A special good morning to subscriber Jo Ann Norton Tuesday, September 6, 2022 • Redmond, Oregon • $1 redmondspokesman.com @RedmondSpox It’s a car! It’s a plane! It’s ... both? Redmond inventor ready for vehicle’s first flight BY TIM TRAINOR • Redmond Spokesman S am Bousfield has spent hundreds of hours in a simulator, driving and flying his invention. He’s driven down virtual highways, flown over virtual mountains and landed on a virtual football field. Later this month, the virtual will become reality. “At some point you just have to get in the air and see how this thing flies,” he said. “That’s where we’re at right now.” The Samson Switchblade, what Bousfield hopes is the world’s first commercially via- ble flying car, is set to take to the sky for the first time. Whether that happens in Central Oregon or not remains to be seen, as test flights often happen closer to Photo courtesy Samson Sky The flight test crew goes into action on the Switchblade flying car. LOCAL NEWS Photo courtesy Ross Chandler Sam Bousfield, designer with the Switchblade Flying Car. sea level. A professional test pi- lot will have first-flight honors, though the Redmond inventor hopes to take the controls as soon as safely possible. Liftoff, should it occur safely, will mark a momentous change for his company. “The moment will be ... hard to describe,” said Bousfield. “I don’t even know what it’ll feel like.” Samson Sky crews have spent years working to design and manufacture a prototype, tin- kering with it at every step of the process and rethinking ev- erything from what kind of en- gine to use to the location of the smallest bolt. But once the plane goes up and they clear the last few bars from the Federal Aviation Ad- ministration, all that tinkering must end. “We have to put our game faces on now,” said Bousfield. “This is a real aircraft now. We have to treat it differently.” WHAT IS THIS MACHINE? Bousfield can picture it. A customer purchases their Quick attack keeps brush fire at 10 acres. A3 Photo courtesy Samson Sky The Switchblade goes through high speed tests in the High Desert. ers will flock to it once they see how much shorter travel time can be in the Switchblade. There are more than 5,000 public-use airports in the country, he noted, which opens up a wide range of travel options. “We wanted to make some- thing that people will buy, something they will want to use .. and is useful,” he said. The Switchblade will need an 1,100-foot runway to take off and, thanks to its automo- tive-style brakes, just 700 feet to land and stop. Many companies have built vehicles that both fly and drive, but Bousfield said none have been practical or able to be mass-produced and mass-mar- keted. Many required multiple people and hours to attach or remove the wings, which made everyday use impractical. See Flying car / A6 Candidates set for November city elections BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman Wildland fire $170,000 Samson Switchblade and spends a little more than a week working with Samson Sky employees to build it. Once they get it home, the customer parks it in their garage, where it fits neatly alongside their every- day car. The driver can then hop be- hind the wheel, throw their bags in the fronk (front trunk) and drive the three-wheeled vehi- cle on city streets and interstate highways to the nearest airport. On their way, they can stop at a gas station for a cup of coffee and top off the tank with pre- mium unleaded. Once they ar- rive at the airport, the customer presses a button, releasesing wings tucked below the passen- ger compartment. They hit the gas, the propeller fires up be- hind them, and the Switchblade tears down the tarmac at speeds well past 100 mph. It then takes flight, heading off in the direc- tion of a lunch meeting or vaca- tion spot. A recent customer survey indicated strong demand from recreational pilots, though Bousfield thinks business travel- The field is set. Let the cam- paigning begin. After the filing deadline came and went at 5 p.m. on August 31, we now know the final list of candi- dates for the November election in Redmond. Four men will vie for the top job in city government, as George End- icott is set to leave his mayorship at the end of the year. Endicott, who has served seven two-year terms as mayor, did not file for re-election and will step down from his post at the end of 2022. A four-way race to replace him will be between Charles Webster Baer, Ben Schimmoller and current city councilors Ed Fitch and Jay Patrick. There are also five candidates vy- ing for three at-large spots on city council. Those seats have a four- year term that starts Jan. 1. Those candidates are: Branegan J. Dixon, John Nielsen, Kathryn Osborne, Bill Trumble and Cat Zwicker. Other issues are likely to appear on city ballots including temporary and permanent bans of psilocybin manufacture and therapy. The exact language of those questions is set to be ironed out at a Sept. 6 city coun- cil meeting. City voters will also have a say in Oregon’s three-way governor’s race, on the newly-drawn Oregon House and Senate districts that bisect the city as well as the U.S. House race pitting Terrebonne resident Jamie Mcleod-Skinner against Republican Lori Chavez-DeRemer. █ Reporter: ttrainor@redmondspokesman.com WEATHER FORECAST INSIDE Calendar .......................................................A2 Sports ...........................................................A8 Coffee Break ............................................. A10 Classifieds ................................................. A12 THIS WEEK’S FORECAST SPONSORED BY Volume 113, No. 1 USPS 778-040 Jo i n u a s r k a b l e f o r a g r e e x m p e r i e n c e dinin TUESDAY Sunny WEDNESDAY Sunny THURSDAY Partly cloudy FRIDAY Sunny SATURDAY Sunny SUNDAY Partly cloudy MONDAY Partly cloudy 96/57 96/53 86/48 90/54 94/58 90/53 85/46 The Spokesman uses recycled newsprint U|xaIICGHy02326kzU Wine and Dine as you step back in time... For reservations call 541.527.4336 646 SW 6th St., Redmond Wed - Sat 5 to 9 p.m.