ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Yves Rossy - Jetman
With a jet-powered wing attached to his body, Yves Rossy expands the possibilities of human flight.

Why you should listen

On May 7 of this year, Swiss pilot Yves Rossy stepped out of a helicopter 8,000 feet above the Grand Canyon and ... took off. Wearing a rigid wing powered by four model jet turbine engines, Rossy flew for eight minutes over the mile-deep trench, soaring over the red rocks before parachuting down to the Colorado River far below. It's the latest exploit in a life powered by one dream: to fly like a bird.

Wearing his single wing, Rossy really flies, steering with the movements of his body. In the last couple of years he has crossed the English Channel, flown over the Swiss Alps and performed aerobatic loops around a hot-air balloon; for his next quest, he is developing a new kind of parachute that will enable him to fly as low as 200 meters.

 

More profile about the speaker
Yves Rossy | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2011

Yves Rossy: Fly with the Jetman

Filmed:
8,564,968 views

Strapped to a jet-powered wing, Yves Rossy is the Jetman -- flying free, his body as the rudder, above the Swiss Alps and the Grand Canyon. After a powerful short film shows how it works, Rossy takes the TEDGlobal stage to share the experience and thrill of flying.
- Jetman
With a jet-powered wing attached to his body, Yves Rossy expands the possibilities of human flight. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:17
(Music)
0
2000
8000
00:43
Text: Jetman - Yves Rossy
1
28000
7000
00:50
Grand Canyon
2
35000
4000
01:23
(Video) Narrator: Many of the tests are conducted
3
68000
2000
01:25
while Yves is strapped onto the wing,
4
70000
2000
01:27
because Yves' body is an integral part of the aircraft.
5
72000
3000
01:30
Text: Wind tunnel tests
6
75000
3000
01:33
Narrator: The wing has no steering controls,
7
78000
2000
01:35
no flaps, no rudder.
8
80000
2000
01:37
Yves uses his body to steer the wing.
9
82000
3000
01:40
Stefan von Bergen: Well he turns
10
85000
2000
01:42
by just putting his head on one or the other side.
11
87000
2000
01:44
And sometimes he assists that with his hands,
12
89000
3000
01:47
sometimes even with the leg.
13
92000
2000
01:49
He's acting as a human fuselage, so to say.
14
94000
3000
01:52
And that's quite unique.
15
97000
3000
01:56
Narrator: When he arches his back,
16
101000
2000
01:58
he gains altitude.
17
103000
2000
02:09
When he pushes his shoulders forward,
18
114000
2000
02:11
he goes into a dive.
19
116000
2000
02:21
Text: Swiss Alps
20
126000
3000
03:18
Strait of Gibraltar crossing
21
183000
3000
03:47
English Channel crossing
22
212000
2000
03:49
Commentator: There he goes.
23
214000
2000
03:51
There is Yves Rossy.
24
216000
2000
03:53
And I think the wing is open, the wing is open.
25
218000
3000
03:56
So our first critical moment, it's open.
26
221000
2000
03:58
He is down. Is he flying?
27
223000
3000
04:01
Commentator Two: It looks like he's stabilized.
28
226000
2000
04:03
He's starting to make his climb.
29
228000
2000
04:05
Commentator: There's that 90 degree turn you're talking about, taking him out.
30
230000
2000
04:07
He's out over the channel.
31
232000
2000
04:09
There is Yves Rossy.
32
234000
2000
04:11
There is no turning back now.
33
236000
2000
04:13
He is over the English Channel and underway.
34
238000
3000
04:16
Ladies and gentlemen,
35
241000
2000
04:18
an historic flight has begun.
36
243000
2000
04:40
Commentator Two: And what he's going to do as he approaches the ground
37
265000
2000
04:42
is pull down on those toggles to flare,
38
267000
2000
04:44
slow himself down just a little bit,
39
269000
3000
04:47
and then come in for a nice landing.
40
272000
2000
04:55
Commentator: There he is.
41
280000
2000
04:57
Yves Rossy has landed in England.
42
282000
3000
05:02
Bruno Giussani: And now he's in Edinburgh. Yves Rossy.
43
287000
2000
05:04
(Applause)
44
289000
10000
05:14
And his equipment as well.
45
299000
2000
05:16
Yves, welcome. It is quite amazing.
46
301000
3000
05:19
Those sequences were shot over the last three years
47
304000
2000
05:21
in various moments of your activities.
48
