Tag Archive for 'Flight'

Human Powered Aircraft

In these troubled times of Peak Oil and climate change it’s time to start looking at more uses for one of most versatile power sources ever made – you, dear reader. You don’t emit too much CO2, you can be fuelled by everything from rancid eels to fungi and if something breaks it’ll usually grow back. That’s a pretty cool spec list.

Flying Bicycle

Fail

When the oil runs out there are plenty of things we’ll still want to pull off, one of which is flying. Luckily there’s a small band of scientists and enthusiasts out there working to make human-powered flight a reality.

We’re not talking gliding or ballooning, we’re talking taking off and providing forward motion through one’s own toil. Inevitably the earliest attempts at this involved strapping wings onto the arms and flapping away gamely, unfortunately humans would require pectorals the size of beer barrels to keep ourselves in the air.

The archives are littered with questionable achievements in this field. Many an unverified flight took place, others used catapults and cables to gather momentum.

To finally clear the whole thing up the Kremer Prize was created in 1959 by the industrialist Henry Kremer – a pioneer in chipboard and fibreglass. He offered a prize of £50,000 to the first human-powered aircraft to fly a figure of 8 course of nearly a mile at a height of at least 10ft. The stipulations were intended to prove that any winner was a genuinely viable, maneuverable aircraft and not something that could just limp into the air.

The first ever successful human powered flight followed soon after in 1961. The SUMPAC was designed and built at Southampton University. The machine was made from aluminium, spruce, balsa and nylon sheeting and weighed in at just over 60kg. Pedals drove an 8ft propellor. Its best ever flight covered 622 metres at a height of 3.65 metres. It was an amazing achievement, but not enough to win the money.

sumpac 300x167 Human Powered Aircraft

The Sumpac

After that milestone a variety of contenders appeared. Some were sponsored by aircraft companies, others were private efforts. The maximum distances flown rose to nearly a mile but no one was capable of taking the prize. Mr Kremer increased the winning fund but it wasn’t until 1977 that somebody finally claimed it.

The Gossamer Condor was the machine that pulled off the first controlled flight and won the Kremer Prize. It was a team effort led by aeronautical engineer Dr Paul B MacReady and piloted by cyclist and hang glider Bryan Allen. The machine was largely made from plastic and aluminium and weighed in at a piffling 32kg. It flew a mile and a half and executed a series of manoeuvres. The plane now hangs in the Smithsonian.

Gossamer Albatross

The Gossamer Albatross

You’d think the Gossamer team would be content to rest on their laurels, but the Condor was only the first salvo. The Gossamer Albatross truly upped the ante by crossing the English Channel in 1979. The craft, made from carbon fibre and polystyrene over a stretched plastic skin, made the 22 mile crossing in 2hrs and 49 minutes at an average altitude of 5ft, winning a second Kremer Prize of £100,000.

Since then a variety of other firsts have taken place. The first human powered passenger flight took place in 1984 when the German-built Musculair 1′s pilot carried his 10yr old sister a short distance.

The all-time distance record was set by the MIT Daedalus 88 that flew between the Greek islands Crete and Santorini, a distance of 71 miles over a time of 3hrs and 54 minutes. An Olympic cyclist – Kanellos Kanellopoulos – was recruited for the task. He crashed into the sea 7 metres short of his target after high winds broke the 88′s structure.

What next? There are still several unclaimed Kremer Prizes. £50,000 is up for grabs for the first person to cover 26 miles in under an hour. £100,000 is available for the first person to create an aircraft suited for sporting events in normal weather conditions. A competition is also open to schools for the longest flight duration.

People around the world are still refining designs.

There are hopes that one day human-powered aircraft racing will be an Olympic sport. Perhaps when materials and designs advance further we may all be able to have a go. Have a look at the Kremer Prize page if you have a few ideas yourself.

If you’re the inquisitive type, there could be one more thing scratching away at the back of your mind – what about a human-powered helicopter? You’re still in the right place.

This was the Da Vinci 3, the first human-powered hover. It was built in 1989 by Cal Poly. The flight reached an altitude of 8 inches for 8 seconds.

Yuri 1

The Yuri 1

The current record holder is the Yuri 1. It was built in 1994 by Japanese students and upped the record to nearly 20 seconds of hovering.

Think you can do better? The Sikorsky Prize is offering $250,000 for the first machine to stay up for 60 seconds at a height of 3 metres. Now you know what to do with your Sunday.

