Watching this man fly on a commercially available jet pack while being filmed in 4K by a drone I realized that we are living in the science fiction dream of my childhood. CRAZY!!!
yesssss.. my thoughts.. I remember as a child I'd watch Jetsons thinking: "man, how crazy that their phones have video… wonder if this will be possible"… And today it's become the most trivial thing in the world.
This has so much potential for search and rescue operations, whether it be going up moutainsides, over forests, water or floodwaters, accessing disaster zones or for any number of activities in so many fields of human endeavour. It should not be confined just for military use. The world very much needs this useful invention! It can help save many lives.
Yeah right, that’s why they had to literally carry the jet pack up the hill. Plus, actual mountains are windy, which reduces safety and maneuverability a lot. And it’s just one person instead of a team, like a good pilot + a medic. I don’t see any advantages of this over a traditional helicopter rescue like REGA in Switzerland.
that thing probably has a 90 second flight time.... drones are the MUCH better option. sending a single person into some place hard to access cool but that's about it
@@techfreak111 I think he means to the point where this technology will become mainstream, and accessible to almost anyone. Now that would be badass, i could see them adding jet pack events to the Olympics lmfao
This is amazing, I was a volunteer EMT/firefighter in the mountains of Colorado and when time is of the essence I think this device is going to save a lot of lives. Great application of tech guys!
hi everyone ,if anyone else trying to find out emt practice exams try Elumpa Paramedic Expert Alchemist (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my friend got amazing results with it.
With more than 80% of the land covered with rugged hills and gigantic mountains, I believe Nepal can be the next big project destination for you guys. As a budding medical student and a true admirer of the medico-technology blend, I wholeheartedly welcome you to take on and conquer some of the finest trekking trails in the world. The trekking trails in Nepal receive a heavy flow of tourists each season and the number of unfortunate accidents that take place in these steep and dangerous trails is umpteen. In this context, your emergency service can prove life-saving in many such incidents, and alongside it can be a real challenge faceoff for you guys to check the practical use along with the extents and limitations of your project. It would be a matter of great honor if in case it is possible for me to be a part of this prestigious mission. More power to you guys!
The last bit both because helping people and really who wouldn’t want to have an opportunity to fly one of these unless they’re really afraid of heights
Can we all take a minute to admire the pure passion for saving lives and rescuing people that Andy has at the end? He sounds like he is almost in tears at the thought of being able to help people more.
I’m still looking at stuff from about 120 years ago and impressed they were ahead of their time. When I found they had mobile radio reciever and headphones in New York in the 1920s, I was impressed.
You can keep all the military interest - that's pretty well a 'given' - but using a jet suit for mountain rescue in this way will be a fantastic tool in the arsenal of the paramedic rescue services in difficult terrain. Great video.
Imagine you fell off of a cliff, hit your head really hard and are saying to yourself "Just stay awake, focus on familiar things.. Okay the sky is blue, that's a cloud, the grass is waving in the wind... Oh! There's help!! Wait...Umm, no the paramedic is literally flying in the air". "Well s*** I'm definitely dead already"
Absolutely fantastic that the relevant organisations and Regulators have had the foresight to get onboard with this initiative and put it into practice (with real trials). This is "Can-Do" at its best, it will be good for everyone involved, the accident victims and will be Great for Britain too. Well done to Richard, Andy and all involved! - including those un-seen, unsung regulators who have recognised the value of this service and helped keep it safe.
Its not very practical though with all this fuel needed. I can't see an application beyond mountain rescue, into leisure. Personal ion thrusters are very energy efficient but they can't lift heavy weight.
I will buy them out with my investors patient and develop the fuel cell, viola! It has possible variations perhaps a nuclear cell and a toggle with a carbon grapphene skeleton, if the company vacations in Vegas , stay in your lane and meet me on the helo deck at the Bellaggio, I’ll be drawing chips for all my employees.
@@tulebox Yeah, but if someone is bleeding out or needs critical meds like an Epipen when moments mean life or death then this is when it counts the most. Not for every situation, but some for sure. It has limitations for sure too. but every new tech does, and it will improve. Great point though.
Been a Paramedic in both the Royal Air Force and the civilian NHS, and I've waited 20 years to hear the call-sign "JetMed 1"... Absolutely amazing stuff. Never thought I'd see anything like this during my service...
@@DTG_LOCKETT Me too brother! I'm terrified of commercial flights, but have ridden in helicopters without issue (bizarre I know) so I'd definitely give this a go if the opportunity ever arose.
Love this, not only the tech and how it will help people and save lives but the emotion shown by the guy interviewed at the end, his passion for what he does and had just witnessed was just beautiful. You could almost count the lives he knew this has the potential to save. 👏
thats exactly whats going to happen. Your health system is ridiculously expensive... I live in a "3rd" world country by your standards and we all have good free medical care cause guess what? we pay taxes.
Like the discovery of Penicillin, the invention the radio, automobiles, the computer...this is an invention that will reshape our world. When I was a small boy I used to wish I could fly like Superman, and now I'm seeing people fly through the air in an effort to save people. What was once only a fantastical dream of the imagination, is now a beautiful reality. I'm so thrilled to have lived in this age to see it!
This will reshape entertainment industry and that's about it. Still loads of money to be made, but it simply can't compete with aircrafts or FPV drones in terms of practicality.
@@Teng376 Well in its intended use it does compete pretty well, the point of it is rapid response and does that exceedingly well. What would of been a 30 minute walk up the hills to get to an injured and potentially dying person now takes about 2 minutes with this thing.
@@WhatIsLove170 That is true. However, there are also other personal, compact aircraft like the JB11 JetPack and Flyboard Air. Those are allegedly much easier to operate (less training required) making them more suitable for these sort of applications
@@WhatIsLove170 While I agree with this example, the situation in which there's a person injured so badly that it won't make it another few minutes for the medical helicopter to come, yet at the same time can be saved by a medic with hardly any equipment is such a rare occurrence, that it won't justify buying enough of those suits so that they can cover the entire country such that response time can be short enough to make it viable at all (remember they have enough fuel for roughly 10 minutes). Meanwhile a good FPV drone costs $1000, is risk free for the operator, can be stored in a car or even in a rescuer's backpack, can have thermal cameras installed, can fly for longer and can locate an injured person and call in a medical helicopter just as well if not better than the person in suit. They can even be automated and sent in swarms to scan a big area very quickly. For the price of one suit you could supply dozens of these devices to the rescuers.
Have been following gravity since day one , real fan of hardwork that you guy put into it , and every day , every video showing how this extension of human minds can be utilised in the best way for the well being of the humanity
"It truly is an incredible moment." When I was a kid, everything we witness at this moment was science fiction. The internet, drones, and friggin jet pack heros. Lucky guys to be apart of the start of something very exciting
If they can keep improving the efficiency and stuff it can be used to get to places not as easily accessible by even helicopters and such quickly, so the pilot can at least support the victim until hiking crews can get to them. But for now it's mostly in the early stages of proof of concept and wow factor I guess.
