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Transportation

Jet Pack Company Executive Crashes During A Test Flight (kdvr.com) 100

The Vice President of Jet Pack International was hospitalized Friday after crashing during a test flight in Denver, according to the Associated Press. Though he's successfully flown the company's hydrogen peroxide-fueled jet pack more than 400 times, Friday the vice president experienced "control issues" while hovering 20 feet over the "Go Fast" energy drink company while testing some adjustments, and ultimately crashed in a nearby industrial park. He fell on his head, and he wasn't wearing a helmet, but after receiving 27 stitches, he was released from the hospital Saturday afternoon. The company's jet pack normally has a range of about one-quarter of a mile (and reaches heights of 100 feet) with a flying time of 32 seconds, the Associated Press reports, adding that "The FAA is investigating the crash."
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Jet Pack Company Executive Crashes During A Test Flight

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  • No helmet??? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mpoulton ( 689851 ) on Sunday April 10, 2016 @03:45AM (#51878193)
    Flying a rocket pack with no helmet on sounds about as appealing as felling trees barefoot with a chainsaw, or arc welding with no hood.
    • by WarJolt ( 990309 )

      Flying a jet pack over anything besides water, a net or an air cushion sounds like a terrible idea. At least his head broke his fall.

      • by Cyphase ( 907627 )
        At least his fall didn't break his head (completely); although someone who'd fly around in a jet pack without a helmet might already have a broke head. The guy's lucky.
        • Fun fact: When Bill Suitor stood-in for Sean Connery and flew the jet-pack (aka "The Rocket Belt") in the 1965 James Bond movie "Thunderball," he refused to do it without a helmet, much to the chagrin of the producers who felt it made Bond look less cool
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        A 2 story fall into water (~20 feet, ~6 meters) is considered +90% lethal. These odds change radically if it is a controlled dive. This number is the guideline gathered by the US Navy, compiled from Sailors being blown over the deck.

        With a jet pack accelerating you, I would imagine that you could simulate a 20 foot fall onto water without actually requiring the 20 feet.

        The professional divers survive higher falls onto water by perfecting their entry technique and diving into a pool of bubble filled water

        • by KGIII ( 973947 )

          It's probably going to be a bit difficult to really control a dive with that much weight on. That's really going to be, you mention, the problem.

          On the other hand, it's not all that difficult to jump, and even dive, from much higher heights into regular water. I've done so many, many times. The highest confirmed height that I've jumped from was a little over 84' and that might not have been the highest. It's the only one that I can say, without a doubt, was that high - it's the only one that high that we've

        • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

          A 2 story fall into water (~20 feet, ~6 meters) is considered +90% lethal. These odds change radically if it is a controlled dive. This number is the guideline gathered by the US Navy, compiled from Sailors being blown over the deck.

          Bullshit. I have seen people belly flop from a 5 meter platform (over 16') and while it's awful, 90% lethal is just a false statement. I have from that 5 meters many times, and while I didn't always stick the landing, I sure wasn't in mortal danger. In fact, the majority of people falling from a 2 STORY BUILDING survive.

          So many reasons this is wrong... the "deck" (of an aircraft carrier) is about 60' high, not 20'. Also, stats have shown at least 5% of people jumping off of the Golden Gate Bridge (245'

        • Falling off a ship in the ocean has a different risk profile than falling into still fresh water.

          When I was a teenager, lots of people would jump way more than 20' off of bridges into freshwater lakes. Popular rock-jumping spots near me these days are about 50'.

          You might have a basket of apples and oranges that have led you to false beliefs about the dangers of jumping into water.

