
Voyager returning from its flight
The 'Model 76 Voyager' was the first
aircraft to fly around the world without stopping or refueling. It was piloted by
Dick Rutan and
Jeana Yeager, who took off from
Edwards Air Force Base's 15,000 foot (4,600 m) runway in the
Mojave Desert on
December 14,
1986. Their flight ended successfully 9 days, 3 minutes and 44 seconds later, on
December 23. They flew westerly 26,366 statute miles (42,432 km; the
FAI accredited distance is 40,212 km)
[1] at an average altitude of 11,000 feet (3.4 km). This broke a previous record set by a
United States Air Force crew piloting a
Boeing B-52 that flew 12,532 miles (20,168 km) in
1962.
Record flight
Voyager's takeoff took place at 8:01 AM local time. As the plane accelerated, the tips of the wings, which were heavily loaded with
fuel, were damaged as they scraped against the runway (see photo below), ultimately causing pieces to break off at the ends. The aircraft accelerated very slowly and needed approximately 14,200 feet (4.3 km) of the runway to gain enough speed to lift from the ground, the wings arching up dramatically just before take-off. During the flight, the two pilots had to deal with extremely cramped quarters. To reduce
stress, the two intended to fly the plane in three-hour shifts, but this did not prove to be very successful and they became extremely fatigued.
The plane also continuously reminded the pilots of its fragility. They had to maneuver around bad weather numerous times, most perilously around the 600 mile (1,000 km) wide
Typhoon Marge.
Libya denied access to the country's
airspace, forcing precious fuel to be used. As they neared
California to land, a fuel pump failed and had to be replaced with its twin pumping fuel from the other side of the aircraft. The plane safely came back to
Earth, touching down at 8:06 AM at the same airfield. The average speed for the flight was 116 miles per hour (187 km/h).
Aircraft development
The aircraft was first dreamed up by Jeana Yeager, Dick and his brother
Burt Rutan as they were at lunch in
1981. Like many other inventions, the initial idea was first sketched out on the back of a
napkin. The Voyager was built mainly by a group of volunteers working under both the Rutan Aircraft Factory and an organization set up under the name Voyager Aircraft (it was not, as is sometimes believed, built by
Scaled Composites).
[2] The craft, largely made of
fiberglass,
carbon fiber, and
Kevlar, weighs 939 pounds (426 kg) when empty. However, when it was fully loaded before the historic flight, it weighed 9,694.5 pounds (4397.3 kg). The plane had front and rear propellers, powered by separate engines. The rear engine, a water-cooled
Teledyne Continental IOL-200, was planned to be operated throughout the flight. The front engine, an air-cooled
Teledyne Continental O-240, was operated to provide additional power for takeoff and the initial part of the flight at heavy weights. Voyager was built in
Mojave, California, over a period of 5 years. It is now on display at the
Smithsonian Institution's
National Air and Space Museum in
Washington, DC.
See also
★ The
Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer was a
jet-powered aircraft also designed by Burt Rutan and built by Scaled Composites, in which
Steve Fossett made the first ''solo'' nonstop flight around the world in
2005.
References
1. Official FAI database
2. Scaled Composites' Voyager web page
★ David H. Onkst.
Dick Rutan, Jeana Yeager, and the Flight of the Voyager. U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission.