Maybe my favorite video ever. Nothing defines America more than having a few beers and mowing the runway, before making your first ever solo flight successfully. Simply, awesome.
The best years to be alive in America, well the latter part of the best times. I was miserable as hell in Iraq when this was made. People like this is partly the reason I joined.
Some will call him stupid and some will say he's lucky, but no one can say he's gutless ! I've been a pilot for a long time and won't judge. I understand the desire to fly, even when it's not affordable. And, I've alway wanted the thrill and satisfaction of building my own aircraft and putting it in the air that first time. There can be no better feeling. That said, no safety lectures here, just a big congrats to you and a thank you for the smile I still have on my face. Safe skies !
I am a certified pilot and have been for many years, and guess what? I think you did a great job! Flying is fun but it's also about safety, not only for yourself but for others too. And as long as you keep that in mind... you have my respect and a high five for your first real solo. Happy flying!
Brilliant comment man. I actually thought alot of piolts would give him stick for doin this! I think I could do it too, flyin is in me.. But I cantafford to get lessons or k ow anyone here in Ireland to help me get into it sadly.. Keep flyin safely man! ✌️
ken dalton if you’re serious about learning to fly find a small airfield and help out by volunteering or maybe getting a job and meeting pilots. I’ve known several people who did just that and eventually they were taken in by pilots who helped them get into the air as pilots. Personally I can’t be a pilot because I can’t pass the physical due to a condition, but I love aviation and became a Cadet in the Civil Air Patrol (CAP), the U.S. Air Force Auxiliary as a youth. I later enlisted in the U.S. Army as a communicator and later an Artillery Forward Observer, where I flew in Army Helicopters and adjusted artillery fire from them. After my Army service I rejoined CAP as an adult and I’m a search and rescue navigator/observer and direct the pilot on where to go and what patterns to fly. I have several friends who started with me as CAP Cadets and hung out at our local airfield and would earn rides by cutting the grass, washing the planes, etc., and eventually started working there and earned scholarships for their licenses and some are now commercial pilots. Check it out, you might find such a situation. Good luck!🍀
@@wilfredosoto2722 hey thank you wifred.. Thats some really sound and precious advice there. Thank u kindly! I will definitely look into this so then and try this way of gettin into it. Id be totally happy even with a ride in a old bird.. Old moves like the battle of Britain got me hooked and magnificent men in their flyin machines got me hooked from a very early age haha. I just always felt it's something i feel iv a natural aptitude for an the older I get the less closer it feels to achieving.. But hopefully with your advice it may open some doors. Wow sounds like u had an amazing career all the same.. I'm from a family that relies on our coastal sea rescue services alot so I'm sure there's many many thankful people you and your crew have rescued Over the years.! 😉 Amazing.. Thank u very much once again for that awesome bit of advice Sir
This is that 'special' kind of stupid that makes the Human race better one step at a time. That 'Told'ya I could fly that shit' was an energy that echoed from countless generations past. Well done.
There is a British equivalent to this video with some kids in a Range Rover towing their clueless friend in an Ultralight into the air. It has an equivalent comment, too: “Rich young idiots with no regard for self preservation are a part of what made this country great” 😂
Do me a favor, if you ever are on a plane and they ask for anyone with flight experience, STAND UP! For someone with 0 hours of flight training to manage airspeed, and have a landing like that? Simply amazing. I've never flown an UL, I fly small aircraft (Cessna, Piper, etc.) and I couldn't imagine just figuring it all out the first time around. Simply amazing!
Yup...It should.....Any time I need to justify why you dont need all that BS training and license mumbo-jumbo...I come here....So many people w/ no balls nowadays...!!!!
@@offswitch1 good idea but why not spice it up a bit and fly upside down.... or maby turn the propeller inside out and fly backwards... thatl be cool...
Up on I-80 near Hazleton, Pennsylvania, an old Chevrolet Suburban ('50s vintage?, I don't know) sat in the middle of a field just off the Interstate. It was visible for nine or ten months of the year until the grass grew tall. I last saw the Suburban this past October when the property owner had mowed the grass. I believe it was a pasture for grazing cows 🐄 years ago because of a comment my father made when I was a youngster. My father is no longer here but I'd love to ask him about that location just now.
Mad props to ya bud. Flying is pretty easy. The landing is what they never warn about. I did this same thing. No training, watched a ton of videos here, bought a quicksilver and took off in front yard. Everyone thought I was going to die. 22 flights, accidental flying under powerlines, and one flopped landing. I'm here to congratulate you. Here's to doing what you know you can do!!
I took ultralight flight training years ago. Taking off and flying around is easy. I had no problem with that. It was those damn landings I had a problem with. Finally nailed one and the rest were easy. Main thing to remember is Don't go up on windy days. Those little engines don't put out enough power to allow for safe moves and landing in strong gusty winds. Loved the video.
I did the same thing in a Hummer. Bought the plane, bought a book, practice taxing, then unplanned take off with an uneventful landing. I was hooked, Flew ultralights for 20 years.
And you never got any pilot training throughout ? Plus, that accidental flight was taking you to an airfield for a turnaround, all while you kept your wings parallel throughout, with absolutely no PIO ?? Sure ....
I couldn’t stop watching. I’ve wanted to do this all my life and this hug just hoping a plane and flys it perfectly. You had the weather on your side and brass balls that weren’t too heavy for flight. Kudos to you.
I'm a pilot and i will admit im impressed... i think back to my first flight and i dont care who you are, once you take off alone the first time, the reality that you will have to land hits you hard. this guy held it together and got it done. I wouldnt recommend it though. A few flight lessons would be a great investment. The moment something abnormal occurs... your ability to figure it out on the fly, wont be enough.
As an ultralight pilot myself (American Aerolights Eagle) back in the day, I'd have to say you had a combination of some mechanical aptitude and a truckload of luck. You nearly ground looped on landing (hard turn causing opposite wing to dip or strike to the ground), but recovered, and it looks like you had good weather. Turbulence is another beast altogether, as is too slow of speed, which can cause a stall and then you are nosing into the ground if you altitude is too low. But, it looks like you got the hang of it. Rock on!
