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Posts Tagged ‘The Rocketbelt Caper’

Bill Suitor launches Rocketbelt Pilot’s Manual

February 22nd, 2010

Bill Suitor, the legendary rocketbelt pilot who features heavily in my book The Rocketbelt Caper, has launched his own book, Rocketbelt Pilot’s Manual, “a true description of the ‘nuts and bolts’, inside and outside view, ‘ankle bone connected to the leg bone’ step-by-step account of how a rocket belt works and why it was built.” Given Bill’s expereince, it should be a very authoritative read, although he points out, “It is not intended to encourage anyone to try to build one!”

William P Suitor was an original test pilot for the Bell Rocketbelt, and also flew the Tyler Rocketbelt and the Rocketbelt 2000. He has clocked up more rocketbelt airtime than anyone else, and flew two of the most famous rocketbelt flights of all time – as one of the stunt pilots on the James Bond movie Thunderball, and in front of a worldwide audience of billions at the LA Olympics opening ceremony in 1984.

He was the test pilot on the RB-2000, but thankfully got out before the project spiralled towards its murderous conclusion. Bill supplied a lot of information for my book, and you can read more about his involvement in the caper here.

Sadly, Bill’s book doesn’t feature the foreword he wanted from the first Bell rocketbelt pilot Hal Graham. As previously posted, Hal died in October, aged 75. According to the Nashville Scene, Hal replied to Bill’s request with a message saying, “I probably won’t be around after tomorrow. Catch it in the papers.” The following afternoon, Hal drove to the local headquarters of the Federal Aviation Authority, which had revoked his pilot’s license two weeks earlier. Hal entered the building, saying nothing, took out a handgun, and shot himself in the head. You can read more about the tragic end to a high-flying life in the article Hero pilot Hal Graham’s hard fall to earth by Brantley Hargrove.

Bill Suitor’s tale has a happier ending, and he is currently attending book signings to talk about his remarkable rocketbelt career. You can get his Rocketbelt Pilot’s Manual here.

Books, Technology

Rocketman Hal Graham RIP

October 26th, 2009

hal grahamHal Graham, the first man to officially fly a rocketbelt, has died. The following is an edited extract from The Rocketbelt Caper:

Harold ‘Hal’ Graham was a 27-year-old science graduate from Buffalo who had been working for the Bell Aircraft Company as a test engineer for just over a year when he was selected to be the first man to pilot the rocketbelt – the iconic flying jetpack created by engineer Wendell Moore.

It would be Graham’s first taste of flying. He was not a registered pilot, and the only machine he had previous experience of driving was a car. He was, however, a rocketbelt fan, having grown up with Buck Rogers comics and Commando Cody serials. When Bell began to ask around for a volunteer to fly the rocketbelt he had no hesitation in applying for the job.

Graham’s first tethered flight took place in March 1961. These flights took place in a large aircraft hangar. The rocketbelt was suspended from the ceiling, and small amounts of thrust were used to generate moderate lift. 36 tethered flights later, it was time for the safety ropes to come off.

The very first untethered rocketbelt flight took place at seven in the morning on 20 April 1961. A 20-man Bell crew gathered at an empty clearing near the Bell plant on Buffalo’s Niagara Falls Boulevard and opposite the Niagara Falls Municipal Airport, which had been specially closed for 30 minutes. The crew ran through a detailed checklist in preparation for the flight.

Then Graham, wearing a black rubber suit, white helmet, work boots, and goggles, released the throttle in a short burst to check the propulsion. All seemed fine. Again he released the throttle, this time successfully lifting the belt around 18 inches from the ground in a thick cloud of steam, and piloted it in a straight line at a speed of around ten miles per hour.

The noise was incredible – an explosive roar of gas as loud as a pneumatic drill. And visibility was poor – almost zero according to Graham – due to condensation created by the rocket exhaust.

On the first free rocketbelt flight Hal Graham flew for 13 seconds and covered a distance of 112 feet – eight feet less than the Wright Brothers had covered in their inaugural flight. It was nevertheless a thoroughly triumphant debut.

Following the success of the test flight, Bell executives were keen to unveil the remarkable device to the public. After 28 test flights, Wendell Moore was satisfied enough to agree to a public demonstration.

The first public rocketbelt flight took place at Fort Eustis, Virginia, on 8 June 1961 at a demonstration of new technologies. Light bulbs flashed and film reels rolled as Graham piloted the rocketbelt into the air, legs swinging below him. Against a backdrop of Air Force planes, Graham maneuvered the rocketbelt over a truck, and higher into the sky. He flew to around 15 feet, and then descended, bouncing slightly as he landed on his feet. Graham then offered a salute.

After removing his fire suit, Graham was mobbed by the press. Microphones were thrust into his face, and pencils jotted down every word he said. Bell officials handed out press releases which began, ‘Harold M Graham is believed to be the first man to fly with back-carried rocket equipment.’

The story made the front pages across the US. The New York Times headline read, ‘Portable army rocket propels man 150 feet in 11-second test flight.’ Life magazine said, ‘Graham was strapped to a hydrogen peroxide-fuelled rocket. The Army hopes it will someday make all foot soldiers look like Buck Rogers.’

