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Flying Cars Take Off!

Minnesota just became the second state to allow flying cars on its roads and airstrips.

A three-wheeled vehicle with wings and a tail flies in the air.

© 2024 Samson Sky

This image shows what Samson Sky’s Switchblade flying car will look like in the air.

Imagine getting around town in a flying car! Minnesota governor Tim Walz took this dream one step toward reality in May 2024, when he signed a bill allowing flying cars on the state’s roads and airstrips. Minnesota is the second state to say yes to flying cars, after New Hampshire.

A few companies are building or planning to build flying cars, which can travel on roads but unfold their wings when they’re ready to take flight. Some of these vehicles take off vertically, like a helicopter. Others need a runway to take off, like an airplane. (Like airplanes and helicopters, flying cars can’t be flown without a pilot’s license.)

One example of a car that takes off on a runway is Samson Sky’s Switchblade, a three-wheeled car with foldable wings that can fly for about 450 miles (720 kilometers) at a time at an altitude below 10,000 feet (3,000 meters). (Commercial airplanes fly at an altitude of about 35,000 feet, or 11,000 meters.) Samson Sky says it will start building its vehicles in the next two years. Yet the company has already sold more than 100 cars, and about 2,400 more cars have been reserved.

© 2024 Samson Sky

See Samson Sky’s Switchblade change from a plane to a car and back again.

At this point, most people probably have never seen a flying car in the air. But that’s set to change, as more of the high-flying vehicles become available. More and more people will be able to buy a flying car or call one to take them somewhere, like a taxi or an Uber. Laws, like the one in Minnesota, allow these cars to operate. To ensure that flying cars are operated safely, these laws set rules about where flying cars can take off and land.

Flying cars aren’t just a dream. They’re part of our future.

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Fun Fact

What do you think cars will look like in 50 years? In 1956, an American company built a car based on what they thought cars would look like in the year 2000. The photo shows just how wrong they were!

A white car with 1950s-style fins and chrome has a rounded glass hatch instead of doors.
Petersen Automotive Museum, petersen.org

In the 1950s, this is what some people thought cars would look like in the year 2000.

Can I Play?

Salvador Perez poses in a backyard with seven children of different ages.
Courtesy of Lesley Lard

Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez took the time for a photo with his temporary Wiffle ball teammates.

A group of young Wiffle ball players in Kansas got the thrill of a lifetime when a Major League Baseball superstar asked if he could join their game.

The kids have been playing Wiffle ball together in their neighborhood several nights a week for the past three years, and just about anyone is welcome to join them. So when Kansas City Royals catcher Salvadore Perez showed up, the answer was yes! Perez, a nine-time All-Star, had been visiting a friend in the area.

“He was like, ‘Hello guys, can I play?” said 9-year-old Cameron Lard, whose mom took a video of the whole thing. Perez played defense for a bit and also batted, even hitting a home run during his 15 minutes on the field.

Check out the video for a highlight! 

Courtesy of Lesley Lard

Cars, Then and Now

Six photos show cars from 1769, 1909, 1927, 1941, 1958, and 1970.

National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, Hampshire; Ford Motor Company; © Bright, Sigurbjornragnarsson/Dreamstime.com; National Motor Museum—Heritage Images, Ken Fermoyle—The Enthusiast Network/Getty Images; Photo composite Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

The first real automobile was invented in 1769. This car, which is in the top left photo, ran on steam power. 

Today, many people around the world depend on cars to get them where they need to go. Have you ever wondered how a modern car works? You can find out at Britannica!

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Word of the Day

prediction

Part of speech:

noun

Definition:

: a statement about what will happen or might happen in the future

Definitions provided by
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