I had a friend that had no training, one day he hit a down draft pulled back on the stick and stalled, spun it into the ground broke his back and both ankles. Training is a good thing.
Larry Davis I think he mentions his friend above, training might’ve been good! Obviously his balls made it out ok however a broken back.......not good !
pull the motor off the Zturn, put it on the plane... then back on the mower... Roadkill Style. Doggie was wondering... You gonna be back @ chow time?? or do I need to find a new forever family. LOL
Yep, after WWI there were hundreds of Jenny's left over, you could get them dirt cheap, farm kids would get them and teach themselves to fly, and barn storming was born.
Nice video.... I had a friend back in the 80's and he did the same thing. He acquired an ultra light and took it up to about 5 thousand feet, then it suddenly broke apart and crashed to the ground and he died in the most horrific way. But on a good note, he was the talk of the town.
LOL love the final quote "told ya I could fly that shit" this is amazing guys. I love the friends cracking up in the background the whole time as this guy risks his life doing this death defying flight with zero training lol
+Chainsaw look up richard pearce he's a kiwi guy who FLEW (about 1km or so usually) in 1901 in nz making his plane with 3 axis controls (with aerolons not shitty wing warping) and a trike landing gear (used now in aircraft today) out of no.8 wire and bamboo
+Erin martin Try looking it up yourself.. "It is claimed Pearse flew and landed a powered heavier-than-air machine on 31 March 1903, some nine months before the Wright brothers flew their aircraft.[1] The documentary evidence to support such a claim remains open to interpretation, and Pearse did not develop his aircraft to the same degree as the Wright brothers, who achieved sustained controlled flight.[2] Pearse himself never made such claims, and in an interview he gave to the Timaru Post in 1909 only claimed he did not "attempt anything practical...until 1904".[3]"
Amazing! Not least the fact that over a span of 8 years, no-one have said "No way that was his first flight !!". After watching, I checked the video title again, and noticed it says "First ultralight flight". So the guy was at least a competent GA flyer, who simply awarded himself a new rating on that ultralight. This underlined by the only wobbly bit of the flight was when he stuck it and the taildragger-like looping tendency surprised him. But he kept it straight. Great video!
I have wanted to do the same thing for years!! I used to watch the challenger 2 ultra light videos every day. I eventually talked myself out of buying and flying an ultralight. Your video is thrilling and very cool!! Great job man! 😊
+Indiana Joe What hospital bills? That's kinda the point. Let me ask you... how many people have not flown... BECAUSE of lessons, and their costs? Life is a daring adventure, or it is nothing at all.
Indiana Joe Yeah... but he *landed*. No hospital bills. Can the Wright Brothers make the same claim? How come the Wright Brothers are heroes, never criticized for doing something dangerous even though they had numerous crashes? How come this guy gets criticized, NEVER crashing? Look, he had a plan, executed it, and it went as planned. This means he knows a LOT more about this subject than you do, right?
Ryder Spearmann I fly a little plane too. I have flown mine hundreds of times, even with an engine out, no problem. So, no, not really. He looked iffy as hell to me. Just a matter of time.
Of course it looked iffy. ** How was your first landing? ** I'll bet you a thousand bucks that he didn't expect a perfect landing. Literally... I well make this wager with you. But he expected that his landing, while not perfect, would be adequate. And it was. This means that he had a plan, executed it, and it went as planned. Now that he's made hundreds of landings (we might suppose)... and can do a perfect landing at will. He's at a point where he's gaining experience. Nobody is saying that people don't benefit from formal training. But not everything, nor everyone... need formal training. Ever notice how all the billionaires never finished college?
That was HILARIOUS!! Way to go!! I've been flying (with a license) for 35 years and this always scares me to watch these kinds of events but I have to give you credit where credit is due---you did a great job. I've always wondered what it would be like to be called to the front of a 767 or 737 for them to say (ala Airplane) we need you to land this thing. I think I could do it given the proper procedures, flap and speed settings. You did a heck of a lot better than most 1st time ultralight self-taught flyers!
when i was a kid in the fifties a man down the street built a baby lakes in his garage. when it was finished he got it down to our local airport and did taxi testing. he had never flown a plane before. one day he took off and landed and it wasn't rare to see him flying around in good weather for years to come.
I’ve been flying for many years. Yup i was very concerned for this fella but good job man, you flew it haha. Weather was definitely on your side with that plane
Absolutely briliant. Can't tell you why exactly , may have your choice of music, the enoughs , enough to the grass cutting and fk it I'm off ! attitude but every single hair on my body was standin' up on end. Top shelf !
I feel kind of ambivalent about this video. I am an ultralight paramotor pilot, a helicopter pilot, and a fixed wing pilot, so I certainly understand the dream to chase flight, and I commend you for achieving your dream. However, we no longer live in a world where aviation needs to be as dangerous and pioneering as it once was (in the early 1900s). A few flight and ground lessons from your local airport could have taught you the fundamentals of flight that could have helped you understand the dangerous phenomenon that a flight sim might not accurately convey. Have fun with that thing, but remember: just because you can doesn't mean you should. When everything's perfect, you can fly for your entire life and never have a problem. But, when you, the aircraft, the environment, and/or the operation aren't familiar, you may not have the tools necessary to get yourself out of the fix you're in.Good luck!
I was impressed with the first take off. BUT--the second one not so much. A turn immediately after take off is bad news if you have a decrease in power or engine failure.
I’ve never even been trained as a pilot on a real plane and my only experience of really piloting has been from playing Flight Sim X, but even my novice ass still really cringed in horror while watching him dip his wing down and almost cartwheel that plane lol
I'm glad I've quit drinking long before I watched this video. I love it, and the music, is spot on. Really cool. God bless ya'll, praying ya'll are still ok.
Man that brings back memories! I did virtually the same thing in 1992 (no flight sim in those days). I flew with a guy for an hour and a half, but he wouldn't let me land or take off (the challenging part). A few weeks later I took off by myself, no spectators, in a wet hayfield with a hill coming up pretty quick. Full throttle, front wheel was throwing water in my face that I could hardly see. I popped off the ground and flew around for about an hour before attempting to land at a private airstrip with a half mile runway. I was all over the place on my first attempt (wind was picking up). On my 4th or 5th attempt I set it down. Things improved quickly from there. I saved some money by not getting flight lessons, but in retrospect it was a whole lot of stupid and naivety. A guy can get killed very easily in a situation like that. To anyone watching this video and thinking "I can do that".....don't do it. Don't risk your life just because there is a decent chance you would survive flying without instruction.
