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Your own personal jetpack, coming soon

By | January 12, 2011, 6:52 PM PST

Meet George Jetson:  It is reported that a personal jetpack, capable of 30 minutes of sustained flight, will soon start undergoing field tests, and then be available to anyone willing to open their wallet.

Martin Aircraft, based in New Zealand, is expected to start selling jetpacks for up to $100,000 apiece that can fly up to an altitude of 8,000 feet and a range of 31 miles. The Martin Jetpack, according to a report in Fast Thinking, is made “from lightweight carbon fibre composite,” and includes a “backup flying system and a parachute in case of emergencies.” (That’s very good to know.)

The above video is a demonstration of the Martin JetPack in action. Note the resemblance to a full drum set strapped to the pilot’s back. The jetpack is even powered by regular premium gasoline available at your local station — no rocket or jet fuel required. Training is mandatory for prospective pilots, who can’t weigh more than 238 pounds.

The company reports that it is already working with an undisclosed government agency for 500 Martin Jetpacks a year. Martin Aircraft reports that an unmanned remote-controlled version is under development and is undergoing field trials. Availability of the remote-control version is expected by the second quarter of 2011.

The only nagging question is what practical purpose jetpacks will serve for its users. There’s military potential, but as with the case of hang-gliders, it’s likely to to be more of an extreme sport than any useful economic purpose.

There are other interesting variations of the jetpack idea also hitting the market. For example, Jetlev Sports Inc. has developed a water-powered jetpack for soaring above bodies of water. Water is the propellant, piped in by a 30-foot long tethered hose. The first rollout was scheduled to be underway at this time in south Florida and the Caribbean.

Beyond the thrill rides, perhaps the jetpack, with vertical takeoff and landing capabilities, could be employed for some more business-like purposes — here are a few thoughts:

  • By emergency personnel to spot people in remote locations in search and rescue operations
  • To deliver medical supplies to inaccessible locations.
  • By police, firefighters or forest rangers to survey trouble spots
  • By geologists seeking to identify and explore terrain
  • By engineers to survey stress fractures in tall buildings or bridges
  • To transfer people and supplies between ships.

Readers, what are your ideas for possible uses for this new technology?

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Joe McKendrick

About Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick

Contributing Editor, Business

Joe McKendrick is an independent analyst who tracks the impact of information technology on management and markets. He is the author of the SOA Manifesto and has written for Forbes, ZDNet and Database Trends & Applications. He holds a degree from Temple University. He is based in Pennsylvania.

Follow him on Twitter.

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an independent consultant and editor. Joe has performed project work for the following companies in the IT marketspace: IBM, Systinet/HP, Teradata. He has performed project work for the following organizations in partnership with Unisphere Research (Unisphere Media): IBM, Oracle Corp., International Oracle Users Group, Oracle Applications Users Group, Professional Association for SQL Server, International DB2 Users Group, International Sybase Users Group.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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Well...
I can just see this being left at home when the parents go on holiday and the children are left to their house partys. One kid says, "Just going out to get more beer" and straps on the jet pack...

You think leaving your car keys around was dangerous, try leaving your jetpack keys around. haha
Posted by ITManx
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
I have a business model that will make all the financed payments for the buyer. Yes, that mean you won't have to pay for it.

Love this. Former military pilot.

I am looking for a partner.

Thomas Adair
thomasadair@live.com
Posted by riskfreeinvesting
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Gotta get one of these,
Posted by altheroadrunner
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
This thing would be noisy as heck, couldn't land in a patch of dry leaves, and is very expensive both to buy and run. I think it may fill a niche, but remotely controlled smaller drones with better on-board cameras would be more practical in emergency work, in my opinion. Personally, I would prefer flying an improved model of the NASA Puffin as my 'air-bike'.
Posted by robert_m_77009@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Where was this when I used to commute to the Boston area? It sure would beat sitting in traffic.
Posted by philwhite42@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Well, I have been a paraplegic for the past 10 years. A little tinkering, and tweaking and I could go around the house and the farm in a way that would be much more like walking and not so much like riding a very unstable set of wheels like I do now. It could provide an amazing liberation for people like me.

Think there is a chance for this to have a medical application?

Sam
Posted by samcraw@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Lets buy one for all our elected officials, it would be far more productive to let them work the bugs out!

EC
Posted by EDDER60
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
How much of your life do you waste in traffic on the way to and from
work? If you have a one hour commute each way, then you're
wasting around 30 days a year just getting to and from work. How
much is that time worth to you? What else could you do with that
time? For someone who has the money, and a 30 minute or less
commute as the bird flies without any traffic at all, this isn't a bad
investment.
Posted by wineaux
13th Jan 2011
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Personal jetpack - remote control
I can see launching this out of a chopper flying at the limit of small arms fire, flying it remotely from the chopper to pickup a downed military pilot, and using supression fire from the chopper to get the pilot back to the chopper.

