Human Jet Zooms Across English Channel
Swiss Adventurer, Using Homemade Fuel-Powered Wing, Completes 22-Mile Stunt
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Yves Rossy wears a heat-resistant suit similar to that worn by firefighters and racing drivers to protect him from the heat of the turbines. The cooling effect of the wind and high altitude also prevent him from getting too hot. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
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- It's A Bird, It's A Plane...
Yves Rossy leapt from a plane at more than 8,800 feet, fired up his jets and made the 22-mile trip from Calais in France. Rossy passed over a thin strip of land in front of South Foreland lighthouse, looped over onlookers and opened his parachute, his wings still strapped to his back.
"It was perfect. Blue sky, sunny, no clouds, perfect conditions," he said. "We prepared everything and it was great."
The trip across the Channel is meant to trace the route of French aviator Louis Bleriot, the first person to cross in an airplane 99 years ago.
Rossy has said the experience is like flying an airplane without the airplane, CBS News correspondent Richard Roth reported.
The lighthouse was the site of Guglielmo Marconi's experiments with radio telegraphy in 1898. Bleriot used the white building as a target during his pioneering flight, the building's manager, Simon Ovenden, said.
Several hundred spectators rushed to greet the pilot, trying to take photographs with cameras and cell phones.
"It's a remarkable achievement, we saw the climax of his attempt as he came down to earth with his parachute. It's been an exciting afternoon," said Geoff Clark, a 54-year-old onlooker from Chatham, in Kent.
The carbon composite-wing weighs about 121 pounds when loaded with fuel, and carried four kerosene-burning jet turbines that kept him aloft. The wing had no steering devices - Rossy moved his body to control its movements.
He wore a heat-resistant suit similar to that worn by firefighters and racing drivers to protect him from the heat of the turbines. The cooling effect of the wind and high altitude also prevented him from getting too hot.
Mark Dale, the senior technical officer for the British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association, described Rossy's flight as a "fabulous stunt."
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- Air pollution.
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- txgrouch2006 .... I watched it live as it happened this morning. He wasn''t a blur! And there were cameras all over the place. They even had a helicopter nearby him the whole way taking pictures of him during the flight. So please ... don''t make up what you don''t know!
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- Of all the pictures you could have used for this story .... you show him on the ground after he landed ..
Posted by thisandthat1 at 03:40 PM : Sep 26, 2008
Before he landed, he was just a blur. They couldn''t get a picture of him. - Reply to this comment
- This guy is a genius. And he''s got guts to match.
I wonder if he could help with our economic problems. - Reply to this comment
- Yves Rossy is one extraordinary aviator & stuntman!!! What a great engineer and ingenuous aviator!!! We still live in amazing times!!!
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- Of all the pictures you could have used for this story .... you show him on the ground after he landed .. makes no sense! By the way ...this was COOL! What a guy.
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- I hear it''s got a knife, screwdriver, corkscrew & scissors built into it.
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- What would Evel Kenivel say?(He could have jumped over Ceaser''s Palace...to bad he didn''t that wing & jets at his jump at Snake Canyon!
Nice flight Swiss man! - Reply to this comment
- Cool!
- Reply to this comment
- Nice to know someone is doing something that is entertaining.
http://www.youtube.com/user/ronnierayjenkins - Reply to this comment
Ex-NBA ref Tim Donaghy 



