Audio By Carbonatix
An aircraft built by South African teenagers has successfully landed in Egypt six weeks after it set off from Cape Town.
The four-seater Sling 4 plane was assembled by a group of 20 students from vastly different backgrounds.
The crew landed in Namibia, Malawi, Ethiopia, Zanzibar, Tanzania and Uganda during the 12,000km (7,455 mile) trip.
Pilot Megan Werner, 17, founder of U-Dream Global project, said she was thrilled by the accomplishment.
"I'm so honoured to have made a difference around the continent at the places we've stopped.
"The purpose of the initiative is to show Africa that anything is possible if you set your mind to it," she added.
Another Sling 4 plane, flown by professional pilots, accompanied the teen flyers, whose goal was to give motivational talks for other teenagers along the way.
The teenagers built the aircraft in three weeks from a kit manufactured in South Africa by the Airplane Factory. Construction included assembling thousands of small parts.
Megan's father, Des Werner, who is a commercial pilot, said it would normally take 3,000 man hours to assemble a Sling 4.
The impressive feat had its challenges, Megan said.
In the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, they could not get fuel.
"When we eventually got it, the support aircraft started leaking fuel so they couldn't fly with us and only two people - Driaan van den Heever, the safety pilot, and I carried on," Megan said.
"We were concerned about flying across Sudan because of the political unrest in that country."
PHOTO: The plane was assembled by a group of 20 students from vastly different backgrounds
Megan was one of six in the group to have obtained a pilot's licence, and the six shared flying duties in their silver aircraft, which is emblazoned with maps of Africa on both wings together with sponsors' logos.
Their basic pilot's licences presented a further challenge as they only allow flying at a height where the ground is still visible and prohibit entering cloud.
The last leg, from Addis Ababa to Cairo via Aswan, tested the pilots' mettle.
"Driaan van den Heever and I flew alone for 10 hours, without the support aircraft, so it was two teenagers, all by ourselves with no support," Megan said.
PHOTO: Project participants (L-R) van den Heever, Werner and Hendrik Coetzer
The two pilots encountered a problem with one of their avionic systems about an hour into Egyptian airspace. So they decided it would be better to land at the closest domestic airport in Cairo, instead of the international airport as planned.
"That created a little chaos but it was done in the interest of safety," Des Werner said.
"In the end, it was just a loose connection which they sorted out but the bureaucratic process took a while to sort out because they had to complete a report," he added.
"When we landed in Egypt the authorities wanted to arrest us, take our passports and licences but luckily after about four hours, everything was sorted out and we got some more fuel and carried on to Aswan. We then flew from Aswan to Cairo and it was a really awesome feeling to land here," said Megan.
PHOTO: The plane was assembled by a group of 20 students from vastly different backgrounds
Megan was one of six in the group to have obtained a pilot's licence, and the six shared flying duties in their silver aircraft, which is emblazoned with maps of Africa on both wings together with sponsors' logos.
Their basic pilot's licences presented a further challenge as they only allow flying at a height where the ground is still visible and prohibit entering cloud.
The last leg, from Addis Ababa to Cairo via Aswan, tested the pilots' mettle.
"Driaan van den Heever and I flew alone for 10 hours, without the support aircraft, so it was two teenagers, all by ourselves with no support," Megan said.
PHOTO: Project participants (L-R) van den Heever, Werner and Hendrik Coetzer
The two pilots encountered a problem with one of their avionic systems about an hour into Egyptian airspace. So they decided it would be better to land at the closest domestic airport in Cairo, instead of the international airport as planned.
"That created a little chaos but it was done in the interest of safety," Des Werner said.
"In the end, it was just a loose connection which they sorted out but the bureaucratic process took a while to sort out because they had to complete a report," he added.
"When we landed in Egypt the authorities wanted to arrest us, take our passports and licences but luckily after about four hours, everything was sorted out and we got some more fuel and carried on to Aswan. We then flew from Aswan to Cairo and it was a really awesome feeling to land here," said Megan.DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Government engages large-scale mining companies on GANRAP
3 minutes -
‘3 Faces of Jeffrey Nortey’ returns June 12 with film, stage and street twist
12 minutes -
UPSA to host 9th Mini GUSA Games from May 5
36 minutes -
BBC Industrials marks Global Safety Day with road marking drive in Tema
42 minutes -
IMF urged to come clean on Bank of Ghana losses
46 minutes -
Soyalana Community Gala ignites football fever in Tolon
60 minutes -
Talent identification takes Maxwell Konadu and Awudu Issaka to Tolon
1 hour -
At least 130 Nigerians seek repatriation from South Africa after protests, Abuja says
1 hour -
Nigeria plans to repatriate nationals willing to leave South Africa after attacks
1 hour -
Ghana’s fishers hold the knowledge, why are they not shaping policy?
2 hours -
Two killed and many injured after car driven into crowd in German city of Leipzig
2 hours -
GNFS honours firefighters on International Firefighters’ Day 2026
2 hours -
Kasapreko PLC announces GH¢700million IPO on Ghana Stock Exchange
2 hours -
NIA resumes Ghana Card registration for children in Volta and Oti Regions
2 hours -
Handling of BoG 2025 report risks politicisation – Oppong Nkrumah
2 hours