If you don't get training and are lucky to survive and learn to fly, I bet you will also "save" on maintence either by skipping it altogether or doing it yourself. Sooner rather than later you will loose the engine and will inevitably crash and probably die.
I don't know how wise it was to take to the air without at least some instruction, but I have learned to fly an ultralight at Kitty Hawk in San Antonio with only 4 hours ground instruction and have flown several single engine aircraft for years now. Flight simulation teaches you quite a bit and is good for brushing up on your skills. Good job landing that craft just wouldn't recommend it LOL!
Well done! I was flying UL in '06 also, and had a friend with zero UL hours take to the air in a Weed hopper. Like you, he did alright. A memorable event ! Thx for stirring the memory.👍
Damn good flying. That thing jumps in the air. The landings will get better with time. Then again, any landing you walk away from is good. Any landing you can walk away from and reuse the plane is fantastic.
Good on you Yank and for any one with a negative view remember Orville and Wilber didn`t have pilot licences.And to nutsackmania I agree.Andy Jacobs Nottingham ENGLAND
Wright Brothers took it one step at a time, learning from each attempt. Many other wannabee pilots and designers were not so methodical and fortunate and paid with their lives. Even one of the Wrights (Orville I think) crashed a plane while demonstrating it for the US Army. The passenger was killed and Orville was seriously injured.
I'm no pilot, but I thought in the last part of the video when he took off again, he started accelerating on the corner before the straight - he's had training, for sure!
Rock on! I won't say that it's always a good idea, but in most cases it's totally possible to acquire the knowledge you need to start something like this. once you're in, experience will quickly teach you a lot.. I'm a career glassblower and started by just playing with a propane torch and random glass scraps &vessels.. 16 years later I'm still supporting myself with it and do all the training and prototype work in my shop I also started riding motorcycles by just buying one.. id ridden scooters & mopeds my whole life and every car I'd owned prior was manual.. so far so good. I also learned how to drive stick by just buying one. A little guidance can be valuable but generally I think that if you have the drive, you'll be able to figure it out without having your hand held. Failure Is a great teacher too.. I always prefer to just give something a shot and fail rather than never even try because I was told it won't work.
Dude, I got a tear in my eye when you went into the air-flying. That was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. Your flight made me wonder about who gave the Wright Brothers flight lessons or certified them to fly.
Nice Job, glad it all worked out for you, when I was younger I know if I had had the resources I would have done it too!But the title it a little misleading, "NO TRAINING", I think you meant no Formal Training. as you said, "Played the flight sim so much". I've seen guys who wanted to fly RC helicopters but know better without training. They bought a sim, played it for hours on end, days, doing stunts and normal flying. Then went out and purchased an RC Helicopter and flew great. Flight sims can't replace formal training but they can give you enough experience that IF all goes right you can do what you set out to do. I agree with you when you implied, "Take all the necessary Precautions". Yep the world needs folks to take risks, to step out on faith and risk it all, granted if they are willing to pay the price of failure, and take the necessary precautions for sure. I'm with the NANNY STATE. "LIVE FREE!" Just make sure if you fail no ones home, property or life is in danger. Well thanks for the post and good luck in the future Jason, hats off to ya! Best Wishes n Blessings Keith
Honestly i had to learn the same way years back in my Quicksilver MX ultralight, was shear terror rolling down the grass path as i accelerated, but once i was above the trees i instantly felt the world fade away and was one from then on with the sky!! Let me state it is very, very, very stupid to fly any aircraft without prior training of some sort, however...there are many of us who realize that sometimes ya got to just take the control stick and open the throttle in life and see where ya go. To those like this gent and like myself, i salute us all!!!
Man sooo awesome!!! Not quite sure how incredibly dangerous that was, but fuck it if you have the basic idea of lift and how your rudder works then your good. A basic 4 page flight pamphlet would be the way to go, just to understand the basic idea of lift and rudder usage and your golden. Fuckin amazing though, i bet you never felt freedom like that before!!! Im slightly envious because ultralight aircraft are the closest thing to just flying by yourself almost like a bird. Plus i dont have the land to build a runway. Happy flyin bud!!!
I got my ultralight license after few weeks of theory and practice training. Now I’m certified ultralight pilot and love to fly with my trike. The only flights prior training were as a passenger. I could only wish this guy all the best…!
That was crazy and could have gone very wrong. You lived to tell about it and now you have an awesome story to tell. Nothing ventured , nothing gained. I am happy for you although I don't know if it was balls or stupidity.
Having flown for 10 years myself & knowing what I know now, I wouldn't risk flying without training. There are so many things that could kill you, things you can't possibly know about without studying meteorology & the physics of how an aircraft actually flies. There are old pilots & there are bold pilots, but there are no old + bold pilots ;). Cheers, Shaun
Great Job! Glad you had that opportunity to fly and show people you can do it. True Story I basically did the same thing. My wife has the video somewhere but my little story is I also played the hell out of flight simulators and played around with RC Planes years later met a guy at Wal-Mart and saw his wings pin, questioned him about it and acted like I knew everything about planes. Well he told me he owns a couple of planes and would let me fly one that following Saturday if i came to the local airport. Well I showed up and there he was with his Piper Cub. He gave me a quick 101 about his plane and off I went. I flew the hell out of that shit lol. I was pretty scared but I didn't show it. When i landed that plane I felt like I really accomplished something. He let me fly one of his other airplanes a couple of times the deal was I had to pay for the fuel. I never told him that I have never actually flown a plane before that first time. He has since retired and sold most of his air craft and doesnt fly much anymore. I miss being in the air
This may be the greatest example of Freedom ever displayed. Build an aircraft. Create a runway for takeoff and landing. Then, without the benefit of “training”, fly based on your own nerve and can-do attitude. Dangerous, yes. Thrilling beyond belief, absolutely. It’s great to see people taking a chance and learning what they are capable of accomplishing.