@@kacmed Adam Savage even got to try out the jet pack on the test stand. The suit was built to Marvel visual effects specs from thin 3d printed titanium plates but turned out to be very impractical - looks more like an olden days knight and very cumbersome.
And it actually goes some way to restoring faith in humanity, because at the same time the Royal Navy are testing this technology for combat operations, it is being utilised in the civilian world to deliver life saving care to unfortunate souls who find themselves injured and/or ill in remote, inhospitable locations where they could decline rapidly and never even make it to hospital. People are keen to simply concentrate on all the negatives about Britain (be them legitimate or otherwise) but this fills me with pride.
@@Ironfangzu "Adorn" isn't a big word Did it cross your mind that English might be their second language, they may be dyslexic, or even just a kid? Obviously not Not everyone speaks perfect English, and we're certainly not obliged to either We knew what he meant, you know what he meant, and people are a lot more bothered by your deliberately snyde bullshit than his small literary mistake.
It's got great potential for search and rescue organisations but at a cost of just over £300,000 for the jet pack, I cant see many people in the general public being able to fly anytime soon
Operator rule number one. If you get a real itchy left testicle dont automatically scratch it. Rule number two. Dont make other hill walkers bald before their time.
Yes. Lets look forward to flying morons everywhere and sound of jet engines all around all day with no escape.. and huge increase in pollution. I mean it's cool and all, and for applications like mountain rescue the noise is tolerable, but if this gets anywhere near mass adoption I will surely vote to ban this for general and recreational use.
I can't think of an early childhood experience that would be quite like a hero flying in to save you wearing a jetpack. That would almost be worth the price of admission.
In 10 or 20 years we will look at this technology no different than we looked at a helicopter 50 years ago. Simply amazing, so many practical applications.
What people don't know. It takes EXTENSIVE EXPERIENCE to be one of these "pilots". Just to jump as a legal wing suit pilot. You need to first skydive several thousand times.... I can only imagine how much these guys need. RESPECT
I am not sure if that is not the most astounding thing I have ever seen! Brave as well, I am a licensed pilot but would stay with Wings Thank You. Amazing and bloody well done!!!
What a truly incredible moment for them. Everyone is gonna want one of these I know I do but to see it going to a mountain rescue team you can't get any cooler than that.
Imagine being able to take the injured back with you to safety,not sure this could happen due to variety of injuries,thanks to great people who come out ,risk their lives to come in our need,bless you all.
A good few years ago I was surprised to see a "Ben Kenobi" was my till operater when ordering food in a pub in Newcastle (and I was going to see a SW film that night too!)
love this ...i dont have the vocabulary to truly express my emotions about this progress but i love where this is going...thank u all for making this possible :)
Too true, man. I recently discovered that if one turns off one's phone, puts on one's boots, and goes hiking on a mountainside, life gets a lot better. Strongly recommend it!
@@PrestigeWorldWidePWW For what it's worth, I share your sentiment. However, we were just commenting on the fact that life improves when politics is forgotten for a while lol the irony...
Wow you could see the joy in that mountain rescue medics face knowing they will be able to assist injured people quicker with that flash Gordon jet pack. All lives matter 🙏 ♥️ ❤️ ✨️
Imagine walking the fells and this chap flies by....you'd think someone has spiked your Kendal Mint Cake. I wonder, seeing the dried bracken whether there would be a fire risk
Look at jets in the dark and you see sparks coming out the back , that's stuff that's in the air that's sucked in , flamed and sent out the back . Don't believe gravity industries, they ain't jet engineers, they just mechano kitted hobby jets to wear .
@@pauldean8638 .... But let's believe your random uneducated A r s e and just dismiss what the company working and building on the device actually says.
@@smoketinytom my dumb arse has letters after my name in engineering , care to check it , it's public knowledge from a guilded London institution . You failed life cause you don't understand why this is a money pit going nowhere, they tested practical use for jet packs in 1967 , this runs a few mins , bells ran 7mins being hey use on the throttle and of set to run constant mid throttle it done 21 mins, here is this pack an it's what a few mins, gravity are embarrassing British engineers by calling their product ground breaking when it'd factually 5 times worse than 50 years ago . Frank whittle was a ground breaking British engineer that was years ahead of the rest , the modern jets are all owed to from his original design . I wave my flag proudly when we achieve but cuss idiot who claim to be ignorant to the fact they 5 times worse than a design half a century ago
I know this can fly for a few minutes now, but just take a look at the wright bros. Their First flight was only 12 seconds and now the 787 can fly non-stop for 16hours. This is awesome.🥂
But that's because planes got heavier and more powerful. It isn't magic. A human is only going to be able to carry so much. So don't expect great leaps and bounds in range any time soon.
@@No1sonuk What happens when you land? Yes, the human has to carry it, and the human has to be able to manipulate it. If it carried the human, it'd be a helicopter, or at least have a seat. That defeats the entire point of this. It is absolutely carried by a human and thus limited by what a human can carry.
I visited Scotland in 2019 . The natives were wonderful people waiting for others to board the bus first . Nice culture . I wanted to learn galelic - first language of British Isles but my mental health issues didn't allowed me to stay much in British isles
Galelic first language in British Isles?? Wow i didnt know that because I'm English and i thought English is the first language which it is not galelic😂😂😂
@@НиколайХанзо Yes and no... To this day, there is no imaging system that has the amount of recognition as the brain and human eye combo. Sure, you can have someone sat on the other side of a monitor watching through a camera but its just not the same as having your own human eyeballs to look around with in real-time. Also, humans are naturally able to recognise things that seem out of place. I mean, you can teach a drone to spot a body shape from the air but what if the patient crawled under a plastic sheet to keep dry? A drone would fly over and not recognise it. A human specifically looking for someone would see the body shape under the plastic and investigate. Even if its monitored by a human, the drone has to get pretty close to what its looking at to see with the kind of detail the human eye can see with. Personally, I'd prefer a human looking for me. Sure, drones can help and they should most definitely be used. But you can't beat "boots on the ground".
This is what we should be using all these science incridibality to rescue fellow friend rather than killing eachother . Thank you man , you safe life. Long live bro to serve humanity
When I first saw this video it brought tears. This is a marvel of technology, absolutely amazing. The epitome of mankind and our shared dreams. Stunning.
I’ve got someone who would disagree with your statement.... Has papers published in his name, likes to harp on about CNC machined today technology being expensive and inefficient.
Golden Dragon Knight That would be an interesting one. I’m going to be a downer and say “Let’s leave Airbus to build Electric Airliners” before we start doing individuals.
