Credit: Guinness World Records View full size image
Franky Zapata set a new Guinness World Record for the farthest hoverboard
flight.
Credit: Guinness World
Records
View full size image
The "Flyboard Air"
developed by Zapata
Racing.
A French jet ski champion has set a new world record for the longest hoverboard flight, far
surpassing the previous record.
Franky Zapata flew a hoverboard 7,388 feet (2,252 meters) from a height of 164 feet (50 m),
according to Guinness World Records. The daredevil set the new record on the Flyboard Air, a
futuristic craft developed by his company, Zapata Racing.
Previous world record holder Catalin Alexandru Duru piloted a hoverboard prototype of his own
design that flew 905 feet, 2 inches (275.9 m). [Hyperloop, Jetpacks & More: 9 Futuristic
Transit Ideas]
The hoverboard is essentially a flying skateboard, similar to the
one that Marty McFly famously rode in the 1989 classic movie
"Back to the Future Part II." Though the board from that film
was only a piece of movie magic, a number of functional
prototypes have been introduced in recent years.
Zapata’s record-breaking flight, which flew more than eight
times the distance of Duru’s, was staged off the coast of
Sausset-les-Pins, in the south of France, on April 30. Followed
by a fleet of boats and jet skis, Zapata can be seen piloting his
Flyboard Air over the water in a video of the event that Zapata
Racing shared recently.
On site to confirm the record-setting distance, Guinness World
Records adjudicator Sofia Grenache said in the video that the
flight as “a phenomenal sight to see.”
Prior to the Guinness World Record attempt, Zapata Racing had
shared footage from a test flight of the Flyboard Air that went
viral. The company has developed a range of other devices,
including the original Flyboard, which connects to a watercraft turbine via a long hose. In
comparison, the Flyboard Air is powered by an "Independent Propulsion Unit" to fly hose-free
for up to 10 minutes, according to Zapata Racing. The company also claims that the
hoverboard can reach a height of 10,000 feet (3,048 m), with a maximum speed of 93 miles
per hour (150 km/h).
The Flyboard Air’s technology took four years to develop, reported The Verge . The board has
four 250-horsepower turbo engines, fueled by Jet A1 kerosene carried in a tank strapped to its
rider's back. There are also two engines for stabilization on each side of the board.
“It’s extremely hard to stabilize … it’s not only my balance,” Zapata told The Verge. “For
example, we use, like, the same kind of electronics like you use on a drone to stabilize. The
problem is to create the algorithms, the right algorithms, to combine the intelligence in the
board and in your brain.”
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