For much of its 11-year history, the company now known as Wisk Aero has appeared reluctant to share much publicly about its extensive work to bring eVTOL aircraft to market. Over the past two weeks, the company has started releasing what appears to be a series of videos showing various stages of its development work, with the latest being a first hover flight with what is described as its third-generation design. This followed the earlier release of footage from 2017 showing the same technology demonstrator transitioning from hover to cruise flight.
While it’s not clear what has prompted Wisk to now release videos from four and five years ago, it does bring to mind the company’s ongoing lawsuit against rival Archer, which it accuses of stealing designs for what it refers to as a sixth-generation eVTOL vehicle. Archer strenuously denies these allegations and is now suing Wisk for damages.
However, one key aspect of the legal arguments appears to hinge on how long Archer has had its eVTOL aircraft in development by comparison with Wisk, which can correctly claim to have been working in the field for far longer. While Wisk Aero was formed in 2019 as a joint venture between Boeing and Kitty Hawk, the latter company started work on eVTOL designs in 2010 with backing from Google co-founder Larry Page.
What remains unclear is the technology connection between the third-generation vehicle shown flying in the newly disclosed videos and the designs being so hotly disputed in a San Francisco federal court. However, some might say that if Wisk had been more consistently transparent about the evolution of its eVTOL designs, it would have been harder for Archer to allege, as its lawyers have, that it sought to patent plans for an eVTOL design larger than its two-seat Cora only after learning of Archer’s plans.
Meanwhile, Kitty Hawk will be taking another step out of the closet when it exhibits at the National Business Aviation Association’s BACE trade show in Las Vegas next month. It is expected to showcase its Heaviside eVTOL aircraft.
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