Posted on 03/23/2004 6:36:40 PM PST by nuconvert
British Balloonist Claims Altitude Record in Colorado
Mar 23, 2004
By Ben Kieckhefer / Associated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) - A British balloonist soared into the Colorado sky Tuesday in an open wicker basket, saying he reached 42,000 feet - nearly 8 miles - in what would be a world record for a gas and hot air balloon. David Hempleman-Adams took off from Greeley and landed about 3 1/2 hours later in a farmer's field near Akron, 100 miles east of Denver on the Colorado plains.
The current altitude record for gas and hot air balloons is 38,507 feet, set in 1999 by the Breitling Orbiter crew in a pressurized cabin.
Hempleman-Adams, 47, was in an open basket, breathing through an oxygen mask and bundled up against temperatures he said reached minus-75 degrees.
Verifying the new record could take several months, since equipment measuring the air pressure must now be shipped to Europe and tested. The equipment was sealed before the flight.
Hempleman-Adams said he had intended to try only for the 34,741-foot record for his size of gas and hot air balloon, as measured by volume.
"I just decided to go for it," he said by telephone after landing. "We didn't know if it was possible with this size (balloon), but everything worked very well."
The record for all manned balloon flights was set in 1961 with a gas balloon that ascended to 113,740 feet, said Art Greenfield, director of contests and records for the National Aeronautic Association.
Last September, Hempleman-Adams became the first person to cross the Atlantic solo in an open wicker basket balloon. Tuesday, he used the same balloon he flew during that 86-hour trip, but it had been completely rebuilt to make it lighter.
He said he would also like to fly over Antarctica and perhaps Mount Everest, but said he did not know what he would try next. "We're going to go for beer later on, and that's where most trips discussed, over a pint of beer," he said.
While this feat by David Hempleman-Adams is noteworthy I believe that the story of Larry Walters and his lawn chair flight with helium balloons to an altitude of 16,000 feet is absolutely astounding.
The story is reported here. Be sure to note the audio file and listen in on his radio communications. Photos as well.
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