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Cyclic Hotline
24th Jul 2001, 01:33
OK, here's the deal. If he gets this thing onto the launch pad, I'll be there to witness it on behalf of all PPRuNers! :)
http://www.mycnn.com/jbcl/cnews/Go?template=otmDetStory&art_id=6947826&uid=995923873130

[b}'Rocket Man' Plans to Launch Himself{[/b]

Aspiring rocket traveler Brian Walker poses next to a poster of Buzz Aldrin walking on the moon

BEND, Oregon (AP) -- Next summer, Brian Walker will strap himself into the 24-foot rocket he's building in his back yard, ignite 9,000 pounds of fuel and hurl himself toward the edge of space.

At least, that's the plan.

If he's calculated correctly, Earthstar 1 will run out of fuel six minutes out, about 35 miles from the Earth's surface. The spent fuel tank will drop off and the control capsule, with Walker strapped inside, will coast to a stop.

He'll float in space for a moment, then activate a thruster in the nose of the capsule and prepare for descent.

As he glides back toward Earth, a dozen Hooters girls will be waiting, ready to shower him with champagne. That part is in his dreams.

Fulfilling a childhood dream
Walker, a bearded 44-year-old who never finished college, gets a gleam in his eye when he talks about his idea of the perfect end to the space flight he's fantasized about since watching the Apollo flights on black-and-white TV when he was 8.


He isn't trying to break any records. Even if his homemade rocket hits its peak trajectory, it won't make it all the way into space, which most scientists define as beginning 65 miles above the Earth.

"My No. 1 goal is that I survive," he said. "My No. 2 goal is that I actually go 35 miles."

Walker has always had a knack for inventing things, but many of his gadgets were failures, such as a two-person recreational submarine that he built in Fiji and a hard hat with a built-in ventilation system. Until about six years ago, he was broke and living with his parents.

Finally, his tinkering began to produce something profitable -- toys. Royalties have been rolling in for gizmos that, not surprisingly, are space-related: lasers, a hand-held Pop It Rocket, a gyroscope in the guise of a glow-in-the-dark alien spaceship.

He made enough to buy a BMW Roadster and a log house in a subdivision outside Bend.

But something was missing.

He set to work, putting his rocket dreams onto paper. When experts told him his plans wouldn't work, time and time again, Walker took an eraser to the penciled blueprints. Fins on the outer skin of the rocket were removed, making it more aerodynamic. Boosters were added to the rocket's nose to stabilize it as it makes its ascent.

"I'm not supposed to admit that I can make mistakes," Walker said. "But I do. And then I move on."

David Engeman, a 24-year-old community college student in Bend, tracked Walker down after reading about the rocket on the Internet. Walker decided Engeman's background with wood and metal composite work would come in handy and pays him generously to come in several days a week to help out on the "Rocket Ranch."

"Nothing is too outlandish," Engeman said of Walker's rocket design. "Some of this technology has been around since the '60s and '70s."

The rocket is simple enough that some experts say it might just work.

In Walker's backyard "Rocket Garden" -- a bed of black lava rock -- sits a full-scale, black-and-white mock-up of the rocket. With a bulbous command capsule sitting atop a long fuel tank, it looks like it could be from an old Buck Rogers movie.

There's still plenty of work to be done.

Walker is assembling by hand plastic molds that will be used to make the rocket's capsule and fuel tank. He's building a distillery behind his warehouselike shop to refine enough hydrogen peroxide to fuel his flight.

He's also constructing a centrifuge, which will spin him to 70 mph to acclimate him to the force of six Gs.

Work will soon begin on a 30-foot-long launch trailer that Walker plans to tow into southeastern Oregon's Alvord Desert, his planned blast-off site, next year.

Is he nuts?

More often than not, the media has portrayed Walker as a lunatic with a death wish. "I don't care if people think I'm nuts," he said. "If I hadn't lived this life, I'd think I was nuts, too."

In his office, Walker shows off video from his recent 30-minute, $11,000-ride on a Russian MiG. "Not the slightest tinge of anxiety," he said. "Not a moment where I thought, 'Oh my God, what am I doing here?"'

Walker, who has spent at least $250,000 preparing to blast himself into space, attended a cosmonaut training course last year in Russia, where he experienced zero gravity in a program also attended by millionaire space tourist Dennis Tito.

"We all ended up puking," Walker said.

Even if he can build a workable rocket, Walker will have to persuade the Federal Aviation Administration to give him flight clearance. Already, he's wrangled with the Bureau of Land Management, which oversees the Alvord Desert, over his take-off plans.

"They can't say you can't launch," he said. "No one owns the rights to the sky."

Walker has been dreaming about take-off for years. The details have been on his mind, too.

Spectators will be kept at a safe distance, he said. Water and Porta-potties will be hauled into the desert. He said he'll offer money to those living nearby who might be inconvenienced by the crowds.

If anything goes wrong after blast-off, Walker thinks it will be within the first 10 seconds. In case the capsule loses pressure, he will be wearing a pressurized, $70,000 Russian space suit. He'll have an ejector seat and two parachutes on his back.

When he reaches his 30-mile-plus apogee, he'll be able to see hundreds of miles in every direction. He'll drift a little in the wind.

Once back in Earth's atmosphere, a giant custom-made parasail will unfold from the capsule and he will float back to the desert.

That's the plan, anyway.

"I'm attempting to dream in a world where not many people dream any more," he said.

Hagbard the Amateur
24th Jul 2001, 18:29
Yep - I wish him luck too but it does sound a bit more Icarus than Wright.

I still remember the guy who strapped the garden chair to the helium balloons and went up with a BB gun as a means of getting down.
He was seen by an airliner. Does anyone have a link to the story?

[ 24 July 2001: Message edited by: Hagbard the Amateur ]

Roadtrip
24th Jul 2001, 19:19
I would think it hard to actually watch someone commit suicide. At least it will clean the gene pool a little.

[ 24 July 2001: Message edited by: Roadtrip ]