful) came out about a year after that, if you're really hung up on the 'west' thing.

                                                                                          • amluto 9 hours ago

                                                                                            > the Tesla Roadster sales figures completely support the idea that it was a complete flop of a car that didn’t even appeal to impractical rich people or anyone else.

                                                                                            Tesla never meant to sell it in large numbers, and they probably couldn’t have made many more anyway. And this still represented around $3bn if revenue and helped get Tesla off the ground.

                                                                                          • lmm 7 hours ago

                                                                                            > Helipads are cheaper to build and site than train stations

                                                                                            Is that still true once you control for capacity? A modern single-line station is handling, what, 150 people alighting every 2.5 minutes? How many helipads would you need to match that?

                                                                                            > $200 a trip. Assuming that's only affordable for someone making $50k a year or more, that covers the top 80% of Manhattan

                                                                                            Someone making $50k isn't going to spend $200/trip regularly. They might spend it occasionally for an urgent trip, but how often is that going to be to/from an airport? For someone making $50k any flights they're taking will have been planned and booked months in advance, they can't afford to fly spontaneously/last-minute. (And if 80% of the population did want to use it, would it even be possible to build enough enough helipads? There isn't room for anything like 80% of the population to park in Manhattan, and these things look to be bigger than cars and I don't see anyone putting them in a multi-storey garage).

                                                                                            • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

                                                                                              > Someone making $50k isn't going to spend $200/trip regularly

                                                                                              They don’t fly regularly. I picked that number because it puts $200 into the reasonable splurge bucket, and that’s the lowest income of a friend I know who has taken one more than once.

                                                                                              If $50k doesn’t do it, take it to $80k and still understand that covers quite a bit more than half of Manhattan. Plugging these services as top 0.1% is wrong—that’s private jets.

                                                                                              • lmm 2 hours ago

                                                                                                > They don’t fly regularly

                                                                                                Right, which is why it makes no sense for them to pay extra to get to the airport slightly faster. (They might splurge $200 occasionally to get home from a late night out or something, but this isn't serving that route). They're not doing last-minute spontaneous trips or trying to cram a city break into a weekend. They're not cutting it close on the timing knowing they can always buy a replacement if they miss their flight. They probably don't even have precheck, which tells you how much saving 20 minutes the rare time they fly is worth to them. This is absolutely not a product that fits into a $50k or $80k lifestyle.

                                                                                                • cguess 2 hours ago

                                                                                                  I live in NYC and make quite a bit more than $80k and would still never splurge $200 for a trip to the airport. JFK by car (when I'm in an emergency) is already $100 and I get irrationally angry at it. Not to mention I'd have to actually get to a helipad, which are only on river fronts, an basically no train goes to those either, so I'm still in a cab.

                                                                                                  • JumpCrisscross 17 minutes ago

                                                                                                    > would still never splurge $200 for a trip to the airport

                                                                                                    Would you splurge $200 on anything? There are 8.6 million people in New York and 1.7 million in Manhattan. Some fraction of those can call this their cup of tea.

                                                                                                    Like, I will never splurge for curbside bag check. That doesn't make it a plutocratic privilege. eVTOLs have lots of downsides that are worth debating. Only solving "problems for the 0.001%" is not one of them. That designation belongs to private jets.

                                                                                                  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                                                                                                    > why it makes no sense for them to pay extra to get to the airport slightly faster

                                                                                                    “Slightly” faster from where they live is like an hour.

                                                                                                    > They're not doing last-minute spontaneous trips or trying to cram a city break into a weekend

                                                                                                    I’ve taken Blades quite a few times. This describes zero of their clients. It’s folks who want to fly out of EWR without having to deal with New Jersey’s infrastructure, those splurging and a very small number of regulars.

                                                                                                    > This is absolutely not a product that fits into a $50k or $80k lifestyle

                                                                                                    Agree. But it can and does on occasion. That makes it categorically different from purely plutocratic services. Also, use $80k if that works better for the example. That’s half of New Yorkers and a commanding majority of Manhattan residents.

                                                                                                    Helicopters and eVTOLs are relatively accessible in a city as rich as New York.

                                                                                              • AngryData 6 hours ago

                                                                                                People making $50K a year are not dropping $200 to save even 2 hours of time, not to mention 15 minutes. Even if they paid zero taxes $200 is an entire working persons day at $50K a year.

                                                                                            • janalsncm 8 hours ago

                                                                                              > The five-bladed propellers have a low tip speed, with twisted blades designed to reduce the “whop, whop, whop” of a helicopter to the volume of leaves rustling in the wind

                                                                                              I think they must mean when it’s high overhead. Based on the video, it’s still pretty loud up close.

