I Can Fly

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Birdbomb

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Swiss Man Flies With Own Wings

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It's a bird, it's a plane ... it's a crazy Swiss guy with four jet engines strapped to his back flying above the Alps! A dedicated inventor has set a new record for powered personal flight.

The name he chose sounds like the title of a summer blockbuster: Fusion Man. But Swiss inventor Yves Rossy is no mutant superhero or Hollywood creation. On Wednesday, he jumped out of a plane above the Swiss town of Bex and took flight using a jetpack he created.

The five-minute flight was the first public demonstration of Rossy's one-of-a-kind device, which took him five years to create.

The inventor brings years of more conventional experience to his death-defying feats. He is a former Swiss military pilot and has been a co-pilot and captain for Switzerland's two national airlines, Swissair and Swiss.

Dressed in a white flight suit, wearing a white helmet and strapped to his black device, Rossy was dropped from an airplane 2,348 meters above the Earth. He first unfolded the rigid, eight-foot wings strapped to his back, then fired up four tiny jet engines originally intended to power model aircraft.

A helicopter flew nearby to document his five minutes of glory, and an airplane followed to measure his speed. Rossy reached speeds of 300 kilometers per hour (186 miles per hour).

"The flight was excellent," Rossy told reporters gathered at the airfield where he touched down. Rossy wears a heavy, heat-resistant flying suit, similar to those worn by race car drivers and firefighters, to protect himself from the jet engines' exhaust.


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Should anything go wrong, Rossy has a parachute to rely on. "I've had many 'whoops' moments," he said Wednesday. "My safety is altitude."

Rossy has more flights planned for the future -- including a 22-mile crossing of the English Channel that may be broadcast live on television. He would also like to fly through the Grand Canyon some day.

Jetpack hopefuls, take heart: Rossy plans to market his invention to the public in the future. It won't come cheap. Rossy and his sponsors say they've poured almost €200,000 ($300,000) into the project so far.






I want one! :clap:
 
How cool

The only difference between men and boys ...
... is the size and price of their toys!!!

It looks like he has this down except for fuel capacity. Maybe my grandson will let me try his in 25 years.



Birdy - The 'I can fly' video belongs in speber's auditorium. That is great.
 
Moar!

World's smallest helicopter to fly in da Vinci birthplace

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TOKYO (AFP) - The world's smallest one-man helicopter will soon take flight in the birthplace of Leonardo da Vinci, who is credited with having first thought of a vertical-flight machine, its developer said.

The 75-kilogram (165-pound) helicopter will make a demonstration flight in the city of Vinci, near Florence, on May 25, according to Japanese developer Gennai Yanagisawa, 75.

"Since the concept of our helicopter came from Italy, I always wanted to take a flight in the birthplace of da Vinci," Yanagisawa said.

"I feel like I'm greeting an ancestor. I hope da Vinci would be pleased," Yanagisawa told AFP.

Yanagisawa said he went to Vinci in February and received the blessing of Mayor Dario Parrini.

The helicopter, named GEN H-4, has a set of two rotors turning in opposite directions and can fly at a maximum speed of 50 kilometres (31 miles) per hour.

Guinness World Records in February recognised it as the world's smallest helicopter that can carry a person.

Renaissance genius da Vinci was born in Vinci in 1452 and spent the first several years of his life there.

His sketch, dated in 1493 and discovered in the 19th century, shows a vertical flight machine. As in the drawing, the GEN H-4 has no tail.

Yanagisawa runs a company in Matsumoto, north of Tokyo, selling the helicopter. He has sold five units in Japan and two to US customers.

The current model is priced at six million yen (58,250 dollars).



 
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