Quantum XYZ Will Test Using Electric Fixed-Wing Aircraft for L.A.-Based
Air Taxi Service
By Brian Garrett-Glaser | April 14,
2020
Quantum XYZ is planning to launch a
mostly-electric commercial airline in the Los Angeles, California area in 2021,
using a number of eFlyer aircraft, such as the single engine eFlyer pictured
here, from Bye Aerospace before eventually adding eVTOLs. Photo: Bye Aerospace.
Quantum XYZ is planning to launch a mostly-electric commercial airline
in the Los Angeles, California area in 2021, linking LAX to other regional
airports to serve intra-city travelers. The company has made purchase deposits
with Bye Aerospace for at least 24 of their two- and four-seat conventional
takeoff eFlyer aircraft, as well as $2 million in purchase orders with
WorkHorse for its SureFly hybrid-electric VTOL aircraft, according to
eVTOL.com.
Quantum Air, the group’s airline subsidiary, also began procuring a
Part 135 operating certificate from the Federal Aviation Administration more
than five years ago.
The global coronavirus outbreak is likely to disrupt Quantum’s
timeline; the eFlyer 2, which Bye Aerospace previously expected would achieve
certification in late 2021, will likely be delayed.
“The Bye Aerospace team of engineers and [designated engineering
representative] DERs is working hard with the FAA, and the certification effort
continues to make solid progress,” a representative for the company told Avionics
International. “It is too early to determine the depth of the virus-related
impacts; certainly one quarter, or perhaps two quarters schedule delay.”
According to Bye’s website, its employees are fully remote at this
time, meaning flight tests are almost certainly suspended. California and
UK-based ZeroAvia, which is developing six- and 19-seat hydrogen-powered
electric aircraft, told Avionics last week on the Connected Aircraft Podcast it
had suspended flight testing as well.
The company hopes to receive its production certificate “nearly
simultaneous with eFlyer 2 type certification” and produce 50 eFLyer 2’s in the
following 12 months at its facility at Centennial Airport, south of Denver,
Colorado.
Bye’s primary intention with its eFlyer project is to address to coming
pilot shortage by providing training aircraft with drastically lower operating
cost than legacy options; the company estimates the eFlyer 2 will cost $23 per
flight hour, compared to $110 per hour for the Cessna 172.
“Bye Aerospace has surpassed 300 paid purchase deposits for both the
eFlyer 2 and the eFlyer 4,” said George E. Bye, CEO of Bye Aerospace. Those
deposits are not refundable, the company clarified to Avionics.
George Bye is also on Quantum XYZ’s board of advisors.
The Quantum XYZ team, including
co-founders Tony Thompson, Zeeshan Moha, Napp Da and Scott Akina. Photo:
Quantum XYZ
In an interview with eVTOL.com, Quantum CEO Tony
Thompson said the company is open to working with Uber, which plans to begin
commercial eVTOL operations in LA in 2023, but “our strategy does not depend on
what Uber does … and one of the big reasons why is [because] Uber is just not considering
fixed-wing whatsoever.”
Quantum XYZ believes it can use these aircraft for regional air taxi
services as well, saving travelers travel time in the highly-congested LA area,
but — depending on customers’ final destinations — that may prove difficult to
do with conventional aircraft, departing and landing at airports rather than
rooftops. Current and former members of Uber’s Elevate team have stressed
to Avionics the difficulty of building efficient multi-modal
transit systems and minimizing time spend not in flight, based on their
modeling and experience with Uber Copter.
On its website, Quantum XYZ declares itself the “1st VTOL
Airline,” despite the existence of many helicopter airlines in prior decades
and the fact that Bye Aerospace’s eFlyers are not VTOL. Quantum declined to
elaborate on its purchases, its plans or provide clarifying information in
response to an inquiry from Avionics.
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