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Swiss Olivier Vietti-Teppa prepares to
land with his 12 kg pyramid-shaped parachute designed by Leonardo da Vinci
in Payerne. (Photo: Chinadaily.com) Photo Gallery>>>
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BEIJING, April 30 -- A 36-year-old Swiss amateur
parachutist made a successful 650-meter (2,130-foot) drop Saturday using a
replica of a parachute designed more than 500 years ago by Leonardo da Vinci.
"I came down... smack in the middle of the tarmac at
Payerne military airport," said Olivier Vietti-Teppa. "A perfect jump."
Vietti-Teppa is the first person to have made it
safely to the ground with the Leonardo model.
In 2000, Britain's Adrian Nicholas tried it but had
to pull the ripcord on a modern backup parachute to complete his descent safely.
Vietti-Teppa jumped from a hovering helicopter and
the Leonardo parachute opened at 600 metres, he reported.
The parachute he used was made using modern fabric
along lines designed by the Renaissance genius. The specifications were found in
a text dating from 1485.
The parachute consists of four equilateral triangles,
seven metres on each side, made of parachute fabric, Vietti-Teppa explained.
The base of the pyramid is a square of mosquito net,
which enables the parachute to open. A wooden frame originally conceived by da
Vinci was not used on the model in action on Saturday.
One drawback: it is impossible to manoeuvre or steer
the Leonardo parachute. "You come down at the whim of the wind," said
Vietti-Teppa, who carried out advance tests using a scale dummy model launched
from a remote-controlled model helicopter.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)