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What Money Can Buy…

Let us assume for a moment that you’ve just come into a vast amount of money, or you’ve been diagnosed with an unpleasant disease and have recently wangled an enormous loan from your neighbourhood gangster that you’ve no intention of paying back, what could that money buy you in terms of experiences?

It seems that you’re alive at the right time. Well done.

With the collapse of communism, economies and the relentless demand for new sensations the possibilities are almost unlimited. Let’s have a look at what’s out there.

1 – Dive the Titanic

Titanic 300x232 What Money Can Buy...

The Titanic

If  you have £28,000 and 12 days to spare then you can go down and have a look at the remains of the Titanic, going only where scientists, James Cameron and other rich and bored people have been before. Travelling aboard a Russian Academy of Science owned ship, once you’ve covered the 350 or so miles from Newfoundland you descend 2.5 miles down in one of their submersibles. Once down there you can weep over little Leonardo Di Caprio, take some pics or just tick it off your list. Taking souvenirs away is not encouraged.

2 – Drive an F1 car.

Villeneuve 300x226 What Money Can Buy...

Piece of piss?

Ever watched a backmarker in an F1 race and thought you could do better? If you really wanted to find out that could be arranged.

There are no shortage of places offering F1 experience drives. Prices tend to start at around £1000 and rise rapidly. You may find the experience not all that you were hoping for as many of them detune the engines, reduce the number of gears and limit you to a tiny number of laps.

If you want it done right then things will need to be more involved. It’s pretty tough to find a complete top-line F1 car for sale. There are plenty around minus engines and electronics but your chances of finding the remaining parts are zero. Running one would also require a small army of people and computers.

To make life easier we’d recommend buying something already developed to run in the Big Open Single Seaters series. Slightly simplified 90s mid field cars start from £50,000. If you want something proper retro and easier to operate then a nice 70s Cosworth DFV-powered machine will be a lovely buy.

Rent yourself a race circuit. Not many have the noise levels allowing F1 cars, but you’d be looking at £5000 a day for a smaller circuit up to £25,000 plus for the Silverstone GP circuit. Of course if you’re that rich or dying then you may as well take it out for a spin on the public highway.

3 -Fly to Antarctica to have a look around

Landing on ice

Buckle up

Almost all Antarctic tourism involves getting there by ship. Unfortunately this means you have to cross the Drake Passage which is renowned as the planet’s roughest patch of ocean.

Since you’re now rich, and thus important, the only option is to fly. Your options are fairly limited. Qantas offer day flights over the continent in conventional airliners. They reduce speed to lessen the pollution and allow more time for cooing out the windows but there is the small annoyance of not actually landing.

For $38,000 Adventure Network , the only people in Antarctica with a private camp, will fly you to various spots in the Antarctic including the South Pole.

If you intend to charter your own plane to get there then be warned that the US Antarctic program does not encourage logistical help for joyriders so if you run out of fuel you may be washing their dishes for a very long time.

4 – Climb the Seven Summits

161 people have climbed the highest mountain on each continent. The first was Richard Bass, a US businessman in 1985. Since then there’s been a bit of dispute over which mountain is in which continent so your task will be 8 summits -

Kilimanjaro in Africa, 19,340 ft. Everest in Asia, 29,029 ft. Mount Elbrus in Europe, 18,510ft. Mount Mckinley in North America, 20,320ft. Aconcagua in South America, 22,841ft. Mount Vinson in Antarctica, 16,050ft. Kosciuszko in Australia, 7,310ft. Carstenz Pyramid in Australia, 16.024ft.

That all sounds like seriously hard work, so we’ll have to get creative. If it really means that much to you to slog your way up from the bottom then try a pressurised version of one of these.

sedan chair

Roughing it

You will require a team of hardy porters. Be nice to them.

If you simply want to step outside onto a summit then our top tip is a Super Blimp

It’ll probably need upgrading to cope with breezes up there but there look like few more relaxing ways to get those peaks in the bag. Check out www.aeroscraft.com for your very own sky yacht.

5 – Fly around the moon.

the earth from the moon

The Ultimate

For $100 million a seat Space Adventures will fly you and a special friend around the moon. That seems awfully cheap but their mission plan utilises existing Russian technology that has already been there, albeit unoccupied. Within the last couple of weeks Space Adventures announced that their first taker has signed on the dotted line. There’s still time for you to nab the second seat.