        • by delt0r ( 999393 )
          I have jumped off 30 meter falls before. Feet first of course, a number of times when i was a young lad, and one of us did get hurt (bruising). But that is higher than 90feet. 20 feet 90% lethal sounds like BS to me. In fact lets run the numbers. 20 feet is 6 meters, lets make it 10 cus round numbers and all. 2as=v^2 so you would be going at 14 m/s at impact. (at 6 it is only 10m/s) or 50km/h (36km/h). Lots of people water ski faster. I have hit a car from my motor cycle side on faster (ok that really hurt,
    • You seem to be assuming that a (motorcycle) helmet would have saved this guy. I don't think such helmets or really any helmets are designed to protect you from such a fall or really any aircraft crash. Maybe a small parachute would have helped though. It's always better to have a helmet in such head smashing situations of course, but it probably would not have made much difference in the severe brain damage this guy has suffered.

      We all like to think that our brains are more damage resistant than they really

      • It might have helped him. What's the difference between falling onto you head and being accelerated into something from a motorbike? I'd imagine they are very similar.

        • From 20 feet, he likely would not have accelerated to over 25 miles per hour at the point of impact. I guess it depends a lot on what "on his head" actually means. If he did a swan dive into the asphalt it might be more comparable to a faster speed on a motorcycle. If he hit at an angle or offset somewhat, it could be more directly comparable to a 25 mile per hour accident.

          And for the mathematical challenged, 25 mph is about 40 kph

      • by Longjmp ( 632577 )
        You didn't even bother to read the summary, right?

        ... while hovering 20 feet over the "Go Fast" energy drink company ...
        ...but after receiving 27 stitches, he was released from the hospital...

        No parachute will open at that height, unless it's a rocket-propelled military jet seat parachute.
        Kinda hard to imagine he could carry one of those.
        And any kind of helmet, even a bicycle helmet, would have prevented those injuries.

      • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

        Then you dont know anything at all about helmets and need to stop talking about them until you get some education.

      • DOT or M rated maybe not. SA rated probably.

        There are many different ratings and styles for helmets. They should probably do A risk assessment on this and figure out what the need before they strap people to it.

      • by KGIII ( 973947 )

        LOL... Really? I mean, yeah, we don't usually read the article around here - and I'm kind of guilty of that one myself. Heck, I might even be more guilty of that than most. I almost never read the article. I do, at least, skim the summary. Yeah, a helmet would have, almost certainly, helped this person in this particular crash. There's some claim that a helmet might have actually killed him in this crash but that's a REALLY unlikely outcome.

        He flipped upside down and smashed into the ground, head-first. The

        • He almost certainly *is* brain damaged. I did read the summary and I know he 'survived'. With the amount of cognitive impairment he ends up with though he may wish he were dead. Most head injuries that cause permanent disability are much less severe than what happened to this guy. There is no doubt that this guy is fucked for life. Whether he realizes it or not. I just hope he didn't have a high IQ before the accident because in an accident like this it will almost certainly drop 30+ points.

          • You're comparing how scary the situation sounds, and presuming damage based on that. No need to start speculating about IQs and such things.

            He got some stitches and was sent home. That is way more informative about his injuries that a hand-wavy "what happened to this guy." People with head injuries that lead to permanent disability are usually admitted to the hospital for observation. Blood tests can tell the ER doctor if there is damage, and various scans can test for swelling. He's not poor, so he probabl

            • Lots of people end up with permanent brain damage just from slipping on some ice and hitting their head from a normal fall. This guy fell 20 feet. The brain is as fragile as jello.

              • Just to repeat the part you didn't read... (you can read, right?)

                People with head injuries that lead to permanent disability are usually admitted to the hospital for observation. Blood tests can tell the ER doctor if there is damage, and various scans can test for swelling.

                It does not matter if you fall on ice, or fall from the sky. That is completely irrelevant. That is causing you emotive bias. What matters is the actual injuries to the brain , which is very easy to test for in any ER. A simple blood t

    • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

      It's as stupid as the morons on motorcycles that ride without helmets.

      Disclaimer: I have been and still am a motorcycle rider. 20 years and over 250,000 miles on 2 wheels.