If i get to choose, i might ask to be alive about another 100 years from now, we made progress no doubt about that, but we are still driving in cars that have 4 wheels, living in houses that are the same, of course cars and houses are more comfortable now, we have made huge leaps on the way we communicate, internet, smart phones and video conferencing, they make trains high speed but its a form of transport that has been there for more than 100 years. Interplanetary travel is not possible in our time, we will work hard but people that are born in about 80 years from now will reap all the rewards, they may have to contend with a world that has a really bad environment given our focus now is not to save the planet.
@@danielrodrigues4903 I see this and it makes me feel akin to how the Victorians must have felt as they read about the Telegraph and Morse code. Being a patient in a 1940s hospital suffering from a bacterial infection, fearing the worst, and then receiving a clinical trial of Penicillin. Or huddled around a small black and white TV with your family in 1969 as Apollo 11 blasted off into the unknown. I'm a child of the 1980s, and despite seeing some amazing technological achievements throughout my 40 years upon this earth, I _never_ thought I would live long enough to see a Paramedic flying across the Lake District to render life saving care to a casualty... Kinda restores my faith in humanity somewhat.
@Gadolini Rutherfordium What about couriers? Lots of legal firms and big Corporations use motorcycle couriers etc. In cities like London to zip contracts and other important documentation between offices which needs signing/notorising. This would be a great application for the technology. Urgent blood and organ transfer between medical facilities too? Although you'd need some innovative modding to add a refrigerated unit to carry the cargo 🤔
When your child's dreams come true :) Can't believe I'm living at this age of humanity. I wish be here in 100 years from now (will be so amazing). Tears here dudes... damn.
Наверное, для такой штуки нужны ещё специальные ботинки с пружинами, чтобы была возможность безопасно приземлиться с большей высоты. Это ещё и дополнительная безопасность при любой внештатной ситуации.. Т.к. человек с такой установкой тяжелее своего обычного веса, это сильное напряжение на колени и спину. . Здорово!!
@Gadolini Rutherfordium No it wouldn't. Not remotely. A drone couldn't get you treatment, and a helicopter would take probably at least 20 minutes to fly out there.
@@literalantifaterrorist4673 What's the guy going to treat you with? A pocket mask and some gauze? You still have to drive out there, which would take longer than the helicopter would take to fly, and once you get there you won't be able to take any gear up because it's too heavy for the jetpack. So basically you can watch the patient cry for 20 mins until the helicopter got there or take 20 mins to haul your gear up there and actually do something for them. But maybe if they developed a drone to haul the gear up there for them. A really really big one, maybe one that could even fit 2 responders on it! Oh wait...
I appreciate the wild enthusiasm. Most Mountain rescue organisations are charities. So I do wonder about the costs involved from equipment and obviously training. I have only ever see this work in exceptionally good weather. A lot of rescues occur in bad weather. Excited yes, is it practical I wonder. How long to suit up, prep, launch, recovery and the back up plan when it all goes wrong.
@Gary Gavin True, it wouldn't be practical in every situation but as a tool to get to an injured patient faster and triage/prep for when the full team gets there later I think it would be a welcome addition.
Britain is a country of microclimates. The time this takes to get ready and in the air is an order of magnitude faster than a helicopter, meaning the rescue teams are no longer at the mercy of rapidly changing weather. As soon as it's clear they can get to the patient in single-digit minutes, rather than double-digit minutes or worse.
Gravity Jetsuit is becoming one of the best in rescue operations! I hope this becomes fully open for commercial/personal use coz the traffic here in Philippines is just a nightmare for commuters!
but you can still fall off a cliff, it thrusts against the ground for its uplift. hopefully in the future we can get a anti gravity suit that has no such limitations.
Who is stopping you to fly? I fly paragliders, it's pretty much like this. You take a 15 kg backpack to a hill and then you take off. It's several times safer too, with propper training.
There is a noticeable absence of medical equipment on him so not quite sure about the 'save' bit. He seemed to say, 'Yep, hurt her leg, send in a helicopter'.
Elliott Hall Depends. If they drunk the fuel then they’ll be able to lubricator the system with them. That’s my solution but it might nigh work. Good job U.K. pemergancy sercives!
"We're living in the future!" Your smartphone is actually more of a technological advancement than simply taking a jet engine, making it smaller and putting it on someone's back.
Yes yes ..exactly ..I am extremly happy the realization of my own idea ...amazing amazing I cannot say how much I ma surprised and thrilled ..this is the realization of my dream .glorious ..amazing ...now we can see agreater market for this technology ...my true wish was to see the market development for this technology ..it is now real ..woderful ..Bravo ! Bravo Bravo to Richard and his great professional team Bravo Bravo ...I will share this for lall my friends and relatives ...the movie is a real masterpeace ..We love Richard and his professional ...the potention of using this technology is great ...
I think as a Military Scout or Reconnaissance, Roving Security around a large Naval Asset is very realistic. A Military Assault still needs more work...
im really interested to see this eventually using some of the exoskeleton knowledge to control the arm positioning and really adding some stability for new users.
@@TechyBen Yeah, but the problem is it is still very unstable and dependent on pilots strength and endurance. They have to lean in with half of their weight.. How long can you stay like that? And what if the pilot bends an elbow for a second and starts rotating? Clearly exoskeleton is the next step..
@@kyjo72682 It has less than 15 mins of flight time. An exoskeleton will lower that. It is a physically intensive design, because it is meant for physically intensive actions. For easy to use/non physical options, there will be quadcopters with seating positions soon enough.
Imagine being on a late afternoon hike on these trails and seeing a man casually flying past you in some high tech gear. Lmao Idk how I would react tbh
Watching this man fly on a commercially available jet pack while being filmed in 4K by a drone I realized that we are living in the science fiction dream of my childhood. CRAZY!!!
Mobile devices already did that at least a decade ago. The next big one is probably force fields.
It is crazy!
the future really is now, its gonna be cool to see all the improvements in every work field
yesssss.. my thoughts.. I remember as a child I'd watch Jetsons thinking: "man, how crazy that their phones have video… wonder if this will be possible"… And today it's become the most trivial thing in the world.
Agreed
This has so much potential for search and rescue operations, whether it be going up moutainsides, over forests, water or floodwaters, accessing disaster zones or for any number of activities in so many fields of human endeavour. It should not be confined just for military use. The world very much needs this useful invention! It can help save many lives.
Lol you think they’re gonna use that for the military? Right now this tech doesnt serve purpose in a combat setting other then suicidal reconning
They can just use a drone to recon
Yeah right, that’s why they had to literally carry the jet pack up the hill. Plus, actual mountains are windy, which reduces safety and maneuverability a lot. And it’s just one person instead of a team, like a good pilot + a medic.
