Solar Impulse 2 leaves Ohio

(FILES) This handout file photo from Solar Impulse 2 taken on May 21, 2016 shows ground crew members towing the experimental solar-powered aircraft to the runway in preparation for takeoff in Tulsa, Oklahoma. A solar-powered plane set to fly from Ohio to Pennsylvania on May 24, 2016 delayed its departure to inspect possible damage due to a mishap, organizers said. The Solar Impulse 2, set to be piloted by Swiss national Bertrand Piccard, was scheduled to fly out of Dayton International Airport and head to Lehigh Valley International Airport near the city of Allentown at 1000 GMT.  / AFP PHOTO / Solar Impulse 2 / JEAN REVILLARD / REZO

 

Washington / AFP

The Solar Impulse 2, a solar-powered airplane piloted by Swiss national Bertrand Piccard, successfully flew out of Dayton, Ohio in the dark early on Wednesday en route to Pennsylvania, according to
a live online feed of the departure.
The single-seat plane with the wingspan of a Boeing 747 is covered in solar cells that power its propellers and charge its batteries. The panels provide the plane’s sole source of energy for the flight.
The flight to the Lehigh Valley International Airport is expected to take 17 hours, organizers said.
The gangly plane, which travels at an average speeds of only 30 miles per hour, flew out of the Dayton International Airport on time at 0800 GMT.
Piccard said he dedicated this flight to the engineers “who worked all night to make sure #Si2 could fly to Lehigh Valley today. A fantastic team!”
The Solar Impulse 2 flight had been originally scheduled for early Tuesday, but problems arose with the fan needed to keep the plane’s giant mobile hanger inflated. While rebooting the system the deflating hangar fabric touched parts of the airplane, which has 17,000 solar panels.
“After the fans that keep the mobile hangar inflated experienced a brief power failure, the plane underwent checks to verify that no damages resulted from the event,” the organizer said in a statement.

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