Martin Jetpack 5000ft flight - highlights
To demonstrate flight high above the ground and the concept of the ballistic parachute as an emergency safety system, the Martin Jetpack was flown to around 1500m (5000ft), brought down from this height and an off-the-shelf ballistic parachute was deployed.The aircraft was flown by James via radio control in a chasing helicopter - also demonstrating the ability of the technology to apply to UAV applications. Jetson, Martin Aircraft Company's weighted dummy was on board, and the parachute was placed out front for visibility and weight balancing.The video features inventor Glenn Martin and RC pilot James Bowker. The jetpack ascended initially at 4m/s (800ft/min) and the climb took about 6 minutes. The parachute was deployed at around 3000ft above ground level. The aircraft sustained some damage on impact, but we would expect that it is likely a pilot would have walked away from this emergency landing. The total flight was just under 10 minutes.
Видео Martin Jetpack 5000ft flight - highlights канала Martin Aircraft
Видео Martin Jetpack 5000ft flight - highlights канала Martin Aircraft
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
7 Real Flying Machines That Actually FlyJetPack Aviation JB10 Principality of Monaco Flight #3 iPhone6SPauls 2nd flightMartin Jetpack Series 1 - From Concept to Reality VideoThese Ancient Relics Are so Advanced They Really Shouldn't ExistParamedic Mountain Rescue!Series 1 Jetpack Manned Flying August 2017Martin Jetpack Flight Demonstration 6 December 2015 Shenzhen, ChinaHow Gravity Built the World's Fastest Jet Suit | WIREDTOP 12 Unique Flying Machines5 Real Flying Bikes That Actually FlyBEST COMPILATION of BAD (and CRASH) RC LANDINGS #515 Coolest Machines That Makes you FlyMosquito Air precision work and funI Made a Jet Pack! (ONE DAY BUILD)Martin Jetpack Finding SolutionsKit Buchanan Human powered aircraft record triangle flight Icarus Cup Lasham 2019Smallest Mini Aircraft in the World Part 2Nikola Tesla - Limitless Energy & the Pyramids of EgyptWhy It's Almost Impossible to Jump Higher Than 50 Inches | WIRED