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| Science and Technology "Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known." - Carl Sagan. |
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#1 |
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To boldly go...
Location: Kansas City
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The Flying Car
The flying car has been a staple of movies and other works of fiction set in the future and the idea of it has always been placed just out of reach but within a lifetime. Most people presently in their mid 30s probably best think of "Back to the Future" when it comes to the future and the flying car. Mostly when we see flying cars in fiction it's simply a car-looking vehicle that's able to defy gravity without the need for flight and control surfaces (wings, flaps, ailerons, rudder.) It's simply a car that functions in 3 dimensions as well as it does in two. This past summer's "Total Recall" presented us with "flying cars" that were simply "Mag-Lev" vehicles that operated along specialized roadways and were otherwise useless when not on the magnetic roadway. Back to the Future presented it in an interesting way as opposed to how the flying car was used in the past as a symbol of the future. In moves from the 50s, 60s and in promotional videos the flying car was presented as a solution to traffic congestion and problems, after-all it's the sky and there's a lot of it! So no more traffic, right? In Back to the Future 2 we're presented with a vastly more realistic idea that with flying cars there'll still traffic problems. We see a "traffic report" before Doc and Marty leave for the suburbs talking about a jammed skyway making Doc groan that it'll take "forever to get out there." Which that's what it'd be. They wouldn't let you just fly wherever you want it'll still be controlled and restricted to avoid crashes and other potential problems. As we've seen technology grow most have probably groan more indifferent to the idea of the flying car, considering most people can barely handle two-dimensions without crashing into things while dicking with their iPod what's going to happen when you put them hundreds of feet in the air? Real-world "flying cars" have been less that and more like roadable airplanes. No "fuck this traffic!", flip a switch and take to the skies and more "I've got to be in a different city in the region so I better drive to the airport and get clearance for take-off." But, setting everything aside the flying car is a symbol that says "this is the future." So let's say we have them for the purposes of this discussion. We'll argue that the flying car is now available, it's no more expensive that cars presently are (no matter the make or model) or a conversion process for a car isn't prohibitively expensive, no more expensive than, say, buying a new set of average tires. For that you get a "flying car", there's a catch, however. The car isn't capable of flying more than a few dozen feet off the ground, say no more than 50 or 60 feet. So the only "advantage" they may have is being able to pass someone by flying overhead of them. Essentially traffic laws in the third dimension are about the same as they are on a three-lane highway. Traffic closest to the ground is for "slow" and entering/exiting traffic, mid-flight level for "cruising" and the highest level for "passing." Though this exists "everywhere" so it's theoretically possible to make a VTOL landing into a parking spot from the "vertical fast lane." (Though the practice is frowned upon. Landing from 60 feet in the air is a dick move and likely to get your car keyed. )The car has a minor AI preventing you from being able to drive off the roadway and to prevent possibly "overhead passing" into someone. Signals on the car can be used to signal 3rd-dimensional lane changes, mirrors and possibly even an on board CCTV preventing an "overhead blind spot." The car is maneuverable in the classic "flying car" style. No need to get to a "take off speed" or anything like that. The car simply ignores gravity. Stabilization systems prevent the car from being blown off course in high wind, etc. At least not any more greatly than an ordinary car. The flight system is no more energy intensive than an ordinary car's engine drive-train. My question is one of: What's the advantage of a flying car? Would being able to pass cars or flying "over" traffic really be an advantage and make driving between places easier? Would the loss of the rolling friction between a car's wheels and the road make cars any more fuel efficient? Would traffic jams be a "thing of the past" or would we still have more of the problems? (Again, for the "sake of argument" we'll assume all of the "problems" with flying cars aren't the case due to how they work and are operated. There's no higher risk of accident or calamity than there is with a normal car. Accidents still happen, yes; people still get distracted and the occasional vertical-merge crash does happen but overall accidents, mortality and injury rates and risks are the same as with roaded cars.)
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Just because it's futuristic doesn't mean it's practical. |
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#2 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: The Flying Car
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#3 |
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Commodore
Location: Mr. Brody's still
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Re: The Flying Car
__________________
Ee'd plebnista, norkohn forkohn perfectunun |
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#4 |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: The Flying Car
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We establish no religion in this country, we command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor will we ever. Church and state are, and must remain, separate. -Ronald Reagan |
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#5 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: The Flying Car
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#6 |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: The Flying Car
__________________
We establish no religion in this country, we command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor will we ever. Church and state are, and must remain, separate. -Ronald Reagan |
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#7 |
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Commodore
Location: Mr. Brody's still
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Re: The Flying Car
__________________
Ee'd plebnista, norkohn forkohn perfectunun |
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#8 |
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Commodore
Location: Huntsville, AL, USA
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Re: The Flying Car
__________________
B.J. --- bj-o23.deviantart.com |
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#9 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: The Flying Car
Snoogans.