                                                                                              • jillesvangurp 6 hours ago

                                                                                                Propeller noise is largely a function of rotation speed, blade size, and radius.

                                                                                                Electrical motors have high torque and are basically silent. Torque limitations constrain the blade size on a helicopter. The whop whop comes from the relatively long blades. And because of the large diameter that happens at a relatively low RPM. So, the frequency of the noise is low as well. Hence the whop whop sound.

                                                                                                Higher torque electrical motors enable higher RPM with smaller diameter and more blades. So, you get a higher frequency noise. Higher frequencies carry less far than lower frequencies. So, a lot of drones are measurably more quiet than helicopters when they fly overhead because they have lots of smaller propellers spinning faster. There's plenty of footage of electrical planes and drones taking off and landing at airports, air shows, etc. Some youtubers also use decibel meters. This has long stopped being a matter opinion / debate, you can just go out and measure it.

                                                                                                The short version of it is that these things are quieter, as the physics suggests.

                                                                                                • givemeethekeys 7 hours ago

                                                                                                  Is it any louder than driving on the highway with the windows down? I imagine when air hits ears at a high speed, it's going to be loud.

                                                                                                • dmix 10 hours ago

                                                                                                  I wonder what it's like flying in one. People are scared of planes, but flying in helicopters is way scarier.

                                                                                                  • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

                                                                                                    > People are scared of planes, but flying in helicopters is way scarier

                                                                                                    Genuine question: do eVTOLs flip over in the water like helicopters do? Or is the battery place low down.

                                                                                                  • stuaxo 2 hours ago

                                                                                                    That's a funny name - look up the Scottish slang "jobby".

                                                                                                  • Ekaros 5 hours ago

                                                                                                    Seems awfully tiny for any real total capacity. Should scale it up to size of say large railway car size so dozens if not hundreds of people at one time. This would also cut down cost and allow wider range of population that is no limited from use to use it.

                                                                                                    • cli 5 hours ago

                                                                                                      What you are describing seems outside the scope of this particular aircraft model.These are meant to land on existing helipads in NYC. From the article, the business model is to cut down 1-2 hour commutes to and from the JFK airport to seven-minute flights. Never mind the helipad space, just boarding hundreds of passengers and their luggage would cut severely into that time saving.

                                                                                                      • Ekaros 5 hours ago

                                                                                                        But it is fundamental issue. Unless you have extremely large number of helipads. The throughput is limited to capacity of landing, deboarding, boarding and lift off. Is the 7 minutes from lift off to landing or just travel time in air? How long does boarding and deboarding take, especially with luggage? Can this system reach more than low dozens passenger per hour by pad?

                                                                                                        • anonymous_user9 3 hours ago

                                                                                                          That doesn't matter as much when each passenger is happy to pay thousands of dollars for the privilege.

                                                                                                          24 pax/hr * $1000/pax * 12 hr/day = $288,000/day in revenue

                                                                                                      • yellow_lead 5 hours ago

                                                                                                        I say the same about ground taxis - buses are much more efficient

                                                                                                        • iso1631 5 hours ago

                                                                                                          Or perhaps take that large railway car, put a few together, and run then on or through the ground direct from the airport to a few downtown locations every couple of minutes. The efficiency per person would be ridiculously high (20,000 an hour), and I suspect the individual end-to-end speed would be faster than by air

                                                                                                          15 minutes for JFK to West 34th Street is just 14 miles. That doesn't include any boarding/off boarding process, which are far faster in a train than anything, including in a taxi.

                                                                                                          That's about the distance from Heathrow to Paddington which also takes 15 minutes.

                                                                                                        • felooboolooomba 4 hours ago

                                                                                                          Can it glide in case of a prop/motor failure? Or something resembling a helicopter's autorotate? Or is the passenger just SOOL if that happens?

                                                                                                          • hahajk 3 hours ago

                                                                                                            I believe the entire aircraft has a parachute that can deploy in the event of engine failure.

                                                                                                            Edit: I'm wrong. https://www.ainonline.com/news-article/2022-04-08/developers...

                                                                                                            > Joby also insisted that the high levels of redundancy built into its four-passenger eVTOL design obviate the need for a parachute. The company, which recently lost one of its two prototype aircraft during a flight test accident, said that the vehicle can safely operate after failures to the motors, batteries, or electric propulsion units and also has the option to land vertically or glide to the ground on its wing.

                                                                                                            • pjc50 3 hours ago

                                                                                                              "The air taxi can continue flying with up to two motors out" says the article.

