A 24-year-old undergraduate from Nigeria is building helicopters out of
old car and bike parts. Mubarak Muhammed Abdullahi, a physics student,
spent eight months building the yellow model seen here, using the money
he makes from repairing cellphones and computers. While some of the
parts have been sourced from a crashed 747, the chopper contains all
sorts of surprises.
The 12-meter-long aircraft, which has never
flown above a height of seven feet, is powered by a secondhand 133
horsepower engine from a Honda Civic. In the basic cockpit there are two
Toyota car seats, with a couple more in the cabin behind. Controls are
simple, with an ignition button, an accelerator lever to control
vertical thrust and a joystick that provides balance and bearing. A
camera beneath the chopper connected to a small screen on the dash gives
the pilot ground vision, and he communicates via a small transmitter.
Mubarak
says he learned the basics of helicopter flying through the internet
after he decided it would be easier to build a chopper than a car.
Flying his creation is easy, he claims. “You start it, allow it to run
for a minute or two and you then shift the accelerator forward and the
propeller on top begins to spin,” he explains. “The further you shift
the accelerator the faster it goes and once you reach 300 rpm you press
the joystick and it takes off.”
Undeterred that his home-made
transporter, which lives in a hangar on campus, lacks the gear to
measure atmospheric pressure, altitude and humidity, Mubarak is working
on a new machine which “will be a radical improvement on the first one
in terms of sophistication and aesthetics.”
A two-seater with the
ability to fly at 15 feet for three hours at a time, Mubarak’s new
creation will be powered by a brand-new motor straight from Taiwan,
normally found in motorbikes.
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