Kiss The Ground Goodbye - Martin Jetpack Takes Flight

By Humphrey Cheung, published on July 30, 2008 at 7:20 AM
Source: Tom's Guide | Keywords: , , ,
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Oshkosh (WI) - It’s up up and away for Glenn Martin as he showed off his experimental jetpack at the annual EAA AirVenture festival in Oshkosh Wisconsin. The "Martin Jetpack" can fly for several minutes and can cruise at up to 60 miles-per-hour. For the truly adventurous, the soon to be commercialized contraption can soar to 8000 feet, however Martin hasn’t actually tested it more than a few feet off the ground. Martin hopes to sell the jetpack for $100,000 a pop.

The 250-pound jetpack is billed as "The World’s First Practical Jetpack" and lasts much longer than previous jetpacks. In the past you’ve seen jetpacks drop into major football games and other events, but those only have enough fuel for approximately 20 seconds of flight - this one can go for up to thirty minutes thanks to the five gallon fuel tank. A gas-powered V-4 piston engine powers two ducted fans that sit behind and to the side of the ’rider’. The engine provides 200 horsepower and the jetpack itself produced approximately 600 pounds of thrust.

Mr. Martin says he’ll be doing some high-altitude flying with the jetpack in the coming months and promises to take the gadget up to 500 feet. Now that would be one hell of a ride. The controls on the jetpack are fairly basic. A joystick by one hand controls side to side and forward and backward gliding, while a lever on the other hand varies the altitude. Safety-wise, a cushioned based helps the would-be Buzz Lightyear cope with hard landings and don’t worry there’s even a ballistic parachute if things get really hairy.

Martin has been secretly working on this jetpack part-time for more than twenty years. Recently he acquired some venture capital which allowed him to devote all his time to development. In all, he’s gone through eleven prototypes and eventually hopes to sell 10-20 units at $100,000 each over the next year. Buyers will have to endure approximately 15 hours of flight training spread over ten days to procure the jetpack - you wouldn’t want people to kill themselves on their first flight would you?

The jetpack will probably be classified as an experimental airplane by the FAA much like ultra-lights and paragliders. Pilots will only be able to fly the jetpack recreationally at remote airports and won’t be able to fly to regular airports.

Interestingly enough, Martin’s wife was the first test pilot as the early prototypes could only maintain altitude for passengers weighing up to 130 pounds. The unit was tethered to the group, just in case it really took off. Since then Mr. Martin has also taught his teenage son how to fly the jetpack. Now you’d think that would be one hell of a story to tell your high-school friends, but the son was sworn to secrecy.

Mr. Martin’s demonstration at AirVenture only last a few minutes with him hovering just a few feet above the ground. His crew members were holding the sides of the jetpack to prevent it from drifting into the crowd. Despite the low level demo, the crowd was still wowed and one person yelled out what everyone else was thinking - "I want one!"

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Comments

Anonymous 07/30/2008 3:34 PM
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hmm, a commercially viable jet pack would pose major security risk to secure areas. Just imagine what expert jet pack pilot can do in 30 minutes with a 60MPH jet pack? sneak in to pentagon, white house, etc. That thing wouldn't even show up on radar. I can't imagine this being sold in open market.

Anonymous 07/30/2008 4:39 PM
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I doubt that. Jets arn't exactly what you call silent. They're loud as hell. Not to mention you'd be a sitting duck out in the open for small arms fire. I highly doubt the military wouldn't have already looked into this and decided it was not a worthwhile pursuit.

velocityg4 07/30/2008 4:56 PM
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anonyis :
I doubt that. Jets arn't exactly what you call silent. They're loud as hell. Not to mention you'd be a sitting duck out in the open for small arms fire. I highly doubt the military wouldn't have already looked into this and decided it was not a worthwhile pursuit.


Coming in for a landing would make you an easy target but trying to hit a moving target from a stationary standpoint is extremely difficult, especially a target with three dimensions of movement. Though the pilot would be an easy target for a tripod mounted machine gun.

This would be great for a bank robber though.

Mr_Man 07/30/2008 5:09 PM
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It's a bird... it's a plane...

NeoDude007 07/30/2008 6:05 PM
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Humans aren't the only ones that can shoot a person with a jet pack... There are heat seeking missiles, auto-aiming sentry guns, or you could just pick him off with a rifle. And let's be honest, you say the jetpack person has 3-D movement? This is not a video game and I'm sure that 3-D movement is rather slow on the jetpack, its not like they can just bounce all over the place quickly...hahah. Not to mention this thing weighs a lot, WTF they gonna do when they land? Slowly unbuckle the 90 seatbelts and run?

bounty 07/30/2008 6:30 PM
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1 Apparently ya'll have never been dove hunting... Also, not much different than a motorcycle, unless you plan on crashing through a window on the 22nd floor or something. No, this wouldn't be good at bank heists or the white house... might work for prison breaks... nevermind,
goto 1

Rhinofart 07/30/2008 7:52 PM
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Bounty beat me to it. I was going to say "Rednecks do it all the time." You have obviously never seen hunters shoot down birds before. Of course you are going to say, but this is faster than a bird. But remember a bird is a lot smaller and more agile than this thing would be. Even at 60MPH anyone who CAN handle a weapon would be able to pick this thing out of the air no problem even in full flight.

gm0n3y 07/30/2008 8:37 PM
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I would love to fly one of these to work every day. That would be fucking sweet.

kittle 07/30/2008 10:10 PM
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Just dont run out of fuel while crusing at 500ft

zerapio 07/30/2008 11:27 PM
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Very neat technology. As for the security risks, has anyone thought about suicide jetpackers carrying bombs?

klarkmdb 07/31/2008 2:26 AM
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That is a nice idea

JonnyDough 07/31/2008 4:33 AM
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Quote :Of course you are going to say, but this is faster than a bird.


The average bird flies faster than you think.

Some Falcons hit 200mph on a dive.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peregrine_Falcon

A big 60mph human with a jetpack is an easy target for special forces or a secret serviceman.

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