Set aside the courtroom drama for a moment. The part of the Advanced Air Mobility industry that’s actually building things — certifying propulsion systems, rolling out new prototypes, deploying aircraft for emergency response, and pivoting legacy helicopter companies toward autonomy — is moving faster than the headlines suggest. Here’s a clear-eyed look at what happened in the past two weeks and what it means.
SkyDrive Clears Certification Hurdles & Announces US Strategic Alliance
Japan’s SkyDrive has secured agreement with the JCAB on its General Certification Plan for the SD-05 eVTOL, marking one of the most significant milestones yet on the road to type certification and a planned 2028 commercial launch in Japan and the U.S.
News Roundup: Volocopter, Horizon, and Ohio, Intelligently Tackling AAM
From Volocopter’s push into light sport eVTOLs to Horizon’s updated Cavorite X7 and Ohio’s bold eIPP medical transport proposal, advanced air mobility is shifting into practical service. These three stories reveal how regulators, designers, and states are turning new aircraft into real tools for healthcare and regional connectivity.
AutoFlight’s 10 Seat Matrix eVTOL Completes First Public Transition Flight
AutoFlight has completed a public transition flight of its 5 ton class Matrix eVTOL in China. The 10 seat aircraft moves the industry beyond four to six seat designs and pushes Advanced Air Mobility toward higher payloads, cargo operations, and new route economics. We look at what this milestone means for regulators, infrastructure planners, and operators watching the large eVTOL space.