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This shirt is dry clean only. Which means it's dirty. -Mitch Hedberg |
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#10 |
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Admiral
Location: Kentucky
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Re: The Flying Car
A flying car has to overcome that problem before it becomes viable as a vehicle that can operate in congested areas or anywhere near neighborhoods, and unlike conventional ground vehicles, no amount of parked cars, curbs, berms, trees, and a stone foundation will keep an out-of-control flying car from crashing into your bedroom at 60 mph, and crashes will happen due to unforeseeable circumstances (falling trees, unsecured loads flying back off a truck, teens tossing things out a window, etc). You could possibly overcome these problems by having the car latch itself to a magnetic track, which could be stacked into almost any configuration (like a giant fence you'd see around a horse farm). That would give you a car that could operate normally or stick itself to the wall and be supported from the side, a simple variation on the idea of a car that followed tracks in the roadway. As they say, at speed your car only contacts the road with four patches of rubber about the size of your tongue. If you want to eliminate the roadway, all you really need is to focus on is controlling what those four patches touch, or their equivalent. |
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#11 | |
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To boldly go...
Location: Kansas City
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Re: The Flying Car
The thought experiment was in a "all things being perfect" type thing to avoid discussions like cars being blown around in the wind. Which also goes to what gturner above says. Naturally a real flying car, barring any radical change or discoveries in science, are going to have a LOT of problems to overcome. That's not what we're discussing here. We're discussing what the advantages of a flying car would be and to do that we're going to assume that the way the flying cars work and are operated causes no higher incidences of accidents, fatalities, and such as ordinary roaded cars. The cars are also just as maneuverable in three dimensions as cars are in two. They can stop in place, after a "breaking distance" due to inertia and hover in one spot. Essentially the "Back to the Future" version of the flying car. (Ignoring how disturbed by the wind the DeLorean was in 1955) only it's altitude is limited to a few dozen feet off the ground rather than hundreds. Either due to technological limitations or law. It doesn't matter. People aren't flying them at 1,000 feet and crashing them into buildings anymore than people drive their cars across fields and crash into buildings. Maybe it does happen, maybe it doesn't. It's not enough to overcome the "advantages" the cars offer. It's just a matter of what the advantages of a flying car are. Or if we'd simply still have the same problems. Would traffic jams really be lessened? Would they be more fuel efficient due to not having to overcome friction with the ground? Would less ground space need to be dedicated to streets and parking structures? (Since you could theoretically have a tall standing parking garage, or even an underground one, without the need for ramps to get between levels.) -For this we'll say the car can "descend" as low as possible to get to the ground. A minor "break" in the altitude limit, you could th erotically fly safely across the Grand Canyon, or descend into it, and ascend out of it since there's "ground" at the top of the canyon.
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Just because it's futuristic doesn't mean it's practical. |
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#12 | ||
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Cherry Chassis
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Re: The Flying Car
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Your crash was, like, spectacular! My world simulation project! Also: Women and Men: Self-Image and Rape Culture |
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#13 |
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Moderator with a Soul
Location: Fairfax, VA
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Re: The Flying Car
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Lead Organizer for EVN: Firefly. "So apparently the really smart zombies have automatic weapons!" -Torg, Sluggy Freelance |
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#14 |
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Admiral
Location: Kentucky
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Re: The Flying Car
You could also do this with many major roads, eliminating or greatly reducing the need for snow plows and salt trucks, and also eliminating that very dangerous period when the roads have iced but the salt trucks or plows haven't come around yet. |
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#15 | |
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To boldly go...
Location: Kansas City
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Re: The Flying Car
In the real world of course a flying car would have numerous problems not make them worth it. They would be more vulnerable to gusts of wind blowing them off course, they'd have to obey the laws of physics and gravity and be little more than small aircraft. That's not the question here. What are the advantages of a flying car if we assume they can be operated like roaded cars and present no greater danger or risk of accident.
__________________
Just because it's futuristic doesn't mean it's practical. |
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