306000
2000
05:23
And there were many, many others.
49
308000
3000
05:26
So it's possible to fly almost like a bird.
50
311000
2000
05:28
What is it [like] to be up there?
51
313000
2000
05:30
Yves Rossy: It's fun. It's fun.
52
315000
2000
05:32
(Laughter)
53
317000
2000
05:34
I don't have feathers.
54
319000
3000
05:37
But I feel like a bird sometimes.
55
322000
2000
05:39
It's really an unreal feeling,
56
324000
4000
05:43
because normally you have a big thing,
57
328000
2000
05:45
a plane, around you.
58
330000
3000
05:48
And when I strap just these little harnesses,
59
333000
4000
05:52
this little wing,
60
337000
2000
05:54
I really have the feeling of being a bird.
61
339000
3000
05:57
BG: How did you start to become Jetman?
62
342000
3000
06:00
YR: It was about 20 years ago
63
345000
2000
06:02
when I discovered free falling.
64
347000
2000
06:04
When you go out of an airplane
65
349000
2000
06:06
you are almost naked.
66
351000
2000
06:08
You take a position like that.
67
353000
3000
06:11
And especially when you take a tracking position,
68
356000
3000
06:14
you have the feeling
69
359000
2000
06:16
that you are flying.
70
361000
2000
06:18
And that's the nearest thing to the dream.
71
363000
4000
06:22
You have no machine around you.
72
367000
3000
06:25
You are just in the element.
73
370000
2000
06:27
It's very short and only in one direction.
74
372000
3000
06:30
So the idea
75
375000
2000
06:32
was, okay, keep that feeling of freedom,
76
377000
5000
06:37
but change the vector and increase the time.
77
382000
3000
06:40
BG: So I'm kind of curious, what's your top speed?
78
385000
3000
06:43
YR: It's about 300 km per hour before looping.
79
388000
4000
06:47
That means about 190 miles per hour.
80
392000
3000
06:50
BG: And what's the weight of the equipment you're carrying?
81
395000
2000
06:52
YR: When I exit full of kerosene,
82
397000
3000
06:55
I'm about 55 kilos.
83
400000
3000
06:58
I have 55 kilos on my back.
84
403000
2000
07:00
BG: And you're not piloting?
85
405000
2000
07:02
There is no handle, no steering nothing?
86
407000
2000
07:04
It is purely your body,
87
409000
2000
07:06
and the wings become part of the body and vice versa?
88
411000
2000
07:08
YR: That's really the goal,
89
413000
2000
07:10
because if you put [in] steering,
90
415000
3000
07:13
then you reinvent the airplane.
91
418000
2000
07:15
And I wanted to keep this freedom of movement.
92
420000
5000
07:20
And it's really like the kid playing the airplane.
93
425000
2000
07:22
I want to go down like that.
94
427000
2000
07:24
And up I climb, I turn.
95
429000
3000
07:27
It's really pure flying.
96
432000
3000
07:30
It's not steering, it's flight.
97
435000
3000
07:33
BG: What kind of training do you do,
98
438000
3000
07:36
you personally, for that?
99
441000
2000
07:38
YR: Actually, I try to stay just fit.
100
443000
4000
07:42
I don't do special physical training.
101
447000
4000
07:46
Just, I try to keep my mobility
102
451000
4000
07:50
through new activities.
103
455000
3000
07:53
For example,
104
458000
3000
07:56
last winter I began with kite surfing --
105
461000
3000
07:59
so new things.
106
464000
2000
08:01
So you have to adapt.
107
466000
2000
08:03
Because this is -- I'm quite an experienced manager of systems
108
468000
3000
08:06
as a pilot,
109
471000
2000
08:08
but this is really --
110
473000
2000
08:10
you need fluidity,
111
475000
2000
08:12
you need to be agile
112
477000
2000
08:14
and also to adapt really fast.
113
479000
3000
08:17
BG: Somebody in the audience asked me,
114
482000
2000
08:19
"How does he breathe up there?"
115
484000
2000
08:21
because you're going fast and you're up 3,000 meters or so.
116
486000
3000
08:24
YR: Okay, up to 3,000 meters,
117
489000
2000
08:26
it's not such a big problem with oxygen.
118
491000
3000
08:29
But for example, bikers,
119
494000
3000
08:32
they have the same speed.
120
497000
2000
08:34
Just with the helmet, integral helmet,
121
499000
2000
08:36
it's really no problem to breathe.
122
501000
2000
08:38
BG: Describe for me the equipment since you have it here.
123
503000
3000
08:41
So Breitling's four engines.
124
506000
3000
08:44
YR: Yeah, two-meter span.
125
509000
2000
08:46
Ultrastable profile.
