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To which we’d like to say: Might we recommend this Moller M400 Skycar, currently available on eBay for a Buy It Now price of $5 million? There’s a catch, however: You can’t legally fly this ...
To showcase the Skycar’s potential, the Skycar Expedition Team is planning a January 2009 flight/drive from London to Timbuktu, a distance of over 6000km (3700 miles).
Always looking for that perfect Christmas gift for the person who has everything, Neiman Marcus has put the ultimate commuter vehicle in this year's catalog – the Moller M400 Skycar. The ethanol ...
"Anyone can fly the Skycar," the headline on the January 1991 cover of Popular Mechanics blared, teasing the possibility of a future where everyone could own their own "flying car." That dream ...
Parajet, the same company responsible for that downright unnerving personal flying machine we peeked back in '05, has now placed its long-awaited SkyCar up for pre-order. Said vehicle has evolved ...
He’s the inventor of the Skycar, a personal vertical takeoff and landing vehicle that he’s convinced will usher in the next phase of mass transportation. Moller’s vision of the future is ...
Top airspeed would be in the 330 mph range, and altitudes of 36,000 ft would be reachable. The SkyCar was last seen flying in 2003 in a small tethered test hover. Last we heard it will next be ...
It's not quite what Moller set out to make. His true goal is his four-passenger dreammobile called the Skycar, which could fly hundreds of feet above gridlocked highways and zoom as fast as 375 ...
The Moller Skycar 400 is up for auction on eBay, but this conversation piece is having trouble attracting bidders. eBay/Moller International “The M400 is a flying car that promises to let you ...
We want to bridge divides to reach everyone. Loading... British inventor set to fly car from London to Timbuktu. Click on the thumbnail to see the full image. You've read of free articles ...
While it may not have been the first, the Moller Skycar has become widely known as the original flying car, partly because of the vast marketing hype surrounding its 30-plus-year development.
His work has appeared in The New York Daily News and City & State. That’s because the Skycar, while having successfully completed several low-stakes tests, is not approved for flight by the ...