Students take off on flight of fancy
Los Altos only high school in U.S. trying to make human
powered airplane
BY ANISSA VICENTE
Staff Writer
This is a big deal.
With a 100-ft. wing span and 35-ft. long body, the Grasshopper
is big indeed.
Los Altos High School students in Hacienda Heights hope
that a 70-pound assortment of aluminum tubing, foam, double
sided tape, clamps, carbon fiber and balsa wood will become
their most ambitious project yet: a human powered airplane.
No other high school in the nation has tried to make this
project fly, but Bob Franz's engineering technology students
want to try.
"We know some Japanese university students have done it,
some MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) students
tried and Boeing did too," said team leader Michael Ni,
18. Ni graduated this year and will attend the University
of Pennsylvania in September.
Franz said his students have three goals: make the plane
fly; make it fly further; and then make it turn.
"They're not going to give up until all that happens," Franz
said.
Incoming senior Alen Lin, 17, will take over team leader
reins from Ni this year. "It's too late to turn back now,"
he said, ''we've come this far."
About 20 students started on the project a year and a half
ago. They researched the history of human powered flight,
exchanging e-mails with Boeing engineers and meeting with
Paul McCready in Monrovia.
McCready, 75, and a Caltech graduate, heads Aerovironment
Inc., a company that builds energy-efficient planes. McCready
built one of the first human-powered planes, the Gossamer
Condor, which first flew in 1979.
Los Altos students modeled the $7,000 Grasshopper after
McCready's Condor, except the Grasshopper has its propeller
in front and a rudder in the back. The Condor had its propeller
in the back and its rudder in front.
Even with that inspiration, building a human-powered plane
is 10 times harder than building a solar car, because of
the requirements of flight, students said.
Their first prototype was too heavy. Other models fell apart
at the slightest breeze. The Grasshopper is fragile, but
strong.
"We attached piano and polyester strings to give the plane
all-around
tension," graduate Danny Huang said. Like Ni, Huang is spending
his summer working on the Grasshopper. The plane will also
be wrapped in Mylar, which will be ironed on most parts.
"We picked Mylar because it's strong, light and transparent,
so we can see where things go wrong or break," graduate
Arthur Chang said.
These days, students are working to meet a self-imposed
deadline for the Grasshopper's first test flight. The Federal
Aviation Administration helped them find space at the San
Bernardino Airport and students hope to go there by the
end of July.
“If all goes well, the Grasshopper will take to the skies
in early August.” Ni said they hope the plane will fly 5
feet high for 100 yards, or the length of a football field.
Juniors Joyce Chen or Nancy Chiu will pilot the Grasshopper.
Chen or Chiu has to pedal the plane at 8 mph before it can
take off. Both are training everyday on a LifeCycle that
measures the power they expend. Grasshopper's pilot has
to produce 250 watts or one-third horsepower for the plane
to take off.
Students are also monitoring the weather at the airport
everyday.
"We have to have zero wind because the plane has no steering
and even the slightest wind can move the plane," Chen said.
Chen said the toughest sacrifice she's had to make is sleep.
Franz added that students have been as dedicated to this
project as they were for Los Altos' other Regional Occupational
Program projects, like its electric and solar cars.
But the hardest part about the student-run project wasn't
the minute calculations or labor-intensive parts. It was
naming the plane. The group named the plane the Grasshopper
instead of, say, the Eagle because of the way they expect
it to fly.
"An eagle soars, but a grasshopper makes periodic flights;
it sort of flies, then stops, flies, then stops," Ni said.
"Naming the plane was the hardest part about the whole thing."
The $7,000 project got help from local industries for materials.
The Youth Science Center in Hacienda Heights donated $1,000;
a resident gave $2,000; and many local banks anted up with
donations of their own. Ni said their families and friends
also helped support the project. The team still needs help
transporting 20-foot by 9-foot plane sections to San Bernardino
Airport and any help is appreciated.
"We don't think we can't do anything," Ni said. "We've gotten
so far in this and it's an opportunity of a lifetime."
Other students in the Grasshopper team are Jennifer Chou,
Nelson Lee, Dave Sadamoto and Edward Song.