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Franky Zapata: Flyboard inventor fails in cross-Channel BID | |
(32 minutes later) | |
A French inventor has failed in his attempt to cross the English Channel on a jet-powered flyboard. | |
Franky Zapata, a former jet-ski champion, had been hoping to cross from northern France to southern England in just 20 minutes. | |
But the 40-year-old fell into the water halfway across as he tried to land on a boat to refuel. | |
He took off from near Calais on Thursday morning and was heading for St Margaret's Bay in Dover. | |
Mr Zapata was not injured when he fell in the water, according to a member of his team. | |
The attempt took place today exactly 110 years since Louis Blériot made the first plane flight across the Channel in 1909. | |
Mr Zapata set off from the beach at Sangatte, near Calais, at about 09:00 local time (07:00 GMT) on Thursday. The exact timing was dependant on the weather conditions and shipping traffic. | |
He was aiming to keep an average speed of 87mph (140km/h) while travelling 15-20m (50-65ft) above the water. | |
"We created a new way of flying. We don't use wings. You are like a bird, it is your body that is flying. It is a boyhood dream," he told reporters ahead of the flight. | "We created a new way of flying. We don't use wings. You are like a bird, it is your body that is flying. It is a boyhood dream," he told reporters ahead of the flight. |
But he warned that the wind could make the 22-mile (35km) crossing "more complex". | |
Mr Zapata received widespread attention following the annual Bastille Day parade in Paris earlier this month, when he took part in a military display on his futuristic flyboard. | Mr Zapata received widespread attention following the annual Bastille Day parade in Paris earlier this month, when he took part in a military display on his futuristic flyboard. |
The invention, which is about the size of a skateboard, is powered by five small jet engines and fuelled by kerosene which is kept in the rider's backpack. | The invention, which is about the size of a skateboard, is powered by five small jet engines and fuelled by kerosene which is kept in the rider's backpack. |