As reported by AFP: The New Zealand developers of a personalized jet-pack said Tuesday that aviation regulators have issued the device with a flying permit, allowing for manned test flights.
Martin Aircraft chief executive Peter Coker said the certification was a significant milestone in the development of the jet-pack, which the company hopes to begin selling next year.
"For us it's a very important step because it moves it out of what I call a dream into something which I believe we're now in a position to commercialize and take forward very quickly," Coker told AFP.
The jet-pack is the brainchild of inventor Glenn Martin, who began working on it in his Christchurch garage more than 30 years ago.
Inspired by childhood television shows such as "Thunderbirds" and "Lost in Space", Martin set out in the early 1980s to create a jet-pack suitable for everyday use by ordinary people with no specialist pilot training.
His jet-pack consists of a pair of cylinders containing propulsion fans attached to a free-standing carbon-fiber frame.
The pilot backs into the frame, straps himself in and controls the wingless jet-pack with two joysticks.
While the jet-pack's concept is simple enough -- Time magazine likened it to two enormous leaf blowers welded together -- fine-tuning it into an aircraft that is safe and easy to use has been a lengthy process.
Coker said the latest prototype, the P12, incorporated huge design improvements over earlier versions.
"Changing the position of the jet-pack's ducts has resulted in a quantum leap in performance over the previous prototype, especially in terms of the aircraft's maneuverability," he said.
Coker said a specialized version of the jet-pack designed for the military and "first responder" emergency crews such as firefighters should be ready for delivery by mid-2014.
A simpler model aimed at the general public is expected to be on the market in 2015.
The price of your own personal flying machine is estimated at US$150,000-250,000, although Coker said the cost was likely to come down over time.
It comes with a rocket-propelled parachute if anything goes wrong.
In May 2011, a remote control Martin jet-pack carrying a dummy pilot soared 1,500 meters (5,000 feet) above the South Island's Canterbury Plains as its creator watched anxiously from a helicopter hovering nearby.
The New Zealand Civil Aviation Authority said the jet-pack had now been issued with an experimental flight permit for development test flying, which allows someone to pilot the aircraft.
It said the test flights would be subject to strict safety requirements, with flights not allowed any higher than 20 feet (six meters) above the ground or 25 feet above water.
The flights are also limited to test areas over uninhabited land.
Martin Aircraft chief executive Peter Coker said the certification was a significant milestone in the development of the jet-pack, which the company hopes to begin selling next year.
"For us it's a very important step because it moves it out of what I call a dream into something which I believe we're now in a position to commercialize and take forward very quickly," Coker told AFP.
The jet-pack is the brainchild of inventor Glenn Martin, who began working on it in his Christchurch garage more than 30 years ago.
Inspired by childhood television shows such as "Thunderbirds" and "Lost in Space", Martin set out in the early 1980s to create a jet-pack suitable for everyday use by ordinary people with no specialist pilot training.
His jet-pack consists of a pair of cylinders containing propulsion fans attached to a free-standing carbon-fiber frame.
The pilot backs into the frame, straps himself in and controls the wingless jet-pack with two joysticks.
While the jet-pack's concept is simple enough -- Time magazine likened it to two enormous leaf blowers welded together -- fine-tuning it into an aircraft that is safe and easy to use has been a lengthy process.
Coker said the latest prototype, the P12, incorporated huge design improvements over earlier versions.
"Changing the position of the jet-pack's ducts has resulted in a quantum leap in performance over the previous prototype, especially in terms of the aircraft's maneuverability," he said.
Coker said a specialized version of the jet-pack designed for the military and "first responder" emergency crews such as firefighters should be ready for delivery by mid-2014.
A simpler model aimed at the general public is expected to be on the market in 2015.
The price of your own personal flying machine is estimated at US$150,000-250,000, although Coker said the cost was likely to come down over time.
It comes with a rocket-propelled parachute if anything goes wrong.
In May 2011, a remote control Martin jet-pack carrying a dummy pilot soared 1,500 meters (5,000 feet) above the South Island's Canterbury Plains as its creator watched anxiously from a helicopter hovering nearby.
The New Zealand Civil Aviation Authority said the jet-pack had now been issued with an experimental flight permit for development test flying, which allows someone to pilot the aircraft.
It said the test flights would be subject to strict safety requirements, with flights not allowed any higher than 20 feet (six meters) above the ground or 25 feet above water.
The flights are also limited to test areas over uninhabited land.
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