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-   -   The Skycar Uses Rotary Engines (https://www.rx8club.com/general-automotive-49/skycar-uses-rotary-engines-39085/)

NoPistonsHere 09-13-2004 05:59 PM

The Skycar Uses Rotary Engines
 
1 Attachment(s)
If you didn't know, the skycar uses Rotary Engines.
and it is not too late to buy Moller international stock, become a share holder and you too can go to the shareholders meeting in Davis Ca.


stock symbol..... MLER.pk
1.50 a share

for more information
www.moller.com



Moller International Annual Shareholders' Meeting
Skycar Developer Sets Date for 2004 Annual Shareholders' Meeting


DAVIS, Calif., /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Moller International (OTC Pink Sheets: MLER - News) will conduct its 2004 Annual Shareholder's meeting on Saturday, 16 October 2004 from 10:00 a.m. to noon. The meeting will be held at 1632 Da Vinci Ct., Davis, CA 95616-4860, which is adjacent to MI's main offices. You can park at 1632 Da Vinci Ct. or at MI's offices at 1222 Research Park Dr.
The purpose of the meeting is:

1. Election of Board of Directors;
2. Annual report to shareholders; and
3. Such other business as may be properly brought up at the meeting


Shareholders of record on the books of the corporation at the close of business on September 30, 2004 will be entitled to vote at the meeting. All shareholders are cordially invited to attend the meeting in person. It is important that your shares be represented regardless of the number you own.

DOMINION 09-14-2004 04:54 AM

Hey what will stop someone from stealing one?
Not knowing how to drive it?

RobDickinson 09-14-2004 05:17 AM

No one will be able to steal one, as they dont fly anyhow.

Since I've been watching their development (ongoing since the 70's I believe) , in that 7 years they've made no progress, but attracted a lot of investment funds...

The thing doesnt work, the business plan dosnt work, current laws on airtraffic wont let it work.

If they ever get to a commercial product I'll be amazded, but what there pushing now is 99.8% fraud.

MadRonin 09-14-2004 05:17 AM

This has been discussed here before.

NoPistonsHere 09-14-2004 10:20 AM

2 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by RobDickinson
No one will be able to steal one, as they dont fly anyhow.

Since I've been watching their development (ongoing since the 70's I believe) , in that 7 years they've made no progress, but attracted a lot of investment funds...

The thing doesnt work, the business plan dosnt work, current laws on airtraffic wont let it work.

If they ever get to a commercial product I'll be amazded, but what there pushing now is 99.8% fraud.


Please supply some evidence before you bash a company

this is the same bs they said about flying and flight in space.
Very negative comments such as above slows down progress in the world, the skycar is still in development many designs from 1970-present and the skycar has changed through those years with the present technology, skycars new automated avionics system and with GPS satellites the skycar will be a reality.

NoPistonsHere 09-14-2004 10:25 AM

BOO to RobDickinson :rolleyes:


Progression hater!!!!!!!!!!! :mad:

misterwilson007 09-14-2004 10:31 AM

If I could trade in my 8 for any other mode of transportation that would be it

MTCD01 09-14-2004 10:54 AM

Nah it probably has low torque and most likely will only flood when you try to start it, I bet the 0-60 sucks too. (J/k)

RobDickinson 09-14-2004 03:56 PM

heh. I'd love to be flying one of these things one day myself.

But In 7 years they've gone nowhere, and the only evidence they've don anything is a 30 second clip of a car (tethered) hovering.

This thing just isnt going to work, not wiht 8 rotary engines (less advanced than the renesis). They've been promising this mythical skycar since the 70's and are still no closer to a product, and when they DO get a product it'll face all the same restrictions as helocopters anyhow, so your not going to be landing one in the works car park or at home etc.

RobDickinson 09-14-2004 04:03 PM


Originally Posted by ABCnews/Moller
Moller says the small but robust rotary engines enable Skycar to take off vertically and, theoretically, travel at up to 380 mph. It takes eight rotary engines, 24 microprocessors, and two flight computers to get the vehicle off the ground.

8 rotaries. How much fuel will it need.....

pmacwill 09-14-2004 04:39 PM

I don't know what you all have done, but their stock rose 0.1 points to day (6.67%). I work for a contractor for the FAA, and I'll speculate that its a ways out before you could see regulations that would allow personal air vehicles (50+ years even for a handful, not for the masses)

NoPistonsHere 09-14-2004 05:11 PM

It will be used for government applications
search and rescue, recon, and skytaxi.


JSOC 6 member squad
maybe

Microdot 09-14-2004 06:36 PM

What? Nobody else sees this thing militarized?
Slap some guns and a targeting computer on this, and it would be like half the arcade games from the early 90's.

Seriously though, before civilian use, I can see police and emergency vehicles soaring above traffic in some decended variation of the M400 If they work as advertised, I think things like these would probably take the place of medivac choppers and troop transports rather quickly too.

Moller's website claims "Comfortable cruise speeds of 350+ MPH" and "able to achieve up to 28Mpg on regular automotive fuel"

And you think people stare now when you put gass in the 8... Picture pulling up,... or rather landing one of these at your corner gas station.

MTCD01 09-14-2004 06:56 PM

They really need to give it the ability to cruise on the highway as well as the sky. There will always be no-fly zones and you'll need some kind of land ability to access those areas (for example Washinton DC is a no-fly zone as well as the areas surrounding large airports).

NoPistonsHere 09-15-2004 04:12 PM

well the stock is up 32% it is now 2.12 a share :D

it was at 1.50 two days ago.

NoPistonsHere 09-16-2004 12:30 PM

Freedom Motors Signs Contract to Develop Small Rotapower Engine

"This is a major milestone for the rotary engine as it has the potential to become the largest implementation of rotary engine technology to date, even surpassing the millions of engines produced by Mazda," said Jim Toreson, Freedom Motor's CEO.

http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/040910/sff011_1.html

s13lover 09-17-2004 06:53 PM

Joke. The thing will never evolve past a pet project no matter how much funding there is.

47samurai 09-18-2004 07:49 PM

Guys I have to lean towards Mr. Dickinsons side here. Been driving rotarys since 1972 and have seen the Skycar develop almost as long. You guys need to check out the advancements in turbine engines. If there is a flying car it will be turbine or some fuel cell powered yet to be discovered technology.

BaronVonBigmeat 09-18-2004 09:11 PM

Nicola Tesla had imagined a flying car very simliar to this, only powered by his bladeless turbines, which "in theory", would be making about 10 HP per pound at much higher efficiency than any other type of turbine. Unfotrunately he had a tendency to bounce from one invention to another without fleshing out all the details. Plus there weren't really any suitable materials for making a long-lasting turbine 100 years ago.

http://my.execpc.com/~teba/


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