For decades, flying cars have featured in our visions of what futuristic cities might look like. Now EU-funded researchers with the MYCOPTER project have developed a steering system that makes helicopters as easy to control as cars. While having your own personal aerial vehicle (PAV) may still be some way off, the success of the project opens up the possibility that one day flying vehicles could indeed be an integral part of the urban transportation network.

Currently, only pilots who have undergone extensive training can fly a helicopter. Four control axes must be operated in order to maintain a stable position in the air. This requires skill, knowledge and concentration. In order to extend aerial flying to the general public, PAV operation needs to be significantly simplified, with a greater degree of automation introduced.

The MYCOPTER project started in 2011 with the objective of developing a PAV ideally designed for travelling between the home and the workplace. The project envisioned that the vehicle would fly at a low altitude in urban environments, be fully or partially autonomous without requiring ground-based air traffic control and would operate outside controlled airspace. Current air traffic would therefore remain unchanged, ensuring that PAVs could be easily be integrated into the next generation of controlled airspace.

To achieve this, the project replaced the helicopter's cyclic stick, which is responsible for movements around the longitudinal and transverse axis, with a steering wheel. Pilots simply need to turn the wheel in the intended direction. The MYCOPTER team believes that this represents an important step in making PAVs more accessible to the general public.

Test models were implemented on unmanned aerial vehicles, motion simulators, and a manned helicopter. The project also focused on collision avoidance systems, pilot training and overall streamlining of helicopter control processes. New automation technologies for obstacle avoidance, path planning and formation flying were developed and successfully tested. The MYCOPTER project sought to assess how the benefits of automation could be implemented while still providing the pilot with the ability to feel in control.

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