Wow. Ultra lights are no joke. I did research on ultra lights. And you must respect that there not general Aviation aircraft. So respect that. If you have pilot training it will help to spare you from accidents. So that should be your focus. Ultra lights are fun to fly. But also remember there very light aircraft and must be flown within there limits. Good luck have fun flying.
Honestly this says more about the forgiving nature of the Quicksilver ultralight than it does about anything else. Flying isn't difficult... but landing without bending or breaking something is the hard part.
To me the man is a hero, never flown before , despite a fondness for low altitude, power-lines, low passes over main roads he took it up and brought it down safely,( well brought it down). Greetings from Oz. Davox.
The Wright Bros were very methodical studious engineers, they read all they could find about other's attempts at gliding and airfoil designs. They developed their piloting abilities and concepts of wing warping to achieve the ability to turn an aircraft through building and flying a series of unpowered gliders, developed the propeller and a light-weight engine that drove two propellers via chain drive. Their story is worth reading, To make light of their achievements as two "wild and crazy guys" is not realistic at all.
Man please, they had no flight lessons and no one to train them. If anything, they learned what not to do from the failures of others. But no one taught them how to fly a plane.
Smart or stupid, make no mistake, this man will never have felt more alive is his whole life and for that I am envious. Congrats and well done!
The smart or stupid question is easily answered.
And if you have to cheat death to feel alive, you're broken.
amen!!!!!!!
Well, all the comments make good points. But, I guarantee you he shit his pants. Hell, I almost shit mine watching.
Those are exactly my thoughts! What a feeling that must have been!
@@brokenrecord3523No. We all aren't wired the same. Doesn't mean someone is broken 🤡
This video had a very "hold my beer and Marlboros, don't smoke 'em all while I'm gone" vibe to it.
BYRD DOG
2 seconds into watching this I paused it to see if someone did a “hold my beer” comment. You didn’t disappoint. 😉
Fu k that when I'm at risk of dying i always bring my cigs lol
Ya
pineyLt lol
We edited out most of the beers we drank whole assembling it
Maybe my favorite video ever. Nothing defines America more than having a few beers and mowing the runway, before making your first ever solo flight successfully. Simply, awesome.
Agree. We did this same exact thing in the 70’s and at one point there were about 10 of us on any given Sunday
Fuckin' A, Murica!
Exactly!
The best years to be alive in America, well the latter part of the best times. I was miserable as hell in Iraq when this was made. People like this is partly the reason I joined.
You know you are in for a treat when you get to see the mowing of the runway prior to takeoff.
Some will call him stupid and some will say he's lucky, but no one can say he's gutless ! I've been a pilot for a long time and won't judge. I understand the desire to fly, even when it's not affordable. And, I've alway wanted the thrill and satisfaction of building my own aircraft and putting it in the air that first time. There can be no better feeling. That said, no safety lectures here, just a big congrats to you and a thank you for the smile I still have on my face. Safe skies !
I am a certified pilot and have been for many years, and guess what? I think you did a great job! Flying is fun but it's also about safety, not only for yourself but for others too. And as long as you keep that in mind... you have my respect and a high five for your first real solo. Happy flying!
Very well said sir
Brilliant comment man. I actually thought alot of piolts would give him stick for doin this! I think I could do it too, flyin is in me.. But I cantafford to get lessons or k ow anyone here in Ireland to help me get into it sadly.. Keep flyin safely man! ✌️
I have thought of trying something like that myself .
ken dalton if you’re serious about learning to fly find a small airfield and help out by volunteering or maybe getting a job and meeting pilots. I’ve known several people who did just that and eventually they were taken in by pilots who helped them get into the air as pilots. Personally I can’t be a pilot because I can’t pass the physical due to a condition, but I love aviation and became a Cadet in the Civil Air Patrol (CAP), the U.S. Air Force Auxiliary as a youth. I later enlisted in the U.S. Army as a communicator and later an Artillery Forward Observer, where I flew in Army Helicopters and adjusted artillery fire from them. After my Army service I rejoined CAP as an adult and I’m a search and rescue navigator/observer and direct the pilot on where to go and what patterns to fly. I have several friends who started with me as CAP Cadets and hung out at our local airfield and would earn rides by cutting the grass, washing the planes, etc., and eventually started working there and earned scholarships for their licenses and some are now commercial pilots. Check it out, you might find such a situation. Good luck!🍀
@@wilfredosoto2722 hey thank you wifred.. Thats some really sound and precious advice there. Thank u kindly! I will definitely look into this so then and try this way of gettin into it. Id be totally happy even with a ride in a old bird.. Old moves like the battle of Britain got me hooked and magnificent men in their flyin machines got me hooked from a very early age haha. I just always felt it's something i feel iv a natural aptitude for an the older I get the less closer it feels to achieving.. But hopefully with your advice it may open some doors. Wow sounds like u had an amazing career all the same.. I'm from a family that relies on our coastal sea rescue services alot so I'm sure there's many many thankful people you and your crew have rescued Over the years.! 😉 Amazing.. Thank u very much once again for that awesome bit of advice Sir
This is that 'special' kind of stupid that makes the Human race better one step at a time.
That 'Told'ya I could fly that shit' was an energy that echoed from countless generations past. Well done.
Very well said.
agree. 120 years ago, this is how we got off the ground.
There is a British equivalent to this video with some kids in a Range Rover towing their clueless friend in an Ultralight into the air. It has an equivalent comment, too: “Rich young idiots with no regard for self preservation are a part of what made this country great” 😂
Exactly.
Nothing stupid there. I'll bet the guy had at least a PPL in his pocket.
Do me a favor, if you ever are on a plane and they ask for anyone with flight experience, STAND UP! For someone with 0 hours of flight training to manage airspeed, and have a landing like that? Simply amazing. I've never flown an UL, I fly small aircraft (Cessna, Piper, etc.) and I couldn't imagine just figuring it all out the first time around.
Simply amazing!
this video is a masterpiece that deserves to be in the UA-cam hall of fame
Yup...It should.....Any time I need to justify why you dont need all that BS training and license mumbo-jumbo...I come here....So many people w/ no balls nowadays...!!!!
