Solar Impulse 2 plane lands in Dayton

Agence France-Presse

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It takes the solar-powered plane 16 hours and 34 minutes to travel from Tulsa, Oklahoma to Dayton, Ohio

SUCCESSFUL LANDING. Swiss adventurer and pilot Bertrand Piccard (L) and pilot Andre Borschberg (R) acknowledge the crowd after Borschberg landed Solar Impulse 2 in Dayton, Ohio, USA on May 21, 2016. Photo from Solar Impulse/EPA

WASHINGTON, USA – A solar-powered plane landed in Dayton, Ohio on Saturday, May 21, on the latest leg of a record-breaking trip to circle the globe without consuming a drop of fuel.

Solar Impulse 2, piloted by Swiss businessman Andre Borschberg, arrived at 9:56 pm (0156 GMT Sunday) at Dayton International Airport after a flight from Tulsa, Oklahoma that lasted 16 hours and 34 minutes, a live video feed showed.

“Amazing to have landed in #Dayton after being in the sky for 17 hours!” Borschberg tweeted.

The slow-moving, single-seat plane with the wingspan of a Boeing 747 cuts a flimsy figure, but it has traversed much of the globe in stages since taking off March 9, 2015 from Abu Dhabi.

The project aims to promote renewable energy.

The aircraft – clad in thousands of solar cells, the sole source of energy for the flight – reached its destination more than an hour ahead of schedule.

Still, traveling at average speeds of only 30 miles (48 kilometers) per hour, it took Solar Impulse 2 longer to reach Dayton than a car – the typical road trip from Tulsa is around 12 hours.

The flight to Dayton was the 12th leg of Solar Impulse’s projected 16-leg east-west circumnavigation, with Borschberg and Bertrand Piccard alternating as pilots.

Piccard, a Swiss psychiatrist and balloonist, initiated the project.

“The flight is part of the attempt to achieve the first ever Round-The-World Solar Flight, the goal of which is to demonstrate how modern clean technologies can achieve the impossible,” Piccard and Borschberg said in a statement.

Dayton is significant to aviation buffs because it is the home of Orville and Wilbur Wright, brothers who developed the world’s first successful powered aircraft heavier than air.

Solar Impulse 2 departed from Tulsa International Airport at 4:22 am (0922 GMT).

It may next fly to Pennsylvania as early as Tuesday, May 24, the team said. Its final destination in the United States is New York.

Thanks to an inflatable mobile hangar, which can be packed up quickly and transported, the plane can be sheltered at a variety of locations.

The aircraft was grounded in July when its batteries were damaged halfway through its 21,700-mile (35,000-kilometer) circumnavigation of the globe.

The crew took several months to repair the damage caused by high tropical temperatures during a 4,000-mile flight between Nagoya, Japan, and Hawaii.

The plane was flown on that stage by Borschberg, whose 118-hour journey smashed the previous record of 76 hours and 45 minutes set by US adventurer Steve Fossett in 2006.

He took 20-minute catnaps to maintain control of the pioneering plane during the flight from Japan, in what his team described as “difficult” conditions.

How it works

The Solar Impulse 2, which weighs roughly the same as a family car, contains 17,000 solar cells that power the aircraft’s propellers and charge batteries.

At night, it runs on stored energy.

The plane’s typical flight speed can increase to double that when exposed to full sunlight.

After crossing the United States, the pilots are set to make a transatlantic flight to Europe, from where they plan to make their way back to their point of departure in Abu Dhabi.

Piccard, a doctor by training, completed the first non-stop balloon flight around the world in 1999.

His teammate Borschberg is no stranger to adventure – 15 years ago he narrowly escaped an avalanche, and in 2013 he survived a helicopter crash with just minor injuries. – Rappler.com

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