I don’t see any advantages of this over a traditional helicopter rescue like REGA in Switzerland.
This would be more believable if the jets were on his back and not his arms. Who could support their weight like that? HeeeMan?
that thing probably has a 90 second flight time.... drones are the MUCH better option. sending a single person into some place hard to access cool but that's about it
if we could go back even 400 years and show people this. i couldn't even begin to imagine their reactions. You are inventing the future
Dude, 400 years ago, the fact that you are showing this to people on a tiny magical image box is already impressive by itself
@@CapitaoAmerica737 truue dude
This technology is old people have been flying on jetpacks since the 60s
@@techfreak111 I think he means to the point where this technology will become mainstream, and accessible to almost anyone. Now that would be badass, i could see them adding jet pack events to the Olympics lmfao
they will call you either a god or witch.
then u will either get your free religion or execution. they will start writing some books for you.
This is amazing, I was a volunteer EMT/firefighter in the mountains of Colorado and when time is of the essence I think this device is going to save a lot of lives. Great application of tech guys!
the effect of having someone by your side in such a short time frame makes all the difference when every second counts.
If i was in emergency up in a mountain like that and the rescuer uses that, i won't be injured anymore to try that jetpack.
For real I could have two broke femurs and stand my ass up to fly that thing
😁😁
Me too
hi everyone ,if anyone else trying to find out emt practice exams try Elumpa Paramedic Expert Alchemist (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my friend got amazing results with it.
You need to let some ladies have a crack at it.
With more than 80% of the land covered with rugged hills and gigantic mountains, I believe Nepal can be the next big project destination for you guys. As a budding medical student and a true admirer of the medico-technology blend, I wholeheartedly welcome you to take on and conquer some of the finest trekking trails in the world. The trekking trails in Nepal receive a heavy flow of tourists each season and the number of unfortunate accidents that take place in these steep and dangerous trails is umpteen. In this context, your emergency service can prove life-saving in many such incidents, and alongside it can be a real challenge faceoff for you guys to check the practical use along with the extents and limitations of your project. It would be a matter of great honor if in case it is possible for me to be a part of this prestigious mission. More power to you guys!
The last bit both because helping people and really who wouldn’t want to have an opportunity to fly one of these unless they’re really afraid of heights
get real the Nepalese government would never buy this. $340,000 pounds British for this for one
nepal is fine, but the air is too thin for Himalayan rescue
Unfortunately the air may be too thin for the jets to be efficient at that altitude.
Can we all take a minute to admire the pure passion for saving lives and rescuing people that Andy has at the end? He sounds like he is almost in tears at the thought of being able to help people more.
He's crying because he's thinking about how rich he is about to be with all these government contracts.
Absolutely awesome
can we take a minute to count the can we take a minute comments
He is an actor
Coz he eats them.
Переполняют удивительные, радостные эмоции когда видишь таких счастливых людей и такие красивые места. От увиденного хочется жить.
Так можно будет всю планету исследовать за 180 дней!
I can imagine someone watching this video 120 years from now and saying “wow that thing is primitive”
@@canon6 nah tik-tok trash also no teleporters or futuristic stuff probably very advanced robots that can fly and do tricks nothing more
It is now
Lol yeah they may have nuclear powerded one or solar powered
I can understand that since this stuff only allows you to hover several feet from any surface, not actually fly like ironman.
I’m still looking at stuff from about 120 years ago and impressed they were ahead of their time. When I found they had mobile radio reciever and headphones in New York in the 1920s, I was impressed.
You can keep all the military interest - that's pretty well a 'given' - but using a jet suit for mountain rescue in this way will be a fantastic tool in the arsenal of the paramedic rescue services in difficult terrain. Great video.
We should hope militaries start to use this. Then the technology will become more advanced and we can get these models for cheaper.
@voice of reason yeah a jetpack user is a sitting duck
If we Mix all tec together Soon you will see a jet man partner with some Roof Box drone come to save you life...in war.
If I was mangled on a mountain and a fella come flying up to me on a jet pack, I’d be convinced I was about to die and my body just released its DMT.
Then calling a helicopter afterwards lol
Lmfao 😂😂😂
Could you imagine being out hiking then you hear some jet engines coming and then see this flying at you!? Lmao so crazy, I love it
the one weekend it wasn't raining in the UK :)
Just saw your video. Didn't expect to see you here lol
😂
Never happen. CGI
dang it, where is that lmao emote when I need it.
everyone and always complaining about weather, but here, in Scotland is all good, normal for May/June and have to water my organic garden again.....
Imagine you fell off of a cliff, hit your head really hard and are saying to yourself "Just stay awake, focus on familiar things.. Okay the sky is blue, that's a cloud, the grass is waving in the wind... Oh! There's help!! Wait...Umm, no the paramedic is literally flying in the air".
"Well s*** I'm definitely dead already"
Absolutely fantastic that the relevant organisations and Regulators have had the foresight to get onboard with this initiative and put it into practice (with real trials).
This is "Can-Do" at its best, it will be good for everyone involved, the accident victims and will be Great for Britain too.
Well done to Richard, Andy and all involved! - including those un-seen, unsung regulators who have recognised the value of this service and helped keep it safe.
Nature of the U.K. looks wonderful
This looks like the perfect use case. Human personal flight is a reality and it is amazing.
Its not very practical though with all this fuel needed. I can't see an application beyond mountain rescue, into leisure. Personal ion thrusters are very energy efficient but they can't lift heavy weight.
I will buy them out with my investors patient and develop the fuel cell, viola!
It has possible variations perhaps a nuclear cell and a toggle with a carbon grapphene skeleton, if the company vacations in Vegas , stay in your lane and meet me on the helo deck at the Bellaggio, I’ll be drawing chips for all my employees.
my youth dream is going to be real
If you try to do a real search and rescue with this suit, you will be the one who will be needing rescue. Flight time is only 8 minutes.
@@tulebox Yeah, but if someone is bleeding out or needs critical meds like an Epipen when moments mean life or death then this is when it counts the most. Not for every situation, but some for sure. It has limitations for sure too. but every new tech does, and it will improve. Great point though.
Paramedic unit captain: we need someone willing to fly a jetpack so can rescue people in dangerous areas
That guy: you had me at jetpack
Been a Paramedic in both the Royal Air Force and the civilian NHS, and I've waited 20 years to hear the call-sign "JetMed 1"... Absolutely amazing stuff. Never thought I'd see anything like this during my service...
@@residentelect I'm scared of heights but given the chance I would have to do it at least once
@@DTG_LOCKETT
Me too brother! I'm terrified of commercial flights, but have ridden in helicopters without issue (bizarre I know) so I'd definitely give this a go if the opportunity ever arose.
