John K. Moody is widely acclaimed as the “Father of Ultralights,” and he makes effective use of that unique title to publicize his new millennium act featuring his last millennium ultralight. Is Moody really the father of ultralights or the first to fly one? Several other enthusiasts were experimenting with power units for various kinds of hang gliders in the mid-1970s when Moody started. His distinction was that he was the first person to foot-launch and climb from flat terrain without benefit of wind or a slope. I saw Moody fly in the summer of 1975 when he performed before about 250 hang glider pilots in a contest on the sand dunes near Frankfort, perched on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. He began this risky behavior on March 15, 1975, above a frozen lake southwest of Milwaukee, at age 32. Into almost still winds at the end of a day of hang-gliding competition, Moody ran his heart out and coaxed his Icarus II biwing hang glider off the beach with a 10-hp West Bend engine giving him some push.
Pioneer in Ultralight Industry Still Going Strong
John K. Moody, a.k.a. the "Father of Ultralights," directs a Discovery Channel crew as they attach small cameras to the Easy Riser's leading edge.
While this Part 103 legal ultralight's cockpit may appear spartan, it in fact bristles with the controls and levers Moody uses while flying.
After losing his nosewheel to the "repo man," off come Easy Riser's maingear.
Moody's plane appears to be in big trouble. All three of its landing gear have been shot off, and now a third shot takes off the horizontal tail shown fluttering away!
As the act comes to a close, Moody lands neatly on his feet sans wheel landing gear or horizontal tail, unbeknowst to spectators that the plane needs neither part to function.
Moody shows off the Easy Riser's day-glow orange wheels, which are painted this color so his crew can easily find them after they've been "blown off."