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Pining for the fjords

A very soothing vid starring Icarus Canopies testing out some of their creations in Norway. We’ll cover something non flight-related soon, honest.

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Sweet & Low Down

We’re feeling smug tonight after breaking a world record time on Colin Mcrae Dirt 2, so let’s check out one of the lesser known records in the real world, one that may not be familiar but is definitely one of the most extreme.

There have been plenty of individuals willing to push the outer envelope. You have your Donald Campbells, Craig Breedloves, Chuck Yeagers and the list continues into the hundreds. Some of these people had the backing of governments, corporate sponsors or wealthy patrons. Others had to improvise a little more.

Darryl Greenamyer set the world low altitude speed record on the 24th of October 1977. The record required 4 passes at a height above ground level of less than 100 metres. An altitude of no more than 300 metres was to be exceeded between passes and no landings were allowed between them.

He officially clocked 988 mph at a height of less than 60 feet above the desert floor. At that speed and height someone told him his brain would be processing sights that were 150 feet behind him. And he achieved it with a plane cobbled together by hand from the remains of at least 12 others that he named The Red Baron.

the red baron

the red baron in action

988mph? That may not sound too impressive but low altitude flight is a very different beast compared to further up. Fuel consumption and drag increases enormously in the thicker air. To give an idea, the range of his aircraft at high altitude would have been around 1500 miles at a fast cruise. He covered 130 miles during the record attempt and landed on fumes.

Greenamyer’s steed was a Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, the first combat plane capable of sustained flight at Mach 2. The Starfighter was the perfect machine for the job. Its thin wings mean low drag and turbulence and combined with its endurance, handling and grunt there’s probably no plane out there that could take the record today without unfeasible amounts of expenditure and development.

The man himself also had the Right Stuff for the job. Greenamyer was a former Lockheed test pilot and he’d already broken the piston-engined world speed record. During his years at Lockheed he’d flown the F-104 countless times and was convinced that it was capable of setting more records.

Darryl Greenamyer

A standard working day for Mr Greenamyer

The only question was how he would obtain his own example. In the mid 60s the F-104 was still a front line aircraft and military types are never keen to give up their hardware to civilians. He resolved to build his own from scavenged parts.

It took 13 years to create the Red Baron. It was assembled from bits found in scrapyards, job lots bought blind that included fridges and chunks of helicopter, one part was somebody’s office paperweight, a significant portion of the fuselage came from a preproduction mockup that required every rivet replacing.

By the time the plane was finished in 1976 it was a miracle of resourcefulness and a full on airborne hotrod weighing 20% less than a standard Starfighter and having 25% more thrust from a US Navy loaned engine.

It was taken out to Mud Lake Nevada and upped the low altitude record by 90 mph. The Red Baron actually exceeded 1000 mph but the timing equipment malfunctioned and 988mph remained the official speed. It hasn’t been beaten to this day.

That wasn’t enough to satisfy Mr Greenamyer. A few weeks later modifications began to take the world altitude record. It wasn’t to be. On a test flight the landing gear failed and he was forced to eject. The Red Baron’s story was over.

F-104 rb

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Rocket Man

Now it’s 2010 the time has come to admit that the future really isn’t all that. There are certain things futurists guaranteed us which have failed to arrive. There should be robots attending to our every need, a nice resort on the moon and perhaps most glaringly – the jet pack. By now we should be able to pluck a contraption out of the cupboard, slap it over the shoulders and soar off down the pub.

For a privileged few it is a reality. And like so much other heroic technology it’s over 50 years old.

The idea of one-person flight has probably been around since the first humanoid stretched their rags over their arms, took a leap and started flapping but the most iconic and enduring example of the real thing is the Bell Rocket Belt.

The German army of WW2 was the first to attempt the development of a lifting device, but it wasn’t until the US Army backed Wendell Moore of Bell Aerosystems to develop what was termed the Small Rocket Lifting Device that the idea was refined.

wendell moore

Wendell Moore with his creation in the background

Testing on the belt began in late 1960 with several tethered flights in an aircraft hangar. In 1961 the first free flight was achieved. It flew a distance of 108 feet and reached a heady 4 feet of altitude. The future had arrived.