मै क्यू नही,मै भी कर सकता हु
@@uttamsingh33378 UA-cam doesn't translate brother
Love this, not only the tech and how it will help people and save lives but the emotion shown by the guy interviewed at the end, his passion for what he does and had just witnessed was just beautiful. You could almost count the lives he knew this has the potential to save. 👏
Getting medical bill in America
Jet pack rescue: 260,000,000$
Just let me die
😂🤣🤣
Pretty much 😂
😂😂
thats exactly whats going to happen. Your health system is ridiculously expensive...
I live in a "3rd" world country by your standards and we all have good free medical care cause guess what? we pay taxes.
Like the discovery of Penicillin, the invention the radio, automobiles, the computer...this is an invention that will reshape our world. When I was a small boy I used to wish I could fly like Superman, and now I'm seeing people fly through the air in an effort to save people. What was once only a fantastical dream of the imagination, is now a beautiful reality. I'm so thrilled to have lived in this age to see it!
This will reshape entertainment industry and that's about it. Still loads of money to be made, but it simply can't compete with aircrafts or FPV drones in terms of practicality.
@@Teng376 Well in its intended use it does compete pretty well, the point of it is rapid response and does that exceedingly well. What would of been a 30 minute walk up the hills to get to an injured and potentially dying person now takes about 2 minutes with this thing.
@@WhatIsLove170 That is true. However, there are also other personal, compact aircraft like the JB11 JetPack and Flyboard Air. Those are allegedly much easier to operate (less training required) making them more suitable for these sort of applications
@@WhatIsLove170 it doesn't...let it go..it's cool to look at but that's about it..
@@WhatIsLove170 While I agree with this example, the situation in which there's a person injured so badly that it won't make it another few minutes for the medical helicopter to come, yet at the same time can be saved by a medic with hardly any equipment is such a rare occurrence, that it won't justify buying enough of those suits so that they can cover the entire country such that response time can be short enough to make it viable at all (remember they have enough fuel for roughly 10 minutes).
Meanwhile a good FPV drone costs $1000, is risk free for the operator, can be stored in a car or even in a rescuer's backpack, can have thermal cameras installed, can fly for longer and can locate an injured person and call in a medical helicopter just as well if not better than the person in suit. They can even be automated and sent in swarms to scan a big area very quickly. For the price of one suit you could supply dozens of these devices to the rescuers.
Have been following gravity since day one , real fan of hardwork that you guy put into it , and every day , every video showing how this extension of human minds can be utilised in the best way for the well being of the humanity
"It truly is an incredible moment." When I was a kid, everything we witness at this moment was science fiction. The internet, drones, and friggin jet pack heros. Lucky guys to be apart of the start of something very exciting
Facetiming on phones, talking into your watch, VR, etc.
Her leg is fine, but she now has massive hearing loss and we need to airlift.
"Also burns to the face, sorry I cocked up the landing."
Lmaooo
I AM ZIM!! Loool
Oh, and call the fire department, we lit the mountainside on fire with the jetpack while we tended to the girl.
I love you so MUCH! Maybe they should land further away! But it didn't seem to bother HIS ears! 🙏🙌
The seller wants an excuse to sell one, the buyer just wants an excuse to have one, and I can't blame either of them.
Supply and demand 😉👍👍🇺🇸
If they can keep improving the efficiency and stuff it can be used to get to places not as easily accessible by even helicopters and such quickly, so the pilot can at least support the victim until hiking crews can get to them.
But for now it's mostly in the early stages of proof of concept and wow factor I guess.
Told you who?
Blz Ahz all of these jet pack systems need to be heavily restricted or nature be gone and future society a nightmare
@@FenceThis do you ever feel guilty for breathing?
Simply stupendous. The drone operator did a hell of a job too.
He filmed the high ground.
As a landscaper...... This is the coolest backpack blower ever!! Can't wait now for fall with this on my back!!
not happening soon lol
Emergency response is what it should be used for. But we all know we want to be Iron Man!!
Rasanya seperti anda menjadi ironman
Just need someone to invent an arc reactor now!
that guy from mythbusters already build iron man with their cooperation :)
@@kacmed Adam Savage even got to try out the jet pack on the test stand. The suit was built to Marvel visual effects specs from thin 3d printed titanium plates but turned out to be very impractical - looks more like an olden days knight and very cumbersome.
Ehm, tries to do something, pasient, burns away
This is a remarkably emotional video. This is truly the precipice of our ability to personally adorn wings, allowing us to individually fly
And it actually goes some way to restoring faith in humanity, because at the same time the Royal Navy are testing this technology for combat operations, it is being utilised in the civilian world to deliver life saving care to unfortunate souls who find themselves injured and/or ill in remote, inhospitable locations where they could decline rapidly and never even make it to hospital.
People are keen to simply concentrate on all the negatives about Britain (be them legitimate or otherwise) but this fills me with pride.
"adorn" means to decorate. "adorn wings" makes no sense. Please consult a thesaurus if you want to use big words. Thanks.
@@Ironfangzu "Adorn" isn't a big word
Did it cross your mind that English might be their second language, they may be dyslexic, or even just a kid? Obviously not
Not everyone speaks perfect English, and we're certainly not obliged to either
We knew what he meant, you know what he meant, and people are a lot more bothered by your deliberately snyde bullshit than his small literary mistake.
@@rambo-cambo3581 most likely autocorrect. He clearly meant “don wings”.
It's got great potential for search and rescue organisations but at a cost of just over £300,000 for the jet pack, I cant see many people in the general public being able to fly anytime soon
Operator rule number one. If you get a real itchy left testicle dont automatically scratch it.
Rule number two. Dont make other hill walkers bald before their time.
What if I have an itchy right testicle instead?
@@fishsticks11223344 Invert idium 1 by replacing word, "left," with word, "right."
@@fishsticks11223344 man spread hard and have a Karen on the ground trying to get you fired over it on twitter while you aid your target.
Users should be the size of jockeys to fly further.
2nd point😂😂😂😂
Crazy never thought in my lifetime i would witness this our generation has been lucky enough to witness so much history
Looking forward to the day when Aldi and Lidl are selling these in their bonus isles 🤠
naff
Hahahaha
🤣🤣🤣
Yes. Lets look forward to flying morons everywhere and sound of jet engines all around all day with no escape.. and huge increase in pollution.
I mean it's cool and all, and for applications like mountain rescue the noise is tolerable, but if this gets anywhere near mass adoption I will surely vote to ban this for general and recreational use.
@@kyjo72682 boring 😴
I can't think of an early childhood experience that would be quite like a hero flying in to save you wearing a jetpack. That would almost be worth the price of admission.
In 10 or 20 years we will look at this technology no different than we looked at a helicopter 50 years ago.
Simply amazing, so many practical applications.
