Guests at the Model Aviation Hall of Fame banquet were
  thrilled with Burt Rutan's presence. Many young and old
  in attendance captured a gladly personalized memento.


  MA Aeromodeling Editor Bob Hunt acutely interviews Burt
  Rutan during an exclusive meeting with the magazine staff.
 

 

MA: Did you gravitate toward designing your own models, and, if so, were any of these unique compared to the normal models of the era?

BR: Well, they were all unique. I've got a picture of me in what was the Seventh Day Adventist Church equivalent of the Boy Scouts, called the Pathfinders. And in that photo I'm holding a model that I built that looked just like a 707, with the engines mounted on pylons.

    That was back in the days when they had the [de Havilland D.H.106] Comet airliner, but before the 707. And I don't know why I did that ... but there was a military airplane, the B-47, with pylons ...

MA: We know that you competed with models. What aspects of competition flying were challenging to you?

BR: Well, they are all challenging, of course. There is a picture I have that was taken at either the 1959 or 1960 Nationals in which I have A1 and A2 Towline Gliders, a Payload Free Flight model, a Free Flight Scale model, a Control Line Scale model, and a Stunt model.

    I never did get that much into Control Line Speed. That was always more expensive. The guys that flew Speed paid a lot more for their engines than we could afford in those days. I couldn't do the stuff that was expensive, and that's why I didn't get into RC then. And of course everybody knows how all of that affected my career.

MA: Do you still fly models or do your full-scale interests keep you too busy for that?

BR: No. I don't even fly full-size airplanes anymore because I lost my medical [license]. I've got a standby "ignition system": a defibrillator. I can't get my medical ticket back.

    I always said that when I retire I'm going to go back and do that [modeling]. And at times I've thought that I really ought to get into model aviation instead of home-built kit aviation because of the liability aspects associated with it.

    If I wasn't real busy with building these spaceships right now, I'd be really strongly considering getting into the modeling industry as something to do for the next 20 years. You guys have so much better equipment these days. I looked at all the stuff that you can buy and I just drool about the kind of model I could build now. The problem is that my other interests just keep me too busy.

    The only reason that I'm doing golf is that I need some exercise. I need to get out and that's the only thing I could find that interests me. In fact, I've found that taking a 4-iron and hitting a golf ball onto a green is more rewarding than making a good landing in an airplane. And it's more difficult than making a good landing!

MA: Have you looked at the aerodynamics of a golf ball and tried to improve upon them?

BR: No, they're way too complex [much laughter].

MA: Do you find that engineers and/or technicians who were/are modelers are assets to you?

BR: Absolutely! There are two guys who are in this room [who are great examples of that]. The guy who designed the IFO [Indoor Flying Object]—Dan Kreigh—is one of our best engineers. I hired him because he was a modeler.

    And Dave Ganzer, he works at Paul MacCready's company [AeroVironment] now, and he's a very good engineer. I hired him also because he was a modeler.

MA: What skills would today's aeromodeler need to possess to aspire to a career in full-scale aircraft development and construction?

BR: Lockheed [for instance] goes out and looks for skills. They are looking for someone who can follow detailed blueprints, not for someone who is a craftsman. And then they train him on how to lay up composites. But I want to start with someone who is a good craftsman.

MA: You've designed a piston-powered airplane that has flown around the world nonstop, a jet-powered airplane that has flown nonstop around the world, and a vehicle that has flown into space. What is the next challenge for you?

BR: I've got a lot of stuff going on at Scaled Composites right now. The challenge that I can talk about, just because [Richard] Branson has been talking about it, is that we are developing a commercial, "fly the public" spaceship. And we'll be building a lot of them. This isn't a prototype program; we're going to build a lot of spaceships!

    And there will be spaceports all over the place. And their operating cost will be such that it will reach millions of people and enable them to fly outside the atmosphere. So that's a big deal.

MA: You are certainly a unique, out-of-the-box thinker when it comes to aircraft design. Are there any designers whose work you particularly admire?

BR: Certainly Wernher Von Braun, [Sergei] Korolev—he was Von Braun's equivalent in Russia—Kelly Johnson, Howard Hughes. I'm getting the Howard Hughes award in a couple of weeks.

    I made a list for Aviation Week [magazine]. They asked me to list what were the most important things in the first 100 years of powered flight.

    This was the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' powered flight. I thought up nine people and wrote them down. And I wrote that article and turned it in. And then I started working on this idea that is not unique, but it really hit me hard that what people do with their lives has a lot to do with what they're exposed to when they're kids from 4 years to 14 years old.

    And I looked back at this list and I found out that every single one of those nine people was a little kid when the airplane had blossomed from nothing in 1908, to thousands of pilots, hundreds of airplanes, in 39 countries in only four years. So this thing really blossomed up; out of all the millions of kids, the ones who were inspired were that age.

    I was inspired by some phenomenal increase in activity after World War II. I was born in '43. The sound barrier was broken when I was a young kid, and the Jet Age came in, the Missile Age, and all the records and so on just went skyrocketing. I think that my exposure to that had a lot to do with the reason that I've had the courage to go out and try new things.

    The problem is kids now are being bored. Cell phones with pictures in them does not really stroke their passion for exploration and creativity. I don't think that does it.

    And there are so many kids that can't do anything with their hands and they think that inventing something new is some different piece of software. You look at [Bill] Gates, who has made all his money because he cornered the market on some operating system and, you know, I'm bothered by that. That's not right.

    Well, the thing is, you still have kids who go out and do it, but you've got to remember they are the ones that are going to take us to the stars. Not the kids that will only buy something packaged.

MA: In closing, what words of encouragement or inspiration would you like to leave our members with?

BR: You know, try to come up to the [AMA] Nationals. Try to come up with something where you award breakthroughs—new ideas. Try to do that. You can't predict a breakthrough so it's kind of hard to say, but recognize that somebody did something that's a new idea and took the courage to fly it.

MA: Thanks, Burt.
MA

Sources:

Burt Rutan
www.isepp.org/Pages/02-03%20Pages/Rutan.html
www.scaled.com/
www.scaled.com/projects/tierone/
www.isepp.org/Pages/02-03%20Pages/Rutan-2.html
www.space.com/news/050727_branson_rutan.html

The Ansari X Prize
www.xprize.org/about/what_is_the_xprize.php

The Indoor Flying Object (IFO)
www.hobby-lobby.com/ifo.htm
www.wildrc.com/htmlpages/designer.html


A slideshow presentation by Bob Underwood featured this image (by Mark
Lanterman) which humorously suggested a design idea to support Burt's
latest recreational intereststs.

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