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Video Taken By Pilots of What Could Be the Elusive Los Angeles Jet Pack Guy Emerges (thedrive.com) 61

We now have credible video of what appears to be the elusive "Jet Pack Guy" flying around at thousands of feet near Los Angeles International Airport. The Drive reports: The footage doesn't come to us from some random Reddit board or YouTube channel, either. It was taken during an instructional flight from Sling Pilot Academy in the training area off Palos Verdes. We reached out to the flight school, which is based out of Zamperini Field, in Torrance, California for additional details. One of the pilots involved in the bizarre incident told The War Zone that they were flying along their route in the practice area between Palos Verdes and Catalina Island when they caught what appeared to at least resemble a guy in a jet pack flying towards them in the opposite direction at about 3,000 feet. The object passed along the right side of their aircraft and kept going until it was out of sight.

There was no communication from the object or about the object on the usually busy radio channel used for the training area. As such, the pilots did report the encounter with the FAA, but because there wasn't really any detail to add, an official report was not filed. They were able to grab the video seen [here].
The FAA issued the following statement: "The FAA has not received any recent reports from pilots who believe they may have seen someone in a jetpack in the skies around Los Angeles. The FAA has taken the sighting reports it has received seriously, and has worked closely with the FBI to investigate them. However, the FAA has been unable to validate the reports."

The Drive also said that officials are going to contact the flight school directly to investigate this incident further and they they replayed radar tapes from around the time of previous sightings, but did not see anything abnormal. "No witnesses on the ground have provided any evidence of someone with a jet pack taking off or landing, either," the report adds.
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Video Taken By Pilots of What Could Be the Elusive Los Angeles Jet Pack Guy Emerges

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  • by jvanber ( 170198 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @02:05AM (#60864590)

    guy's just trying to get to work.

    • Omg that is freaking awesome. Is that the guy from Dubai? I want one!!
      • The guy from Dubai probably has better sense than to fly around in controlled airspace at 3000ft. Don't know if his jetpack can even reach that altitude and range.
        • by CADirk ( 4093555 )
          The guy from Dubai (Vincent Reffet) unfortunatley died during an accident with his jetpack in Dubai on november 18 this year. It would probably someone or something else that the pilots have seen.
          • God fucking dammit, 2020.
            Didn't know that. That's a real bummer.
            • Well, we are still missing two things from the apocalypse bingo:
              1)Zombie apocalypse
              2)global nuclear war.

              The other boxes are all filled..

          • Nah, Yves Rossy [wikipedia.org] is still alive, Vincent Reffet [wikipedia.org], who was on the same acrobatic team was the one who died.

            Also, the winged suits that they use are large and delta shaped and allow them to fly nearly horizontal to the ground. The flying object on the video was in a more upright configuration (like the old bond jet packs). An Australian inventor has a backpack with two large motor driven fans that can keep him aloft for some time (sorry no link) , but that was not visible in the video.

            Who knows? Maybe some comp

    • by clovis ( 4684 )

      That explains the spray of Cran-Raspberry juice you can see behind him.

  • by locater16 ( 2326718 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @02:31AM (#60864604)
    Built this in a cave! With a box of scraps!!
  • Balloon (Score:5, Interesting)

    by tap ( 18562 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @02:53AM (#60864620) Homepage

    Large mylar balloon. Like for a radiosonde. It's mostly deflated and crumpled a bit so it kinds of looks like a standing person with something on their back.

    • Large mylar balloon. Like for a radiosonde. It's mostly deflated and crumpled a bit so it kinds of looks like a standing person with something on their back.

      I wonder what type of radar signal that would have? Given the prevailing winds would be known youo could also check the fight path agianst how a ballon would track to see if it could be a ballon.

      The drone explanation makes sense since the technology is readily avaiable; my question is what sort of range would an RC controller have? I've seen numbers saying 2KM for a good radio, and depending on the radio 50-60km. I doubt someone who is flying a drone in controlled airspace worries about things like radi

    • The power requirements for a 200 pound man and equipment to be flying at that altitude and span of time is too great. It most likley is a balloon.
  • by Arzaboa ( 2804779 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @03:25AM (#60864646)

    He clearly isn't flying under FAA authority. What if he got sucked into the engine of a plane? I mean this ain't no bird strike! What if there were children on that plane? What if the plane crashed into a school? What guidelines did we have in place for superman when he was being this reckless? Where is the precedent? Someone please think of the children!

    Honestly, it just looks like an alien in an anti-gravity suit. If you zoom in real close it looks like it has antenna sticking out, but I admit, the pixilation makes it hard to discern. You be the judge!

    --
    Madness, as you know, is like gravity, all it takes is a little push. -- The Joker

  • If I'm not wrong, long-term flying by jetpack is not feasible because of matters of energy storage density.
    • it could be a balloon made in the shape of a human and has drone copter power to move it around, somebody is on the ground with a radio controller
    • There's a simple solution to this problem: smaller people. Equipping babies with jetpacks is entirely doable. We could even throw some up on existing quadcopters drones.