                                                                                                              Probably safer than a V-22 Osprey.

                                                                                                            • hyencomper 8 hours ago

                                                                                                              Awesome! Joby needs trained pilots so that may be a bottleneck to scaling. I am guessing they would have to create autonomous air taxis like EHang to scale.

                                                                                                              • Animats 7 hours ago

                                                                                                                Ehang had a scaled-up multi-rotor drone that could carry one person. They're a drone company. Worked, but max flight time was something like 17 minutes. Their new model has both lift props and wings, plus a pusher prop for horizontal thrust. Range about 200km.

                                                                                                                Joby is more like an Osprey. It takes off and lands hanging from its props, then tilts the props horizontally to operate in airplane mode. This potentially offers more range with less power consumption. They've tried running on hydrogen, and claimed 524 miles of range.

                                                                                                                There's also Archer Aviation (https://www.archer.com/) which has a roughly similar vehicle. Test flights since 2021. Was supposed to be in service in 2025. Didn't happen. They supposedly have an air taxi contract for the 2028 Olympics in LA. Owned, or at least heavily financed, by Stellantis.

                                                                                                                There seems to be convergence on something that transitions to airplane mode, as opposed to the previous round of giant quadrotor-type drones.

                                                                                                                It's now clear that this can be done, but not clear that there's a business in it.

                                                                                                              • rafram 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                Will this be any less ridiculously loud than the conventional helicopters that fly over Brooklyn all day ferrying people to JFK?

                                                                                                              • walrus01 11 hours ago

                                                                                                                The venture money behind some of the larger and more prominent electric VTOL air taxi/helicopter-plane things seems to be betting that by the time they get the hardware design, software, user interface and general safety systems to 100%, battery technology will also have become a lot better.

                                                                                                                I'm referring to Joby, Archer, Wisk and similar.

                                                                                                                The range is not really good right now with batteries at 255Wh/kg and much worse energy density than Jet-A fed into turbine(s). None of the evtol companies are big enough or vertically integrated enough to come up with some miracle 500Wh/kg battery on their own, so they're relying on market pressure generally to cause their battery subsystem vendors to make some significant breakthroughs.

                                                                                                                More directly related to the PR, I saw the video of the JFK to Manhattan test flights and they're being done with only the pilot on board.

                                                                                                                • nradov 11 hours ago

                                                                                                                  The venture money is betting that the e-VTOL technology can be weaponized. Small, disposable drones have been getting all the attention lately due to the war between Russia and Ukraine. But longer term there are a lot of potential missions for larger VTOL combat aircraft — both drones and crewed.

                                                                                                                  • amluto 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                    I would guess that a military version would be a hybrid: electric motors as in all the e-VTOL prototypes, enough battery power to comfortably take off, land and maneuver in combat conditions, and a small hydrocarbon-fueled engine to recharge the battery while cruising.

                                                                                                                    • dzhiurgis 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                      What problem would a hybrid solve for military? Military doesn't care about emissions and this doesn't offer resilience like fully electric does (recharge anywhere, reliability).

                                                                                                                      • amluto 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                        The same problem that a hybrid architecture solves for ships: the ability to use physically small electric motors with very high power density that are mechanically decoupled from the rest of the vehicle. This lets a bunch of designs pull off neat thrust vectoring tricky with much simpler and lighter components than a mechanical thrust vectoring system would need.

                                                                                                                        (Electric azimuth thrusters are becoming common in large ships for roughly this reason, too.)

                                                                                                                        • dzhiurgis 2 hours ago

                                                                                                                          > ships

                                                                                                                          That's a tangent from most sensitive vehicle to weight to the _least_ sensitive one.

                                                                                                                        • nradov 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                          The military cares a lot about range, signature reduction, and especially fuel efficiency. Reducing fuel usage reduces the logistical train necessary to sustain units in the field.

                                                                                                                          https://www.defensenews.com/land/2025/01/22/army-tries-out-n...

                                                                                                                          • dzhiurgis 2 hours ago

                                                                                                                            How is it going to reduce fuel consumption by nearly doubling the weight?

                                                                                                                      • AngryData 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                        I don't see how these style of drone like aircraft could possibly be better for personnel or gear transport over a collective rotor helicopter. A bigger rotor is more efficient, can lift more, and can autorotate to a safe landing after taking the inevitable battle damage and losing power.