The Bell Rocket Belt was powered by hydrogen peroxide. By coming into contact with a catalyst it decomposes into a mixture of superheated steam and oxygen providing thrust through movable jet nozzles. The entire pack weighed 57 kilos fully fuelled and had a top speed of 60 mph. The pilot had to wear a thermal suit to keep out the intense heat generated by the exhaust.

The system embarked on an international tour, delighting crowds wherever it went. The military paymasters were less pleased. The maximum flight time couldn’t exceed 21.5 seconds, there was no method of a safe landing and the range never went above 800 feet. They decided helicopters were more fun and funding was cancelled.

That might have been the end for the belt but for one thing – Bell went out and got it a Hollywood agent. From the mid 60s it began to appear in movies (most famously Thunderball) , tv shows, events and ads. They were snowed under with requests for appearances and by the time the program was finally abandoned in 1970 over 3000 flights had taken place without a single failure.

Being slung up in a museum now seemed the most likely fate. No more funding or development was in the works until a brilliant engineer named Nelson Tyler gathered enough information to go home and build his own copy.

One of the works Bell pilots, Bill Suitor, heard of the new belt, got in touch and a new lease of life began.

Mr Suitor’s tale adds to the general air of unreality of the story. The original army contract stipulated that the system had to be able to be operated by someone of draft age with no flight experience. The then 19-year-old Suitor was Wendell Moore’s next door neighbour. One morning Moore approached him and casually offered him the choice of continuing in school or taking the job of a lifetime. By 1970 he had become the world’s most experienced belt pilot.

Suitor and Tyler continued flying into the 80s, his most spectacular flight at the opening of the 1984 LA Olympics in front of two billion viewers.

Tyler’s belt was eventually sold on when fuel became very hard to find, but a descendant of the original belt still flies today if you want that office party to be truly memorable.

There’s talk of improving range and performance. Several companies and enthusiasts are building their own examples. Perhaps its time is yet to come.

Fingers crossed.

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The Highest Step in the World

Who do you reckon has pulled off the highest parachute jump in history? Richard Branson? A lantern- jawed skydiver draped in energy drink sponsorship? Someone tripping out of the Space Shuttle?

Nope. It was Captain Joe Kittinger of the USAF.

Here are some numbers and a pretty pic before we proceed.

50 years ago. 102,000 feet (31 kilometres) . 614 mph. 4 minutes and 36 seconds.

Joe Kittinger Freefall

Kittinger’s jump was part of Project Excelsior – a study by the US government into the effects of bailing out at high altitudes. By the late 1950s aircraft were reaching enormous heights and the safety of crews who’d ejected was in serious doubt. Tests on dummies showed that flight crew would enter a potentially fatal spin long before they ever reached the ground.

A refined system using a two stage parachute was developed – a small chute to deploy in the upper atmosphere to prevent spinning, and a larger, more conventional canopy for thicker air.

Captain Kittinger was the test director for the project and he made all three test jumps himself.

Utilising a helium balloon with an open gondola to heights that no aircraft could yet reach, Kittinger wore a full pressure suit to protect him from the near space-like conditions.

Excelsior Gondola

Capt Kittinger next to his office

The first jump nearly ended in disaster when the stabiliser chute delpoyed too soon, wrapping itself around Kittinger’s neck and causing him to lose consciousness. His life was saved by the automatic opening of his larger chute.

The second jump took place only three weeks later from 75,00o feet. It was a success.

On his final record breaking jump in 1960 he lost the use of his right hand on the ascent due to a pressure seal failing. He elected not to inform the ground crew. It took 91 minutes to reach 102,800 feet. He drifted at that altitude for 12 minutes until he was over the landing area and then he stepped out into space.

Kittinger reached 9/10ths of the speed of sound. He experienced temperatures down to -70. The entire descent took 13 minutes and 45 seconds.

No one has topped his record since, though there are people such as Michel Fournier and  Steve Truglia who’ve been trying their hardest. Perhaps it’ll never be beaten.

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Fly like a… rich person

If you need a jet pack in your life (and I think we all do) then your choices at the moment are limited to GTA San Andreas.

If you want to fly around with a giant pipe sticking out of your back then you’re really going to struggle.

Until now.

The Jetlev Flyer is the last word in pipe-based flight over water.

Utilising powerful water jets supplied by a drone boat dragged behind you, the Flyer can lift you to over 10 metres, travel at up to 40mph and fly for durations of up to two hours.

Training is so simple that you can be commuting to work up the Thames within 6 minutes.

And the price? About £110,000.

Count us in.

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