Rafi Yoeli

Rafi Yoeli, Ph.D., is an Israeli pilot, inventor and designer of the proposed Urban Aeronautics X-Hawk, a flying car. He is CEO of Urban Aeronautics Ltd. which he founded in Yavne, Israel in 2000.[1][2]

Early life and education

Yoeli was born in Tel Aviv, circa 1950,[3] and later served as a reserve officer in the Israeli Air Force.[2] He attended Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.[3]

Career

Following his Israeli Air Force service, Yoeli joined Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd., then was with Boeing in Seattle for 18 months. In 1989, Yoeli founded Aero Design & Development Ltd (AD&D, Ltd.), acting as managing director.[2] In 2001 he started his own company in Israel, Urban Aeronautics, to develop "robots and flying machines."[3]

During the 2000s and 2010s, Yoeli designed and tested the Tactical Robotics Cormorant, formerly AirMule or Mule, an unmanned flying car UAS, that was built by Tactical Robotics Ltd., another subsidiary of Urban Aeronautics LTD.[2][4]

Designer

Yoeli envisioned a hovering vehicle similar to helicopters, but with rotors below the cockpit and passenger seating above it.[3] He developed a plan for a flying rescue vehicle that, while still able to hover, would not have the restrictions that helicopters have, due to rotors, enabling his flying car to work in crowded terrains such as cities and urban areas, where rescue would normally be much harder or impossible. Though initially designing a flying car modeled after a sports car; Yoeli realized that a car modeled after a rescue vehicle would sell more successfully. Urban Aeronautics Ltd. was founded to officially develop the concept of the Urban Aeronautics X-Hawk.

In an interview with Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet; Yoeli stated that his flying car, the X-Hawk, would be developed for both military and civilian personal use. The flying car is scheduled to be available to consumers in 2020, with a cost of around $3.2 million USD.[5]

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gollark: I mean generally. Look at DNS. They didn't even have DNS over HTTPS or DNSSEC until fairly recently, and they're still not widely used.
gollark: Yeeees, it's weird how people didn't seem to even consider security and privacy in lots of computer things until seemingly recently.
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References


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