                                                                                                                        I mean I could be wrong, im certainly not an expert in future military design and strategy, but I just don't see any advantages once you start scaling these to the size needed to move humans. The only potential I can see is multi-rotor designs being easier to learn to pilot over a collective rotor design, but I don't see any modern military considering a few weeks off a pilot's training being worth the trade off in range, capacity, and safety.

                                                                                                                        • dzhiurgis 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                          Can we settle in the middle and trial them for cargo first? Seems obvious for deliveries.

                                                                                                                          • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                            > Can we settle in the middle and trial them for cargo first?

                                                                                                                            There is an existing market for passenger eVTOL to and from airports. Using that as a beachhead makes way more sense than trying to develop a de novo niche.

                                                                                                                            • dzhiurgis 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                              Oh market is def there. I mean validating technology on cargo.

                                                                                                                              • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                                                                                                                                > validating technology on cargo

                                                                                                                                The tradeoff is you have to build a cargo business. That costs money and leadership attention. Racing for the beachhead, given sufficient access to capital, is the more focused strategy. (This is a good example of how bootstrapped versus financed companies can be radically different in their technical debts, time to market, culture and discipline around validating hypotheses.)

                                                                                                                          • booleandilemma 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                            Why are larger drones better than smaller suicide drones that can have bombs attached to them and built by the thousands per day in a dark factory?

                                                                                                                            • nradov 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                              Different configurations are better for different missions. Small suicide drones have very limited range, weak sensors, and can't carry much cargo or a large enough warhead to take out hardened targets. Hopefully we'll never get into a conflict with China, but if we do the platforms will have to be much larger just due to the greater ranges involved.

                                                                                                                              • walrus01 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                Range, for one, if what you're referring to as a mental model is 15" prop size quadcopters with an artillery shell strapped to them. For use <50km.

                                                                                                                                Now look at a photo of a human standing next to a shahed-136 size UAV for a totally different size scale.

                                                                                                                                https://www.rand.org/pubs/commentary/2025/11/in-europe-the-p...

                                                                                                                            • walrus01 11 hours ago

                                                                                                                              The 'final' decision was recently made to go ahead with the massive project for this, which is eventually intended to replace the UH60/Blackhawk type platform. Traditional big money defense contractor stuff.

                                                                                                                              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_MV-75_Cheyenne_II

                                                                                                                              • nradov 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                The military operates more than one type of aircraft. I don't think an MV-75 will fit very well on an FF(X), for example.

                                                                                                                            • maxdo 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                              you don't need crazy range to fly between jfk and city .

                                                                                                                              it's doable to do it today, economically, and solve tons of problems .

                                                                                                                              in a similar to ev rollout:

                                                                                                                              solve problem for wealthy people, get the premium, scale cheaper options. Nothing new. Technology of today is ready.

                                                                                                                              • tqi 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                > solve tons of problems

                                                                                                                                I'm skeptical that air taxis could ever meaningfully reduce traffic congestion to / from JFK. Compared to cars, these would seem to require a significantly larger landing pad and passenger unloading space and need much more safety margin in-between drop offs. Maybe this is competitive vs the private helicopter market?

                                                                                                                                • Archonical 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                  I wonder what % of traffic is to/from JFK. The subway decently connects much of the city to the JFK air train, but it's a fairly inconvenient journey. Toronto's UP express has made travel to YYZ significantly easier, but I doubt it's possible to construct something similar in NYC.

                                                                                                                                  I love aviation, but I also don't see air travel as being a scalable/affordable solution to this problem. Then again, it's only meant to alleviate traffic burden for a certain segment of the population.

                                                                                                                                  • maxdo 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                    the problem with train it stops ... on every train stop. New york specifically, there are several networks(new jersey, mta, there are lines that are 100+ years old.

                                                                                                                                    In general if you have an affordable enough option you'd never walk into subway, with your several luggages, to travel longer. Train is a decent plan b.

                                                                                                                                    • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                      > if you have an affordable enough option you'd never walk into subway, with your several luggages, to travel longer

                                                                                                                                      I'm moderately wealthy and lived in New York for a decade. I take the train between JFK and Manhattan. (Specifically, the LIRR.) It's faster, more reliable and–for me–more comfortable than taking a car. (It's also safer.) If I have my cat with me or I feel like having fun, I'll take a Blade, but that's realistically only shaving like 20 minutes off the travel time.

                                                                                                                                      • maxdo 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                        LIRR is not a dirty MTA train :) Noisy shaky helicopter is not an electric taxi with 6+ motors that gives you more stability with way less noise that flies after take of using wings.

                                                                                                                                        Cars for sure are less convenient.

