Joby Aviation closed its New York City flight campaign on Friday afternoon with a final piloted demonstration into Blade Lounge East at the East 34th Street Heliport, and I was on the pad when N545JX touched down. The aircraft came in over the East River from a hover roughly above the 59th Street Bridge, transitioned to vertical descent, and settled onto the helipad without the bone-rattling rotor wash a Sikorsky generates from the same spot.
From a yard back of the cordon, the audible blade noise blended into FDR Drive traffic running behind the lounge. Joby quotes the aircraft at about 45 decibels in cruise, less than half the noise of a conventional helicopter. That figure tracked from where I stood. After the flight I spoke with Rob Wiesenthal, founder and CEO of Blade Air Mobility, now a Joby division. The campaign ran April 27 through May 1 in partnership with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and the New York City Economic Development Corporation. We covered the announcement and the eIPP legal context on Monday.
The Aircraft Touches Down Without Helicopter Drama
Watching N545JX descend onto the East 34th Street pad was the closest thing to a quiet helicopter landing I have observed at sea level. The six tilting propellers spun fast enough to be visible, the wash was contained to the immediate pad area, and conversation continued at the press cordon while the aircraft was roughly fifty feet above the deck. Test pilot James “Buddy” Denham flew at least one of this week’s JFK-to-Manhattan demonstrations, the same routing Joby ran all week to trace what it pitches as a 60-to-120-minute drive converted into a flight under 10 minutes.
Six Tilting Props And A V-Tail Define The Design
The aircraft on the pad does not look like anything currently flying out of an FAA-controlled airport. Joby’s S4 carries up to four passengers and one pilot, with six electrically powered propellers that independently adjust tilt, pitch, and rotation. Four are mounted on the main wing. Two sit on a V-shaped rear empennage that places the props at the tips of the angled tail surfaces. The landing gear is fixed and tricycle-configured. Electric motors deliver torque a turbine cannot match at low rpm, which lets the props be sized smaller and quieter than a comparable helicopter rotor. The tilt mechanism allows vertical takeoff, then rotates the props forward for cruise. Joby quotes a top speed of 200 mph and a range of 150 miles on a single charge.
Wiesenthal Says Joby Is Ahead Of Its Competitors
When I asked Wiesenthal about the biggest challenges for the next five years, he framed the New York campaign as a competitive marker. “We’re on the right track,” he said. “To be able to fly in the wild right now in New York City, where you’re not in a test facility, and you get to see how it interacts with noise of the cityscape and how people react to it.” He went further: “I think we’re way ahead of any of our competitors. You saw full transition, and that was piloted, in a very complicated airspace, so I couldn’t be more thrilled.” That is a direct shot at Archer Aviation and Beta Technologies, the two U.S. competitors most often named alongside Joby in the eVTOL Integration Pilot Program coverage. Joby is currently the only one flying real commercial routes in NYC airspace.
Charging Took Five Minutes For The JFK Run
Asked about charge times, Wiesenthal pointed to the JFK leg as the operational data point. “For the JFK flight, that was about five minutes for the JFK run,” he said. “Over time, the batteries [will allow] quicker charge times, fewer charges before flights.” He noted that solid-state battery development would matter for both turnaround and range, though he said Joby is investigating multiple battery chemistries. On autonomy he was direct: “Autonomy is always on people’s radar, but right now we feel really good about having pilots. The public will embrace it.” He then added something more specific. “Pilots, but autonomy, and also commercial second pilots, like aid pilots. There are hybrid examples of how technology can help these aircraft even with pilots.” That last phrase points at reduced-crew operations, a step short of full autonomy that no Joby press release has yet described in detail.
The Tour Schedule Runs Through Oshkosh And Beyond
The Electric Skies tour moves to Daytona on May 11, returns to San Francisco May 16 to 18, then goes to Dayton June 13 to 14, and Oshkosh July 20 to 26 for EAA AirVenture. Utah, Texas, Florida, and North Carolina are listed as upcoming stops without firm dates. Wiesenthal said he expects regular NYC service by the end of 2026, with pricing pegged at roughly the per-seat price of an Uber Black. The same JFK-to-Manhattan route runs $195 to $250 today by Blade helicopter.
The Aircraft Is Not FAA-Certified Yet
N545JX is a preproduction prototype operating under experimental airworthiness. It is not the FAA-conforming aircraft that drives type certification. Joby has stated it is roughly two-thirds through the certification process, and its first conforming aircraft, N547JX, began flying on a separate track at the Marina, California test facility on March 11. FAA test pilots are expected to begin for-credit Type Inspection Authorization tests later this year. I covered the marketing-vs-reality angle of N545JX versus N547JX in the Golden Gate analysis in March. The New York demonstrations were authorized through eIPP coordination with the FAA and the Port Authority, but the legal framework for revenue operations under the Other Transaction Agreement was still being finalized as of late April.
DroneXL’s Take
The on-pad acoustic experience is the part of the Joby pitch hardest to convey from a press release or a render. Standing a yard back of the cordon while N545JX descended, I can confirm the simplest claim Joby makes: it is quiet. Quieter than the FDR Drive traffic behind the helipad. That part is real. Whether the unit economics work at the Uber Black per-seat price Wiesenthal is targeting is a separate question this demonstration did not answer.
Two things from the interview are worth tracking. Wiesenthal’s “aid pilots” comment hints that Joby is thinking about reduced-crew operations as an interim step toward autonomy. He did not elaborate, and he was not asked the follow-up. The answer matters because reduced-crew operations would change the operating economics well before full autonomy clears the FAA. Watch the May 16 to 18 San Francisco return and the May 11 Daytona stop for whether either flight introduces the conforming N547JX into rotation. The aircraft I watched on Friday is the marketing platform. The one that gets certified decides whether any of this becomes a real service before the end of 2026…