Asmelash Zeferu on his plane |
On June 15
2015, Asmelash Zeferu sat at the end of a runway, over a decade of work
malfunctioning around him. The Ethiopian amateur pilot was as shattered as his
propeller.
There had been
doubters, those who had called him "mad." Many had turned up at the
airfield, 40 kilometers north of Addis Ababa, to watch him take off. He had
been ready to prove them wrong.
But it wasn't
to be. The propeller, hand-crafted from laminated wood, had broken.
The cause?
High amounts of friction, taking with it the smoke exit system too. It was time
to return to the drawing board and now, following months of repairs and
remodeling, Zeferu is ready to line up on the runway once more.
Refusing to
take no for an answer
Zeferu, 35,
says that ever since childhood he'd wanted to become a pilot. He was on the
right track, but when the time came, Zeferu was denied for the most arbitrary
of reasons.
Leaving
Alemaya University with a Bachelor's degree in Public Health, he tried to
enroll at the Dire Dawa branch of the Ethiopian Airlines Aviation Academy.
"I
couldn't fulfill the air school height requirements," he explains. Zeferu
was a centimeter too short.
explaning his home made plane |
Despite this
setback, Zeferu was unperturbed.
"I
decided to build my own aircraft if I couldn't be a pilot," he reasons,
"then I'd be able to fly high in the sky."
The first stage
of his labor of love lasted 10 years. Aviation manuals and YouTube tutorials
were his guiding stars; every aspect of aircraft manufacture gradually imbibed
in painstaking detail.
When the time
came, Zeferu opted to model his plane on one used by trainee pilots in the U.S.
in the 1920s and 1930s.
Some items
were salvaged, others bought second hand from the Merkato market in Addis
Ababa. The 8.5 meter wing was crafted from timber imported from Australia, with
each wooden panel hand-sculpted. But there was one element of the plane Zeferu
could not imitate.
The design
called for a Ford engine, but the amateur engineer "couldn't get [it]
cheap in Ethiopia," settling instead for a four cylinder, 40 horsepower
model stripped from a Volkswagen Beetle. The cost? 8,000 Ethiopian Birr, around
$380.
Total
expenditure rose to $7,600, but after a year and seven months Zeferu had
finished. Not bad for someone who had "never stepped onto an
airplane," never mind worked within the aviation industry.
A second
bite of the cherry
Zeferu shows a
deligation from the government the propellor which scuppered his first attempt
in June
June's
disappointments are now behind him and Zeferu is ready to complete the task at
hand.
In doing so he
would take a seat among a pioneering group of amateur enthusiasts from the
continent. Not all have been successful: Kenyan Gabriel Nderitu has attempted
to take off 13 times, but like his dream, his plane has so far failed to fly.
Nigerian student Mubarak Muhammed Abdullahi created his own helicopter in 2007
with parts stripped from, amongst other things, a Boeing 747. Abdullahi had
more luck, and after lifting 2.1 meters off the ground went on to gain a TED
Global Fellowship and an aircraft maintenance scholarship in the UK.
Zeferu has
made some modifications after receiving advice from fellow flight enthusiast
Rene Bubberman, chairman of the NVAV, the Dutch Experimental Aircraft
Association.
"We gave
him some well-meant advice about his prop and especially about test
flying," says Bubberman. "[His project] deserves a lot of respect...
[it] truly breathes the spirit of the early airplane pioneers and his
enthusiasm is contagious."
Later this
year, Zeferu will return to the same air field and rev his Beetle engine once
more. Taking off at 90 mph, the dizzying height he will aim for is 10 meters --
not unreasonable considering he has "no parachute or anything to protect
me."
Zeferu demurs
about the achievement of getting off the ground -- he has other concerns.
"To fly an aircraft is not a big deal," he explains. "The
greatest danger will be in landing."
That will
involve slowing the plane down from its cruising speed of 70 mph to 45 mph,
then hoping the wheelbase -- taken from a Suzuki motorcycle -- holds out.
If he does
land safely, Zeferu will have overcome the most persistent obstacle in his
quest for flight. Despite support from his family, he argues that "the
biggest challenge in building my aircraft was the people around me... people
calling me mad. People were asking 'How can you build an aircraft in Ethiopia?
In Africa?'"
He's emphatic
about his chances this time around: "I am very sure that I will fly."
'We have
lift off...'
Touching the
skies in his homemade airplane is only the first step for Zeferu. He hopes a
flight school will accept him in the near future so he can train as a
commercial pilot. However the long-term goal is to boldly go further still.
"My dream
is to become an aerospace engineer at NASA," he admits. "And I will
be."
Editor's
note: An earlier version of this story stated that the maiden flight would
occur on 28 October 2015. Asmelash Zeferu has since decided to postpone the
flight to the end of November 2015.
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