"It does remind me of the Jetsons, I think it's pretty cool," said Linda Parsons as she checked out the car.
The vehcile is the "Liberator" and it's an electric powered concept car.
Cincinnati inventors Jay Andress and Andrew Webster say their prototype car will seat four adults and look like a regular car, reported ONN's Lot Tan.
"When I dream about the car I think of it as really flying," said inventor Jay Andress.
Andress says the car will be suspended from a rail system for long distance travel. While riding on the track an energy source could recharge the battery.
"All these drivers down the highway now could use their time productively or relax. Fuel savings would be huge. We calculate 95 billion dollars a year from fuel savings," said Andress
And pretty cheap to charge up the battery too. Officials say it would cost only 4 dollars of electricity to travel 150 miles.
The biggest challenge is money. The inventors need at least 10 million dollars to build a test track and two prototype cars in Clermont County."
And the price tag to build a national rail system that follows the existing highways around the country would cost more than 500 billion dollars.
Andress says although it is expensive, the benefits are huge.
When asked if she would buy it, Linda Parons says in a heartbeat.
"The way global warming is now and impact of all the fossil fuels, this is gonna help greatly," she added.
It is a car of the future that could be a reality in less than a decade.

