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Jetman Attempts Intercontinental Flight

Last year we ran the story of Yves Rossy and his DIY jetwings. Yves spent $190,000 and countless hours building a set of jet-powered wings which he used to cross the English Channel. Rossy's next goal is to cross the Strait of Gibraltar, from Tangier in Morocco and Tarifa on the southwestern tip of Spain. From the article: "Using a four-cylinder jet pack and carbon fibre wings spanning over 8ft, he will jump out of a plane at 6,500 ft and cruise at 130 mph until he reaches the Spanish coast, when he will parachute to earth." Update 18:57 GMT: mytrip writes: "Yves Rossy took off from Tangiers but five minutes into an expected 15-minute flight he was obliged to ditch into the wind-swept waters."

8 of 140 comments (clear)

  1. He already failed by SoCalChris · · Score: 5, Informative
  2. Coulda done it easier [Re:He already failed] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 4, Funny

    He could have made an intercontinental flight more easily by flying from Europe to Asia: if he flew across the Bosporus, that would be only 700 meters. And, heck, if he picked the right place, he could have just walked!

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  3. Ooooh... Intercontinental by aardwolf64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Calling 23 miles "intercontinental" seems disingenuous. I mean, I could drive down to Mexico and make an "intercontinental" jump of 1 foot... But labeling it as such is just stupid.

    1. Re:Ooooh... Intercontinental by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Funny

      I mean, I could drive down to Mexico and make an "intercontinental" jump of 1 foot... But labeling it as such is just stupid.

      Not until Mexico conquers Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa Rica, and Panama, you can't.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    2. Re:Ooooh... Intercontinental by Tellarin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      North, Central and South America are the same continent; America.

      If continents were defined by plate tectonics, then America would be split in 6. And the crossing would be from Mexico to Guatemala.

      Approximately:
      - North American Plate (Canada, most of USA, Mexico, and Belize)
      - Pacific Plate (part of California, USA and Baja California, Mexico; and possibly a few Alaskan islands)
      - Caribbean Plate (Caribbean island countries and Central America)
      - Nazca Plate (Peruvian and Ecuadorian islands)
      - South American Plate (almost all South America)
      - Scotia Plate (south of Terra del Fuego, smallish parts of Chile and Argentina)

  4. balls!!! by visionsofmcskill · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think he could probably fly a whole lot farther if it weren't for the drag created by his monstrously huge friggin balls.

    that is one brave dude

    --
    --Idiots, Every single one of YOU, A flaming mass of conglomerated morons, hey wait a second, isnt that how RAID works?
  5. Re:Engineering Effort? by zippthorne · · Score: 4, Informative

    He's evolving down from "skydiving" to a workable personal jetsuit, rather than up from "rocket skating." An early iteration had no engines at all, just a delta-wing personal glider (and it could probably be considered as an incremental improvement over the "wing suit" which came after the "balloon suit"...)

    It's just safer this way. If he fails, he's ditches the wing and activates "plain old skydiving" mode with a parachute. If he'd started from the ground on the first try, there are dozens of places where a failure means death without any fall-back options at all.

    In previous interviews he has stated than an eventual goal is to do a complete flight including takeoff.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  6. Re:Why the rockets? by Goaway · · Score: 4, Funny

    He uses a jet-powered wing because it's a fucking jet-powered wing strapped to his back, and that is awesome.

    That is not difficult to understand.