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    Check this out: this is no science fiction, this is truly the dawn of flying cars!

    We know that flying cars have forever been science fiction on television, but what if we tell you that two prototypes were launched on Thursday at an event displaying “supercars” in Monaco? Impossible huh? We don’t think so.

    Dutch and Slovak companies unveiled their designs as world premieres in the tiny well-heeled principality, where motoring fans and luxury automakers gathered until Sunday for the Top Marques showcase event.

    Bratislava-based Aeromobil, whose first prototype presented two years ago suffered an accident, returns once again with a “new generation” of flying vehicle named after the firm which makes it.

    “We are taking reservations from today for deliveries expected in 2020, after the process of (regulatory) approvals is completed,” the Slovak firm’s spokesman Stefan Vadocz told AFP.

    Unlike those UFO-cars we see in cartoons, the Aeromobil vehicle is a normal four-wheeled car which can unfold its wings to transform itself into a plane able to fly two passengers at a cruising speed of 260 km/h for up to 750 kilometres.

    You have to be extra rich to purchase one of these because their prices range from 1.2 to 1.5 million euros, depending on options chosen.

    The second prototype is the Dutch futuristic Pal-V Liberty. This aero-vehicle is the brainchild of Robert Dingemanse, whose company is based near Breda in the south of the Netherlands.

    His crossover car-plane is more compact, at four metres long, and should be deliverable as early as next year, once official approvals are secured. He is already taking orders for a vehicle which will cost between 299,000 and 499,000 euros.

    The Dutch flying car is in fact a gyrocopter with three wheels and a retractable rotor. It can carry two people at a cruising speed of 160 km/h for between 400-500 kilometres.

    It is “one of the safest flying machines on the planet,” able to fly “whatever the weather conditions,” say its designers.

    Users of the the Aeromobil and the Pal-V Liberty will require both a driving licence and a pilot’s qualification.

    We’ve seen robots, gadgets, talking phones and now flying cars. The future has to be somewhere next door.

    Picture credit: Youtube

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