Curtiss Autoplane
Revealed by aviation pioneer Glen Curtiss in 1917, the Autoplane was probably the first serious attempt to combine the attributes of an automobile with those of an airplane. The aluminum craft had three removable wings that spanned more than 40 feet. Belts from the engine drove a 9-foot, 4-blade pusher propeller behind a passenger compartment that looked like a car. It hopped down a runway a few times, but was never successfully flown.Fulton Airphibian
Successfully tested in 1947, the Airphibian was the first roadable aircraft to be certified by the Civil Aeronautics Administration. In flight, it looked like a small airplane. For road use, its entire aft section, including the tail and wings, was detached and rested on its own small wheels. The propeller was also removed. The Airphibian was quite airworthy, and on a dare from Life magazine, inventor Robert Fulton once used it to travel from his home in Connecticut to Manhattan to attend a Broadway show. Fulton blamed government regulations for making it unmarketable.Taylor Aerocar
Designer Moulton Taylor came up with the idea of folding wings when he designed the first Aerocar prototype, which debuted in 1949. A Lycoming engine was mounted over the rear wheels and drove a propeller behind the tail. For road use, the wings folded back alongside the tail, which was disconnected and towed like a trailer. It was a CAA-certified aircraft and could cruise in the air at 100 mph, or reach 65 mph on the road. Four examples of the first design were built and sold, and one is still flying.Bing Video: Plane Driven PD-1
ParaJet Skycar
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I-Tec Maverick
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Scaled Composites BiPod
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DARPA Transformer
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Terrafugia Transition
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Terrafugia Transition (continued)
Successfully tested in the air and on the road in 2009, the Transition carries two people and can cruise at 105 mph in the air with a range of about 490 miles. A 100-horsepower Rotax engine powers the rear wheels and a pusher propeller. In road trim, it's more than 18 feet long, so you'll need a big garage, and its side-by-side cockpit is a snug 48 inches wide. A Transition pilot will be required to have at minimum a sport-aviation license, which takes about 20 hours of training. The expected price is $279,000.Bing Images: Terrafugia Transition
Veteran moto-journalist and Wisconsin-native Charles Plueddeman has been driving, riding and testing automobiles, motorcycles, boats, ATVs and snowmobiles for more than 20 years. He is a regular contributor to Boating Magazine and Outdoor Life, and his product evaluation articles have appeared in Popular Mechanics, Men's Journal, AutoWorld, Playboy, Boats.com and many other national publications and Web sites.
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