A Working, Winged Jetpack from Switzerland 125
serutan writes "A Swiss airline pilot and self-described adrenaline junkie named Yves Rossy has developed a working jet-pack and flown it more than 30 times. Actually, it's a pair of rigid carbon fiber wings strapped to his back, with two small kerosene-powered jet engines on each wing — essentially a small jet airplane using the pilot's body as the fuselage. His flights have lasted up to 6-1/2 minutes at speeds over 100mph. Rossy's website and YouTube have some pretty cool videos of him flying around over the mountains like Buzz Lightyear. He is working toward ground takeoffs and landings, but currently he jumps out of an airplane, unfolds the wings and flies until he runs out of fuel, then parachutes to the ground."
hmmp (Score:5, Funny)
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This jetpack looks cool, I would be worried about the landing however, it looks heavy.
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It literally pushes his legs from under him and pushes him over his ankles.
Nausicaa (Score:1, Insightful)
Yeah thats much more like assisted gliding than anything else. When he can take off from a standing start, like in Nausicaa [stomptokyo.com] (valley of the wind), I'll be impressed. Also his landing technique seems a bit hair raising. Do you fold up the wings before or after you deploy the parachute?
Re:Nausicaa (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy crap...
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When the hardest part seems to be a controlled ground takeoff (and maintaining control until you can get up to speed), no, I'm not impressed. It's a neat expensive toy that requires another neat expensive toy -- the plane -- to function. I'll be impressed when it can function by itself.
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All you need is a Catapult, and a big Circus-type net on top of the building you work at, repeat at your house.
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The dude jumps out of a plane with a homemade jetpack and flies around for six minutes, and you're not impressed?
Power assisted gliding [pointvista.com] is nothing new, it has been around for a while now. What he's doing is a cool stunt, yes, a fun toy if thats what floats your boat, but its hardly groundbreaking (no pun intended). Its not like he was in any real danger, what with the parachute strapped to his back and everything. Or if he was it was danger of his own making. So no, not impressed.
No criticism intended.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Its not like he was in any real danger...?
Its not like he was in any real danger...!!
Spheres.
Mighty spheres.
Especially the first time!
I don't care how many plan B's they had.
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Well when it becomes "news for jocks" I'll join you in your admiration. Until then, technically, it wasn't wildly impressive.
Re:Nausicaa (Score:4, Interesting)
Obviously, a quick learner.
I'd be interested in knowing what his "Plan B" was in the event the wings folded up in flight, or one engine exploded.
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Oh Nobodaddy, who farts and belches in heaven...
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Death is a big motivator.
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It isn't the flying that's the hard part (Score:5, Funny)
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Seriously, I think the guy's nuts, but damn that was cool to watch. I know the U.S. military experimented with flying platforms at one time: does anyone know if they ever worked on anything like this? He says he's working on the ability to have ground takeoffs in the next version. That's actually starting to sound like it might become a useful application of
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Which is why he uses a parachute.
Don't get me wrong, it's cool and all... But it requires falling out of a plane for while in order to launch the thing and then still needs a parachute to land. It's a small step beyond the guys who've been jumping for years with flying squirrel type wings stitched in to their jump gear (in that this guy adds a rigid wing and power) but it's a long way from a truly useful jet pack that'
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He was able gain altitude and keep pace with his launching aircraft. He could have returned to the airplane if he was willing risk striking the p
Watch the videos (Score:2, Interesting)
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Christmas (Score:1)
Re:Cliffs in California (Score:4, Funny)
Painfully.
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M. Rossy's contraption looks much more impressive though.
Swiss Ingenuity (Score:4, Funny)
He could have built the engines himself (Score:5, Interesting)
After him, several other people published books on building small jet engines, like this one [amazon.com], for instance.
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I think "amazes" isn't the word I'd use. I was thinking the Swiss is guy is really cool - crazy - but really cool. Then I see your post about people building planes based on designs from Wikipedia and I realize the Swiss guy is the paragon of sane and normal.
They'd build something as dangerous as a plane based on plans from one of the world's most
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Instant RPG, but using mini jets instead of rocket power, sure its slower, but still fast enough and have a decent range.
All at 1/100th the cost of a military contractor.
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Flying is easy ... (Score:3, Funny)
Lovely accent (Score:1)
--
"I can't search. I uninstalled Google." - P. Ducler
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It doesn't take much to insult the Swiss, seeing as they're so fiercely independent. But it was my Swiss friend in Switzerland who characterized Rmantsh as "Swiss-German" and an analysis of the language shows it is basically some sort of superset of German, bastardized by the Swiss.
Branson should sponsor him (Score:2, Interesting)
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Tip for this guy: try the Swiss Navy.
The last shot in the video is inspiring.
Agreed. The image will haunt me for a long time, in the best possible way. I'm glad I saw this.
Summary of his comments (Score:4, Informative)
Basically, at the beginning he explains a bit about how it was designed. One point he made was that his reason for the foldable design of the wings was so that it would fit in the plane. The other interesting thing he said was that the design was effectively that of an airplane - with his body serving as the fuselage.
After the flight he just explains that after he jumped out of the plane he did a little half-turn to catch the wind. He also mentions that the wing unfolded nicely - and that when he kicked in the gas that he moved forward and he could tell that at that point he was flying. He said it was really cool, too. (Which I think we'll all agree is the case!)
Also - I'm not a native French speaker. I'm American but lived in Paris a couple of years - any native French speaker care to comment on the guy's accent? Is that a Swiss accent? (I'm presuming so, but I was curious to know from a native.)
