Amid “massive” layoffs reported by Forbes magazine February 16, Terrafugia abruptly pulled the U.S. plug for the two-person Transition, an FAA-approved light sport aircraft with folding wings.
The magazine reported that “80 to 100 employees at the company’s headquarters” in Woburn, Massachusetts, “have been let go, and that Terrafugia’s intellectual property and further development of the Transition” LSA “are being moved to China by owner Zhejiang Geely Holding Group” with plans to discontinue U.S. operations in the coming months.
The latest setback for the Transition flying car occurred just a few weeks after the FAA granted a special LSA airworthiness certificate for the twin-boom, pusher-prop design on January 26. The measure allowed the company to produce the flying four-wheeled craft for aviation purposes in the United States, though it was still awaiting federal approval to drive on public roadways.
The pathway to the sky was not a direct route, and the Terrafugia Transition needed regulatory help along the way. AOPA supported the company’s bid for an FAA exemption granted in 2016 that allowed the Transition to fly as an LSA at a gross weight significantly above the 1,320 pounds otherwise allowed. The exception accommodated the heft of the folding wing mechanism and additional safety equipment more common to road vehicles.
A Rotax 912iS Sport fuel-injected engine can propel the Transition through the air at 100 mph; Dynon SkyView avionics provide flight deck familiarity; and an airframe parachute rounds out the aviation safety package. NBC reported a projected price of around $400,000 in 2018, about $100,000 more than AOPA reported in 2015.
Unique car-like features include four-wheel hydraulic disc brakes, a circular steering wheel/yoke mechanism, and folding wings that allow the aircraft to tuck into a one-car garage. However, the multipurpose vehicle pays a steep price for its versatility and tips the scales at 1,800 pounds because of Department of Transportation automobile safety and environmental rules.
Terrafugia responded February 17 to AOPA's prior calls and emails, saying that the company was “not commenting at present.”