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Home-made helicopters hit northern Nigeria Print E-mail
Written by Aminu Abubakar, AFP   
Sunday, 21 October 2007
Home-made helicopters hit northern Nigeria
by Aminu Abubakar, AFP

 

Mubarak Muhammad Abdullahi, a 24-year-old physics undergraduate in northern Nigeria, takes old cars and motorbikes to pieces in the back yard at home and builds his own helicopters from the parts.

"It took me eight months to build this one," he said, sweat pouring from his forehead as he filled the radiator of the banana yellow four-seater which he now parks in the grounds of his university.

The chopper, which has flown briefly on six occasions, is made from scrap aluminium that Abdullahi bought with the money he makes from computer and mobile phone repairs, and a donation from his father, who teaches at Kano's Bayero university.

It is powered by a second-hand 133 horsepower Honda Civic car engine and kitted out with seats from an old Toyota saloon car. Its other parts come from the carcass of a Boeing 747 which crashed near Kano some years ago.

For a four-seater it is a big aircraft, measuring twelve metres (39 feet) long, seven metres high by five wide. It has never attained an altitude of more than seven feet.

The cockpit consists of a push-button ignition, an accelerator lever between the seats which controls vertical thrust, a joystick that provides balance and bearing.

A small screen on the dashboard connects to a camera underneath the helicopter for ground vision, a set of six buttons adjusts the screen's brightness while a small transmitter is used for communication.

"You start it, allow it to run for a minute or two and you then shift the accelerator forward and the propeller on top begins to spin. The further you shift the accelerator the faster it goes and once you reach 300 rmp you press the joystick and it takes off," Abdullahi explained from the cockpit.

He said he learned the rudiments of flying a helicopter from the Internet and first got the idea of building one from the films he watches on television.

"I watched action movies a lot and I was fascinated by the way choppers fly. I decided it would be easier to build one than to build a car," he said pacing the premises of the security division of the university which he uses as hanger for his helicopter.

He hoped -- and still does hope -- that the Nigerian government and his wealthy compatriots would turn to him and stop placing orders with western manufacturers.

So far, however, government response to his chopper project has been underwhelming to say the least.

Although some government officials got very excited when they saw him conduct a demonstration flight in neighbouring Katsina state, Nigeria's Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has so far shown no interest in his aircraft.

"No one from the NCAA has come to see what I've done. We don't reward talent in this country," he lamented.

Abdullahi does admit that his first helicopter lacks "some basic facilities like devices for measuring atmospheric pressure, altitude, humidity and the like."

In a country with Nigeria's abysmal air safety record officials may be loath to gamble on one student's home-made helicopter.

But Abdullahi, undeterred, has started work on a new flying machine, which, he says, "will be a radical improvement on the first one in terms of sophistication and aesthetics."

Currently just a spindly metal frame in the back yard, the helicopter will be a two-seater and Abdullahi calculates it will be able to fly at an altitude of 15 feet for three hours at a stretch.

It will be powered by a brand new motor -- albeit Taiwan-manufactured and destined for the Jincheng motorbike so common on the streets of Kano




RobotRobot is offline 
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Posted by Robot| 21.10.2007 08:49

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dapxindapxin is offline 
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 # 2

Ha.

Oro pesi je.

Posted by dapxin| 21.10.2007 09:48

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docokwydocokwy is offline 
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 # 3

Fly this contraption at your own risk. Best suited for flying cattle around.

Posted by docokwy| 21.10.2007 09:58

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VimoVimo is offline 
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 # 4

The current equipment may be suited for cattle flying, but the guy is obviously talented and should be trained to become an world-class inventor.

Posted by Vimo| 21.10.2007 10:05

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dapxindapxin is offline 
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=docokwy;209181014>Fly this contraption at your own risk. Best suited for flying cattle around.




The thing can't even go more than 7 feet yet so the question of flying to death in it doesn't arise t. You'll probably break a few bones here & there, like you mis-judged a High jump crossbar....

But, I salute the ingenuity of this guy...Imagine what 600M naira would do in the establishment of a mini hangar , let alone the encouragement of this budding creator. Ha.

Hold on, where were the accident investigators - if a random student can take parts of a crashed Boeing jet - so easily and yet find it functional enough to make a chopper prototype.... Ha, there is indeed a method to our dysfunctional namespace

Posted by dapxin| 21.10.2007 10:09

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline 
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I applaud Mubarak Muhammad Abdullahi for his intelligence and creativity.

We ought to see him as a NIGERIAN and a fellow human being. I claim his efforts for Nigeria.

I am personally embarrassed by the prejudice and bigotry that has been demonstrated by some here.

You all should be ashamed of yourselves for the parochial and ethnic comments up there!

Posted by I Love Nigeria| 21.10.2007 10:29

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AfeniAfeni is offline 
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=I Love Nigeria;209181030>I applaud Mubarak Muhammad Abdullahi for his intelligence and creativity.

We ought to see him as a NIGERIAN and a fellow human being. I claim his efforts for Nigeria.

I am personally embarrassed by the prejudice and bigotry that has been demonstrated by some here.

You all should be ashamed of yourselves for the parochial and ethnic comments up there!



Exactly, we should be ashamed. British God forbid we don't believe in the union of Niger-area. No! You should be ashamed of yourself for allowing yourself to be ravaged by foreign ideas.

Posted by Afeni| 21.10.2007 10:48

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akuluounoakuluouno is offline 
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Villagers,

The country is making great progress. There is nothing to invent by our Bros since the helicpter has long been invented and patented. He is trying to build one out of scraps including that of the Boeing that crashed in Kano and killed the former charming Sports Minister among others.
I say kudos to him and hope that those laughing at Aba and Igbo - made products will not turn their laughter against the Hausa-made products such as this 7ft altitude flying helicopter.
Let us learn to paen, sing fervent praises to what is proudly Nigerian, irrespective of it being Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba, Ijaw, Annang, Efik, Ibibio, and the the remaining 400 ethnic groups.:D:D:D:D

Posted by akuluouno| 21.10.2007 10:51

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gwappagwappa is offline 
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=I Love Nigeria;209181030>I applaud Mubarak Muhammad Abdullahi for his intelligence and creativity.

We ought to see him as a NIGERIAN and a fellow human being. I claim his efforts for Nigeria.

I am personally embarrassed by the prejudice and bigotry that has been demonstrated by some here.

You all should be ashamed of yourselves for the parochial and ethnic comments up there!



If your able to weld iron and pan together under a mango tree .
And after you paint it with yellow paint .

You will become a genus and some oil money will be rolling for you.:D

Posted by gwappa| 21.10.2007 10:59

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AfeniAfeni is offline 
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=gwappa;209181038>If your able to weld iron and pan together under a mango tree .
And after you paint it with yellow paint .

You will become a genus and some oil money will be rolling for you.:D





:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

Posted by Afeni| 21.10.2007 11:03

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