Sure does... over people who say "you can't"....
Let’s make a new video. Let me
Fly it with no training!!!
@@offswitch1 good idea but why not spice it up a bit and fly upside down.... or maby turn the propeller inside out and fly backwards... thatl be cool...
Terina Pukeroa if they could go inverted. Their would be way more pilots.
I dunno but my mullet is moist after watching this.
Which mullet?
😂😂😂😂
Nice one
Haaaaaa
Git it out your sister's mouth bub
Well on the bright side they mowed the grass and found three cars.
Lol
LMFAO
I thought the bright side was the fact that he flew....with no training.....
@@foobarmaximus3506 Lots of time in the simulator ;)
Up on I-80 near Hazleton, Pennsylvania, an old Chevrolet Suburban ('50s vintage?, I don't know) sat in the middle of a field just off the Interstate. It was visible for nine or ten months of the year until the grass grew tall. I last saw the Suburban this past October when the property owner had mowed the grass. I believe it was a pasture for grazing cows 🐄 years ago because of a comment my father made when I was a youngster. My father is no longer here but I'd love to ask him about that location just now.
THE FIRST COMMANDMENT OF FLIGHT: "LOOSETH NOT THINE AIR-SPEED LEST THE GROUND RISE UP AND SMITE THEE!"
Mad props to ya bud. Flying is pretty easy. The landing is what they never warn about. I did this same thing. No training, watched a ton of videos here, bought a quicksilver and took off in front yard. Everyone thought I was going to die. 22 flights, accidental flying under powerlines, and one flopped landing. I'm here to congratulate you. Here's to doing what you know you can do!!
Lol, looked like the dog was worried more than anyone.
😂😂😂
🤣🤪
I took ultralight flight training years ago. Taking off and flying around is easy. I had no problem with that. It was those damn landings I had a problem with. Finally nailed one and the rest were easy. Main thing to remember is Don't go up on windy days. Those little engines don't put out enough power to allow for safe moves and landing in strong gusty winds. Loved the video.
"Watch this. Hold my beer."
+John Dough Too funny...lol
cool
John Dough lol
Onespot
That was freaking awesome. The adventurous American spirit lives on. Rock on!!!!!
Trailer Park Air Force
lol
hahahahahahaha
.wz ]
Hahah, couldn't have said it better myself:-)
Draufgaenger 😂😂😂😂😂
I did the same thing in a Hummer. Bought the plane, bought a book, practice taxing, then unplanned take off with an uneventful landing. I was hooked, Flew ultralights for 20 years.
And you never got any pilot training throughout ? Plus, that accidental flight was taking you to an airfield for a turnaround, all while you kept your wings parallel throughout, with absolutely no PIO ??
Sure ....
I couldn’t stop watching. I’ve wanted to do this all my life and this hug just hoping a plane and flys it perfectly. You had the weather on your side and brass balls that weren’t too heavy for flight. Kudos to you.
I'm a pilot and i will admit im impressed... i think back to my first flight and i dont care who you are, once you take off alone the first time, the reality that you will have to land hits you hard. this guy held it together and got it done. I wouldnt recommend it though. A few flight lessons would be a great investment. The moment something abnormal occurs... your ability to figure it out on the fly, wont be enough.
Very true.
Loved the start of this "oh we need a runway. Lets get the push mowers out".
As an ultralight pilot myself (American Aerolights Eagle) back in the day, I'd have to say you had a combination of some mechanical aptitude and a truckload of luck. You nearly ground looped on landing (hard turn causing opposite wing to dip or strike to the ground), but recovered, and it looks like you had good weather. Turbulence is another beast altogether, as is too slow of speed, which can cause a stall and then you are nosing into the ground if you altitude is too low. But, it looks like you got the hang of it. Rock on!
This woman knows her shit. She ALWAYS keeps that speed up especially upon landing and close to the ground.
Hey Jason, that was flippin awesome !.....a proverb for ya " it's better to die flying than to have never flown at all"....Peace Brother.
And another, Confucius say "man who go to sleep with itching butthole, wake up with stinky finger."
@@roberthouston3824 Hey Robert, that's some deep shit brother 😉
I had a friend that had no training, one day he hit a down draft pulled back on the stick and stalled, spun it into the ground broke his back and both ankles. Training is a good thing.
kirkm63 Who needs training when you got balls of steel
Larry Davis I think he mentions his friend above, training might’ve been good! Obviously his balls made it out ok however a broken back.......not good !
When you have no feeling from the waist down, your balls become “unemployed”.
@@larrydavis5246 There are old men and there are bold men, just no old bold men.
What is the correct thing to do?
No money for a good zero turn mower... spent it all on a plane... I like it
Catman Outdoors You can actually get an ultralight for cheaper than a zero turn mower, it's crazy
pull the motor off the Zturn, put it on the plane... then back on the mower... Roadkill Style. Doggie was wondering... You gonna be back @ chow time?? or do I need to find a new forever family. LOL
Shut up you brainless slob,
Sometimes the lady has to wait for that new washer and dryer.
Catman Outdoors ABSOLUTELY
Respect.
The WW1 approach to flight school.
WITHOUT the insane torque effect of a spinning 200 lb rotary motor!
Yep, after WWI there were hundreds of Jenny's left over, you could get them dirt cheap, farm kids would get them and teach themselves to fly, and barn storming was born.
@@bigredc222 barn storming??? please explain as im unfamiliar with that expression.
Stunt flying, flying circuses, wing walking and stuff like that, just look it up.
@@bigredc222 My maternal grandfather (an enthusiastic civilian pilot) cut his teeth on a Jenny, and kept a prop from one as a memento.
It's ok, the Wright brothers didn't have any flight training either.
The Wright Brothers also got them selves killed.
Either way, they proved that it's possible to learn new things through observation and careful experimentation.
Careful is not the word I would choose.
Last note; if I performed even as a private pilot in such a manner I would have lost my certificate upon an NTSB investigation.
Coughtry
dieing doing what you dream of by your own accord is well worth dieing for..
Everyone say's "hold my beer, hold my beer." That's silly. Ya take it with ya!