What people don't know. It takes EXTENSIVE EXPERIENCE to be one of these "pilots". Just to jump as a legal wing suit pilot. You need to first skydive several thousand times.... I can only imagine how much these guys need. RESPECT
I am not sure if that is not the most astounding thing I have ever seen! Brave as well, I am a licensed pilot but would stay with Wings Thank You. Amazing and bloody well done!!!
"be advised, girl is also suffering from third degree burns...unrelated to the uh...jetpack..."
"Bootmarks in her face of unknown origin"
Lol
💀💀💀
This is criminally underrated
And hearing damage also unknown cause
What a truly incredible moment for them. Everyone is gonna want one of these I know I do but to see it going to a mountain rescue team you can't get any cooler than that.
Imagine being able to take the injured back with you to safety,not sure this could happen due to variety of injuries,thanks to great people who come out ,risk their lives to come in our need,bless you all.
I'm trying to think of something sarcastic to say about this but it's impossible because it's so effing cool. well done
I guess you could say: "Did they break that girls leg just to see if the jetpack service works?"
I'm more in awe of the centuries of work that have gone into building those stone walls. That's a hell of a lot of physical work at high elevation.
Everyone talking about Iron Man while I want to know how they got Obi Wan as their drone operator
@Tim Hanselbach Top right hand of frame text credit.
A good few years ago I was surprised to see a "Ben Kenobi" was my till operater when ordering food in a pub in Newcastle (and I was going to see a SW film that night too!)
@57secs.he took off like a death watch mandolorian.that was epic👍he saved"the child" 😂😂😂
Also noticed that. Why use a jetpack when you can just use the force...
What do you expect? It's a mountain, he gets the highground
Airmen are truly brave mountain rescue knights. Good deeds are always admirable....the world is better with such people.
love this ...i dont have the vocabulary to truly express my emotions about this progress but i love where this is going...thank u all for making this possible :)
The Passion in his voice leaves one lost for words.
Videos like these make you forget about politics and enjoy life’s magical moments!
Too true, man. I recently discovered that if one turns off one's phone, puts on one's boots, and goes hiking on a mountainside, life gets a lot better. Strongly recommend it!
#TRUMP2020
@@PrestigeWorldWidePWW Yawn
@@PrestigeWorldWidePWW For what it's worth, I share your sentiment. However, we were just commenting on the fact that life improves when politics is forgotten for a while lol the irony...
So true I've waited for this for 60 years since I first read Superman comics. And its taking place in my beloved pennines. I have been in tears.
Wow you could see the joy in that mountain rescue medics face knowing they will be able to assist injured people quicker with that flash Gordon jet pack. All lives matter 🙏 ♥️ ❤️ ✨️
Everyone talking about the Iron Man suit whilst I’m just admiring the Lake District’s natural beauty
Imagine walking the fells and this chap flies by....you'd think someone has spiked your Kendal Mint Cake.
I wonder, seeing the dried bracken whether there would be a fire risk
the heat dissipates really quickly so won't catch fire
I know this as it was said in one of their videos
Look at jets in the dark and you see sparks coming out the back , that's stuff that's in the air that's sucked in , flamed and sent out the back . Don't believe gravity industries, they ain't jet engineers, they just mechano kitted hobby jets to wear .
@@pauldean8638 .... But let's believe your random uneducated A r s e and just dismiss what the company working and building on the device actually says.
@@smoketinytom my dumb arse has letters after my name in engineering , care to check it , it's public knowledge from a guilded London institution . You failed life cause you don't understand why this is a money pit going nowhere, they tested practical use for jet packs in 1967 , this runs a few mins , bells ran 7mins being hey use on the throttle and of set to run constant mid throttle it done 21 mins, here is this pack an it's what a few mins, gravity are embarrassing British engineers by calling their product ground breaking when it'd factually 5 times worse than 50 years ago . Frank whittle was a ground breaking British engineer that was years ahead of the rest , the modern jets are all owed to from his original design . I wave my flag proudly when we achieve but cuss idiot who claim to be ignorant to the fact they 5 times worse than a design half a century ago
paul dean and who else made reliable jets that small? Perhaps you should stop having a negative outlook on everything
I know this can fly for a few minutes now, but just take a look at the wright bros. Their First flight was only 12 seconds and now the 787 can fly non-stop for 16hours.
This is awesome.🥂
But that's because planes got heavier and more powerful. It isn't magic. A human is only going to be able to carry so much. So don't expect great leaps and bounds in range any time soon.
And technology is progressing at a much faster rate now.
@@Desrtfox71 The human doesn't have to carry it. IT carries the human...
@@No1sonuk What happens when you land? Yes, the human has to carry it, and the human has to be able to manipulate it. If it carried the human, it'd be a helicopter, or at least have a seat. That defeats the entire point of this. It is absolutely carried by a human and thus limited by what a human can carry.
there is only so much fuel a human can carry.
I visited Scotland in 2019 . The natives were wonderful people waiting for others to board the bus first . Nice culture . I wanted to learn galelic - first language of British Isles but my mental health issues didn't allowed me to stay much in British isles
Galelic first language in British Isles?? Wow i didnt know that because I'm English and i thought English is the first language which it is not galelic😂😂😂
Wtf, is this real? I checked if it's April 1st after seeing this. Where can I buy one of those?
In the middle of Lidl
@Leo Isburg Then I better start saving
@@codinginflow or starving
CGI
Coding in Flow Home Depot
Who cares for flying cars? I wanna fly like Ironman!
Just wait a bit for the 3.0 model specifically adapted for underwater and space exploration.
@@Ny_miraziz uivyvuuuvuuuuuu yuyvyyuyyyuvyuuyvubyyuuyu
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In
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Yuuyuuiyuuuvuyuy
You using yunyvuiyuuiyuuyvvyyuyuyuuiuuyiyivyu y
It will never be mainstream. A car failing on the road is much safer.
A flying device failing mid-air is disastrous.
me too
@@jebclang9403 if its just couple of meters above ground it is safe...
but high altitude is definitely risky
Ah, I finally made it. Now to call the helicopter.
Lol 😂😂
Drones can do this too. And you don't need galons of fuel.
The helicopter was only required to deliver more jetpack fuel to fly back to the car, the girl was fine :) LOL
@@НиколайХанзо Yes and no... To this day, there is no imaging system that has the amount of recognition as the brain and human eye combo. Sure, you can have someone sat on the other side of a monitor watching through a camera but its just not the same as having your own human eyeballs to look around with in real-time. Also, humans are naturally able to recognise things that seem out of place. I mean, you can teach a drone to spot a body shape from the air but what if the patient crawled under a plastic sheet to keep dry? A drone would fly over and not recognise it. A human specifically looking for someone would see the body shape under the plastic and investigate. Even if its monitored by a human, the drone has to get pretty close to what its looking at to see with the kind of detail the human eye can see with.
