16 August 2013

Jet packs


Slate has an article by Will Oremus of the latest thing in travel, out of New Zealand:
Hoverboards aside, the future isn't shaping up so badly after all. We were promised flying cars, and soon we may sort of have them. I’m not sure if we were promised jetpacks, but thanks to thirty years of hard work by a Kiwi inventor named Glenn Martin, we might soon have them, too. Or at least, some firefighters in New Zealand might.
AFP reported this week that New Zealand’s Civil Aviation Authority has granted Martin Aircraft a permit allowing the company to run manned tests of its new Martin Jetpack prototype. For safety reasons, the test flights will be limited to an elevation of twenty feet over land and twenty-five over water. Still, the approval paves the way for the company to try to meet its stated goal of selling its first jetpacks to the military, first responders, and other authorities by the end of 2014. It’s hoping to develop a simpler commercial model for sale to the general public by 2015, with a price tag around a hundred thousand dollars.
Whether it can deliver on those ambitious promises remains to be seen. According to AFP, Martin started working on the concept in his Christchurch garage in the early 1980s, inspired by old television shows like Thunderbirds and Lost in Space. In 2011, the company sent a jetpack with a dummy pilot five thousand feet into the air in a previous prototype. The new version, called the P12, is said to be sleeker and more maneuverable.
It’s worth mentioning that it actually isn’t technically a “jet” pack. It’s powered by a two-stroke V4 engine that generates two hundred horsepower. That’s modest for an aircraft, though apparently plenty to lift a full-grown man high into the sky and allow him to cruise at a ground speed of about 35 mph.
The video above is the first to show a remote-control test flight of the new prototype. It’s not quite Rocketeer-quality yet, and it’s not immediately clear what its practical uses will be. The company is pitching it as a cheaper, lighter alternative to helicopters, which it says might be of use to first responders in reaching disaster victims. Greg Tyrrell, the company's R&D manager, told me he expects people will find more uses for jetpacks as the technology evolves. "If you go back a hundred years to when they were building the first cars and first motorbikes, they probably seemed pretty impractical to some people, but we've seen where that's come," he said.
For now, if nothing else, it’s something new to daydream about the next time you’re stuck in a traffic jam.
Rico says it's another thing he won't be doing, but it'll be fun to watch on YouTube...

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