There was more than a touch of Hollywood magic in Archer Aviation’s unveiling last week of its Maker eVTOL technology demonstrator. In front of what appeared to be a largely partisan audience for an expertly choreographed event at Hawthorne Airport in Los Angeles, the California-based start-up removed wraps from an aircraft it says will begin hover flight trials before the end of 2021.
The live-streamed presentation also included Archer co-founders and co-CEOs Adam Goldstein and Brett Adcock spelling out their vision for how they expect eVTOL aircraft to radically reshape transportation in gridlocked metropolitan areas. The vision was lunch in Santa Monica in between business commitments downtown or a quick hop from Fort Lauderdale to enjoy Miami nightlife.
Given how tight-lipped and controlling of the information flow some eVTOL start-ups can be, critics tend to watch limited-access vantage points like the Hawthorne event as closely as Cold War analysts kept their gaze on the Kremlin’s curtains. Some critics, not unreasonably given past deployment of smoke and mirrors at aerospace rollouts, questioned whether the aircraft revealed on June 10 is an actual flyable prototype or a more static mock-up.
Archer is adamant this is the real deal and that it is well on its way to taking to the air for the first time. The two-seat Maker will pave the way for a four-passenger production aircraft that the company expects to start building in 2022, en route to projected service entry in 2024. The presentation included some bold predictions, such as a 10-minute battery recharge time, allowing the eVTOL aircraft to complete 40 or so taxi rides each day.
The Archer team made good use of extended-reality technology to present an impressive simulation of how the aircraft will perform in commercial flight. FutureFlight has watched the video playback several times and there is plenty of important detail from the Archer narrative. It’s 30 minutes well spent. Watch it for yourself and make up your own mind.
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