> The Ercoupe tried this exact approach in the 30s in one of the big GA booms and it just wasn't borne out.
The Ercoupe was a great idea for it's time, but we can do so much more with the technology we have today that we didn't have back then
> a production aircraft that's cheaper than $50/hr to fly would.
yes! our long term goal is to get there, but we need more people flying airplanes today to generate enough scale to actually build such an airplane and also stay in business. That's our approach, get more people who can afford to fly doing it, then use that to drive down the cost for everyone.
How many people who don't fly, but can afford to, have you interviewed about their reasons for not flying? This is where I would start trying to solve that problem. I'd be shocked if any of them mention coordinated flying :)
My 2c - the best way to go to big scale with a GA product is to somehow find a way to make it dual use and secure the DoD as a customer. The problem with doing this is that the DoD becomes your main customer and GA becomes your hobby...
We've talked to many and the complexity of flying a plane is a big factor--because the knowledge that if they mess up stick and rudder means they have a high chance of losing control and crashing scares them from flying. Our system helps alleviate that fear.
The Ercoupe was a great idea for it's time, but we can do so much more with the technology we have today that we didn't have back then
> a production aircraft that's cheaper than $50/hr to fly would.
yes! our long term goal is to get there, but we need more people flying airplanes today to generate enough scale to actually build such an airplane and also stay in business. That's our approach, get more people who can afford to fly doing it, then use that to drive down the cost for everyone.