March 24, 2012

Where does an 800-pound paper airplane fly?

Anywhere it wants to.

Over the Arizona desert.

7 comments:

edutcher said...

I was wondering how you got 800 lbs of loose leaf to stick together.

Very impressive, but I'm still wondering how big a plane you could do from standard scratch paper.

WV "parketh" What the old-timers did at the curb as, "He parketh his chariot beside the still waters".

rhhardin said...

An 18 inch wingspan is right for 4x6 index card stock, if you're looking for something to do in college.

Mine always had landing gear and full flaps, and neatly descended lobby staircases.

Wince said...

You could poke someone's eye out.

greenlantern said...

Q: Where does an 800,000-pound Obama fly?
A: Anywhere it wants to.

http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/af1/af1spec.html

rhhardin said...

I wonder what they did about the Reynolds number.

bagoh20 said...

In my hang gliding club we have members who go back to the beginnings of the sport. Although we have many young pilots in their early 20s, the average age of our pilots is probably around late 40s to 50, with our oldest still flying at 83. Back in the early 70's, these guys would build gliders out of plastic sheeting, PVC pipe, and rope, all duct-taped together, and then tie themselves to it and jump off mountains and fly thousands of feet above the ground with no parachute. None would ever think of doing that today.

It's amazing what can be made to fly and how easy it actually is for a human to fly un-powered with simple materials. When you see how easy it is now, it's hard to believe it took thousands of years to realize man's most universal and passionate dream. It turns out that technology had very little to do with it. Maybe it was all in the weed.

Chip Ahoy said...

bagoh20, exactly. What took so long?

Bamboo. Silk. Interest in kites.

It's all right there. Conclusion: Asians are more cautious than Westerners.