Personally, I'd prefer a human looking for me. Sure, drones can help and they should most definitely be used. But you can't beat "boots on the ground".
@@Crimsonedge1 I was just gonna say because it’s cool but sure that works
This is what we should be using all these science incridibality to rescue fellow friend rather than killing eachother . Thank you man , you safe life. Long live bro to serve humanity
This is so wild! This is Science Fiction literally turning into full fledge reality, in a sci fi year like 2020...
But watch out, 1984 is upon us.
@@owtaspac4243 People of 2020 would want to go back to the actual year 1984 lol
@@dream.machine he's not talking about the year, but rather the book.
@@Gogglesofkrome I know that
Doogie Carpit Burger That’s interesting. Excluding that, where can I get a tinfoil hat as shiny as yours?
Drone operator: Ben Kenobi
Hold up...
I thought there was only one Kenobi?
He took the high ground
@Ice "T"esla I have a typhoon H from 2016 that already had "follow remote" capability. You just put the mini remote in your pocket and go.
So this is what Obi Wan did in his exile as Ben. Neat.
@@VickersDoorter I thought there was Obi One Kenobi !
When I first saw this video it brought tears. This is a marvel of technology, absolutely amazing. The epitome of mankind and our shared dreams. Stunning.
why.
@@constantinosschinas4503 Well its easy.
We finally are in the right path to start building a perfect jetpack in the future
Будущее наступило! Спасибо инженерам, учёным и всем участникам научных исследований и проектов!
Now that's what we like to call Advanced Technology !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Gautham_Hector13
Which? Cars and people have existed for around 120 years now 😂
I’ve got someone who would disagree with your statement.... Has papers published in his name, likes to harp on about CNC machined today technology being expensive and inefficient.
@@smoketinytom but imagine what else we can do with that invention specially if it improves to use electricity instead of rocket fuel
Golden Dragon Knight That would be an interesting one. I’m going to be a downer and say “Let’s leave Airbus to build Electric Airliners” before we start doing individuals.
@@MichaelJ44 ikr you cant call a flying car a car it loses the purpose of a car smh.. Makes no sense if it can fly its not a car anymore
I thank God that I'm alive at this time and age to see my childhood fantasies come to life
If i get to choose, i might ask to be alive about another 100 years from now, we made progress no doubt about that, but we are still driving in cars that have 4 wheels, living in houses that are the same, of course cars and houses are more comfortable now, we have made huge leaps on the way we communicate, internet, smart phones and video conferencing, they make trains high speed but its a form of transport that has been there for more than 100 years. Interplanetary travel is not possible in our time, we will work hard but people that are born in about 80 years from now will reap all the rewards, they may have to contend with a world that has a really bad environment given our focus now is not to save the planet.
@@Steven.K8 I'm 30 now, I feel like on my deathbed is when people will start living on the moon/mars
@@lonewolf604 I will be cheering them on by then, hope they achieve that and we get to witness it.
@Chris DON "Simpleton", says the doomer. lol
@@danielrodrigues4903
I see this and it makes me feel akin to how the Victorians must have felt as they read about the Telegraph and Morse code.
Being a patient in a 1940s hospital suffering from a bacterial infection, fearing the worst, and then receiving a clinical trial of Penicillin.
Or huddled around a small black and white TV with your family in 1969 as Apollo 11 blasted off into the unknown.
I'm a child of the 1980s, and despite seeing some amazing technological achievements throughout my 40 years upon this earth, I _never_ thought I would live long enough to see a Paramedic flying across the Lake District to render life saving care to a casualty... Kinda restores my faith in humanity somewhat.
Seeing this, it's not unthinkable that a commercial version of this might be available next decade
A commercial version is available
@@CoolKid-qk7tl I meant an affordable one, not 400K+
@Gadolini Rutherfordium
What about couriers? Lots of legal firms and big Corporations use motorcycle couriers etc. In cities like London to zip contracts and other important documentation between offices which needs signing/notorising. This would be a great application for the technology.
Urgent blood and organ transfer between medical facilities too? Although you'd need some innovative modding to add a refrigerated unit to carry the cargo 🤔
Amazing stuff.....
Lovely to see the passion and commitment to saving lives from the chap Andy at the end also......
Well done to you all 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Wonderful, congratulations to the teams involved.
1:17 Drone operator: Ben Kenobi :D Nice name my dude :D
When your child's dreams come true :)
Can't believe I'm living at this age of humanity. I wish be here in 100 years from now (will be so amazing).
Tears here dudes... damn.
No, you don't. Believe me.
@@Wings_of_foam Yes, I do, "Mr. From Future" hahahaha :)
@@sharkcode1 Haha, okay you win:D Have a good day.
😂😂😂
Наверное, для такой штуки нужны ещё специальные ботинки с пружинами, чтобы была возможность безопасно приземлиться с большей высоты.
Это ещё и дополнительная безопасность при любой внештатной ситуации..
Т.к. человек с такой установкой тяжелее своего обычного веса, это сильное напряжение на колени и спину.
.
Здорово!!
How cool of a job would this be? I could only imagine how proud my children would be if their father got to fly around like a super hero.
@Gadolini Rutherfordium No it wouldn't. Not remotely. A drone couldn't get you treatment, and a helicopter would take probably at least 20 minutes to fly out there.
@@literalantifaterrorist4673 What's the guy going to treat you with? A pocket mask and some gauze? You still have to drive out there, which would take longer than the helicopter would take to fly, and once you get there you won't be able to take any gear up because it's too heavy for the jetpack. So basically you can watch the patient cry for 20 mins until the helicopter got there or take 20 mins to haul your gear up there and actually do something for them.
But maybe if they developed a drone to haul the gear up there for them. A really really big one, maybe one that could even fit 2 responders on it! Oh wait...
Drone operator: Ben Kenobi
Right... I've heard this one before.
right?
I appreciate the wild enthusiasm. Most Mountain rescue organisations are charities. So I do wonder about the costs involved from equipment and obviously training. I have only ever see this work in exceptionally good weather. A lot of rescues occur in bad weather. Excited yes, is it practical I wonder. How long to suit up, prep, launch, recovery and the back up plan when it all goes wrong.
A very pragmatic comment. I like it.
@Gary Gavin True, it wouldn't be practical in every situation but as a tool to get to an injured patient faster and triage/prep for when the full team gets there later I think it would be a welcome addition.
Britain is a country of microclimates. The time this takes to get ready and in the air is an order of magnitude faster than a helicopter, meaning the rescue teams are no longer at the mercy of rapidly changing weather. As soon as it's clear they can get to the patient in single-digit minutes, rather than double-digit minutes or worse.
