Waldo Waterman wanted aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss to like him in the
worst way. Inspired by what was apparently Curtiss' casual remark about
driving an airplane away from the field, Waterman spent years developing
a roadable airplane. In 1934, he flew his first successful prototype,
the "Arrowplane," a high-wing monoplane with tricycle wheels. On the
ground, the wings folding against the fuselage like those of a fly (now
would be a good time to note that Waterman must have been crazy to get
airborne in such a contraption). Nonetheless, the Arrowplane goes down
as the first real flying car. Two decades later, Waterman finally
perfected, if that's the word, what he then called the Aerobile,
configured as a swept-wing "pusher" (prop in the back). There were few
customers with so consummate a death wish as to order their own
Aerobile, and Waterman's one working car-plane eventually wound up in
the Smithsonian, where it can't kill anyone.
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