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A Swiss airline pilot and adventurer, known as Rocket Man, has moved closer to becoming the first jet-powered bird man to cross the Channel.
Yves Rossy completed a 10-minute test flight last week with his jet-powered wing strapped to his back. He flew for more than 22 miles, equivalent to a flight from Calais to Dover – the route first flown by Louis Blériot in 1909.
The test flight, which had been postponed several times because of engine problems, saw Rossy jump out of a small plane 7,500ft above the town of Bex, in Switzerland. Reaching 180mph, he flew through clear skies to Villeneuve and back.
Rossy, wearing a heat-resistant suit similar to those worn by racing drivers, steered by shifting his weight or simply turning his head and shoulders. He deployed two parachutes at 5,000ft and 4,000ft to land at Bex airfield with two litres of fuel left.
Rossy used an 8ft carbon-fibre wing powered by four jet engines. “Everything went well, it was awesome, it’s my longest flight with this wing. If there are no technical problems it’s okay for the English Channel,” he said. Asked how confident he was, he replied: “I did the distance, everything is going swimmingly.”
Rossy is due to cross the Channel on September 24, weather permitting. The event will be broadcast live in 165 countries by the National Geographic Channel. “My flight will be a tribute to all those who came before me, many of whom were killed,” he said.
The 48-year-old Rossy is a former fighter pilot in the Swiss air force. He has been thinking about how to fly like a powered bird for 10 years and has transformed the garage of his home in a village near Lake Geneva into a workshop.
While experimenting with an earlier version of his wing three years ago he lost control and spiralled to just 1,600ft from the ground before managing to open his parachute.
Rossy’s friend and adviser Bruno Brokken, a world champion aeronautic acrobat from Belgium, paid tribute to his persistence. “Many people would have given up years ago. I wouldn’t do the things he does. You need to be a special kind of person to do that kind of stuff.”
In May Rossy staged his first public flight, an acrobatic display over the Alps, including a 360-degree roll that he admitted afterwards was to “impress the girls”. His trials have cost his sponsors, including the Swiss watch company Hublot, more than £100,000.
He says he is always strict about safety but acknowledges that the more progress he makes the longer he waits before pulling the cord of his parachute when something goes wrong.
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Yves,
You do us proud. I wish the pioneers of flight could see you. They would observe with awe and respect. The humans that did not invent are the extinct ones. Way to step up. Any chance we can launch from a motorcycle...... That has to be some fun. You were truly borne with wings.
Craig, Penfield, USA
If you have to jump out of a plane to 'take off' and use parachutes to 'land,' you're not a Rocket Man, you're a rock with wings.
Joe Schmoe, Ann Arbor, US
One thing is for sure:if I had to choose between death and extinction of the human race on one side and survival in the company of the green taliban brigade on the other,I'd choose death any day!!! Phew!
Isa, Lyon, France
Unless he takes off of the ground he will accomplish nothing. Even I could fly over Channel without propulsion if I was dropped from Earth's orbit 400 km over Calais.
Igor, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Oh dear.
Some people have had a joke detector bypass.
Rob, London, GB
think of the carbon trapped in the fibres of the wing itself if you must. his wing like a tree has trapped the carbon. also jets burn nearly all fuel consumed. it is dumping fuel and during take off that the pollution is a problem.
Theadeaus , Ellwood city , USA
Carbon footprint? What a bunch of hogwash! Burn the fuel, baby!
Bob, Clarksburg, WV, USA
Carbon footprint? If you were there when cavemen were inventing fire would you stomp it out and ticket them for air pollution for the smoke? The world won't hurt very bad for the sake of this awesome stunt.
david longcat, Springfield, USA
Trust a guy living in germany to take a "green" angle, and a couple of yanks to effectively say "sod the environment". Talk about country stereotypes....
Sue Denim, Little Windup, UK
It's a carbon fiber wing and a few liters of jet fuel. It's probably no more then someone driving down the street in a '57 Chevy, eating a greaseball burger from McDonalds in the old school Styrofoam containers, and throwing it out the window.
C'mon. Carbon footprint? He's doing it for the chicks.
Jon Madon, Hollywood (FL), USA
It's very fashionable to talk about everything in the context of "carbon footprint". Get a life! What about your carbon footprint when you made your tea this morning?
Danica, Rochester, USA
Has he had time to calculate his carbon footprint for the trip?
Steve Turnbull, Munich, Germany