Walmart Executive Backs EVTOL Startup Archer
The Archer eVTOL is a
five-seat all-electric aircraft with “some tilting” to achieve performance
goals.
Credit: Archer
An urban air
mobility startup with an experienced design team and backing from a Walmart
executive has emerged from stealth with plans to develop an all-electric
vertical-takeoff-and-landing air taxi.
Palo Alto,
California-based Archer is led by entrepreneurs Brett Adcock and Adam Goldstein
and backed by Marc Lore, CEO of Walmart eCommerce. The design team includes
engineers who worked on electric vertical-takeoff-and-landing (eVTOL)
development at Airbus Acubed, Joby Aviation and Kitty Hawk as well as at NASA
and self-driving car developer Zoox.
·
Design team has substantial eVTOL experience
·
A large-scale demonstrator is planned to fly in
2021
Archer is
developing a piloted eVTOL urban air taxi able to carry four passengers up to
60 mi. at 150 mph on today’s battery technology. Details are not being
released, but the design is a fixed-wing aircraft with 12 electric motors and
“some tilting,” says Adcock. A teaser image shows an aircraft with a V tail and
six five-blade propellers on a high-aspect-ratio wing.
The startup
hopes to set itself apart in the hype-plagued urban air mobility (UAM) market
by tapping the experience of its design team to produce a safe, quiet vehicle
with reliable performance at low manufacturing and operating costs.
Adcock and
Goldstein sold hiring marketplace Vettery in 2018 for $100 million, while lead
investor Lore sold his e-commerce company Jet.com to Walmart in 2016 for $3.3
billion. They are the latest internet entrepreneurs to put money into UAM.
Google co-founder Larry Page backed Kitty Hawk while Pinterest co-founder Paul
Sciarra co-founded Joby.
Archer is
relatively late to the UAM game. “We are the underdog today, so we have a lot
to prove,” says Adcock. “The goal is for us to show the world that we can build
a vehicle that is high-performance, with low direct operating costs, high
safety and low noise.”
The 44-strong
team now “designing the perfect vehicle” is led by Tom Muniz and Geoff Bower.
Muniz was previously vice president of engineering at Wisk, the Boeing/Kitty
Hawk joint venture developing the Cora eVTOL. Bower was previously chief
engineer on Acubed’s Vahana eVTOL.
Archer has
flown a number of subscale testbeds and is now building higher-fidelity models.
In parallel, it is working on an 80%-scale demonstrator that is planned to fly
in 2021. “It is too early to say when we will certify,” says Adcock. “We need
to start engaging with the FAA. We hope to certify in the most efficient way
possible, but it will be a long journey.”
Unlike some
eVTOL startups that are counting on promised advances in battery technology to
achieve their performance claims, he says Archer is designing “a vehicle that
can get 60 mi. of range in the worse possible conditions.” That means available
batteries at the end of their useful life, with full reserves for emergencies
and energy that is inaccessible due to low voltages.
“We think we
can make that work today with technology that exists off the shelf,” Adcock
says. Archer is also designing for low noise for public acceptability. “We want
these to be almost inaudible in flight over a city, operating at between 55 and
60 dB,” Adcock says.
In addition
to low direct operating cost, the startup is designing its eVTOL for low
manufacturing cost. “The team we have has such a deep bench of knowledge we are
hopeful we can home in on a design concept that can achieve the speed, range
and payload we need to have an economically viable business. Also [we hope to
achieve] the safety and noise levels to gain community acceptance and, at the
same time, make sure we’re focused on being able to mass-manufacture these
vehicles,” says Goldstein.
Archer is
designing the eVTOL to the same 10-9 probability of catastrophic failure as
commercial transport aircraft. “Safety is our No. 1 priority,” adds Goldstein.
“It’s not just an Archer issue. As an industry, we need to make sure there is
trust from the public and that we can get people in these vehicles right from
the beginning.”
Like other
eVTOL startups, Archer is looking at both manufacturing and operating its air
taxis. “If you can manufacture and operate, you have the best likelihood of
providing the best possible customer experience, and that’s something we’re
focused on,” says Goldstein. “So that would be our aspiration. I don’t think
that precludes us from working with folks like Uber or a network.”
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