Highest Human Elevation Using a Rocketbelt
Chris Gondek writes "Rocketman Eric Scott shot 46 metres into the air in London and promptly claimed a world record. Scott, 41, from Dallas, Texas, donned his red and white jumpsuit and zoomed into the north London sky in his bid to achieve the highest human elevation using a Rocketbelt. His feat, which saw him reach the equivalent height of a 12-storey building, lasted just 26 seconds but allowed enough time for a couple of pirouettes. The Rocketbelt was devised by the United States military in 1961 but has since been used for performances and displays around the world, including the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles."
Since then he has become a veteran of almost 500 flights and claims to be the world's only Rocketman.
Obviously he hasn't seen Rocketeer.
...from the top of Everest?
The highest human elevation using a Rocketbelt is funny.
;-)
The dumbest human fall that follow this record is even funnier
Ploum.net.
Well, it seems safer than the rocket jump we've all pulled a thousand times in order to get up to those sweet camping spots...
davejenkins.com |
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"There's no I in Team." - Reporter
"Yeah, there ain't no we either." - Leon
...lasted just 26 seconds but allowed enough time for a couple of pirouettes.
Interesting, I too accomplished this feat with my imaginary girlfriend over the weekend.
Hi. I'm Troy McClure. You might remember me from such rocketman documentaries as "Rocketeer 2: Electric Boogaloo" and "Splattered All Over Nebraska".
Because Wile E. Coyote has gone way higher than this guy did. Unfortunately he bashed his head through an overhanging ledge, which then broke off and fell on him when he plummeted to the canyon floor below.
Read any good sonnets lately?
How lame. Even assuming an average of two meters per person, stacking 747 people is not even 1,500 meters. I've been way higher than that in an airplane.
Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
but my squirrel rocket belt still holds the real record. The trick is finding a good squirrel. Most can't steer for shit.
From the article:
There were no records before. I am the first one in the books for the record so it is neat.
Basically, the story is "Man uses Rocketbelt and happens to measure how high he went."
Hardly Rocket Science.... (BaDum Tish!)
One would think that "Highest Human Elevation Using a Rocketbelt" would be something one gets just before the Darwin Award.
-Styopa