Gennai Yanagisawa, 75, of Japan, left, looks on as Gen Corporation employee Yasutoshi Yokoyama, also of Japan, sits on the GEN H-4 helicopter, the world's smallest one-man helicopter, in Vinci, birthplace of Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci, near Florence, Italy, Sunday, May 25, 2008. The GEN H-4 helicopter, developed by Yanagisawa in the late 1990s, has two rotors turning in opposite directions to maintain stability, and four engines that enables a 30-minute flight with a top speed of about 56 miles per hour. The helicopters sell for about 6 million yen (US$57,140).
Japanese Gen Corporation employee Yasutoshi Yokoyama takes a demonstration flight on the GEN H-4 helicopter, the world's smallest one-man helicopter, in Vinci, birthplace of Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci, near Florence, Italy, Sunday, May 25, 2008. The GEN H-4 helicopter, developed by Gennai Yanagisawa, 75, of Japan, in the late 1990s, has two rotors turning in opposite directions to maintain stability, and four engines that enables a 30-minute flight with a top speed of about 56 miles per hour. The helicopters sell for about 6 million yen (US$57,140).
Japanese Gen Corporation employee Yasutoshi Yokoyama takes a demonstration flight on the GEN H-4 helicopter, the world's smallest one-man helicopter, in Vinci, birthplace of Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci, near Florence, Italy, Sunday, May 25, 2008. The GEN H-4 helicopter, developed by Gennai Yanagisawa, 75, of Japan, in the late 1990s, has two rotors turning in opposite directions to maintain stability, and four engines that enables a 30-minute flight with a top speed of about 56 miles per hour. The helicopters sell for about 6 million yen ($57,140).
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