Friday, January 30, 2015

Balloon Pilots Break World Records Crossing The Pacific Ocean

A two-man crew on Thursday beat the 5,209-mile record set in 1981 for gas balloons, crossing the Pacific Ocean from Japan in the process. The next day, they also passed the world record for time spent aloft.



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The pilots — Troy Bradley of Albuquerque and Leonid Tiukhtyaev of Russia — traveled farther than the 5,209-mile record set by the Double Eagle V in 1981, their team announced.


To set a new record, a crew must exceed a current record by 1%, as confirmed by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, which the Two Eagles flight did by Thursday afternoon after surpassing the 5,260-mile marker.


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The current record of 137 hours, 5 minutes and 50 seconds was set in 1978 during the first trans-Atlantic balloon flight.


At 7:29 a.m. MT, the Two Eagles balloon passed the record, and then beat it by at least an additional 1% at 8:51 a.m., mission control reported. The crew was still roughly 400 miles from its landing point in Baja Mexico, which they expected to reach on Saturday.




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