A powered paraglider is type of ultralight aircraft.
It is a combination of two main components, a paraglider or "wing" that provides lift and a propulsion unit called a paramotor the pilot wears on his or her back that provides enough thrust for the aircraft to take off and fly.
So basically...
A powered paraglider is a combination of a paraglider wing and a motorized paramotor unit.
The powered paraglider "wing"
The most important part of a powered paraglider is the paraglider itself, usually referred to as the "wing" or "glider." The wing is what makes flight possible, not the paramotor. The wing determines most of the flight characteristics like speed, handling and so on. You don't need a paramotor to fly with a paraglider, just something tall to jump off of, like a mountain.
You can see videos of @captainobviou3 doing this. I would love to do that someday but where I live there is nothing tall to jump off of.
Paramotor Components
The propulsion unit of a powered paraglider is called a paramotor.
There are many manufacturers and different styles of paramotors all of which consist of a circular cage, an engine, fuel tank and a seating harness that retracts on take off and landings.
Everything is connected to the frame of the paramotor.
In the paramotor image below you can see the seating harness and the round cage with the netting. This prevents body parts and other objects from coming into contact with the propeller.
The Paramotor Engine
Most powered paragliders are propelled with small 2-stroke engines and while electric motors are used, presently they are fairly rare.
2-stroke internal combustion engines are favorable due to their impressive power-to-weight ratio for example the engine shown weighs less than 30 pounds and produces nearly 26hp!
4-stroke paramotor engines are available however the heavier weight prevents their popularity currently.
While there are many paramotor frame and cage manufacturers there are just a handful of companies that make engines.
Below you can see the paramotor unit with the engine and propeller. The fuel tank on this style of paramotor is inside the frame but on other styles the tank is usually located on the frame under the engine.
I had just got to the airport so the paraglider wing was still inside the stuff sack which can be seen next to the paramotor. The combination of these two components are what make up a powered paraglider. As you can see, this flying machine is very compact and easy to transport.
And finally, here is a picture of me flying.
When you takeoff you have to support the paramotor on your back which on average weights about 55 pounds. After liftoff however, the wing carries everything so you can sit back, relax and enjoy the flight.
Thanks for your attention,
Michael
PS - Upvote if you like this post!!
PSS - Flying at sunset is awesome!
Thanks for the shout out @michael-kahunka. One day I will get a PPG. I actually have a wing made for Powered Paragliding, but I need to get a motor.
I am amazed how small the #paragliding community really is in the world.
Great post!
See you in the air!
Thanks @captainobviou3 and thanks for the share!
Thanks for the informative post. I am scouting out different schools around the world to get my paragliding license. Any suggestions? I live in Utah and there is an infamous location called south mountain. They are pricey and I want to find a school abroad for cheaper.
I'm trying to connect with other adventure sport enthusiasts here on Steemit and hopefully build a little community of content creators who are going out on these extreme physical endeavors we do and post video and photo.
Love the "escaping the american disease machine" in your bio. that is currently what i am doing.
Keep up the work. Looking to seeing more of your content during your time aloft.
Thanks for the comment!
I would recommend two schools, one in Lakeland Florida called AviatorPPG and one down here in South Florida, their website is http://aerolight.com/
I don't know the costs for these two schools, figure $1500 to $2000 or so.
You can see some of my flying videos here...
http://paramotorflying.com/my-videos/
Followed you and look forward to seeing your content.
Michael
Right on man! I'll look into them.
If you are interested in snowboarding at all I've got a new snowboarding short film out. https://steemit.com/video/@arqetype/what-is-flow-what-is-valuable-about-zen-what-can-the-brain-states-give-us-checkout-my-new-film-snow-roshi-for-a-personal
If you check it out I would love to hear what you think.
Your film is awesome, if you're reading this comment, I recommend you check out @arqetype 's video link above!
@michael-kahunka thanks a bunch
Hi @arqetype, stoked to see you get in the air. I totally understand the price issue when it comes to learning, but if Point of the Mountain is in your backyard, the price is probably worth the world-class instruction. Paragliders in general usually seem to be pretty cool about trading and negotiating prices, might be worth cruising down there and seeing what they'd be willing to do. Be safe, and glad to see you working to build an adventure sport community on Steemit!
Concise and with some nice pics there Michael.
I can't understand why everybody isn't PPG'ing? ;)
Probably the cost Rob, however more and more people down here are doing it.
I think I prefer it to be a niche sport. Too many airborne at any one time is bound to cause havok lol.