                                                                                                                                        • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          > LIRR is not a dirty MTA train :) Noisy shaky helicopter is not an electric taxi with 6+ motors that gives you more stability with way less noise that flies after take of using wings

                                                                                                                                          I've also taken the A from Harlem to JFK once. It was fine. Tougher to read a book, like I can on the LIRR, mostly because the frequency of stops means having to constantly be aware of your belongings.

                                                                                                                                          And agree on helicopters. We already have helicopters. Switching them to eVTOLs is a move forward.

                                                                                                                                    • maxdo 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                      if your air taxi is pilotless and electric, why it can't be scalable.

                                                                                                                                      • Archonical 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                        How many people do you think enter/exit JFK arrivals and departures every hour? Where are you going to land all those air vehicles? Is this a shuttle service with many seats? How do you plan for the air traffic for that many people?

                                                                                                                                        • Dylan16807 6 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          About 7000 on average, but let's say 10000 since demand varies. And let's consider doing 10% of them with helicopters. If we average 3 people per helicopter, that's 170 groups in and 170 groups out. If each landing needs 5 minutes of pad time, that's 14 pads. Make it 20 to handle variation.

                                                                                                                                          Wow, that makes it sound significantly more feasible than I would have guessed.

                                                                                                                                          • fragmede 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            Those are all reasonable questions, but if some entity would be able to answer them, of all things, I think JFK, an airport, would be well equipped to handle them.

                                                                                                                                          • tqi 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            JFK airtrain carries about 30K passengers per weekday in 2025. how many landing pads would be needed to carry a meaningful % of that traffic alone?

                                                                                                                                        • maxdo 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          travel time is 5-10 mins with 40 mins to 2hours.

                                                                                                                                          Yes, it is better compared to helicopter. cheaper, less noise. e.g. you can place it more applications, for less money.

                                                                                                                                          • tqi 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            Well it's 5-10 minutes once you get to the west 30th st heliport, which can easily take 20 minutes within Manhattan. Plus getting loaded in, cleared for takeoff, and potential for backups at the landing pads, I suspect the gains are much less in practice.

                                                                                                                                            • youngtaff 4 hours ago

                                                                                                                                              How long does it take to get from a helipad to the terminals at JFK?

                                                                                                                                        • walrus01 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          JFK and city is a relatively niche and regionally unique market compared to how short/medium range aircraft are used in general. For instance the Joby or Archer product right now wouldn't have the range to fly from a helipad on the Seattle waterfront to somewhere in the San Juan Islands. Or for a flight from Vancouver harbour to Victoria.

                                                                                                                                          • maxdo 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            it's every airport in every city. In new york only you have 3 airports. its a 200k+ a day traffic.

                                                                                                                                        • gpm 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          I'm not sure I agree that they're making that bet (there's lots of market at current ranges IMHO), but even if they were it would be a great bet to make. We're talking about jumping to 375 [1] or even 400 Wh/kg in production cars this year [2] (with prototypes long since shown off). And there's every reason to believe that there's a lot more headroom in this space to improve, and that we will improve rapidly since we're making so many more batteries now.

                                                                                                                                          [1] https://electrek.co/2025/04/28/jeep-dodge-maker-validates-so...

                                                                                                                                          [2] https://www.evlithium.com/lifepo4-battery-news/calb-solid-li...

                                                                                                                                          • CarVac 11 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            I think Beta's CTOL has better economic prospects, if less useful as an air taxi.

                                                                                                                                            • walrus01 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                              More like in a similar (but smaller) role as the Cessna 408 Skycourier, which is short to medium range, unpressurized.

                                                                                                                                            • vlovich123 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                              Isn’t the comparison against helicopters for regional and urban transit where EVTOLs hold an edge because of the drastic energy reduction that fixed wing has over helicopters?

                                                                                                                                              I mean sure long term the goal may be to wait for battery density to increase to keep moving upmarket and eat longer and longer flights from traditional aviation, but I don’t think better batteries are a requirement for the initial batch of vehicles.

                                                                                                                                              • cyberax 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                The upcoming solid-state batteries are around 500 Wh/kg.

                                                                                                                                                But batteries have an advantage over turbines, especially small turbines: specific _power_ density.

                                                                                                                                                • carabiner 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                  Joby actually claims their business is viable without significant advances in battery energy density. We'll see. I think this will be closer to an Eclipse Aviation business case than SpaceX.

                                                                                                                                                • fergie 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                  Reminder that New York Airways used to operate helicopter flights to the top of the Pan Am building until a 1977 accident killed five people.

                                                                                                                                                  • dboreham 4 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                    Apparently nobody with Scottish heritage was involved in selecting that name.