      • It's as stupid as the morons on motorcycles that ride without helmets.

        Don't call them morons. They are organ donors on wheels, and they deserve our appreciation for their sacrifice.

        • I have maintained for a long time that motorcycle riders should be allowed to ride without a helmet as long as they are registered organ donors. There could be a special endorsement on their license designating this.

    • There was a full documentary movie (Rocket Compulsion (2011)) about a guy(David Mayman?) on a mission to build a jetpack, he also used hydrogen peroxide fuel.

      Finally after over a year of research and building the prototype he tests it .... in shorts and a tshirt instead flame retardant suit .. and afair burns his leg. Maybe its the same guy? :)

  • With a flight time of 32 seconds is this more of a jump jet than a jet pack?

    Also wear a dam helmet.

    • by stooo ( 2202012 )

      >> With a flight time of 32 seconds is this more of a jump jet than a jet pack?

      No, it's a Dumb Jet.
      An accident waiting to happen. Any unforeseen difficulty, needing a few more seconds of fuel, and you're toast.

  • Given you're willing to test fly a jetpack, your maniac credentials are firmly established. Doing it without a helmet seems almost par for the course.

  • No helmet means the idiot was not taking it seriously.
  • The company's jet pack normally has a range of about one-quarter of a mile (and reaches heights of 100 feet) with a flying time of 32 seconds

    It may not be ready for regular transportation use, but military may finally have, what they wanted for decades [vice.com]. And not just to run faster [geek.com], but to be able to get over a river or a mine-field or some fortified perimeter quickly.

  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Sunday April 10, 2016 @08:24AM (#51878695)
    He should have worn a helmet, but then again it was just a TEST FLIGHT? So basically this is a company of fucking jerks.
    • Gravity sure sucks, doesn't it? Instead of jet packs maybe research anti-gravity matter. :-)

    • by delt0r ( 999393 )
      They are making a rocket pack. What would you expect? They have almost zero flight time. Pretty nasty fuel on your back, and blistering hot gasses pretty close to your arse. They just don't even sound fun. Wingsuit flying sounds like fun.
  • Must be a cub reporter; It's the NTSB that constacted. FIRST, or there will be hell to pay.
    • by AJWM ( 19027 )

      The NTSB investigates the cause of the crash. The FAA investigates which regulations the pilot was breaking. But yeah, if the NTSB is involved (they're not always, especially for single-occupant non-fatality accidents) they get first dibs.

      NTSB reports have been known to put some of the blame on FAA, for example in the Korean 801 crash in Guam some years back, where FAA had made some "irresponsible" changes to the operation of the MSAW. (The pilot training was also faulted.)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The technology is not there yet. What the "jetpack" word evokes in most of us (a small, light rucksack that you strap to your back) in its current inception is outrageously expensive, unreliable and good for a minute of flying time, if that. If you want better than that, you have to pay more and strap yourself to what is essentially a small helicopter. Which is not a jetpack any more. Which implies that we do not have the technology for it as yet. The same with flying cars, as currently conceived - they are

    • The technology is not there yet.

      It might be that the whole concept is not "there" yet, and won't ever be. The technology might be really awesome and mature, and the nature of the vehicle is just not effective at anything useful.

  • >> he wasn't wearing a helmet,

    What a moron.

    • Helmet or not won't matter much falling from above 30 foot altitude. This guy didn't fall from very far if at all.

      • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

        He needed 27 stitches in his head becuase he wasn't wearing a helmet. That was my point.

        • if he had superglue in his pocket and any reflective surface to use as mirror he could have fixed that problem himself

  • "He fell on his head, and he wasn't wearing a helmet,..."

    Sounds like a genius to me, who could possibly have foreseen an accident using this stable, proven technology? Oh, wait...

  • by ctrl-alt-canc ( 977108 ) on Sunday April 10, 2016 @01:16PM (#51879709)
    ...he probably was wearing the jetpack upside down.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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