APR 20, 2024 JLM 57°F 01:16 AM 06:16 PM EST
Pilotless electric robo-taxis getting ready for take off

Following the 1967 Six-Day War, Israeli military planes facing hostilities across the Suez Canal were being taken out by Egypt’s new surface-to-air missile systems. And the Egyptians had built a 30-foot sand wall, severely limiting visual reconnaissance.

Major Shabtai Brill came up with a crazy idea: Attach a camera to the bottom of a toy airplane and fly it by remote control over the border to see what was happening.

Israel’s defense industry got serious about designing lightweight UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) after Egypt launched its surprise attack in the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Today, drones account for about half of all Israel Air Force flight hours.

Israel has evolved into the world’s leading UAV manufacturer, with 61% of total global sales of UAVs. In 2018, Israel exported about $1 billion in drone technology.

It’s that experience with UAVs, amassed by Yair Dubester and his colleagues at Netanya-based Israeli startup Pentaxi, which is setting the stage for the world’s first pilotless flying robo-taxi.

Pentaxi’s eVTOL (electrical vertical takeoff and landing) craft will be available in cargo and four-passenger models, able to carry up to 400 kilos (about 880 pounds) for 320 kilometers (nearly 200 miles) at a speed of about 240kph (150 mph).

CEO Ori Tamari says the first model will likely be a cargo carrier able to take up to 55 kilos (121 pounds) 100 kilometers (62 miles).

‘A real showstopper’

ISRAEL21c has covered other “flying cars” such as those from AIR and Urban Aeronautics, and Dubester estimates there are upwards of 200 such companies around the world.

How can Pentaxi, which has only raised about $1 million through a crowdfunding campaign so far, hope to compete?

“We have the best people in the world in the area of autonomous aircraft,” Dubester tells ISRAEL21c. “Together, we’ve been working on UAVs since 1974.”

Dubester headed the UAV division of Israel Aerospace Industries for seven years, following many years as an engineer and manager.

“When a potential customer comes to us, I say, ‘I’ve crashed more UAVs than anyone in the world.’ The point is: I have all the lessons learned from those years.”

And those lessons are going to play a critical role in calming consumer fears about trusting a flying taxi with no pilot.

“A lack of public acceptance can kill the whole thing,” Dubester, who is now Pentaxi’s chairman, admits. “It’s a real showstopper. Maybe we will put a pilot in there at first, for the sake of psychology.”

That’s what companies like Waymo and Uber have done with self-driving car tests. That won’t work so well for unmanned flying craft.

“You have a vehicle with five engines, two wings and it’s all moving independently. What pilot can control it?” Dubester asks. Only a sophisticated flight control system can handle that degree of complexity.

The five engines, arranged in the shape of a pentagon, are the reason for Pentaxi’s name.

Five, Dubester explains, is “the minimum number of motors to have so that if you lose one engine you don’t crash. If we had more engines, that would add weight – the worst thing in the world for aircraft.”

Cargo version ready for liftoff by 2025

Dubester estimates that the first version of Pentaxi, designed to transport cargo, will be ready for liftoff by 2025.

It will be at least another three years before a passenger Pentaxi will be transporting paying customers, depending on whether aviation regulations meet all the players’ satisfaction.

Image source: Pentaxi
Video source: Pentaxi

Did you find this article interesting?
Comments
To leave a comment, please log in

DISCOVER MORE

"Iron Swords" - War in Gaza Benjamin Netanyahu Hamas The Iran Threat Biden Administration The Leftist-Islamist Alliance Hezbollah Israeli Technology Palestine = Hamas = ISIS Israeli_Nature 10/7 Hamas Massacres Biblical Archaeology Jihadi Infiltration into the West Heroes of Israel The Bible Muslim Persecution of Jews