Chiba: The race to build a practical and safe flying car is on in earnest, as Japanese electronics giant NEC and Cartivator on Monday unveiled their prototype in Japan's Chiba. The "flying car" has four propellers and is being tested inside a cage as a safety precaution.
NEC and Cartivator invited the public to observe its drone-like "flying car" prototype, which can hover at three meters.
NEC is among the 80 companies who sponsored for Cartivator's flying car, which is also backed by automaker Toyota and video game company Bandai Namco Holdings. The company aims to deliver a seamless transition from driving to flight.
The company believes that its a revolution and the Japanese Government would have a role in bringing it out. It has a goal of having people zipping around in flying cars by the 2030s.
The firm developed a huge test course for flying cars in an area devastated by the 2011 tsunami, quake and nuclear disasters in Fukushima in northeastern Japan.
In 2017, the test didn't fetch proper result as one of the flying cars developed by Cartivator crashed quickly during a similar demonstration.
But Cartivator's CEO Tomohiro Fukuzawa said that things have been improving since. "I think, in the future, the market will be the almost same size with automobile. But it grows gradually, so not only Japan but also global markets we are looking now," he added.
Flying car project has many challenges to face regarding safety in making an urban mobility people's lives and longevity of the battery according to the distance.
Officials say their flying car is designed for driverless flights for deliveries.