Post by Clemo on Jan 30, 2007 5:25:13 GMT -5
I wish this guy the best of luck.
www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061227/NEWS04/612270379
He doesn't believe in UFOs; he's just building his own
December 27, 2006
BY STEVE NEAVLING
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Some people may call Alfie Carrington crazy or foolish.
How else do you describe a man who has spent more than half his life building a flying saucer?
By day a construction worker, Carrington spends his free time inside a rented storage garage in Clinton Township where he broods over a 14-foot-wide, carbon fiber, fiberglass vessel.
"Something genius is hiding away in Alfie's eccentricities," friend D.L. Bradley, a pastor in Clinton Township, said last week.
Thirty years ago, when Carrington of Clinton Township was 27 and obsessed with science fiction, he set out to build a UFO look-alike. But something inside him cried out for more.
Inspired by ordinary Americans like Orville and Wilbur Wright, who piloted the first heavier-than-air aircraft 103 years ago this month, Carrington pored over books, magazines and studies about aviation. Never mind his lack of engineering experience.
He has spent nearly $60,000 for some of the materials he believes are needed to launch his creation -- a lot for a man who drives a rusted 1986 Mercury Cougar.
Carrington does it because he believes he has discovered a simple design for an aircraft that aeronautical engineers have spent countless millions trying to build.
"People are going to say I'm nuts," Carrington shrugged.
Unlike aeronautical engineers who have tried to build vessels for commercial flight -- most notably those who entered the X-Prize contest for a reusable privately built suborbital spacecraft -- Carrington's aim is more terrestrial. He wants to replace the automobile with a Jetsons-style vehicle.
"Why drive when you can fly 500 m.p.h.?" he asked.
Carrington has two patents on the design and a company called Vertex Aerospace. His work caught the attention of NASA, which invited him to a conference in the mid-1990s where engineers scratched their heads when he confessed he knew nothing about computers.
His idea is to fire up the vessel with a rotary engine to stimulate a magnetic levitation system to rotate the ship's two discs. The discs would draw air into propeller blades.
"It's a simple concept," Carrington said. "There is no way this thing can't get off the ground because 40% of it is rotating."
Aeronautical engineers aren't so confident, especially considering the rotation speeds needed to lift the aircraft.
"Things spinning at those speeds are worrisome because of the stress from centrifugal force," explained Cornelis van Dam, professor of mechanical and aeronautical engineering at the University of California-Davis, a leading aviation school. "If it's not properly designed and built, it will rip itself apart. I wouldn't want to stand next to it when it gets up to speed."
Even aerospace experts rely on other professionals to build such complex vessels, van Dam pointed out.
But Carrington doesn't have time for naysayers. In eight months, he hopes to launch his dream, assuming he can raise at least another $40,000 to complete the project.
"When he starts it up, we'll know either it was the biggest folly of all time, or one of the most ingenious inventions of all time," said Bradley, Carrington's friend.
www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061227/NEWS04/612270379
www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061227/NEWS04/612270379
He doesn't believe in UFOs; he's just building his own
December 27, 2006
BY STEVE NEAVLING
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Some people may call Alfie Carrington crazy or foolish.
How else do you describe a man who has spent more than half his life building a flying saucer?
By day a construction worker, Carrington spends his free time inside a rented storage garage in Clinton Township where he broods over a 14-foot-wide, carbon fiber, fiberglass vessel.
"Something genius is hiding away in Alfie's eccentricities," friend D.L. Bradley, a pastor in Clinton Township, said last week.
Thirty years ago, when Carrington of Clinton Township was 27 and obsessed with science fiction, he set out to build a UFO look-alike. But something inside him cried out for more.
Inspired by ordinary Americans like Orville and Wilbur Wright, who piloted the first heavier-than-air aircraft 103 years ago this month, Carrington pored over books, magazines and studies about aviation. Never mind his lack of engineering experience.
He has spent nearly $60,000 for some of the materials he believes are needed to launch his creation -- a lot for a man who drives a rusted 1986 Mercury Cougar.
Carrington does it because he believes he has discovered a simple design for an aircraft that aeronautical engineers have spent countless millions trying to build.
"People are going to say I'm nuts," Carrington shrugged.
Unlike aeronautical engineers who have tried to build vessels for commercial flight -- most notably those who entered the X-Prize contest for a reusable privately built suborbital spacecraft -- Carrington's aim is more terrestrial. He wants to replace the automobile with a Jetsons-style vehicle.
"Why drive when you can fly 500 m.p.h.?" he asked.
Carrington has two patents on the design and a company called Vertex Aerospace. His work caught the attention of NASA, which invited him to a conference in the mid-1990s where engineers scratched their heads when he confessed he knew nothing about computers.
His idea is to fire up the vessel with a rotary engine to stimulate a magnetic levitation system to rotate the ship's two discs. The discs would draw air into propeller blades.
"It's a simple concept," Carrington said. "There is no way this thing can't get off the ground because 40% of it is rotating."
Aeronautical engineers aren't so confident, especially considering the rotation speeds needed to lift the aircraft.
"Things spinning at those speeds are worrisome because of the stress from centrifugal force," explained Cornelis van Dam, professor of mechanical and aeronautical engineering at the University of California-Davis, a leading aviation school. "If it's not properly designed and built, it will rip itself apart. I wouldn't want to stand next to it when it gets up to speed."
Even aerospace experts rely on other professionals to build such complex vessels, van Dam pointed out.
But Carrington doesn't have time for naysayers. In eight months, he hopes to launch his dream, assuming he can raise at least another $40,000 to complete the project.
"When he starts it up, we'll know either it was the biggest folly of all time, or one of the most ingenious inventions of all time," said Bradley, Carrington's friend.
www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061227/NEWS04/612270379