Eventually, the Jetson ONE was born. Composed of a race car-inspired aluminum and carbon fiber frame and equipped with eight high-power motors, the ONE is an impressive feat of engineering. With a pilot sitting between the rotors in a lightweight chassis, it certainly wouldn’t look out of...
LEGO buildershiudelivers a brilliant take on the racing future with his eVTOL, Rodenbach. Many lament that the Jetson’s flying car has not made it to us in 2025, but if the Rodenbach is what the future holds, it will be well worth the wait. While this is build is for the future, ...
Jetson ONE – the flying car future we’ve been waiting for If you want to get the attention of vehicle enthusiasts of all types, you need to show them something new, doing what their current vehicles don’t do and can’t do, and the Jetson ONE from Jetson Aero just di...
The article focuses on the animated television series "The Jetsons" produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions Inc. and Warner Bros. in the U.S. It features George Jetson and his family who own a space car. It relates the battle of George to escape from the gridlock highway as ...
See? No driverless cars in the Jetson’s version of the future. I like driving. Lots of people like driving. Why, then, are companies seeking to take away our fun? I would much rather see them developing flying cars. Now that would be fun. And it would take hours off a weekly commu...
In this episode, Rosey falls in love with Mack, a helper robot built by the apartment building superintendent Henry. Mack appears to be made out of a filing cabinet and the kind of rolling stand you might find on the bottom of an office chair. This romance parallels Judy Jetson’s own...
When George Jetson first flew across American TV screens in his flying car-like vehicle in 1962, many of us began wondering when we could buy our own Supersonic Suburbanite or Spacion Wagon. Amazingly, that day may be around the corner. After a century of unfulfilled promises, flying cars ...
on the way that we view culture, and our own place in the future—as “The Jetsons” seems to ask us to do—we have to ask ourselves how our expectations might have changed with subtle tweaks to the Jetson story. What if George took a flying bus or monorail instead of a flying car...
Shop now Swedish EV startup Jetson has finally delivered that flying “car” the future promised. Their Jetson One EV uses 8 electric motors to power itself & a single passenger to speeds of 63MPH yet requires no pilot’s license. Constructed of carbon fiber and driven by 8 props, it boa...
While perhaps not influenced by George Jetson's flying car, two Northrop Institute of Technology aeronautical engineering school graduates, Henry Smolinski and Hal Blake, decided they wanted to build a flying car. When they said flying car, it was indeed a car that could be driven to the airpo...