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- <text id=90TT1536>
- <title>
- June 11, 1990: Profile:Paul MacCready
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 11, 1990 Scott Turow:Making Crime Pay
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 52
- He Gives Wings to Dreams
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Paul MacCready's creative mind, having spawned weird and
- wonderful vehicles, now focuses on the global environment
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff
- </p>
- <p> A few blocks away from the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.,
- a slight, bespectacled, gray-haired man sits motionless in a
- reclining chair in his study, staring vacantly into space. Paul
- MacCready is engaged in his most productive activity,
- daydreaming.
- </p>
- <p> His chin is cupped in one hand, a ball-point pen in the
- other, and opened on his lap is a large notebook with lined
- pages. Occasionally he stirs, his eyes focus, and in tidy,
- cramped handwriting he adds a sentence or two to the notebook,
- already largely filled. To a visitor the pages look vaguely
- familiar. Then realization dawns. The black-inked notations and
- tidy sketches of winged and wheeled vehicles, streamlined
- contours and odd mechanisms are startlingly reminiscent of the
- famous illustrated notes penned by Leonardo da Vinci five
- centuries ago.
- </p>
- <p> Self-effacing and at 64 still somewhat shy, MacCready would
- cringe at any comparison with the original Renaissance man. Yet
- he has created what Da Vinci dreamed of and designed, but
- literally never got off the ground--flying machines propelled
- solely by human muscle power. These and other unique MacCready
- airborne contraptions have made aviation history, and his
- innovative electric-car designs could help usher in a new era
- in ground transportation.
- </p>
- <p> Such accomplishments would be fulfillment enough for most
- humans. But they attest to only a few of MacCready's many
- skills. He has piloted conventional aircraft as well as
- sailplanes and hang gliders, is an ardent environmentalist and
- a successful entrepreneur, the founder and president of
- AeroVironment Inc., a small, innovative firm that specializes
- in monitoring and cleansing the environment, alternative energy
- and energy-efficient vehicles. He also frequently dons the hat
- of an educator, lecturing at schools, universities and business
- meetings, urging the formal teaching of the kinds of "thinking
- skills" he feels are necessary to meet growing environmental
- and social challenges.
- </p>
- <p> MacCready's own thinking skills have served him well. He
- first won national acclaim in 1977 when his Gossamer Condor,
- a kitelike affair propelled only by a furiously pedaling
- cyclist-pilot, flew in controlled flight for more than a mile
- around a figure-eight course. For that feat, unsuccessfully
- attempted by dozens of others over the previous 18 years,
- MacCready won a $95,000 prize from British industrialist Henry
- Kremer. Two years later the same pilot pedaled an improved
- version of the ephemeral craft, the Gossamer Albatross, all the
- way across the English Channel to earn MacCready a second
- Kremer prize of $213,000.
- </p>
- <p> MacCready had already been named Engineer of the Century by
- the American Society of Mechanical Engineers when, in 1981, he
- unveiled another of his pioneering vehicles. Carrying a single
- pilot, the Solar Challenger took off, climbed to 11,000 ft. and
- flew 163 miles from France to an R.A.F. base in England, its
- electric motor powered solely by the 16,128 solar cells mounted
- on its wings.
- </p>
- <p> It has been all uphill ever since. In 1986 another MacCready
- creation, perhaps his most remarkable, swooped high over Death
- Valley while being photographed for the Smithsonian
- Institution's IMAX film On the Wing. It was an awesomely
- realistic, radio-controlled, computer-brained, wing-flapping
- replica of the largest creature ever to have flown, the
- pterodactyl, which vanished with its dinosaur cousins some 65
- million years ago.
- </p>
- <p> The list of MacCready's brainchildren goes on and on: the
- General Motors Sunraycer, a solar-powered electric car that in
- 1987 won a 1,867-mile race across Australia against 23
- competitors, averaging 41 m.p.h. and beating the second-place
- finisher by two days; the Pointer, a 9 lb., battery-powered,
- TV-equipped observation aircraft that can be launched by hand,
- remain aloft for 75 minutes, transmitting back to the ground
- whatever it sees, and then make a soft landing; the General
- Motors Impact, a sleek, battery-powered electric car that can
- accelerate from 0 to 60 m.p.h. in 8 sec.