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All I want for Christmas... (Score:1)
Dear Santa (Score:5, Funny)
If it's not too late, I would like to add a jetpack to my Xmas list. You can cross off the PS3 if that helps.
Thanks!
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If it's not too late, I would like to add a jetpack to my Xmas list.
In case Santa doesn't have time to check his inbox today, you can always try the Three Wise Men on January 6th. You gotta be in a spanish-speaking country, however, 'cause that's where the Three Zoroastrian Magi (Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar) show up with gifts for children (of all ages).
I am surprised this works ... (Score:5, Funny)
Hate to be a spoil-sport but--- (Score:2, Informative)
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http://www.metacafe.com/watch/207659/amasing_rc_je ts/ [metacafe.com]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fbITzCI2AU0 [youtube.com]
Those little hairdryers deliver up to 50 pounds of thrust and sell for $3000-$5000.
rj
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Thanks! Some facts at last. I stand corrected-- he may have been flying.
But please realize that these things are doubly inefficient--
Combine these two gotchas and you have th
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rj
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-66AcTo9TU [youtube.com]
Truely inspirational. For some reason I cried for the first time in many years (can't remember when the last time was). This guy is my new hero.
He should get a donation link at his website.
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The builder wanted to switch to duced fans for commercial use: I never knew what b
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Just in time... (Score:1)
To be Featured in the Next Bond Movie? (Score:2)
Further developments (Score:1)
Oh wait, that's called an airplane.
What the guy needs... (Score:2)
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His feet are just where the thrust from those VTOL
engines will be coming down. (unless he takes off from
his belly - not a good sales argument).
jets + thrust = hot!
Batman (Score:2)
Wow (Score:1)
Its not an airplane-it cant take off (Score:1, Interesting)
For example, Wrights brother contraption was not an airplane because although it could fly,it cannot take off on its on (this is the reason why many nations believe that the Wright brothers did not invent the airplane). The same with this contraption, it can fly but i
Who cares what the French think? (Score:2)
Second, who cares how the French define the meaning of an *English* word? These are the same people who are up in arms over the pollution of thier language with "Big Mac" and "Le Picnic", so what's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander... McDonalds keeps their fingers out of l'Academie Francais and they keep their fingers out of the OED.
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So basically without them a lot of people couldnt do it, it doesnt matter that someone else may have made a more powerfull rotary engine, since that
is really more of a general purpose part.
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Because it's faster than writing it on cards and holding it up so you can read it?
It's one of the four official languages of Switzerland.
Dont they learn English in school in Switzerland?
Probably, but English isn't one of their official languages. They don't even border an English-speaking country. Why would they speak English?
Besides, it is a funny kind of French, is the inventor French Canadian or what?
It's pretty clear he's Swiss. (They speak everything funny.
The art of flying (Score:2, Redundant)
WOW where's the.. (Score:1)
sure flyin is fun and all until one of those (Score:3, Funny)
I must have one of these. (Score:1)
Is that really a "JetPack" ?? (Score:2)
Swiss Army Jetpack? (Score:1)
The 35th jump went well until he accidentally unfolded the cork screw and magnifying glass instead of the wings and plummeted to his death.
Segway.. (Score:2)
It's like God taking you for a ride (Score:1)
"Is that a jet plane strapped to your back... (Score:1)
Old News (Score:1)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=213172&cid=173 37636 [slashdot.org]
Darwing Awards (Score:1)
Done before (Score:1)
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The problem with takeoff from the ground is that if his engines crap out on him at a couple of hundred feet, he has no time left to open his parachute and he'll be dead for sure. It makes much more sense to iron out any technical glitches with a drop from a plane so he alwa
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I don't think the thing climbs very well because they don't show any dramatic shots of climbing. There's one shot that looks like a steep climb but that is after a power dive. Still it's pretty impressive to pull out of a dive and gain altitude using a short pair of wings strapped to your hips.
The most dramatic segment on the videos is an over the shoulder shot w
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I disagree: it all depends at which height the jet engines stop: if high enough, even in case of problem (asymetrical deployement/propulsion for example), he should be able to get rid of his wings and open his parachute (well, I remember a similar design where the pilot could drop the wings, not sure about his design).
What killed many early wingmen is that their wings were not removable, and of course that they opened quite
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The issue came up in a discussion of a similar technology 30 years ago: these ideas are hardly new.
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Not for me (Score:2)
Chances are the parent is experiencing issues due to outdated browser/plugins rather than a problem with youtube itself.
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Inspired by my one and only skydiving adventure, which included a forty-five second solo freefall, I once wrote a short story (in a notebook I can't seem to find anywhere) about a guy who re-enters the atmosphere from an orbital flight and becomes a human meteorite. Obviously the person is breathing through canned oxygen, and once a certain speed has been attained through deacceleration, the heat shield is jettisoned so t
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You're right of course, the link to lostcosmonauts.com was a weak one, yet keep in mind that PBS took it seriously enough to run a show on the Ilyushin incident, which brings the ballgame to a higher level. BTW, correcting three mistakes of mine, proving that memory isn't as strong as a bit of research:
a) It's Ilyushin, not Ilushyn,
b) It was on PBS, but not on Nova, and
c) The show was run in 1999, not the early nineties.
Here's a stronger link: http://www.astronautix.com/astros/ilyushin.h [astronautix.com]
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Star Trek Generations (again, the book) also has Kirk doing a similar stunt.
I, for one, hope the hobbyists never get bored, and help make some of these things we've read in stories a reality (I bet you were expecting an overlord joke with the starter, weren't you? Sorry to disappoint...)