126
511000
2000
08:48
Four little engines,
127
513000
2000
08:50
22 kilos thrust each, turbines
128
515000
3000
08:53
working with kerosene.
129
518000
2000
08:55
Harness, parachute.
130
520000
3000
08:58
My only instruments are [an] altimeter and time.
131
523000
3000
09:01
I know I have about eight minutes fuel.
132
526000
3000
09:04
So just check before it's finished.
133
529000
4000
09:08
(Laughter)
134
533000
2000
09:10
And yeah, that's all.
135
535000
3000
09:13
Two parachutes.
136
538000
3000
09:16
That means, if I have a problem
137
541000
2000
09:18
with the first one I pull,
138
543000
2000
09:20
I still have the possibility
139
545000
2000
09:22
to open the second one.
140
547000
2000
09:24
And this is my life.
141
549000
2000
09:26
That's the real important thing about safety.
142
551000
3000
09:29
I did use that
143
554000
2000
09:31
during these last 15 years
144
556000
2000
09:33
about 20 times --
145
558000
2000
09:35
never with that type of wing, but at the beginning.
146
560000
3000
09:38
I can release my wing
147
563000
3000
09:41
when I am in a spin or unstable.
148
566000
3000
09:44
BG: We saw the 2009 crossing of the Gibraltar Strait
149
569000
3000
09:47
where you lost control
150
572000
2000
09:49
and then you dived down into the clouds
151
574000
2000
09:51
and in the ocean.
152
576000
2000
09:53
So that was one of those cases where you let the wings go, right?
153
578000
3000
09:56
YR: Yeah. I did try in [the] clouds,
154
581000
3000
09:59
but you lose [orientation completely].
155
584000
3000
10:02
So I did try to take, again,
156
587000
2000
10:04
a climb altitude.
157
589000
3000
10:07
I thought, okay, I will go out.
158
592000
2000
10:09
But most probably I did something like that.
159
594000
4000
10:13
BG: Something that is not very safe in image.
160
598000
3000
10:16
YR: But you feel great,
161
601000
2000
10:18
but you have not the right altitude.
162
603000
5000
10:23
So the next thing I saw was just blue.
163
608000
3000
10:26
It was the sea.
164
611000
2000
10:28
I have also an audible altimeter.
165
613000
2000
10:30
So I was at my minimum altitude
166
615000
3000
10:33
in that vector -- fast --
167
618000
3000
10:36
so I pulled that.
168
621000
2000
10:38
And then I did open my chute.
169
623000
2000
10:40
BG: So the wings have their own parachute, and you have your two parachutes.
170
625000
3000
10:43
YR: Exactly. There is a rescue parachute for the wing
171
628000
3000
10:46
for two reasons:
172
631000
2000
10:48
so I can repair it afterward
173
633000
2000
10:50
and especially so nobody takes that, just on his head.
174
635000
4000
10:54
BG: I see. Maybe come back here.
175
639000
3000
10:57
This is risky stuff indeed.
176
642000
2000
10:59
People have died trying to do this kind of thing.
177
644000
3000
11:02
And you don't look like a crazy guy; you're a Swiss airline pilot,
178
647000
3000
11:05
so you're rather a checklist kind of guy.
179
650000
3000
11:08
I assume you have standards.
180
653000
2000
11:10
YR: Yeah. I have no checklist for that.
181
655000
3000
11:13
BG: Let's not tell you employer.
182
658000
3000
11:16
YR: No, that's really two worlds.
183
661000
3000
11:20
Civil aviation is something that we know very well.
184
665000
3000
11:23
We have a hundred years of experience.
185
668000
3000
11:26
And you can adapt really precisely.
186
671000
4000
11:30
With that,
187
675000
2000
11:32
I have to adapt to something new.
188
677000
2000
11:34
That means improvise.
189
679000
2000
11:36
So it's really a play between these two approaches.
190
681000
3000
11:39
Something that I know very well --
191
684000
2000
11:41
these principles, for example,
192
686000
2000
11:43
we have two engines on an Airbus;
193
688000
2000
11:45
with only one engine, you can fly it.
194
690000
2000
11:47
So plan B, always a plan B.
195
692000
3000
11:50
In a fighter, you have an ejection seat.
196
695000
2000
11:52
That's my ejection seat.
197
697000
2000
11:54
So I have the approach of a professional pilot
198
699000
3000
11:57
with the respect of a pioneer
199
702000
5000
12:02
in front of Mother Nature.
200
707000
3000
12:05
BG: It's well said. It's well said.
201
710000
3000
12:08
What happens if one of the engines stops?