Although the business commute, while likely impractical, does have a certain appeal too!
Posted by Jim Johnson
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Darwin will love this one ...
Posted by kdryder@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
It would need mirrors if used by commuters! Can't quite imagine the new rules of the "road" but expect they would be figured out.
Posted by Caroline Webb
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Dude, I just want to use it to get to work. Of course I suppose the
MPGs are not that sweet.
Posted by joel@...
13th Jan 2011
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One definite use for it...
I'd say this is a must-have for all forward-thinking bank robbers & drug smugglers... great getaway vehicle!!! We should also expect to begin seeing it in movies (particulary of the James Bond type).
Posted by wa1den_b@...
13th Jan 2011
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Another use...
This could really be a handy way for undocumented immigrants to deal with border crossings... the downside, unfortunately, is that they'd probably have to pack a serious amount of illegal drugs with them to sell, in order to cover the cost of the venture. Too bad... so promising otherwise!!!
Posted by wa1den_b@...
13th Jan 2011
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...so many uses!!!
...and then of course, it boggles the imagination what this will do for peeping toms!!! Truly this will be a life-changing bit of technology!!!
Posted by wa1den_b@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
I can't imagine that this is all that comfortable to fly either...I mean, look at the guy's legs..they're just hanging there! After a while, this could become quite painful!
Posted by tech_ed@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Very scary.

Yes, I want one - but it would be useless for commuting, for the
same reason that pilots are trained to land on open fields rather
than roads: overhead wires. Add the airspace prohibitions and air
traffic control requirements that apply in nearly any urban area,
and how much convenience have you really gained?

Military applications? Payload limit and stealth are an issue - any
infantryman with equipment exceeds the weight limit, and you
can't do covert ops by landing a commercial lawnmower behind
enemy lines...

Police/Fire? Overhead wires become an issue, and in a police
activity, the lack of armor is also a problem - to say nothing of
proximity to news helicopters... A small, unmanned drone with
cameras would have broader application.

For some of the other suggested uses, the small size and
enclosed fans are a big advantage. It _could_ transport a single
person with a line across a gap - say to establish a rope bridge or
zip line. Or drop of a lifeline, small raft or marker buoy at sea, with
far more precision than the old rescue cannon...
Posted by BaapidMakwa
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Comedian Tim Wilson released a song recently "Where the f... is my jetpack?"

Guess he'll have to get one of these
Posted by kbmoose1@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
The smugglers could use the remote control version. It wouldn't take long to pay for itself.
Posted by philwhite42@...
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
No home owners out there? Cleaning the gutters!! Changing light
bulbs at the peak of the roof. Getting the kite out of the tree or
frisbee off the roof. Have a cart to wheel it around on it's side and
you have the most awesome leaf blower in the neighborhood! Or in
construction getting the shingles up on the roof without carrying
them up the ladder. Or gang three or four together to get a small
A/C unit onto a commercial roof without bringing in a big crane.
How about the fastest pizza delivery in town! "We blow the
competition away!" Most awesome snowblower yet???
Posted by Bernard Shanfield
13th Jan 2011
0 Votes
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getting to my home
We had a big snow and my house is at the top of a long steep road.
There was no way to get my car up the road until it was plowed so
we had to walk through the snow up and down and up and down for
three days until it was cleared. I would have loved to just strap into
the jetpack and zip up to the house and back down to my car. Or I
could just use the jet pack to get to work, it is only 4 miles away.
Posted by tutor33
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Using it to commute to work might be impractical during inclement weather - unless they can find a way to enclose the rider. I certainly wouldn't want to ride that thing in 12 degree weather - or even 40 degree if it's raining....

Haha, build me a car that does that! And after that, how about an RV?
Posted by howigetby
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Whaddaya know. Always figured that it would be a set of ducted fans, instead of jets, that would be more practical.
Sorry, but commuting isn't going to fly, excuse the pun. Large numbers of people in the air will translate to people falling out of the sky from malfunctions & the occasional collision. And how do you do air traffic control?
Good point about limited military applications, too. Miniature helicopters are much quieter. 238 lb is fine for an unmanned vehicle but too little for a piloted one.
Posted by hoodedswan
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Another downside for commuting is that 31 mile range is a full tank
of gas, so you'll have to land at the gas station every time.

Keeping a small electric car parked there to get to the office and
another at the station nearest home, plus a tank of gas each way,
will add to the expense.
Posted by AugustM
13th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
I think future models will indeed elevate the quads and assist the hemiplegics too. It is a great opportunity to lift the patient and perhaps allow a degree of rehab too.

Future refinements will make this a reality. I forgot the name of the fellow who has been a quad for 10 years, maybe Sam? But I think you were quick to pick up on a very likely market for this. I see your mind was not in any way injured when you became a quad.
Posted by IMWeira
13th Jan 2011
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Harley
About as practical as riding a Harley to work... probably cheaper in the long run too. :P
Posted by rykerabel@...
14th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
By enterprising terrorists who want to take down jet planes in suicide
attacks on leaving and landing planes!
Posted by Nostredamus
14th Jan 2011
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RE: Your own personal jetpack, coming soon
Exploring jungles. The new VIP helicopter for really cool CEOs. Picking figs. Rescuing cats. Collecting swallow nests for bird's nest soup. Professional photography, esp. news. Mountain climbing for lazy people. Invading Taiwan. (Oops, I meant the rebel province of Taipei, of course. Forgive me, future Overlords.) Showing your annoying neighbor what a dork he is compared to you. Term limits for Congress, without amending the Constitution. (Better than small aircraft or fact-finding trips to Iraq.) Along those lines, take away the parachute, and it's great for implementing the death penalty. (Cheaper than current methods, and so cool it might even reduce appeals. It would certainly be MY preferred way to go! And if you survive a fall from 8000 feet, then you're declared innocent.)
Posted by dmm99
18th Jan 2011
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