https://www.goodmorningamerica.com/living/story/meet-24-year-build-worlds-1st-personal-flying-66449193
Meet the 24-year-old trying to build the world’s 1st personal flying device
November 19, 2019  Teri Whitcraft

[images  
https://s.abcnews.com/images/GMA/gma-mariah-cain-DragonAir-191113_hpMain_1x1_992.jpg


videos
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVMqKq0TXlk
Meet the 24-year-old trying to build the world's 1st personal flying device
| GMA Digital
Nov 19, 2019

(dated)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8fqofZWMJpk
Team DragonAir Aviation - Airboard 2.0 Turns
Mar 26, 2019


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https://www.instagram.com/p/Bd9PQIxnwlQ/
mariah_cain_  Pompano Beach, Florida

https://www.instagram.com/p/BWsdx9mHN65/
]

Meet the 24-year-old trying to build the world's 1st personal flying device

Three years ago, Mariah Cain was teaching extreme water sports to tourists
in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and working part-time as stewardess on yachts.

Now, the 24-year-old is the president and project manager for a new
invention she believes will change the world.

"I’m a pilot for an experimental ultralight, fully electric vertical
take-off and landing aircraft. That means it lifts straight up and down from
any location," Cain explained. "You basically plug it in like your phone and
when the light turns green you can take off and go fly."

Cain flies in a standing position and controls the Airboard using her body
movements to control it.

"Humans have dreamed of flying like birds forever…. but I never dreamed I’d
be one of the first women to bring this new style of transportation to the
world," she added.

The FAA is still developing the best way to certify these aircraft. Cain
said the Airboard, which is battery powered, allows for easy transportation
and doesn't use fuel.

It also offers a unique advantage for many industries in the future, such as
search-and-rescue operations.

"Most small aircraft and helicopters have at least a 15-minute pre-flight
before take-off. Since our system checks are done by computers, we can do
those pre-flight checks in a fraction of the time," she told "GMA." "We plan
to integrate all the technology we created while building the Airboard into
a multi-copter that can we use for search-and-rescue. Until then, we will
use it for sport and entertainment as a means of getting these devices out
in front of people and showing safety."

The invention is competing in an international contest called the "Go Fly
Prize" to make human flight a reality by building the world’s first personal
flying device for prizes up to $2 million. The personal flying device must
be safe, quiet, compact and capable of carrying a single person for a
distance of 20 miles without refueling or recharging, according to its
rules.

I fell in love with flight and had to turn it into my life.
Falling in love with flight

As a child, Cain says she imagined gliding through the air and traveling
wherever she wanted to go.

"The feeling I had during my dreams is surprisingly close to what it feels
like to fly my Airboard now," weightless, limitless and without the bounds."

A chance meeting with Jeff Elkins, an inventor/drone pilot who was making
LED light suits for SeaWorld trainers, would help make her dream come true.
Cain initially wanted Elkins to create an LED suit for her HydroFlight
exhibitions, but when he told her he was building a battery-operated
air-board that would fly on its own – untethered - she was intrigued.

Cain volunteered to help work on the project, and started commuting 18 hours
round-trip to Elkin's workshop in Panama City on weekends and days off. Then
Elkins approached her to start flying it.

“The next thing I knew I was flying in the air,” Cain said. “I fell in love
with flight and had to turn it into my life. I had no choice.”

PHOTO: Mariah Cain, DragonAir Aviation  Mariah Cain is a pilot for an
experimental personal flying device competing for up to $2 million in prizes
in the Go Fly Challenge.

Initially Cain could only remain airborne for 30 seconds at a time before
the batteries needed recharging. But by July 2017, she was able to fly for a
full 7 minutes, 100 feet in the air on the device, which she nicknamed "The
Dragon."

“We always joked it was my dragon,” Cain said. “Jeff tried for so long to
get it flying, and once I started flying it was doing things it never did
before.”

That month, Cain climbed on the Airboard and lifted off. The video later
went viral, racking up 30 million views across social media.

"I did a phenomenal flight over the water,” she recalled. "Huge big turns. I
felt like I was on a motorcycle, but it was super peaceful … like sliding on
ice. When I landed everyone was amazed."

Taking on the 'Go Fly Prize'
In 2018, Cain moved to Panama City to work full-time on the project – and
raise much-needed cash for parts. She had heard about an international
competition called the "Go Fly Prize," which awards $1 million to create the
best human flying machine.

She said she submitted in the nick of time.

"They had just reopened entries for Phase II and I had just enough time to
get signed up," Cain said. "It felt like fate."

Partnering with Elkins, Cain immediately registered DragonAir Aviation, Inc,
ordered new parts and started collecting extensive testing data to prove
they could satisfy the competition guidelines and build an Airboard 2.0 that
was reliable and quiet.

Ten days later, they put the finishing touches on their design report just
moments before the deadline, she said.

PHOTO: DragonAir Aviation  Mariah Cain and Jeff Elkins are working together
to build Airboard 2.0.

The competition included 850 teams from 103 counties. DragonAir was named
one of five finalists in Phase II of the challenge, from which they scored
$50,000 in prize money, and the opportunity for potential sponsorships.

Now, Cain and her team will work on the the design to ensure that DragonAir
can complete a course of six miles going at least 30 mph, perform a touch
and go, and hover for a total flight time of 20 minutes before sticking a
controlled vertical descent within a landing zone.

The Final Fly-off will take place on Leap Day, February 29, 2020, at NASA
Ames Research Center’s Moffett Air Field in Mountain View, California.

"Winning the Go Fly Prize would be such an incredible feat,” she said. "To
take our project to that level in front of the world would be amazing for my
personal mission. To inspire others to follow their passions and not let
anything hold them back."

Cain is an example of how determination and hard work can lead to success.

"I look at my life every day. How did I get here? I can’t believe I’m doing
this,” she continued. "But [I've learned] you are absolutely capable of
anything and everything you dream of. Anything you envision in your mind you
can create in your life."
[© goodmorningamerica.com]
...
https://www.yahoo.com/news/meet-24-old-trying-build-world-1st-personal-090302154--abc-news-lifestyle.html


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18 November 2019 ... I can now see the potential of electric aircraft ...
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