World

Solar Impulse plane begins Pacific crossing

Solar Impulse left Nanjing at 02:39 local time, Sunday (18:39 GMT Saturday). Photo AFP

Swiss pilot Andre Borschberg has begun his bid to cross the Pacific, from China to Hawaii, in the zero-fuel Solar Impulse aeroplane.

The experimental aircraft, which has a wingspan bigger than a jumbo but weighs little more than a large car, left Nanjing at 02:39 (18:39 GMT).

It is likely to take Borschberg five to six days of continuous flight to reach his central Pacific destination.

He will try to stay awake for much of that time, taking only short catnaps.

His progress will be monitored the entire way from a control room in Monaco.

Meteorologists and flight strategists will constantly update him on the best route to follow.

The journey is the seventh leg in the single-seat, propeller-driven aircraft's quest to circumnavigate the globe using just the energy of the Sun.

The project made steady progress after starting out from Abu Dhabi in March, but was held up for more than a month on China's east coast waiting for the right weather conditions over the ocean.

Solar Impulse needs not only favourable winds to help push it forward, but also clear skies to enable its 17,000 wing-mounted photovoltaic cells to achieve peak performance.

These cells must have the vehicle's lithium-ion batteries fully topped up at dusk to sustain flying through to dawn the next day.

TOUGH ASK

Borschberg is a highly experienced pilot, and as a trained engineer is completely familiar with the plane's systems.

Nonetheless, he is in no doubt how tough the mission will be.

"It's more in the end about myself; it's going to be an inner-voyage," he told the BBC before departure.

"It's going to be a discovery about how I feel and how I sustain myself during these five or six days in the air."

And Bertrand Piccard - who has flown Solar Impulse on other stages of the voyage - told the BBC: "There's one pilot at a time, so the pilot needs to do everything on his own. And it's a very large aeroplane, big wingspans, sensitive to turbulence, flying quite slow.

"So sometimes it's difficult to handle when the air moves. But we have an auto-pilot, we have toilets on board, we have food for days, water reserves and everything, and we are well trained."

The distance to Kalaeloa airport on Hawaii's O'ahu island is more than 8,000km (5,000 miles).

If, early on in the flight, the weather turns bad or he encounters a major technical problem, Borschberg can always choose to turn around and head back to China or Japan.

But there will come a point where that option is denied to him, and Borschberg and his support team have had to prepare for the possibility of ditching in the Pacific if something goes seriously wrong.

The pilot himself would not go down with the plane because of the risk of electrocution once in the water. Instead, he would bail out with a dinghy and wait for a ship to come and pick him up.

If he succeeds in reaching Kalaeloa airport, he will set several aviation records - not least the longest-duration journey for a single-seater plane.

The purpose of the Solar Impulse project is not really to showcase a particular kind of future for aviation, but rather to demonstrate the potential of clean technologies more generally.

 

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Solar Impulse plane begins Pacific crossing

Solar Impulse left Nanjing at 02:39 local time, Sunday (18:39 GMT Saturday). Photo AFP

Swiss pilot Andre Borschberg has begun his bid to cross the Pacific, from China to Hawaii, in the zero-fuel Solar Impulse aeroplane.

The experimental aircraft, which has a wingspan bigger than a jumbo but weighs little more than a large car, left Nanjing at 02:39 (18:39 GMT).

It is likely to take Borschberg five to six days of continuous flight to reach his central Pacific destination.

He will try to stay awake for much of that time, taking only short catnaps.

His progress will be monitored the entire way from a control room in Monaco.

Meteorologists and flight strategists will constantly update him on the best route to follow.

The journey is the seventh leg in the single-seat, propeller-driven aircraft's quest to circumnavigate the globe using just the energy of the Sun.

The project made steady progress after starting out from Abu Dhabi in March, but was held up for more than a month on China's east coast waiting for the right weather conditions over the ocean.

Solar Impulse needs not only favourable winds to help push it forward, but also clear skies to enable its 17,000 wing-mounted photovoltaic cells to achieve peak performance.

These cells must have the vehicle's lithium-ion batteries fully topped up at dusk to sustain flying through to dawn the next day.

TOUGH ASK

Borschberg is a highly experienced pilot, and as a trained engineer is completely familiar with the plane's systems.

Nonetheless, he is in no doubt how tough the mission will be.

"It's more in the end about myself; it's going to be an inner-voyage," he told the BBC before departure.

"It's going to be a discovery about how I feel and how I sustain myself during these five or six days in the air."

And Bertrand Piccard - who has flown Solar Impulse on other stages of the voyage - told the BBC: "There's one pilot at a time, so the pilot needs to do everything on his own. And it's a very large aeroplane, big wingspans, sensitive to turbulence, flying quite slow.

"So sometimes it's difficult to handle when the air moves. But we have an auto-pilot, we have toilets on board, we have food for days, water reserves and everything, and we are well trained."

The distance to Kalaeloa airport on Hawaii's O'ahu island is more than 8,000km (5,000 miles).

If, early on in the flight, the weather turns bad or he encounters a major technical problem, Borschberg can always choose to turn around and head back to China or Japan.

But there will come a point where that option is denied to him, and Borschberg and his support team have had to prepare for the possibility of ditching in the Pacific if something goes seriously wrong.

The pilot himself would not go down with the plane because of the risk of electrocution once in the water. Instead, he would bail out with a dinghy and wait for a ship to come and pick him up.

If he succeeds in reaching Kalaeloa airport, he will set several aviation records - not least the longest-duration journey for a single-seater plane.

The purpose of the Solar Impulse project is not really to showcase a particular kind of future for aviation, but rather to demonstrate the potential of clean technologies more generally.

 

Comments

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