If you thought you were to lat to invest, dont worry, they have extended!:
http://www.martinjetpack.com/news/15...o-offer-period
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If you thought you were to lat to invest, dont worry, they have extended!:
http://www.martinjetpack.com/news/15...o-offer-period
I've been thinking. But this is one for the engineers. I'm wondering what the force of the jet pack down draft is. I'm also wondering what force needs to exerted on an avocado before it detaches from the tree.
so I'm wondering how high above a tree a jet pack needs to be to ensure tree and fruit aren't damaged.
If it's anything above what we'd call a gentle breeze we can be assured the jet pack won't harm the fruit. That's because anything over 15kph means the pack stays on the ground.
I guess the force required to detach an avocado from a tree would be at least 10 N. In order to pick an avocado with a jetpack then, the cross section area of the avocado would have to be at least 1/200th of the cross sectional area of the downdraft, which it probably wouldn't be. My guess is you could probably safely fly over fruit trees without dislodging the fruit.
It'd be cool if the significant offshore investor was Google.
:D:D:D:D:D
You can just tell they are jealous from this article: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...ready-YET.html
Google may in fact need MJP patents and IP if they want an electric powered jetpack as the hint may be construed by the comments made by Astro: http://www.cnet.com/news/google-x-he...tpacks-coming/
They can just strap their new battery technologies straight onto the existing Martin - it would be quieter and lighter as Astro seems to complain about.