    • From what I know the jet packs that have been used in TV, movies, and events like the Super Bowl are limited to 30 second flights. As such, they also have limited height as the pilot could go higher but they would not have enough fuel for a controlled landing.
      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Personally, I'm leaning towards the novelty drone theory. Given a light enough dummy and a small jet engine, it might have that sort of range.

    • It is conceivable, though unlikely, that this jetpack uses a much more efficient energy source, such as a small nuclear reactor.
  • by kot-begemot-uk ( 6104030 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @04:07AM (#60864692) Homepage
    Check the map in the first link: The sighting is half-way between Long Beach and Santa Catalina Island. 10km from closest land.

    If this is a jetpack, this is pushing the current tech towards its limits (10km+ from launch point). So sooner or later Darwin in the form of Pacific Ocean +/- a couple of Great Whites will sort things out.

  • Am I the only one who's mildly concerned that pilots flying in the crowded LA airspace are busy shooting videos instead of doing the flying?

    • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @07:05AM (#60864854)

      Am I the only one who's mildly concerned that pilots flying in the crowded LA airspace are busy shooting videos instead of doing the flying?

      Training airspace. One shooting video and the other flying the plane.

      • Training airspace. One shooting video and the other flying the plane.

        You thought I was flying the plane? But I thought you were flying the plane!?

        • But I thought you were flying the plane!?

          Which is why you have a protocol for handing over the control of the aircraft. Also, as I've observed for myself, for handing over control of a ship from the forward controls to the aft controls, or from port to starboard, depending on what the boat is doing or equipped with.

          One of the things that always make me laugh about people dreaming of flying cars is that they take their dreams of unbelievably lax, poorly trained drivers (such as those allowed onto the road

    • I have a friend in flight school who posts cockpit photos on her Facebook account sometimes. I asked her about just this and was told that it was taken by her friends in the back seat. I didn't think that you could take passengers on training flights but since they don't let us blind people fly planes, it's not surprising that I am unfamiliar with the nuances. At least under some conditions you can actually have others on board.
      • by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @09:33AM (#60865036) Homepage

        You can take passengers as long as there's a licensed pilot in one of the front seats. Just like driving.

        Regardless, collision avoidance is largely the responsibility of the control towers, not the pilots (aside from following directions from the tower). It's not like humans could react in time to avoid a collision in most instances anyway.

        • by VAXcat ( 674775 )
          In VFR airspace, each pilot is responsible for "maintaining separation" (not running into other airplanes).
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @03:32PM (#60865684) Journal

      Yes, you're the only one. Back when I was taking lessons, we often flew around with a video camera, and that was in very busy airspace as well. It only takes one person to fly the plane, and that's if you're not using an autopilot. In VFR, on a clear day...not a problem.

    • Pilots are explicitly trained in workload management.
  • what if it is not really a human with a jetpack

    and its just some sort of custom built drone copter with a human shaped chassis, and it only weighs a few pounds so it is able to fly, and somebody on the ground is controlling it via a radio controlled joystick thingy
    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      That would be quite possibly the single greatest prank since the straw person hanging precariously from the gutter next to the fallen ladder.

      That said, they posted the wrong video. I found exclusive footage from later in his flight that gives a much better view [youtu.be].

  • It's obviously Pedro Pascal rehearsing between seasons!

    I didn't know that Beskar armor had stealth technology to avoid terrestrial radar and ?

    So far it's been impervious to plasma blasters, light sabers, dark blade, dark trooper fists, etc.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ... they they replayed radar tapes from around the time of previous sightings, but did not see anything abnormal.

    And they won't, since no modern airports actually use radar any more. The wonders of modern software-driven "radar" means that tracks won't be displayed for anything without a beacon broadcasting its ident, position and heading.

  • by Joe2020 ( 6760092 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @09:43AM (#60865058)

    Humidity is rising - Barometer's getting low
    According to all sources, the street's the place to go
    Cause tonight for the first time
    Just about half-past ten
    For the first time in history
    And the latest in drones
    Through Amazon Prime delivery
    Straight up to your homes
    It's gonna start raining men.

    It's Raining Men! Hallelujah! - It's Raining Men!

  • C'mon CD, we need you.
  • So let's see... if you want to fly a 251g child's toy in your own back yard, beneath the cover of trees you need to register and pretty soon that toy will need to have a sophisticated "remote ID" transmitter onboard that reports its position to a national data-acquisition network.

    But... if you want to buzz around the skies in your own jetpack... well no registration, no remote ID and, it would seem, pretty much no-rules.

    Please can I have some of whatever the regulators are smoking because that's some powerf

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Gravity Industries was apparently testing it's jetpack in the area: https://gravity.co/ [gravity.co]
  • It's a fake... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Friday December 25, 2020 @02:45PM (#60865592)
    The guy who produced the video admitted to faking it. AND, any commercial pilot who whips out his cell phone under 10,000 feet will be in trouble for violating the sterile cockpit rule.
    • Did you read the headline, the summary, or the actual article?

      I didn't bother with the article (it's an ocean and a continent away, and Someone Else's Problem), but I did read the bit in the summary where it is reported as being in a TRAINING AREA. So, weird aircraft and erratic steering are to be expected.

      Someone who had RTFA said the flight path was at least 10km from shore. I thought the floating airport was in Hong Kong, not California.

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