Martin Jetpack Closer To Takeoff In First Responder Applications 55
Zothecula writes Last year's redesign of the long-awaited Martin Jetpack was accompanied by plans to begin commercial sales in 2014, starting with emergency response services and individual sales to follow thereafter. The release date for the first responder Jetpack has since been revised to 2016, a prediction bolstered by the fresh announcement of a partnership between Martin Aircraft Company and US company Avwatch to develop air-based, first responder solutions for the US Department of Homeland Security and Department of Defense.
Consumer Warning (Score:4, Funny)
Do Not Use Indoors
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Why not [youtube.com]?
Not a jet pack (Score:5, Informative)
Despite appearances, there is no "jet" or "rocket" engine. It is a pair of ducted fans driven by a four cylinder gasoline engine.
It isn't a pack either. The weight of the machine is borne by a large frame that the pilot steps onto.
It is really an odd sort of helicopter. It looks really cool and it is much more compact than a normal helicopter but it is not a jet-pack.
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I am trying to figure how this could be used by the Fire Service, in a first responder role.
1. It doesn't look like it has the weight limit to do bucket drops for wildland firefighting
2. It doesn't look like it has the weight limit to haul very much equipment
3. It doesn't look like it could do any rescue
4. At best, it looks like someone could scout the perimeter of a fire. For $200k, that is an awful expensive scout
I see cops wanting this, but not the fire service
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In short, I don't see sales of this jet pack taking off.*ducks*
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This would be a great tool for getting a medic to an injured person in rugged terrain.
As long as the following conditions exist;
1. There is sufficient open flat ground for the rather large machine to land.
2. The machine has the weight capacity to to carry the operator and all life saving equipment.
3. The "rugged terrain" is within 15 km of the station. While the machine has range of 30km it has to get back to the station. Sure one could truck the machine closer to the accident but then a helicopter would probably be faster.
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the use cases would be extremely, extremely limited.
guess that's why they had to sign up homeland security to pay the bill with foot in mouth.
if there's so little time that you can't get to the place by walking, from where you launch this, it's unlikely you can bring this thing near enough.
if there's so little space around that you can't drop from a copter, unlikely that you can land this thing(cliff edge in the middle of a steep cliff or something - and really that's a quite rare case).
if there's so bad vi
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And your medic will need to be well-trained in flying this thing, or he'll need a medic.
Especially when you bear in mind that "rugged terrain" can easily mean steep mountain slopes or forests, where safely landing will be a nightmare if not outright impossible, at which point isn't it easier and a lot more functional to just send a helicopter which can winch the EMTs down and the patient up?
If you can fly one of these to a patient you can fly a helicopter there; a jetpacking EMT can only treat using the gear their jetpack can carry, the jetpack can't carry a patient *and* pilot at the same ti
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But the grandparent's point's two and three still apply - a medic sans equipment and supplies isn't much better than no medic at all, and you still need to get the patient evacuated. And all that assumes you know where the injured person is in the first place...
This jetpack really does look like it's mostly a solution in search of a problem.
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I thought it would be able to bypass traffic and get a first responder on the ground in a much shorter time even in an urban environment, when 3 or 4 minutes could be the difference between life or death. They may not be able to evacuate an injured person but they should be able to attempt to stabilize an injured person. {the article doesn't really mention lift capacity but I imagine it would have to be able to take some basic supplies}
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Well, he can carry basic supplies.
In a lot of cases, you just need a trained responder there ASAP while you dispatch a regular ambulance. Said ambulance can take easily 15-30 minutes to arrive even in an urban environment. The jetpack responder can b
Of course cops want this (Score:2)
I am sure somewhere there is a Federal Law Enforcement agency that already has plans to buy about two dozen of these things and establish a jet pack SWAT team.
If its even halfway successful, expect every agency with a SWAT team to have one.
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It's a jet pack, it will advance the tech used in first responders by making them have to rescue people from new and interesting places.
So...a leaf blower? (Score:3)
>> ducted fans driven by a four cylinder gasoline engine
Yeah...the guy who blows the leaves off the parking lot has one of these too.
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It is a pair of ducted fans driven by a four cylinder gasoline engine.
I didn't see anything in the link that stated it was a 4 stroke engine. Do you have another link? This seems like a great application for a 2 stroke engine to me.
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You can get various fun cars powered by motorbike engines these days. Several based on the old Lotus 7 (e.g. Westfield, Tiger) are in your 200 bhp/1000 lbs ballpark. Tiger do or did 2-engine versions (2WD, with one driving each rear wheel or 4WD, one per axle). You can even get a 2.8 litre V8 which is 2 Hayabusa blocks on a common crankshaft; with a supercharger if you wish. Hartley builds the engine, used by Radical and Ariel.
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I still wonder how hard it would be to just use a pair or triplet of AMT Titan microjet engines [amtjets.com] to make an actual jetpack ? That's the smaller-is-better approach "Jetman [jetman.com]" has followed, with success.
Oh lordy! (Score:3, Informative)
You'd better listen to the noise [youtube.com]. You definitely won't need a sireeen.
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first responder call... (Score:5, Funny)
911 DISPATCH: 911 What is your emergency?
Person: There are 2 people here who need an ambulance!
911 DISPATCH: OK We're sending over a First Responder!
Person: OK
WHOOSH...CRASH AHHHHHH!!
Person: There are 3 people here who need an ambulance!
first responder call... (Score:2)
Think of it as job security. Sold to First responders - check. Sold to general public - check. General public uses it, crashes, and calls first responders - check!
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Disruptive If We Say So Ourselves (Score:3)
Uhhh, I don’t think so. This is like an extremely small helicopter, there is little I can see it doing a helicopter couldn’t. What few things it might be able to do a copter couldn’t, remote control drones will soon be able to do.
I don’t think the 60’s jetpack dream will ever be truly realized.
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I'm surprised to find the concept dates back to the 20s, although I had never seen one until viewing media from the mid-60s.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_pack#Andreyev
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Anyway, jetpacks are old news now. What we want is whatever gear Lena Oxton is wearing.
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Strange, I thought I'd seen those basket lift contraptions used for years. Guess they quit making them.
You say the emergency area is farther than 20 miles round trip? Too bad, a helicopter would never be able to go that far either I guess.
Re: Disruptive If We Say So Ourselves (Score:2)
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(been on vacation)
Sorry to have been snarky.
But if the contraption can't lift both responder and victim out (like the basket can), then I really think this has limited use. I suspect the weight of two people and the geometry of the contraption make impractical for evacuation -- which is the most common rescue work I imagine.
Ubiquitous (Score:2)
You would think that with the advent of drones/quad copters and the technology stabilizing and controlling them, that various manned vehicles such as this or even Moller's Skycar would be popping up all over the place.
Not a disruptive technology (Score:2, Insightful)
with a limited range and load capability the small number of "rescue" missions it would be appropriate does not justify the cost. Except, they'll use taxpayer dollars.
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You think any service that does rescue missions gets money for this sort of toy? not a chance. This will be used by DHS, Police, maybe even the TSA. But you won't see paramedics flying in one of these things.
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Maybe they can sell one of the Mine Resistant Anti-Armor vehicles.
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Anybody remember Dallas Thompson (Score:2)
Martian Jetpack (Score:2)
UAV + people (Score:2)
Looking at one of the videos on the co's site, looks like it can be remote controlled and stabilised - seems like an ideal platform on to which to mount a police sniper and carry him/her to a target location to do the business. I guess it could lift as high a a helo so sound would not be too bad.
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Except snipers usually want to be stealthy, this machine makes an incredible racket.