- </p>
- <p> What makes MacCready a font of creativity? Nobel laureate
- physicist Murray Gell-Mann, a Pasadena neighbor and close
- friend, attributes that quality to MacCready's outlook: "He
- approaches nature and daily life with an innocent sense of
- wonder. He approaches problems and learning about new things
- in the same way, without strongly held, preconceived notions.
- When he sees something in daily life, when he sees something
- in nature, he takes a fresh view of it."
- </p>
- <p> Ivar Tombach, an AeroVironment vice president, marvels at
- MacCready's "intense curiosity and incredible capacity to take
- little fragments of information and synthesize something
- totally unexpected out of them. A news clipping, a little thing
- on the evening news, something that he sees while going down
- the street." Often, while driving with Tombach, MacCready will
- suddenly look out the window and exclaim, "Look at the bird.
- See what he's doing!"
- </p>
- <p> MacCready waves away any praise. "There is less here than
- meets the eye," he insists. While many off-the-wall concepts
- arise in his mind, he says, most of them could not have been
- translated into reality without the talented scientists and
- engineers among his 200 employees. And, he insists, without the
- automotive savvy and financial backing of General Motors (which
- owns 15% of AeroVironment), the Sunraycer and Impact might
- still be on the drawing boards.
- </p>
- <p> When pressed, however, MacCready credits daydreaming for
- much of his success. As an example, he cites a month-long
- vacation in the summer of 1976, when he, his wife Judy and
- their three young sons drove 7,000 miles from California to the
- East Coast and back again. Rolling along in the family van,
- away from work, MacCready let his mind wander.
- </p>
- <p> Random thoughts occurred: the $100,000 note he had co-signed
- to help a relative and now must repay. The news item about the
- value of the British pound rising to two dollars. The unclaimed
- 50,000 pounds Kremer prize awaiting the first person to achieve
- a mile-long, controlled, human-powered flight. "Suddenly this
- light bulb just glowed over my head," MacCready recalls. "Fifty
- thousand pounds was worth $100,000, which would pay off the
- debt."
- </p>
- <p> Back in his daydreaming mode, MacCready drove on, watching
- a red-tailed hawk circling above. Estimating the bird's bank
- angle and timing its circles, he calculated its speed, then did
- the same with a black vulture. His mind drifted to hang gliders
- and sailplanes, conjured up scaling laws to compare their
- flying characteristics with those of the birds, and suddenly
- focused on man-powered flight.
- </p>
- <p> "This was really the great `aha' moment," MacCready says.
- Stopping along the way in Aspen to visit Murray Gell-Mann, who
- was vacationing there, MacCready announced that he had figured
- out how to win the Kremer prize. "He was that definite,"
- Gell-Mann recalls.
- </p>
- <p> The solution, in retrospect, was simple. "If you start with
- a hang-glider-size plane and triple its size up to a 90-ft.
- wingspan while keeping its weight the same," MacCready
- explains, "the power needed to fly it goes down by a factor of
- three"--to only about 0.4 horsepower, in fact, which a
- trained cyclist can generate for many minutes at a time.
- </p>
- <p> Two months later, with the help of his sons, friends and a
- few colleagues from AeroVironment, MacCready had assembled the
- first flimsy version of the Gossamer Condor out of aluminum
- tubes, piano wire, Mylar film, a propeller and bicycle parts.
- With a wingspan of 96 ft., it weighed only 55 lbs., and
- MacCready's two older sons, Parker and Tyler, were soon flying
- it for short distances, rising a few feet above the ground.
- After another ten months and many crashes and revisions, Bryan
- Allen, a bicycle racer and hang-glider pilot, successfully flew
- the Condor around the Kremer course, ensuring MacCready's place
- in history.
