MacMusic  |  PcMusic  |  440 Software  |  440 Forums  |  440TV  |  Zicos
japan
Search

Japan Regulators Setting Rules for Flying Cars

Friday May 6, 2022. 03:27 AM , from Akihabara News
Akihabara News (Tokyo) — A year after the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) established its Next Generation Aviation Mobility Planning Office to centrally handle administrative tasks related to next-generation aviation such as drones and eVTOL (flying cars), the first fruits of these efforts are beginning to appear.

The office launched on April 1, 2021, with an inaugural staff of 22 full-time employees.

Its stated goals are to prepare for the start of Level 4 drone flights (beyond visual line of sight in populated areas) later this year, as well as for the launch of the first eVTOL businesses in Japan sometime next year.

This office has been collaborating with other departments, such as the Japan Civil Aviation Bureau’s Aircraft Technology Examination Center, located within Nagoya Airport, which is in charge of the practical testing of next-generation aviation.

On March 25, the Next Generation Aviation Mobility Planning Office published its Test Flight Guidelines for eVTOL.

Manned or unmanned aerial vehicles over 200 grams in weight (over 100 grams from June 20) are subject to the terms of the Civil Aeronautics Act, but an exception is made for indoor flights as well as test flights conducted within spaces which are surrounded by netting, similar to the conditions seen in SkyDrive’s famous manned hover test at the Toyota Test Field in August 2020.

Among the provisions of the Test Flight Guidelines is that a single person needs to be appointed as the overall manager of the test, so the lines of command and responsibility are clear.

The test area should be an open space, with no structures obstructing takeoff, and with reasonable measures taken to prevent third parties from intruding where the aircraft is being tested, such as fences and warning signs.

Special permission from the MLIT is needed to operate in highly populated areas, in emergency airspace, close to airports, at nighttime, and under several other conditions.

Test vehicles which are controlled by remote control need to have various redundancy measures in place to provide back-up options in the case the control link is broken.

In the same way, other provisions of the Test Flight Guidelines appear to be common sense measures to reduce risks of human harm as Japan’s eVTOL industry begins to lift off.

This event is the first international exhibition and conference for new advanced air mobility industry market in Japan and in global market. It features the most updated information of AAM market from Japan and from all over the world.

Recent eVTOL Industry Related Articles

SkyDrive Makes Regulatory Progress

Hyogo Advanced Air Mobility Lab

SkyDrive SD-03 vs. XPeng X1

A.L.I. Technologies Aims for Public Offering

Kansai Firms Partnering with SkyDrive

SkyDrive Partners with Suzuki on eVTOLs

Osaka Releases Flying Car Road Map

Air Traffic System Passes Yumeshima Test

eVTOL VR Flight Experience

Eve and Skyports to Assist Japanese Regulators
The post Japan Regulators Setting Rules for Flying Cars appeared first on Akihabara News.
https://akihabaranews.com/japan-regulators-setting-rules-for-flying-cars/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=...
News copyright owned by their original publishers | Copyright © 2004 - 2024 Zicos / 440Network
Current Date
Apr, Thu 25 - 17:20 CEST