Saturday 4 July 2015

Solar plane lands in Hawaii, after a five-day flight


After nearly 118 grueling, consecutive hours over the Pacific Ocean, the sun-powered Solar Impulse 2 is back on land — and freshly stamped into aviation record books.
Pilot Andre Borschberg landed the plane on the Hawaiian island of Oahu on Friday morning, five days after he took off from Japan — ending the longest and most dangerous leg in his team’s attempt to fly around the world without a drop of fuel.
The leg — the eighth of a planned 13 — set a record for the world’s longest nonstop solo flight in terms of time. It also was the longest flight in time and distance (more than 8,200 kilometers, or 5,100 miles) for a plane run only on solar power, organizers said.
After landing at Oahu’s Kalaeloa Airport, Borschberg opened the cockpit door and waved to a cheering crowd.
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