This vintage flying car just crossed the auction block in Barrett-Jackson Scottsdale. This 1954 Taylor Aerocar just crossed the auction block at Barrett-Jackson Scottsdale. The vintage flying car just now made its way across stage without reserve, and it brought in $250,000. That doesn't include the 10% Buyer Premium which brought the grand total to $275,000. A car that can take to both the road and the skies by simply removing and attaching the flying equipment. Only five of these were built by Moulton Taylor, an aeronautical engineer.
With only 781 flight hours and 15,254 road miles, this
Aerocar comes with full FAA certification. The sale of the car comes with an 8-foot trailer that tows and transports all necessary flying equipment such as the wings, propeller, and fuselage. To turn this two-seater car into a flying machine is said to take less than a half hour, and it ranges up to 300 miles and can cruise at about 100 miles per hour.
Powering the vehicles is a rear-mounted 320cui Lycoming H4 engine with an output of 150-horsepower. This ambidextrous car is shifted by a 3-speed manual transmission that sends power down to the front wheels. When in flight, the car then uses a Hartzell two-blade HA12 UF pusher propeller that can be found on the back of the tail.
This
1954 Taylor Aerocar offers the best of both worlds for somebody interested in the option of cruising around and/or soaring above the clouds
I remember reading about this car as a kid, it was exciting then and still is! Wish I had that kind of disposable income, I'd park it next to the SRT !