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Solar plane makes maiden international flight

Discussion in 'Technology Advice' started by Micawber, May 18, 2011.

  1. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member

    Pioneering Swiss solar-powered aircraft Solar Impulse has landed in Brussels after completing its first international flight, 13 hours after it took off from Switzerland.

    Pilot Andre Borschberg descended from the plane on Friday (local time) amid the applause of hundreds of people including Belgium's crown prince Philippe, who had followed Solar Impulse's long descent from a helicopter.

    "I captured more energy than I used," Borschberg said. "I flew with the power of a scooter".

    Bertrand Piccard, joint founder and president of the Solar Impulse project, said the successful landing was "wonderful".

    The single-seater had lifted off gently in clear blue skies from Payerne airbase at after being delayed by early morning mist.

    It covered roughly 480 kilometres from western Switzerland to Brussels airport, flying over France and Luxembourg at 3,600 metres.

    "With this flight, we would like to encourage politicians to opt for more ambitious energy policies," Piccard said before the aircraft landed.

    He also called for "a change in mentalities to encourage people to use [green] technologies" and stop wasting fossil energies.

    "It is crazy that mankind wastes a billion tonnes of oil an hour," he said.

    "Who wants to believe that we will keep planes that burn up so much fuel?"

    As the dragonfly-like experimental and emissions-free aircraft cruised at 50 kilometres per hour, Borschberg said: "The flight is going really well, I have just flown over Liege, it's a real pleasure to enter Belgian airspace."

    "The view I have here is extraordinary," the Swiss pilot added in a live feed over the internet.

    "I'm above the clouds, for now I'm taking advantage of the blue sky."

    Solar Impulse HB-SIA, which has the wingspan of a large airliner but weighs no more than a saloon car, made history in July 2010 as the first manned plane to fly around the clock and through the night on the sun's energy.

    It holds the endurance and altitude records for a manned solar-powered aeroplane after staying aloft for 26 hours, 10 minutes and 19 seconds above Switzerland, flying at 9,235 metres.

    The high-tech plane has since flown several times, notably between Geneva and Zurich airports, but the journey to a busy airport in Brussels through crowded airspace was regarded as a new test.

    HB-SIA relies on 12,000 solar cells on its 64-metre wings to charge the batteries that provide the energy for the 10-horsepower electric motors driving four propellers.

    Its record-breaking flight last year demonstrated its capacity to store up enough energy to fly through a summer night.

    The Solar Impulse team is planning to fly even further, including possible trans-American, trans-Atlantic and round-the-world flights - in stages - in 2013 and 2014 using a slightly larger aircraft.

    Asked about upping the speed, Borschberg said: "That's not the aim of this plane for now."

    Piccard, himself the first man along with Briton Brian Jones to fly non-stop around the world in a balloon, comes from a dynasty of pioneers.

    His grandfather Auguste Piccard twice beat the record for reaching the highest altitude in a balloon, in 1931-32.

    His late father Jacques Piccard was a deep sea explorer who holds the record for travelling to the deepest point underwater, 10,916 metres below sea level in the Marianas Trench in the Pacific.

    Source:-
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/05/14/3216876.htm?section=world
  2. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member

    Don't think I'll take a solar flight to Philippines any time soon :D
  3. Kuya
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    Kuya The Geeky One Staff Member

    Nope, me neither;)
  4. Jim
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    Jim Well-Known Member Trusted Member

    Specially night flights. :erm:
  5. oss
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    oss Somewhere Staff Member

    It flies at night apparently, must have batteries. :)
  6. KeithAngel
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    KeithAngel 2063 Lifetime Member

    Fantastic achievment though its a tech pusher rather than comercial but thats great:like:

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