Give me the 2nd coozie
@@budsforyou5908 cup holder.
@@foobarmaximus3506 Only if you can't coordinate your turns.
Lol
YEAH !!
Nice video.... I had a friend back in the 80's and he did the same thing. He acquired an ultra light and took it up to about 5 thousand feet, then it suddenly broke apart and crashed to the ground and he died in the most horrific way. But on a good note, he was the talk of the town.
He would have been proud...for a few minutes, he ruled the earth..))
To everyone who had a friend. In the 80’s. Props.
What man can achieve when he's got the balls to go for it. Salute.
LOL love the final quote "told ya I could fly that shit" this is amazing guys. I love the friends cracking up in the background the whole time as this guy risks his life doing this death defying flight with zero training lol
"I told ya i could fly that shit"
-Write brothers, year of our lord 1903
+Chainsaw look up richard pearce he's a kiwi guy who FLEW (about 1km or so usually) in 1901 in nz making his plane with 3 axis controls (with aerolons not shitty wing warping) and a trike landing gear (used now in aircraft today) out of no.8 wire and bamboo
That's some funny stuff right there. lol. I can see one of them saying that.
+Erin martin Try looking it up yourself.. "It is claimed Pearse flew and landed a powered heavier-than-air machine on 31 March 1903, some nine months before the Wright brothers flew their aircraft.[1] The documentary evidence to support such a claim remains open to interpretation, and Pearse did not develop his aircraft to the same degree as the Wright brothers, who achieved sustained controlled flight.[2] Pearse himself never made such claims, and in an interview he gave to the Timaru Post in 1909 only claimed he did not "attempt anything practical...until 1904".[3]"
+Chainsaw lol
+Admiral Nimitz Out doubt that!
Amazing! Not least the fact that over a span of 8 years, no-one have said "No way that was his first flight !!".
After watching, I checked the video title again, and noticed it says "First ultralight flight". So the guy was at least a competent GA flyer, who simply awarded himself a new rating on that ultralight. This underlined by the only wobbly bit of the flight was when he stuck it and the taildragger-like looping tendency surprised him. But he kept it straight.
Great video!
I have wanted to do the same thing for years!! I used to watch the challenger 2 ultra light videos every day. I eventually talked myself out of buying and flying an ultralight. Your video is thrilling and very cool!! Great job man! 😊
not freaking bad at all for a first time. and you even nailed the landing pretty damned nicely too. I am impressed.
'Kick the dog out of the way, I'm taking off!' Dude, lessons are cheap compared to hospital bills. But at least the grass finally got mowed.
+Indiana Joe What hospital bills? That's kinda the point.
Let me ask you... how many people have not flown... BECAUSE of lessons, and their costs?
Life is a daring adventure, or it is nothing at all.
Flying without any training is begging for hospital bills, or worse.
Indiana Joe Yeah... but he *landed*. No hospital bills.
Can the Wright Brothers make the same claim?
How come the Wright Brothers are heroes, never criticized for doing something dangerous even though they had numerous crashes?
How come this guy gets criticized, NEVER crashing?
Look, he had a plan, executed it, and it went as planned. This means he knows a LOT more about this subject than you do, right?
Ryder Spearmann
I fly a little plane too. I have flown mine hundreds of times, even with an engine out, no problem. So, no, not really. He looked iffy as hell to me. Just a matter of time.
Of course it looked iffy. ** How was your first landing? **
I'll bet you a thousand bucks that he didn't expect a perfect landing. Literally... I well make this wager with you.
But he expected that his landing, while not perfect, would be adequate.
And it was.
This means that he had a plan, executed it, and it went as planned.
Now that he's made hundreds of landings (we might suppose)... and can do a perfect landing at will.
He's at a point where he's gaining experience.
Nobody is saying that people don't benefit from formal training.
But not everything, nor everyone... need formal training.
Ever notice how all the billionaires never finished college?
These guys are my kind of people well done 👏 👏👏👏👏
Following in the Wright Brothers footsteps and did much better actually 👌 great job 😃
My favorite video on this kind. Great guys.
That was HILARIOUS!! Way to go!! I've been flying (with a license) for 35 years and this always scares me to watch these kinds of events but I have to give you credit where credit is due---you did a great job. I've always wondered what it would be like to be called to the front of a 767 or 737 for them to say (ala Airplane) we need you to land this thing. I think I could do it given the proper procedures, flap and speed settings. You did a heck of a lot better than most 1st time ultralight self-taught flyers!
when i was a kid in the fifties a man down the street built a baby lakes in his garage. when it was finished he got it down to our local airport and did taxi testing. he had never flown a plane before. one day he took off and landed and it wasn't rare to see him flying around in good weather for years to come.
I’ve been flying for many years. Yup i was very concerned for this fella but good job man, you flew it haha. Weather was definitely on your side with that plane
UA-cam decided that 11 years was long enough for me to wait and see this.
Holy shit😂
Absolutely briliant. Can't tell you why exactly , may have your choice of music, the enoughs , enough to the grass cutting and fk it I'm off ! attitude but every single hair on my body was standin' up on end. Top shelf !
I wonder what America would look like if there were no men willing to do things like this.
I feel kind of ambivalent about this video. I am an ultralight paramotor pilot, a helicopter pilot, and a fixed wing pilot, so I certainly understand the dream to chase flight, and I commend you for achieving your dream. However, we no longer live in a world where aviation needs to be as dangerous and pioneering as it once was (in the early 1900s). A few flight and ground lessons from your local airport could have taught you the fundamentals of flight that could have helped you understand the dangerous phenomenon that a flight sim might not accurately convey.
Have fun with that thing, but remember: just because you can doesn't mean you should. When everything's perfect, you can fly for your entire life and never have a problem. But, when you, the aircraft, the environment, and/or the operation aren't familiar, you may not have the tools necessary to get yourself out of the fix you're in.Good luck!
Tut Tut, old chap, you are to be commended for your commendation of this idiot.
“The Bud UltraLight Brothers”
Pioneers of the future NASAcar space voyage
The worlds most famous words--“Hey y’all, watch this!!”
This took Wright brothers balls!!! I applaud you my man!!!! Brave SOB right there!!