202
713000
3000
12:11
YR: I do a roll.
203
716000
4000
12:15
And then I stabilize,
204
720000
2000
12:17
and according to my altitude,
205
722000
2000
12:19
I continue on two or three engines.
206
724000
2000
12:21
It's sometimes possible --
207
726000
2000
12:23
it's quite complicated to explain --
208
728000
3000
12:26
but according to which regime I was,
209
731000
4000
12:30
I can continue on two
210
735000
2000
12:32
and try to get a nice place to land, and then I open my parachute.
211
737000
3000
12:35
BG: So the beginning of the flight
212
740000
2000
12:37
is actually you jump off a plane or a helicopter,
213
742000
2000
12:39
and you go on a dive and accelerate the engines,
214
744000
3000
12:42
and then you basically take off mid-air somewhere.
215
747000
3000
12:45
And then the landing, as we have seen,
216
750000
2000
12:47
arriving on this side of the channel,
217
752000
2000
12:49
is through a parachute.
218
754000
2000
12:51
So just as a curiosity,
219
756000
2000
12:53
where did you land when you flew over the Grand Canyon?
220
758000
3000
12:56
Did you land on the rim, down at the bottom?
221
761000
3000
12:59
YR: It was down on the bottom.
222
764000
2000
13:01
And I came back afterward
223
766000
2000
13:03
on the sled of the helicopter back.
224
768000
2000
13:05
But it was too stoney and full of cactus on top.
225
770000
5000
13:10
BG: That's exactly why I asked the question.
226
775000
2000
13:12
YR: And also the currents are quite funny there.
227
777000
5000
13:17
There is big thermal activity,
228
782000
2000
13:19
big difference in altitude also.
229
784000
2000
13:21
So it was much safer for me to land at the bottom.
230
786000
4000
13:25
BG: So I think that right now, many people in the audience
231
790000
3000
13:28
are asking, "Okay, when are you developing a double-seater
232
793000
2000
13:30
so they can fly with you?"
233
795000
2000
13:32
YR: I have a standard answer.
234
797000
2000
13:34
Have you ever seen tandem birds?
235
799000
4000
13:38
BG: Perfect answer.
236
803000
2000
13:40
(Applause)
237
805000
10000
13:50
Yves, one last question.
238
815000
2000
13:52
What's next for you? What's next for Jetman?
239
817000
3000
13:55
YR: First, to instruct a younger guy.
240
820000
4000
13:59
I want to share it,
241
824000
2000
14:01
to do formation flights.
242
826000
2000
14:03
And I plan to start from a cliff,
243
828000
2000
14:05
like catapulted from a cliff.
244
830000
2000
14:07
BG: So instead of jumping off a plane, yes?
245
832000
2000
14:09
YR: Yes, with the final goal to take off,
246
834000
2000
14:11
but with initial speed.
247
836000
2000
14:13
Really, I go step by step.
248
838000
2000
14:15
It seems a little bit crazy,
249
840000
2000
14:17
but it's not.
250
842000
2000
14:19
It's possible to start already now, it's just too dangerous.
251
844000
3000
14:22
(Laughter)
252
847000
2000
14:24
Thanks to the increasing technology, better technology,
253
849000
4000
14:28
it will be safe.
254
853000
2000
14:30
And I hope it will be for everybody.
255
855000
3000
14:33
BG: Yves, thank you very much. Yves Rossy.
256
858000
2000
14:35
(Applause)
257
860000
7000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Yves Rossy - Jetman
With a jet-powered wing attached to his body, Yves Rossy expands the possibilities of human flight.

Why you should listen

On May 7 of this year, Swiss pilot Yves Rossy stepped out of a helicopter 8,000 feet above the Grand Canyon and ... took off. Wearing a rigid wing powered by four model jet turbine engines, Rossy flew for eight minutes over the mile-deep trench, soaring over the red rocks before parachuting down to the Colorado River far below. It's the latest exploit in a life powered by one dream: to fly like a bird.

Wearing his single wing, Rossy really flies, steering with the movements of his body. In the last couple of years he has crossed the English Channel, flown over the Swiss Alps and performed aerobatic loops around a hot-air balloon; for his next quest, he is developing a new kind of parachute that will enable him to fly as low as 200 meters.

 

More profile about the speaker
Yves Rossy | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee