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Looking more like a high-tech fighter than a light plane designed for private use, the Valkyrie from Cobalt aircraft boasts a canard front wing, sleek aerodynamic shape and a turbocharged 350 hp ...
Forget drones. The must-have airborne accessory in 2016 is set to be the super sleek Valkyrie aircraft from aviation startup Cobalt, with everyone from Google and Apple executives to an artichoke ...
David Loury, the CEO and chief designer at Cobalt, hopes to change that with the Valkyrie. Loury, who studied aviation at the Georgia Institute of Technology before working at Airbus for several ...
Cobalt is now taking orders for the certified Co50 Valkyrie. You'll need a $15,000 deposit to secure your place on the list for the $699,000 plane, which should see deliveries in summer 2017.
Today is a big day for a San Francisco-based company named Cobalt as it has unveiled a new single-engine propeller airplane named the Co50 Valkyrie. With a ...
In November 2015, aviation startup Cobalt began taking preorders for its Co50 Valkyrie, a fighter jet-inspired private aircraft that has quickly gone on to become a must-have.
It’s really not debatable: aircraft builder Cobalt’s Valkyrie is freakin’ gorgeous, and supposedly the appeal inside the cockpit will match the plane’s outer appearance. Beyond its looks ...
Cobalt is a private aircraft manufacturer launching its first two models today. The fully-certified Co50 Valkyrie and its experimental version, the Valkyrie-X, are available for pre-order starting ...
Cobalt says that it can customize the interior and exterior of the plane. The Co50 Valkyrie—which starts at $695,000 and could reach customers as early as 2017—can be reserved with a $15,000 ...
[Avionics Today 02-22-2016] Cobalt’s Co50 Valkyrie five-seater, single-engine piston aircraft has not yet obtained FAA Part 23 certification, but that hasn’t stopped the manufacturer from ...
Recorded on November 12, 2015. Sarah Buhr speaks with Cobalt CEO David Loury about the new Cobalt Valkyrie, the fastest private plane in existence.
You wouldn’t think that an iPad in an airplane is a big deal, but when it’s used as part of flight control, it’s not only big, it’s verboten. Three months ago, Cobalt aircraft made a big ...