Friday, 30 March 2012
Largest-Ever Paper Airplane Takes Flight
Arturo Valdenegro, a 12-year-old Tucson resident, made paper aviators everywhere look minuscule by comparison last week. In the skies over the Sonora desert in Arizona, the Pima Air & Space Museum launched the biggest paper airplane ever constructed - a paper airplane based on Valdenegro's design - into the sky, accelerating it to speeds topping 100 miles per hour before it came crashing down.
The plane weighed 800 pounds and stretched 45 feet long with a 24-foot wingspan. The museum constructed it out of falcon board, a kind of corrugated cardboard, as part of its Giant Paper Airplane Project, the goal of which is to generate interest in aviation and engineering among young people.
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Sorry, but impressive though it is that isn't a paper plane. It may just qualify as a plane made from paper, but that isn't the same as a paper plane. A paper plane is made from a folded single sheet of paper of any size. No glue, no fastenings, nothing but paper.
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