Inventor aims to cut travel times with passenger drone

Tempo Desk
3 Min Read
A PASSENGER drone, driven by its inventor Kyxz Mendiola, flies overhead during a recent demonstration in Barangay Santiago, Sto. Tomas, Batangas. (Manny Llanes)

 

A PASSENGER drone, driven by its inventor Kyxz Mendiola, flies overhead during a recent demonstration in Barangay Santiago, Sto. Tomas, Batangas. (Manny Llanes)
A PASSENGER drone, driven by its inventor Kyxz Mendiola, flies overhead during a recent demonstration in Barangay Santiago, Sto. Tomas, Batangas. (Manny Llanes)

BATANGAS (Reuters) – An inven­tor has unveiled what he calls a flying sports car that represents the future of transport, riding it out of a ware­house towards a cheering crowd, leaving a cloud of dust in his wake.

Former dancer and camera opera­tor Kyxz Mendiola flew and hovered for a few minutes in a single-pas­senger contraption powered by the “multicopter” technology commonly used in small unmanned drones.

“It was amazing,” Mendiola said after what he said was the first pub­lic test flight of his invention. “All the hard work paid off. Everything worked perfect.”

Mendiola’s machine, the “Koncepto Milenya,” can fly as high as 6.1 me­ters and speed up to 60 kilometers per hour but its maiden flight lasted just a little over 10 minutes.

He said it took a long time to save up the funds for the components of the single-seater powered by six lithium-ion batteries whose passen­ger steers with a portable radio fre­quency controller.

“Press a button and it will go up, then push the stick forward, it goes forward. It’s very smart, that’s why I’m saying it has a lot of potential,” Mendiola said.

The machine, which can carry up to 100 kilograms, could shave hours off trips in cities like Manila, crippled by chronic traffic problem, Mendiola felt. “When we have to go some­where about an hour’s drive, this can take you there in five minutes,” he said.

An added safety feature is that the craft’s 16 rotary motors allow it to keep flying, even if one or two fail, he added.

An Australian company, Star8, is partnering with Mendiola to develop the vehicle after a video featuring it went viral on social media.

Star8’s Chief Executive Jacob Mai­mon said he wanted to mass produce it and market it in Australia, Europe, and Hong Kong, after helping Men­diola perfect the machine. “We will get there very fast now, what with the help that we can give him,” he added.

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