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Wisk Debuts 6th Gen. Big Yellow Air Taxi Prototype

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An air taxisitting at an airport runway under a blue sky. The Wisk Gen 6 is yellow with a black windshield and six propellers on top.

The Wisk 6th generation aircraft continues from the 5th generation “Cora” design but expands the cabin and replaces wheels with skies, meaning any takeoff needs to be done VTOL-style.
Photo: Wisk

The famed Kittyhawk air taxi company is no more, but one of the initiatives spawned from its failed attempts to create quiet, fast, and cheap air taxis has a new design that a new company says may be the best chance yet to see big yellow school buses buzzing overhead.

On Monday, air taxi company Wisk showed off the first details for its 6th generation remote-piloted air taxi designs. It’s the latest design to come from yet another company promising it will be the first to truly push short-range commercial flight into clustered metropolitan settings, but it still remains to be seen whether any company can make such rides cheap and safe enough so as to be viable both in the eyes of federal regulators and the general public.

Wisk promises this four-seater aircraft can cruise between 110 and 120 knots (138 miles per hour) at an altitude of around 2,500 to 4,000 feet. It’s got a wingspan just under 50 feet, and the company claims its batteries allow for a range of 90 miles before tapping into reserves.

Like most modern attempts at creating the first commercially viable air taxi, Wisk’s 6th gen design is a vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft, though its latest version relies on 12 propellers on top of the wings with propulsion in the rear. The big yellow air taxi also claims tickets will be just $3 per passenger per mile once the company receives federal certification (a big “if”).

Promotional videos show passengers strap in using x-shaped seatbelts and use touchscreens to go through the first safety check before takeoff. It’s unclear how customers would set up appointments and flight destinations.

What also remains unclear is the production cost for Wisk’s latest model and just how loud it will be, two elements that have made wide-scale adoption of air taxi technology a hard sell. Wisk said this latest design is supposed to meet and beat safety expectations, boasting there’s a “one-in-a-billion chance of an accident.” The company has not revealed just what redundancies its introducing to fully make that claim.

Each seat has access to a touchscreen which the company showed goes over the pre-flight check with passengers.

Each seat has access to a touchscreen which the company showed goes over the pre-flight check with passengers.
Photo: Wisk

On their face, the stats of this latest air taxi design are similar to Joby Aviation’s latest offering. Last year, that air taxi company was bought from Uber by a special purpose acquisition company headed by LinkedIn co-founder Reed Hoffman and Zynga founder Mark Pincus. The latest designs of Joby’s aircraft showed its a five-seater—including one pilot—with a top speed of 220 MPH and a range of 150 miles.

But what Wisk especially wants to help differentiate it from competition is the focus on its self-flying technology (because you haven’t heard enough talk about wheeled vehicles companies extolling similar technology). Wisk notes in its release they believe autonomous flying is the “key” for air mobility companies. The company said this new aircraft should have improved sensors to detect and avoid obstructions it may encounter in the air. At the same time, there are “multi-vehicle supervisors that provide human oversight of every flight” who can also take over when needed.

Wisk said this latest version of their electric is its best shot at getting full certification from the Federal Aviation Administration. The thing is, certification can take five to nine years to complete, according to the agency’s facts page.

That apparently didn’t stop Joby, which received FAA authorization for its air taxi services in May this year. Joby also boasted they have a timetable to get their plane commercially available by 2023.

Wisk has a long and somewhat complicated connection to Kittyhawk, one of the big original air taxi companies, which last month announced it was closing its doors. Kittyhawk had merged with fellow low-profile electric aircraft company Zee Aero and after partnering with the aeronautics behemoth Boeing to work on a 5th generation VTOL aircraft known as Cora. Kittyhawk, which was spawned by ex-Google engineers who worked on the tech giant’s self-driving car designs, also was working towards self-driving air taxis.

Wisk is set to host reporters in a presentation later on Monday, and we will update the story if we hear more details.


