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22 IEEE Spectrum | November 2005 | NA www.spectrum.ieee.org
ROCKET MANAccording to his handlers, stuntman Dan Schlund [shown]
is one of only 11 people ever to fly a rocket belt. In other words,
more people have walked on the moon than have strapped
on this 75-kilogram mass of tanks, pipes, and nozzles—
and taken off. A perpetual personal-transportation fantasy,
rocket belts never became more than a novelty act, though
they are a lucrative one. A single appearance by Schlund or
one of his colleagues from Powerhouse Productions Inc.
can fetch thousands of dollars.
Invented for the U.S. Army by Wendell Moore at
Bell Aerosystems Co., Buffalo, N.Y., back in the 1950s,
the rocket belt was clearly a military defeat. The roar of the
belt’s hydrogen peroxide–fueled engine and the low alti-
tude limit made any soldier wearing it an easy target. Of
course, the fact that a pilot could fly it for only about
20 seconds didn’t help either. Still, the dream lives on in
the form of personal flight gizmos like the rotor-propelled
Springtail, developed by Trek Aerospace Inc., Palo Alto,
Calif., and in patent applications such as Toyota Corp.’s
personal “vertical takeoff and landing apparatus.” �
PHOTO BY RYAN PIERSE/GETTY IMAGES
www.spectrum.ieee.org November 2005 | IEEE Spectrum | NA 23