Why was the Voyager aircraft not symmetrical?
A 20-year mystery solved.
- By Joe Pappalardo
- AirSpaceMag.com, November 01, 2006
Voyager ends its round-the-world trip in December 1986.
Joe Pappalardo
(Page 2 of 2)
After 20 years, Lakatos is happy to have his answer. "That's one option I hadn't considered, which punctuates the old saying about missing what should be apparent," he says, providing as good a capstone to this case as I ever could.
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Comments (4)
When flying were both engines running or just one? What size were they? What did you figure you had to average per gallon? Will this airplane ever fly again? Where is it now?
Posted by John Hiltner on January 1,2011 | 10:37 AM
Is there any film on the trip around the world? I sent some money when the project was on subscription.
Regards
Posted by accart francis on March 21,2011 | 06:26 AM
Both for takeoff, and only one for cruise flight. I think they alternated, but no sure.
Posted by Donald Kalinowski on September 25,2012 | 03:10 AM
the voyager was a single (rear) engine acft. the front was used only for take off and initial cruise.
MPG at start and it improved to almost 49 MPG at the end of the flight. Front eng was a Cont O-240 130HP, the rear was a
Cont IOL-200 Liquid cooled 110HP. The plane would burn over 50% of the fuel and shut down for the rest of the flt.
Dick Rutan pilot of the voyager. 9 days 3 min and 44 seconds. 26,358 statue miles non-stop non refueled.
Plane in NASM Wash DC
Posted by dick rutan on March 3,2013 | 07:38 PM