Awesome video you have some big balls. Keep up the good work.
The fucking music choice makes this a masterpiece
While it is said “Two wrongs don’t make a right”, it can also be said Two Wrights made an airplane! 🤪
Lol this comment should be on weekly dose of aviation
I was impressed with the first take off. BUT--the second one not so much. A turn immediately after take off is bad news if you have a decrease in power or engine failure.
youre right. everyone learns it in flightschool.......... wait lol
I’ve never even been trained as a pilot on a real plane and my only experience of really piloting has been from playing Flight Sim X, but even my novice ass still really cringed in horror while watching him dip his wing down and almost cartwheel that plane lol
I'm glad I've quit drinking long before I watched this video. I love it, and the music, is spot on. Really cool. God bless ya'll, praying ya'll are still ok.
Way to go. Congratulations on both your first flight, and surviving to tell the tale.
I'll hold your beer. Youre a frickin hero in my books.
Man that brings back memories! I did virtually the same thing in 1992 (no flight sim in those days). I flew with a guy for an hour and a half, but he wouldn't let me land or take off (the challenging part). A few weeks later I took off by myself, no spectators, in a wet hayfield with a hill coming up pretty quick. Full throttle, front wheel was throwing water in my face that I could hardly see. I popped off the ground and flew around for about an hour before attempting to land at a private airstrip with a half mile runway. I was all over the place on my first attempt (wind was picking up). On my 4th or 5th attempt I set it down. Things improved quickly from there. I saved some money by not getting flight lessons, but in retrospect it was a whole lot of stupid and naivety. A guy can get killed very easily in a situation like that. To anyone watching this video and thinking "I can do that".....don't do it. Don't risk your life just because there is a decent chance you would survive flying without instruction.
If you don't get training and are lucky to survive and learn to fly, I bet you will also "save" on maintence either by skipping it altogether or doing it yourself. Sooner rather than later you will loose the engine and will inevitably crash and probably die.
I don't know how wise it was to take to the air without at least some instruction, but I have learned to fly an ultralight at Kitty Hawk in San Antonio with only 4 hours ground instruction and have flown several single engine aircraft for years now. Flight simulation teaches you quite a bit and is good for brushing up on your skills. Good job landing that craft just wouldn't recommend it LOL!
Well done! I was flying UL in '06 also, and had a friend with zero UL hours take to the air in a Weed hopper. Like you, he did alright.
A memorable event ! Thx for stirring the memory.👍
Damn good flying. That thing jumps in the air. The landings will get better with time. Then again, any landing you walk away from is good. Any landing you can walk away from and reuse the plane is fantastic.
Good on you Yank and for any one with a negative view remember Orville and Wilber didn`t have pilot licences.And to nutsackmania I agree.Andy Jacobs Nottingham ENGLAND
i imagine you literally screaming the name of your country at the end there ENGLAND!!!!@@!#
Wright Brothers took it one step at a time, learning from each attempt. Many other wannabee pilots and designers were not so methodical and fortunate and paid with their lives. Even one of the Wrights (Orville I think) crashed a plane while demonstrating it for the US Army. The passenger was killed and Orville was seriously injured.
rod1148 true story..
Atleast he was able to get off the ground unlike a lot of the people from Africa riding their own homemade aircraft...
This had to be preceded by, "Here, dude, hold my beer!"
Can't really tell for sure from the video, but it looked like beers were present while they were clearing the runway!
What an adventure. You'll never beat that, Bud.
You absolutely deserve the 1.5 million views. This was awesome to watch!
Sully slow clapping from the ground. The Wright Brothers smiling from heaven. The FAA calling for the feds.
Feds take a really dim view of any alcohol consumed by a pilot of anything within 8 hours of flying! I'm sure that includes part 103.
hahahaha kinda scary without any training tho.. as a licensed pilot I wouldn't agree but as a man I salute you👍
I have talked to people who say this is bullshit, that they know the pilot who has a good bit of training. I suspect that's far closer to the truth.
I'm no pilot, but I thought in the last part of the video when he took off again, he started accelerating on the corner before the straight - he's had training, for sure!
Look when he lands, to the right there are airplanes
@@nomad-81-25 I went back and looked i see what looks like a row of lights along the road going all the way back to where he started landing.
@@danielcarpenPause at 2:46 there are two white planes, you can see their tails.
All these safety sally`s getting their panties in a bunch hahaha!!! good on you dude.
Rock on! I won't say that it's always a good idea, but in most cases it's totally possible to acquire the knowledge you need to start something like this. once you're in, experience will quickly teach you a lot..
I'm a career glassblower and started by just playing with a propane torch and random glass scraps &vessels.. 16 years later I'm still supporting myself with it and do all the training and prototype work in my shop
I also started riding motorcycles by just buying one.. id ridden scooters & mopeds my whole life and every car I'd owned prior was manual.. so far so good. I also learned how to drive stick by just buying one.
A little guidance can be valuable but generally I think that if you have the drive, you'll be able to figure it out without having your hand held. Failure Is a great teacher too.. I always prefer to just give something a shot and fail rather than never even try because I was told it won't work.
I remember when a lot of youtube was filled with this gold!!! Bring the car around, Jeff's going to try flying again.
Dude, I got a tear in my eye when you went into the air-flying.
That was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen.
Your flight made me wonder about who gave the Wright Brothers flight lessons or certified them to fly.
You realize one of the Wright brothers was killed testing one of their planes?
Hey Orville, toss me a beer on the next pass
Nice Job, glad it all worked out for you, when I was younger I know if I had had the resources I would have done it too!But the title it a little misleading, "NO TRAINING", I think you meant no Formal Training. as you said, "Played the flight sim so much". I've seen guys who wanted to fly RC helicopters but know better without training. They bought a sim, played it for hours on end, days, doing stunts and normal flying. Then went out and purchased an RC Helicopter and flew great. Flight sims can't replace formal training but they can give you enough experience that IF all goes right you can do what you set out to do. I agree with you when you implied, "Take all the necessary Precautions". Yep the world needs folks to take risks, to step out on faith and risk it all, granted if they are willing to pay the price of failure, and take the necessary precautions for sure. I'm with the NANNY STATE. "LIVE FREE!" Just make sure if you fail no ones home, property or life is in danger. Well thanks for the post and good luck in the future Jason, hats off to ya! Best Wishes n Blessings Keith
Honestly i had to learn the same way years back in my Quicksilver MX ultralight, was shear terror rolling down the grass path as i accelerated, but once i was above the trees i instantly felt the world fade away and was one from then on with the sky!! Let me state it is very, very, very stupid to fly any aircraft without prior training of some sort, however...there are many of us who realize that sometimes ya got to just take the control stick and open the throttle in life and see where ya go. To those like this gent and like myself, i salute us all!!!