Gravity Jetsuit is becoming one of the best in rescue operations! I hope this becomes fully open for commercial/personal use coz the traffic here in Philippines is just a nightmare for commuters!
Its a luxury item that cost 26M Php
*Fortunately, he overcame the strong urge to scratch an itch on his face during flight.*
You know that surgeons go hours without scratching their faces at a time right?
you copied this comment from the video that lead to this one for likes. you must be one cringy fuck.
Copy paste
@@mindsprawl A bit touchy eh?
you saod that 5months ago
This is the future. Good job people from Gravity!
"There is a girl up there in critical condition. We MUST rescue her FAST!!!"
"Ok, wait 15 min, I need to mount my GoPro and launch my drone"... :)
They have to use actors to demonstrate the journey , bet you only watch 5 second and went to the next clip . Slow down .
@@NicolasValentinScotland Bet you did not understand the joke in the comment :)
@@OurWorldIsBroken Fair enough .
30 seconds to assemble the drone, I get your point though....
Takes 30 minutes to put the jetpack on.
Drone operator: Ben Kenobi (1:55). Appropriate name for a guy flying such a futuristic machine. 😁
“Drone Operator: Ben Kenobi”
Great grandson of Obi Wan Kenobi
Now that’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time, a long long time.
Do You know him?
I saw that lol
@@izaakpilch5590 you’re kidding right?
He is just flying...FLYING!! I want to fly like him too...
Someday. I hope. We will fly too.
but you can still fall off a cliff, it thrusts against the ground for its uplift. hopefully in the future we can get a anti gravity suit that has no such limitations.
Ask you Mum and she will explain how it's done. I would tell you but my duck is a bit rusty :o)
@@ali09gaming58 that's not how aerodynamics work
Who is stopping you to fly? I fly paragliders, it's pretty much like this. You take a 15 kg backpack to a hill and then you take off. It's several times safer too, with propper training.
Can you imagine being this kid!! Someone flying a jet pack in to save you!? 😳🥺
Truly amazing!
There is a noticeable absence of medical equipment on him so not quite sure about the 'save' bit. He seemed to say, 'Yep, hurt her leg, send in a helicopter'.
That kid was probably glad she got injured just to witness that jet pack in action. 😁
@@russefrance4869 I'd be okay if a jetpack was the last thing I saw
There were spectators of the Wright Brothers with my enthusiasm and optimism. This is great.
Friend: Was that guy flying?!
Me: Oh he’s just in creative mode.
Nobody talking about the guy flying that thing is called Ben Kenobi? He truly has the force.
The force is going down.
Looks fantastic, now you just need a heavy lift drone to carry some fuel so you don’t have to lug it around by hand.
This comment, perfect solution
@Elliot Hall Not just fuel but other med supplies as well, or whatever the context might dictate.
Elliott Hall
Depends. If they drunk the fuel then they’ll be able to lubricator the system with them. That’s my solution but it might nigh work. Good job U.K. pemergancy sercives!
Lol!
Exoskeleton + jetpack = problem solved.
"We're living in the future!"
Your smartphone is actually more of a technological advancement than simply taking a jet engine, making it smaller and putting it on someone's back.
Kitna badhiya baat bole ho.. cm banoge Bihar ke
The lake district is such a beautiful place. I wish I visited more when I was still a lad.
Go now. Right now.
Imagine rushing to the scene, only to find out their “serious injury” was only a splinter...
As someone who works in EMS, that's more or less 90% of the calls.
Better to know that in 90 seconds than wasting hours to get there and back
Well, if it’s on a jet pack I don’t mind it at all.
Or even worse, u get there only to find there's no injury at all. they were just filming a demo video😐
Pinochet as an American I can imagine getting a “jet pack interception and treatment” bill of $20,000 for said splinter.
This is the earliest I've been to a video
me too
Yup me too 6 mins.
Ditto
супер какое развитие я завидую вам белой завистью.... а ведь и у нас могут так и могли :( успехов вам молодцы!!!!
its funny how hes using this practically and not just flying everywhere for fun like I would
That's why he's able to run an industry
Actually, there's very little practicality in this demo video.
I would go buy drugs and booze
It’s a bit limited for range, from what I’ve read it’s able to fly for only 2 mins and the thought of running out of fuel doesn’t bear thinking about.
really? sourcebout the 2min?
This is actually a really great application of the suit, especially in areas with densely populated high trees
...you joking?
"Patient will need to be airlifted... oh, and we'll be needing a water-bomber too, I seem to have set fire to the hillside."
Yes yes ..exactly ..I am extremly happy the realization of my own idea ...amazing amazing I cannot say how much I ma surprised and thrilled ..this is the realization of my dream .glorious ..amazing ...now we can see agreater market for this technology ...my true wish was to see the market development for this technology ..it is now real ..woderful ..Bravo ! Bravo Bravo to Richard and his great professional team Bravo Bravo ...I will share this for lall my friends and relatives ...the movie is a real masterpeace ..We love Richard and his professional ...the potention of using this technology is great ...
The only thing missing is a Mandalorian helmet, awesome jet pack.
Even the drone is operated by Ben Kenobi 1:16
This is a much more realistic use than the "military assault" video.
I agree. Assault doesnt seem viable if you need both hands to fly. Assault is usually done armed.
I think as a Military Scout or Reconnaissance, Roving Security around a large Naval Asset is very realistic. A Military Assault still needs more work...
@@ELCHUCKO666 Drone?
@@peaxoop Depends on how angry I am that day. If I am extremely, unrepentantly, unreasonably, fuck ass mad then I might use myself as a missile.
In my opinion the only use this has is purely novelty.
Done operator: Ben Kenobi. Now that’s a name I’ve not heard in a long time
Wow! My mind has been blown. British innovation all the way, just as we innovated many things
im really interested to see this eventually using some of the exoskeleton knowledge to control the arm positioning and really adding some stability for new users.
IIRC it takes about a day to learn how to fly it for some. So won't take long for any new user.
@@TechyBen Yeah, but the problem is it is still very unstable and dependent on pilots strength and endurance. They have to lean in with half of their weight.. How long can you stay like that? And what if the pilot bends an elbow for a second and starts rotating? Clearly exoskeleton is the next step..
@@kyjo72682 It has less than 15 mins of flight time. An exoskeleton will lower that.
It is a physically intensive design, because it is meant for physically intensive actions.
For easy to use/non physical options, there will be quadcopters with seating positions soon enough.
Imagine being on a late afternoon hike on these trails and seeing a man casually flying past you in some high tech gear. Lmao Idk how I would react tbh
Respect to you Richard, this can be used in many ways to help people 👍 👏
Iron man if he was a paramedic, incredible technology.
Such a beautiful video! Almost crying that Stan Lee isn’t alive to see it.