- </p>
- <p> The Gossamer Condor now hangs in a permanent spot next to
- the Wright brothers' first airplane at the Smithsonian
- Institution's Air and Space Museum, where the Solar Challenger
- and the pterodactyl have been displayed. The Smithsonian has
- also acquired the Gossamer Albatross and the Sunraycer.
- </p>
- <p> Pretty heady stuff for someone who in his New Haven, Conn.,
- school was always the smallest, least noticed kid in the class.
- "I was a lousy athlete, not coordinated and socially pretty
- shy," MacCready says. To compensate, he turned to solitary
- hobbies, largely involving flying creatures and flight. He
- collected butterflies and moths, began assembling model
- airplanes from kits and soon was designing his own autogyros,
- helicopters and ornithopters. At 15, he was already winning
- national model-airplane contests. "At the time I wished that I
- could be a football hero and a smooth character," he says. "But
- I now realize that if I had been, I'd be just an overage
- football jock instead of still plying my trade as a scientist
- and an engineer."
- </p>
- <p> Before long, MacCready followed his models into the sky,
- taking flying lessons and soloing at 16. He studied mechanical
- engineering at Yale, enrolled in the Navy during World War II
- and took fighter-pilot training at the Pensacola Naval Air
- Station. Returning to Yale, he switched his major to physics
- and with a few friends bought an Army surplus glider. Soon he
- was totally absorbed in soaring, which he continued while
- earning his master's degree in physics and a doctorate in
- aeronautics at California Institute of Technology.
- </p>
- <p> While still in school, MacCready managed to win three U.S.
- National Soaring Championships, and rode the updrafts east of
- the Sierra Nevada range to a then record 29,500-ft. altitude.
- After graduation, he went on to become the first American to
- win the International Soaring Championship, at St. Yan, France
- in 1956. While soaring, and daydreaming, he also conceived the
- MacCready speed ring, a simple indicator now universally used
- by glider pilots to determine the optimum speed they should use
- in flying between thermals, or updrafts.
- </p>
- <p> For all of MacCready's fascination with flight, aircraft
- account for only a small fraction of the total business of
- AeroVironment Inc. The company, which he founded in 1971 with
- fellow Caltech aeronautical engineers Tombach and Peter
- Lissaman, derives most of its annual $17 million revenue from
- the monitoring and control of air pollution and hazardous
- wastes. One current contract, for example, involves determining
- the contribution of Arizona's giant coal-fired Navajo power
- plant to the haze that sometimes hampers visibility around the
- nearby Grand Canyon.
- </p>
- <p> The company's emphasis on environment reflects MacCready's
- most passionate concern. "My goal," he says, "is to have
- mankind reach a comfortable accommodation with the flora, fauna
- and resources of the earth. And that requires equilibrium after
- a while, not population increase, not consumption of
- irreplaceable resources, and certainly not wiping out all the
- flora and fauna as we are now doing."
- </p>
- <p> Although he is heartened by the recent upsurge in the
- environmental movement, MacCready remains gloomy about the
- future, especially if population growth continues unabated.
- "There are cultures and religions that just keep wanting more
- people," he says. "So population keeps going up, arable acres
- keep going down, and in a couple of more decades, we are going
- to hit the wall."
- </p>
- <p> One way to delay that impact, MacCready says, is to seek a
- better balance between nature and technology. And a unique way
- to dramatize that concept, he firmly believes, is to achieve
- another of his goals: animal-powered flight. What kind of
- animal? MacCready has already drawn up some formulas and
- tentative contest rules that would permit use of any creature
- from a hippopotamus to a goldfish. He has even considered using
- a hissing cockroach. ("It has a little longer power cycle than
- the ordinary roach.") But he may settle for a dog. "There are
- already cases of dogs that love to join their masters in hang
- gliders," he muses, leaning back and staring into space.
- "There are dogs that happily get exercise on a treadmill."
- Pause. "Dog-powered flight would complete the link." Paul
- MacCready is daydreaming again.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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