Man sooo awesome!!! Not quite sure how incredibly dangerous that was, but fuck it if you have the basic idea of lift and how your rudder works then your good. A basic 4 page flight pamphlet would be the way to go, just to understand the basic idea of lift and rudder usage and your golden. Fuckin amazing though, i bet you never felt freedom like that before!!! Im slightly envious because ultralight aircraft are the closest thing to just flying by yourself almost like a bird. Plus i dont have the land to build a runway. Happy flyin bud!!!
Guy landed that thing perfectly. Told ya.
"told ya I'd fly that shit" hahaha yessss
confidence way to go,, i payed 100 bucks an hr, for my training, "U da man"
Yeah... what's the rest of your life compared to, literally, hundreds of dollars!?
How the fuck was 2006 already 10 years ago??? Holy shit man
O_o ...What's the date. ...the YEAR! WHAT YEAR IS IT?! -Kyle Reese Terminator
I was thinking the same thing.
Then I thought, "how the fuck was 1986 already 30 years ago?"
DaveIn NH haha
R6erGixxer you're getting old buddy
R6erGixxer I
I got my ultralight license after few weeks of theory and practice training. Now I’m certified ultralight pilot and love to fly with my trike. The only flights prior training were as a passenger. I could only wish this guy all the best…!
That was crazy and could have gone very wrong. You lived to tell about it and now you have an awesome story to tell. Nothing ventured , nothing gained. I am happy for you although I don't know if it was balls or stupidity.
Great stuff and well done. The Wright brothers didn't have no stinkin' pilots licence either for their first flight.
Yep, who needs a stinkin' pilots licence. It's them liberals.
LOL, Crazy fool! Great job Buddy! Glad you survived! LOL
This fool is a genius
LOL, Yup.
Having flown for 10 years myself & knowing what I know now, I wouldn't risk flying without training. There are so many things that could kill you, things you can't possibly know about without studying meteorology & the physics of how an aircraft actually flies.
There are old pilots & there are bold pilots, but there are no old + bold pilots ;).
Cheers,
Shaun
It wasn't his time to die.
Man kind was built on just going for it, great video
Some people just have instincts. This was fun to watch! Love the soundtrack too😊
One question did you train with fsx or xplane?
Very Good Landing,you walked away from it
amazing. As experienced pilots says: ''Any landing where you can go out from walking by your own , is a good landing '''
excellent landing if the plane is reusable too!!
I was taught the same thing.
Great Job! Glad you had that opportunity to fly and show people you can do it. True Story I basically did the same thing. My wife has the video somewhere but my little story is I also played the hell out of flight simulators and played around with RC Planes years later met a guy at Wal-Mart and saw his wings pin, questioned him about it and acted like I knew everything about planes. Well he told me he owns a couple of planes and would let me fly one that following Saturday if i came to the local airport. Well I showed up and there he was with his Piper Cub. He gave me a quick 101 about his plane and off I went. I flew the hell out of that shit lol. I was pretty scared but I didn't show it. When i landed that plane I felt like I really accomplished something. He let me fly one of his other airplanes a couple of times the deal was I had to pay for the fuel. I never told him that I have never actually flown a plane before that first time. He has since retired and sold most of his air craft and doesnt fly much anymore. I miss being in the air
Dude...You Beast !!!!!!
This may be the greatest example of Freedom ever displayed. Build an aircraft. Create a runway for takeoff and landing. Then, without the benefit of “training”, fly based on your own nerve and can-do attitude. Dangerous, yes. Thrilling beyond belief, absolutely. It’s great to see people taking a chance and learning what they are capable of accomplishing.
Wow. Ultra lights are no joke. I did research on ultra lights. And you must respect that there not general Aviation aircraft. So respect that. If you have pilot training it will help to spare you from accidents. So that should be your focus. Ultra lights are fun to fly. But also remember there very light aircraft and must be flown within there limits. Good luck have fun flying.
Am I the only one here who expected to see that dog turned into pink mist?
Hold my beer... On second thought, I'll take it with me.
Honestly this says more about the forgiving nature of the Quicksilver ultralight than it does about anything else. Flying isn't difficult... but landing without bending or breaking something is the hard part.
Gotta say, I was impressed from the start. The way the support team cleared that airstrip! Awesome! :D
Looked like they did great FOD check of the runway :)
To me the man is a hero, never flown before , despite a fondness for low altitude, power-lines, low passes over main roads he took it up and brought it down safely,( well brought it down). Greetings from Oz. Davox.
Who was the person who decided to have the date and time on camcorders?
The Wright Bros were very methodical studious engineers, they read all they could find about other's attempts at gliding and airfoil designs. They developed their piloting abilities and concepts of wing warping to achieve the ability to turn an aircraft through building and flying a series of unpowered gliders, developed the propeller and a light-weight engine that drove two propellers via chain drive. Their story is worth reading, To make light of their achievements as two "wild and crazy guys" is not realistic at all.
gary gullikson
Yes they were smart.......
Dont be a poop head about it.
Man please, they had no flight lessons and no one to train them.
If anything, they learned what not to do from the failures of others. But no one taught them how to fly a plane.
That pilot looked far to sober to me. . .needs atleast 10 pints of Guinness before his next flight.
That takes BIG BALLS! (And, maybe some "stupid" thrown in?) ;)
Either way, CONGRATULATIONS on your flight, (and your BALLS!) ;)
BRAVO!!!
Pretty damn good and just like some one else said. Please keep safe and keep other folks safe. But good job on your first solo. Flying is the best!