| A solar-powered plane nearing the close of a cross-continental  journey landed at Dulles International Airport outside the nation's  capital early Sunday, only one short leg to New York remaining on a  voyage that opened in May. 
 Solar Impulse's website said the  aircraft with its massive wings and thousands of photovoltaic cells  "gracefully touched down" at 12:15 a.m. EDT after 14 hours and four  minutes of flight from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Dulles in Washington's  Virginia suburbs.
 
 Pilot Bertrand Piccard was at the controls for  the last time on the multi-leg "Across America" journey that began May 3  in San Francisco. His fellow Swiss pilot, Andre Borschberg, is expected  to fly the last leg from Washington to New York City's John F. Kennedy  International Airport in early July, the website added.
 
 It is  the first bid by a solar plane capable of being airborne day and night  without fuel to fly across the U.S, at speeds reaching about 40 mph. The  plane opened by flying from San Francisco via Arizona, Texas, Missouri  and Ohio onward to Dulles with stops of several days in cities along the  way.
 
 Organizers said in a blog post early Sunday that Piccard  soared across the Appalachian mountains on a 435-mile (700-kilometre)  course from Cincinnati to the Washington area, averaging 31 mph (50  kph). It was the second phase of a leg that began in St. Louis.
 
 The  plane, considered the world's most advanced sun-powered aircraft, is  powered by about 12,000 photovoltaic cells that cover its enormous wings  and charge its batteries during the day. The single-seat Solar Impulse  flies around 40 mph and can't go through clouds; weighing about as much  as a car, the aircraft also took longer than a car to complete the  journey from Ohio to the East Coast.
 
 Despite its vulnerabilities  to bad weather, Piccard said in a statement that the conclusion of all  but the final leg showed that sun-powered cross-continent travel "proves  the reliability and potential of clean technologies."
 
 Organizers  said fog at Cincinnati Municipal Lunken Airport was a concern that  required the ground crew's attention before takeoff just after 10 a.The  standing seam roof clamp is reusable anchor point designed to mount on standing seam roofs.m. Saturday.Are you still hesitating about where to buy LED bulb e27?  The crew gave the plane a gentle wipe-down with cloths because of  condensation that had formed on the wings.Guaranteed low prices on all  modern Led ceiling light and LED light fixtures and free shipping!
 
 "The  solar airplane was in great shape despite the quasi-shower it  experienced" before takeoff from Cincinnati, the website added.  Washington was the first East Coast stop before the final planned leg to  New York.
 
 Organizers said the flight into the nation's capital  was an emotional one for Piccard as it was his last on the cross-country  flight before Borschberg has the controls on the final trek to New  York.
 
 At each stop along the way, the plane has stayed several  days, wowing visitors. Organizers said a public viewing of the aircraft  would be held Sunday afternoon at Dulles.
 
 As the plane's  creators, Piccard and Borschberg, have said their trip taking turns  flying the aircraft solo was the first attempt by a solar airplane  capable of flying day and night without fuel to fly across America. They  also called it another aviation milestone in hopes that the journey  would whet greater interest in clean technologies and renewable  energy.These solar street lamps can, apparently, operate entirely off the grid.
 
 The  Swiss pilots said in a statement that they expected to participate in  an energy roundtable and news conference Monday with U.S. Energy  Secretary Ernest Moniz about the technology. The LED downlight's optical design yields more productive beam lumens and good cutoff.  They have said the project's ultimate goal is to fly a sun-powered  aircraft around the world with a second-generation plane now in  development.
 
 Borschberg also said in a statement Sunday that the  pilots are eyeing 2015 for a worldwide attempt, adding their 'Across  America' voyage had taught them much as they prepare.
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