Giant Paper Airplane Soars Over Arizona Skies

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Building paper airplanes and tossing them around is great fun. However, what would be even cooler is building the world's largest one and taking it to the skies to see how long it could stay afloat. That, is exactly what a 12-year old and some engineers from Tucson's Pima Air and Space Museum did on Wednesday, March 21st.

Spearheaded by a team that included former NASA engineer Art Thompson and Guinness World Record holder for keeping a paper airplane aloft for the longest time, Ken Blackburn, the historic flight was the grand finale of the Giant Paper Airplane Fly-Off - A competition for which 6-14 year olds had to design and create airplanes using an 8.5 x 11 sheet of paper and see whose would fly the furthest.

It attracted over 200 airplane enthusiasts including 12-year old Tucson resident Arturo Valdenegro, whose engineering marvel went the longest distance. His prize not only included a medal and certificate, but also, a chance to help the experts build a giant version of his design which, was named after him.

Arturo's Desert Eagle, which took 2 months to 'fold' was 45 feet long, had a wingspan of 24 feet and thanks to the paper-based graphic board (Falconboard) it was crafted from, weighed an astounding 800lbs (363 kg). In fact, it was so heavy that the first launch had to be delayed because the airplane buckled under its own weight and had to be carried back to the hanger for some adjustments.

It emerged a few hours later, good as new, and was lifted up into the sky with its nose attached to a Sikorsky S58T helicopter. While the initial plan had been to launch it from 5,000 feet, the pilot encountered stronger than expected winds and decided to let the behemoth free, at 4,000 feet.

Arturo's Eagle lived up to its name, gliding at a speed of about 98 mph for six seconds, before heading down. Unfortunately, the plane crumbled under its own weight, and transformed back into a useless heap of paper, as it hit ground.

Luckily however, the historic flight, believed to be the first of its kind was caught on tape by a chaser plane. To read more about how the engineers created this nifty paper airplane and see additional pictures check out greatpaperairplane.org.

Resources: pcmag.com,greatpaperairplane.org,telegraph.co.uk

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358 Comments
  • superjoe
    superjoeover 12 years
    That was just so good :)
    • 22allyover 12 years
      It is so cool that people could make a paper air plane that big. They were comunicaters because tey had to talk about how they would build the paper air plane.
      • 20Chanover 12 years
        Wow!!! a 12-year old and some engineer's made that big of a paper airplane tnat's amazing.200 peple that's cool.2 moths to fold wow how did they do that.how did they ever make it 45-feet long.that's fantastic.wing spang of 24 feet.800 pounds.98 miles an hour.that's why I like this article.
        • 14Reganover 12 years
          I think that this is a cool artical. I think that changes some perspectives. Theres propably a lot of people who thought they couldn't do it. This was an amazing thing to do I couldn't imagine how difficult it was with all that paper and all that folding.
          • 13trevorover 12 years
            i think that this is so so cool and interesting because it took 2 mouths to foled and it is 45 feet long the wing span is 24 feet wide it also got up to 98 mph.
            • Jelloover 12 years
              i have to leave bbyeeee for ever
              • Coolguyover 12 years
                I'm the coolest 1 over here
                • Jelloover 12 years
                  cool
                  • 15bradover 12 years
                    I think this idea is very risk-taking because i didint think anyone could build a paper airplain because it would take alot of paper.
                    • Olivia16over 12 years
                      It is so cool that a twelve yera old was able to make that. I had no idea it was posible to make an airplane that size. I also didn't know paper could reach that big of a size. With that weight- 800 pounds- it is amazing that it was able to fly for 6 seconds. This article really changed my perspective on being knowledgable. to build something like this you need to know a lot about math.