Kuwait Times

Brazil paper plane pilots seek internatio­nal glory

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More than a century after their beloved countryman Alberto Santos-Dumont made aviation history, young Brazilians are taking to the skies seeking internatio­nal glory of their own... with paper airplanes. Eight finalists took part Monday in a heated competitio­n in Rio de Janeiro to pick Brazilʼs entrants for the world paper airplane championsh­ips in Salzburg, Austria in May. Now in its sixth edition, Red Bull Paper Wings 2022 will pit representa­tives of 62 countries against each other in contests to decide the worldʼs best paper airplane flyers in both distance and airtime.

The Brazilian qualifiers were held at the Museum of Tomorrow, a sleek structure opened in the run-up to the 2016 Rio Olympics whose exhibition­s have included tributes to Santos-Dumont (18731932), a national hero who won the Deutsch prize in 1901 for being the first person to pilot a dirigible airship around the Eiffel Tower.

Flying in the face of aviation historians, many Brazilians also insist the legendary bon vivant was the first to fly an airplane, and not the Wright brothers. His would-be heirs face what some might consider an equally quixotic challenge: using a standard piece of 100-gram (3.5-ounce) A4 paper, create and fly the best-performing paper planes in the world. Brazil has won the world championsh­ips twice, in 2006 and 2009, both in the airtime category.

Rockets and gliders

Eight students in fields as diverse as engineerin­g, veterinary medicine and nutrition took part in Mondayʼs finals, after surviving preliminar­y qualifiers with an initial field of 2,500 entrants. Standing on an indoor competitio­n tract painted like an airport runway, they artfully tossed their paper creations aloft into the bright sunlight shining through the museumʼs high, airy dome. Jose Silva, a 24-year-old computer science major from the central-western city of Goiania, was competing in his second qualifiers. “Planes built for distance are like rockets,” he explained. “Planes built for airtime are like gliders, with wide wings.”

His own airtime entry came in at 2.11 seconds, losing to that of 19-year-old Pedro Cruz Capriotti, at 7.61 seconds, and well off the world record of 27.9 seconds held by Takuo Toda of Japan. The distance category was won by 19-yearold Isaac Queiroz Leite, with a flight of 40.3 meters (132 feet). He will be chasing a world record of 69.1 meters, held by Joe Ayoob of the United States. Third-place finisher Richard Amorin, 23, was confident team Brazil would shine in Austria. Like Santos-Dumont, “Brazilians always manage to find a way,” he said.— AFP

 ?? ?? A competitor throws his paper plane during the national Red Bull Paper Wings paper airplane throwing championsh­ips at the Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — AFP photos
A competitor throws his paper plane during the national Red Bull Paper Wings paper airplane throwing championsh­ips at the Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — AFP photos
 ?? ?? Competitor Isaac Queiroz Leite celebrates after throwing his paper plane a winning distance of 40.3 meters.
Competitor Isaac Queiroz Leite celebrates after throwing his paper plane a winning distance of 40.3 meters.
 ?? ?? Competitor Isaac Queiroz Leite throws his paper plane a winning distance of 40.3 meters.
Competitor Isaac Queiroz Leite throws his paper plane a winning distance of 40.3 meters.
 ?? ?? A competitor makes a paper plane.
A competitor makes a paper plane.

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