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Folding plane a real transformer

Goose Creek native's design also loves water

The Post and Courier
Tuesday, June 17, 2008


The ICON A5 is a two-seat sport plane featuring an amphibious design with retractable landing gear, plus several patent-pending technologies highlighted by folding wings.

Provided

The ICON A5 is a two-seat sport plane featuring an amphibious design with retractable landing gear, plus several patent-pending technologies highlighted by folding wings.

Hawkins

Provided

Hawkins

When Kirk Hawkins was a child in his mother's arms during an airplane trip, he turned from staring out the window.

"One day, mama," he told her, "I'm going to land on the clouds."

Today, the Goose Creek native has the clouds in his hands. ICON Aircraft just unveiled a two-seater, amphibious propeller plane with wings that fold up, so it can be carried on a trailer. It can be stored in the garage, land in a field or near an island for use as an afternoon pastime.

The idea is to make flying a handy, relatively affordable thrill, like powerboats. It's novel enough that the ICON has been profiled in The Wall Street Journal.

Hawkins, 40, is the Los Angeles company's founder, the man with a dream to put the adventurer in the pilot's

seat. Hawkins is a 1985 Berkeley High School graduate who has jumped back and forth between the seats of powerboats, motor bikes, hang gliders and experimental aircraft, and was always a little puzzled why airplanes weren't built for motorsports, too.

"No, I never grew up in that respect," Hawkins said.

"It's very innovative. It's very impressive," said Earl Lawrence of EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2008, the Wisconsin air show where a demonstration model of the plane, the ICON A5 will be showcased on the ground in its July public debut.

The plane is a beauty, with a bubble cockpit that looks like a Smart car with wings that runs on gasoline.

It's a step up from ultralight flying, a for-fun personal aircraft that has safety features and requires a Federal Aviation Administration pilot's license, so it can be bought with a bank loan and insured.

"Unlike a Jet Ski, where you throw the keys at anybody," Hawkins said, the ICON A5 is serious flying.

"This is something he's wanted to do for a long time," said Eric Harris, a mechanical engineer who as a neighbor helped Hawkins in high school develop a wind tunnel project that won international science fair awards. "It's a really cool-looking plane."

The cost is still a little too cool for a lot of wallets. The base price for an ICON A5 is $139,000. The plane will be marketed to upscale adventure trekkers, "a touch of style and luxury," Lawrence said.

And the plane has yet to fly. The company won't begin the prototype flights necessary to win FAA certification until this summer.

But orders are already coming in for the ICON A5. The company hopes to deliver the first planes to buyers in 2010.

Hawkins got his pilot's license at 16 years old. He flew F-16 fighters in Iraq with the U.S. Air Force.

Hawkins has an engineering degree from Clemson University and master's degrees from Stanford University in engineering and business.

Hawkins' mother, who still lives in Berkeley County, keeps a shelf of his trophies for dirt-bike riding, waterskiing and skydiving. "He gets excited to invent things. From paper (planes) to balsa wood to wind tunnels, flying has been his dream all his life," said Joyce Hawkins Griffin. "This is a new toy. So it's going to be fantastic."

For more information about ICON Aircraft, go to www.iconaircraft.com.





Reach Bo Petersen at 745-5852 or bpetersen@postandcourier.com.









Video of the plane




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Comments

This article has  5 comment(s)

Posted by Picky on June 17, 2008 at 1:46 a.m. (Suggest removal)

How do I get on the waiting list?



Posted by Neponset on June 17, 2008 at 7:13 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I would be interested in knowing something about the planes specifications, such as anticipated stall speed, cruise speed, wt., red line, rate of climb., etc. It sounds like the plane was designed by folks who do not have formal training and experience in light aircraft design and flight tests will be key in check out their work.



Posted by Early on June 17, 2008 at 7:41 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Good job, probably best you moved to LA, more open thinking there! 139 is not that much for an airplane. Go down to the marina sometime, most of those boats you couldn't touch for 139k. Will this be a EAA airplane only?



Posted by olroofer on June 17, 2008 at 8:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Good job Kirk, some people are shooting you down, because they were not smart enough to follow through with their own inventions. Oh, be carefull, there may be some fithisists, arrowknotical d-ziners, and sometimes the okaysional nookleer enjanea that wreeds these calmints.



Posted by iloveohiointhesummer on June 17, 2008 at 2:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Great work Kirk. You have certainly have the passion.




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