Volkswagen’s long-distance EV, and more in the week that was

This week Elon Musk unveiled his long-awaited plan to establish a self-sustaining city on Mars - and he's targeting a ticket price of about $100,000 per traveler. Meanwhile, Volkswagen showcased a breakthrough electric car that will cost less and tra...

AeroVelo Team Wins AHS Sikorsky Human Powered Helicopter Competition


The AHS Sikorsky Prize has a record of remaining out of reach for many who tried to win it by their ingenious inventions. For 33 long years it was off limits to the world’s inventors. But according...

AeroVelo’s human-powered helicopter bags $250,000 Sikorsky Prize

DNP humanpowered helicopter wins elusive aviation prize

We're sure AeroVelo team members think every sleepless night and pedal push are worth it now that they can add the prestigious $250,000 Sikorsky Prize to their pile of bragging rights. They've completely demolished all the requirements needed to win the human-powered helicopter competition during one of their recent attempts. Atlas, their flying contraption, stayed in the air for 64.11 seconds, flew at a max altitude of 3.3 meters (10.8 feet) and never meandered beyond the designated 10 x 10 meter (33 x 33 feet) area. The University of Toronto's creation was locked in head-to-head battle with the University of Maryland's Gamera chopper for quite some time, but it's finally bagged the prize that had remained unclaimed for 33 long years. That's a tremendous accomplishment for anyone, especially for a project with humble beginnings, and if Leonardo Da Vinci were still alive, he'd extend a big congratulazione.

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Via: Popular Mechanics

Source: AeroVelo