An air taxisitting at an airport runway under a blue sky. The Wisk Gen 6 is yellow with a black windshield and six propellers on top.

The Wisk 6th generation aircraft continues from the 5th generation “Cora” design but expands the cabin and replaces wheels with skies, meaning any takeoff needs to be done VTOL-style.
Photo: Wisk

The famed Kittyhawk air taxi company is no more, but one of the initiatives spawned from its failed attempts to create quiet, fast, and cheap air taxis has a new design that a new company says may be the best chance yet to see big yellow school buses buzzing overhead.

On Monday, air taxi company Wisk showed off the first details for its 6th generation remote-piloted air taxi designs. It’s the latest design to come from yet another company promising it will be the first to truly push short-range commercial flight into clustered metropolitan settings, but it still remains to be seen whether any company can make such rides cheap and safe enough so as to be viable both in the eyes of federal regulators and the general public.

Wisk promises this four-seater aircraft can cruise between 110 and 120 knots (138 miles per hour) at an altitude of around 2,500 to 4,000 feet. It’s got a wingspan just under 50 feet, and the company claims its batteries allow for a range of 90 miles before tapping into reserves.

Like most modern attempts at creating the first commercially viable air taxi, Wisk’s 6th gen design is a vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft, though its latest version relies on 12 propellers on top of the wings with propulsion in the rear. The big yellow air taxi also claims tickets will be just $3 per passenger per mile once the company receives federal certification (a big “if”).

Promotional videos show passengers strap in using x-shaped seatbelts and use touchscreens to go through the first safety check before takeoff. It’s unclear how customers would set up appointments and flight destinations.

What also remains unclear is the production cost for Wisk’s latest model and just how loud it will be, two elements that have made wide-scale adoption of air taxi technology a hard sell. Wisk said this latest design is supposed to meet and beat safety expectations, boasting there’s a “one-in-a-billion chance of an accident.” The company has not revealed just what redundancies its introducing to fully make that claim.

Each seat has access to a touchscreen which the company showed goes over the pre-flight check with passengers.

Each seat has access to a touchscreen which the company showed goes over the pre-flight check with passengers.
Photo: Wisk

On their face, the stats of this latest air taxi design are similar to Joby Aviation’s latest offering. Last year, that air taxi company was bought from Uber by a special purpose acquisition company headed by LinkedIn co-founder Reed Hoffman and Zynga founder Mark Pincus. The latest designs of Joby’s aircraft showed its a five-seater—including one pilot—with a top speed of 220 MPH and a range of 150 miles.

But what Wisk especially wants to help differentiate it from competition is the focus on its self-flying technology (because you haven’t heard enough talk about wheeled vehicles companies extolling similar technology). Wisk notes in its release they believe autonomous flying is the “key” for air mobility companies. The company said this new aircraft should have improved sensors to detect and avoid obstructions it may encounter in the air. At the same time, there are “multi-vehicle supervisors that provide human oversight of every flight” who can also take over when needed.

Wisk said this latest version of their electric is its best shot at getting full certification from the Federal Aviation Administration. The thing is, certification can take five to nine years to complete, according to the agency’s facts page.

That apparently didn’t stop Joby, which received FAA authorization for its air taxi services in May this year. Joby also boasted they have a timetable to get their plane commercially available by 2023.

Wisk has a long and somewhat complicated connection to Kittyhawk, one of the big original air taxi companies, which last month announced it was closing its doors. Kittyhawk had merged with fellow low-profile electric aircraft company Zee Aero and after partnering with the aeronautics behemoth Boeing to work on a 5th generation VTOL aircraft known as Cora. Kittyhawk, which was spawned by ex-Google engineers who worked on the tech giant’s self-driving car designs, also was working towards self-driving air taxis.

Wisk is set to host reporters in a presentation later on Monday, and we will update the story if we hear more details.

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