Guardian Weekly

Taxi!

On 16 December 2021, a group of men dressed in the sober, branded casualwear of the Silicon Valley startup gathered on the asphalt at an airstrip outside Salinas, California. In front of them stood a black shiny capsule on three spindly legs, which resembled the offspring of a suppository and a golf trolley, with a V-tail like a humpback whale. Its single cross-span wing had four banks of three rotor blades – six at the front and six at the back – which made the sound of a loud hairdryer. As the spectators bobbed nervously from foot to foot, the machine rose into the air, tipped a bow and hovered for 10 seconds or so before coming gently to earth. Everyone cheered and clapped and exchanged slightly standoffish hugs. Back in the headquarters of Archer Aviation in Palo Alto, watching events on a huge screen, the rest of the company’s employees were on their feet, whooping and whistling.

It was the first test flight for Maker, Archer Aviation’s version of a new kind of aircraft called an electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicle. This masterpiece of nomenclature should on no account be attempted when drunk; its acronym, eVTOL, is hard to get your mouth around; and consensus is lacking over whether the “e” should be capitalised. The bet that significant numbers of investors are making is that eVTOLs will be big. Three months before the test flight, Archer merged with a special purpose acquisition company, or Spac, also known as a blank-cheque company.

From swapping engines on an old Dornier aircraft to turning someone’s smelly running shoes into fuel, it cannot be argued that sustainable aviation is especially glamorous. eVTOLs are the exception to that rule. Consider all that bespoke composite bodywork and fly-by-wire technology; the way Maker’s rotors sit flat, like adorable baby helicopters, for takeoff and landing, but tilt for forward flight; the tantalising promise of full automation. There is something about pure electric that appeals to the antiseptic, unsooty aesthetic of our age. If you peer into the workings of a Maker, you’ll see a neatly stowed battery pack and

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