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Pakistani villager builds his own plane

China Daily | Updated: 2019-05-09 09:32

Pakistani villager Muhammad Fayyaz (right) speaks to visitors as he stands alongside his small plane at his residence in Tabur village in central Punjab province. ARIF ALI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

TABUR, Pakistan - The engine is from a road cutter, the wings are burlap, the wheels are borrowed from a rickshaw: A popcorn seller has caught the attention of the Pakistan Air Force by building his own plane.

The tale of Muhammad Fayyaz has captured the hearts of many in a nation where millions just like him have limited access to education and are fighting for opportunities.

"I was literally in the air. I couldn't feel anything else," Fayyaz said of his first flight in a machine he learned to build mainly from viewing TV clips and online blueprints.

There has been a steady stream of visitors wanting to view his creation, which now sits in the empty courtyard of his three-room home in the village of Tabur in Punjab Province.

The 32-year-old said he had dreamed of joining the air force as a child, but his father died while he was in still in school, forcing him to drop out at the eighth grade and do odd jobs to feed his mother and his five younger siblings.

As an adult, his passion for flying remained undiminished, so he took a wild gamble on a new dream and put everything he had into creating his own craft.

By day he worked as a popcorn seller, by night as a security guard, saving every rupee he could.

The first thing he had to acquire was information. He began by watching episodes of the National Geographic Channel's Air Crash Investigation for insight into thrust, air pressure, torque and propulsion.

Cheap internet access in a nearby city helped fill the gaps, with Fayyaz claiming he spliced blueprints of planes he found online for his own creation.

He sold a piece of family land, and took out a 50,000 rupee ($350) loan from a microfinance NGO, which he is still paying off.

He used his meager funds creatively, buying burlap sacks wholesale and persuading a kind workshop employee who had seen him scouting for materials to build him a propeller.

There was trial and error. Some equipment needed to be replaced, designs had to be altered, the wiring had to be reworked.

His family worried he was obsessed.

"I kept telling him to stop. I kept telling him to concentrate on his family and work. But he didn't listen to a single word," his mother, Mumtaz Bibi, recalled.

But Fayyaz kept going. And, at the end of it all produced a plane: tiny, fragile, and painted a bright blue.

In February, he said, after more than two years of ridicule, he was ready.

The plane reached 120 km/h before taking off, said Ameer Hussain, a witness who claims to have ridden alongside the plane in a motorcycle.

"It was between two-and two-and-half feet (about 60-75 centimeters) off the ground," he said. "It flew for about two to three kilometers before landing."

AFP has been unable to verify the claim.

But the attempt made Fayyaz bold enough to want to try again in front of the rest of his village, many of whom had mocked his efforts.

He picked March 23, Pakistan Day, for the unveiling. Police said hundreds of people crowded around his tiny plane, many clutching national flags.

Representatives from the Pakistan Air Force have made two visits to view the plane and the commander of a nearby base issued him a certificate that praises his "passion and dexterity" in building what it described as a "mini basic airplane".

Agence France-Presse

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