This eccentric inventor has found a way to avoid traffic jams - with his own flying drone. <br /><br />Kyxz Mendoza from Quezon City, Philippines, started work six years ago on his incredible flying car.<br /><br />Earlier this month he completed the first successful test flight - soaring some 25ft above the ground. <br /><br /> Kyxz calls his flying car the ''Ultralight Aircraft'' and he now plans to mass produce it with a two-seater version added to to the range.<br /><br />He said: ''We've been having bad weather so it took as a while after our deadline before we can finally show it to our followers. But after two months of tuning, here it is. I hope everyone will give this vehicle a positive reaction. This was only a dream for us five years ago.''<br /><br />The aircraft has a metal frame with a carbon fibre shell and resembles the structure of a drone, only bigger. <br /><br />It is powered by batteries which need two-and-a-half hours of charging time. It can then fly for 12 to 15 minutes.<br /><br />Kyxz said his first designs were hoverboard style designs that he stood on and he steered with a remote control.<br /><br />The design evolved and it took him and his team six years before they were able to make the vehicle fly. <br /><br />Koncepto Millenya is now open for buyers and investors for the commercial distribution of Ultralight Aircraft. <br /><br />Kyxz added: ''It's a flying car type of vehicle that uses drone technology or multi-copter technology to fly. It's like a drone car.<br /><br />''I wanted it to be a sports car, a flying Lamborghini, maybe. The design was a trial and error process. Some materials burned up on use. Other materials didn't quite work.''