One week later, Graham demonstrated the rocketbelt on the front lawn of the Pentagon in Washington DC in front of a huge crowd of military personnel.

Then, in October 1961, Graham, Moore and the Bell crew travelled to Fort Bragg in North Carolina to participate in another military demonstration, this time as part of a display of combat readiness. The demonstration was performed in front of a notable guest of honor – President John F Kennedy.

Graham, wearing a US Army uniform, took off from an amphibious landing vehicle, flew across a pond in a spray of water, and landed 14 seconds later on a sand embankment in front of JFK. Graham remembered to salute but forgot to depressurize the belt in the excitement of the moment, although he managed to remain on the ground. ‘Mr Kennedy was described by an Army Officer sitting near him as “wide eyed and open mouthed, just like a kid”,’ reported the Buffalo Evening News.

The public interest and publicity surrounding Graham and the rocketbelt generated much correspondence. Letters requesting public appearances began to flood the Bell offices. One man wrote to Bell requesting the use of the rocketbelt in order to claim a $1 million treasure trove that, he claimed, he could only reach with the use of the belt. Suspicious Bell executives turned the request down.

Although Hal Graham could now proficiently fly the rocketbelt, he was still not a registered airplane pilot. In November 1961 he decided to do something about that. He began to take flying lessons, and qualified for his pilot’s license in July 1962. That year also saw the debut of the B-Series rocketbelt. The new belt was engineered to reduce weight, and, as rocketbelt pilot, Graham was kitted out in a brand new bright yellow flight suit.

But Hal Graham’s short career as a rocketbelt pilot was coming to an end. During an ill-fated demonstration at Cape Canaveral, Graham fell 22 feet, landed on his head, and was knocked unconscious. He survived the crash, but decided to get out of the rocketbelt business. Graham made 83 untethered rocketbelt flights during his time at Bell, but he left the company in 1962 to pursue his new love of flying traditional aircraft. He set up his own one-man, one-plane charter flight company in Crossville, Tennessee.

Hal Graham died in Nashville on 22 October 2009, aged 75.

Watch Hal Graham fly the rocketbelt (YouTube)
Visit Hal Graham’s rocketbelt website

Books, Technology ,

Free is free, but how much will it cost?

July 8th, 2009

FreeChris Anderson is one of my favourite “big idea” guys. He’s the editor-in-chief of US Wired, and the author of The Long Tail (subtitled Why The Future Of Business Is Selling Less Of More). His new book is Free: The Future of a Radical Price, in which he explains how giving stuff away is changing the face of many businesses.

So, for example, a piece of software or a game will be given away free, with the belief that a percentage of the people who use it will end up paying for a related service or a premium version, such as support for the software, or extra game levels.

The book began as a Wired cover story, Free! Why $0.00 Is the Future of Business, which provides a neat introduction to Anderson’s theory.

The hardback is out now, priced £18.99 (currently discounted to £9.41 on Amazon). But as you might expect, Anderson is also making his book available for free.

The ebook can be read – although not downloaded – at Scribd.com. An abridged 3-hour audio book is available on Spotify. Free is the first audio book to appear on Spotify. The 6-hour unabridged version can be downloaded free from Audible.

Anderson promises that the book will be rolled out in other free formats over the next few weeks, via iTunes, Kindle, Google Books and more. Check his blog for more details.

Most interestingly, Anderson and his UK publisher Random House are giving away an abridged paperback edition, which Anderson says is “the entire book minus, if memory serves, the appendixes”, courtesy of a sponsorship with Adobe and via the Brand Republic website. The paperback giveaway will begin at the end of this week.

I’d like to say I trumped Anderson by making my book The Rocketbelt Caper free in both ebook and paperback editions a couple of weeks ago. (See this write-up at TeleRead.) But Anderson was an inspiration for the free promotion, and his distribution model has the potential to really shake up the book industry.

Earlier this year I attended the London Book Fair and saw publishers attempting to embrace ebooks, but determined to charge paperback prices for electronic editions. This will not work for one simple reason: physical books are better than ebooks.

“If you believe that the physical book is the superior form, then you have to believe that people who love the sample will buy the physical book,” Anderson said at a keynote speech at SXSW in Austin earlier this year. And making the full version of Free available on Scribd.com is essentially offering a sample, as few readers will want to read the whole thing via Scribd’s online reader.

Making a paperback edition free courtesy of sponsorship is a really interesting idea. When I worked in publishing we briefly attempted something similar, but the project didn’t get off the ground, mainly because sponsors and advertisers just didn’t get the concept. But it’s essentially the same concept that allows newspapers and magazines to be distributed free. And free newspapers and magazines have seriously damaged their paid-for equivalents, so the book industry needs to take a careful look at what Anderson and Random House are doing here.

It would be fascinating to know how much Adobe has paid to sponsor the project, and how the figures stack up for Random House, who will apparently spend £30,000 promoting the “giveaway”.

So I’m looking forward to reading and listening to Free – for free. And if it’s any good I’ll most probably buy it). A victory for “freenomics”.

It would be remiss of me to end without saying that The Rocketbelt Caper is available as a free ebook for the long term, and a free paperback for a limited period, right here.

Books ,