Indian Tycoon Sets Balloon Flight Record 125
GillBates0 writes "The BBC is reporting that Vijaypat Singhania, a textile tycoon, has set a new world record for the highest hot air balloon flight. The 67-year-old took off from Mumbai, India in a 48m(160ft) balloon and flew to a height of 21,290m (69,852ft) breaking the earlier record of 19,811m(64,997ft)."
In more important news... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In more important news... (Score:1)
-russ
Is he any relation to (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Is he any relation to (Score:1)
And Now.... The rest of the story (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What is it about having a gajillion dollars... (Score:2, Insightful)
so what would _YOU_ do if you had a gajillion dollars?
Buy a Porsche..?
I'd bet he already has a few of those..
Re:What is it about having a gajillion dollars... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:What is it about having a gajillion dollars... (Score:1)
Do the math right (Score:1)
1 billion or 1000 million => 2 * 1000 = 2000 chicks!!
Unless the chicks you get are non-uniformly priced, in which case you may get a bulk discount and even more.
This is of course a slashdotter's dream.
Re:What is it about having a gajillion dollars... (Score:2)
not another one (Score:5, Funny)
These sequels to Railroad Tycoon are getting stranger and stranger.
Re:not another one (Score:4, Funny)
Ok, that's just horrible. I'm a horrible person.
That's very interesting, but... (Score:1)
Re:That's very interesting, but... (Score:1)
"Hi supernintendo Chalmers. I'm learnding." - Ralph Wiggum
Re:That's very interesting, but... (Score:1)
Re:That's very interesting, but... (Score:1)
"I'm normally not a praying man, but if you can hear me, save me superman!"
i bet that (Score:5, Funny)
Re:i bet that (Score:1)
Re:i bet that (Score:1)
Re:what about the katrina victims? (Score:1, Funny)
Live Videos of the flight (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Live Videos of the flight (Score:1)
Aren't Singhania's one of the richest families? (Score:5, Insightful)
Mission Impossible 70k (Score:3, Informative)
48 Meter balloon? (Score:1)
Re:48 Meter balloon? (Score:1)
Re:48 Meter balloon? (Score:2)
A semi-related question (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A semi-related question (Score:5, Interesting)
A weather balloon will continue to rise until it pops. Helium is lighter than air no matter the altitude, so ignoring the helium loss and the extra pressure inside the balloon due to the tension of the balloon itself, there is no point of equilibrium. I think you can theoretically create such a point, but it would rise so slowly that it would be unpractical.
So I was thinking to send one up that is already at/near equilibrium at ground level, aided by a second "booster" balloon to get it up in the air fast. The second balloon would either have to pop sooner than the first one, or else it would have to be cut off by the payload at a certain height. This can be done with a glow wire wound around a nylon tether, eg. After that, the fligt duration will be mainly limited by helium seeping out of the baloon, and I have no idea how long it can last.
I'm thinking to put a simple QRP (=low power) HAM transmitter on board, together with a few simple sensors (pressure and temperature readings). Recovery is unlikely, so a GPRS receiver is way to expensive IMO.
I don't know much about the legal aspects, but I doubt some nation will spend mega$$$ to shoot down a 25$ (?) balloon payload if it happens to drift into their territory. And even if they do, I won't care much (unless if they try to send me the bill - but I plan to include Bill Gates' address on the probe just for that reason 8-) ).
A. Coward: Wind speed can vary significantly with elevation, so I want to make measurements quite high
This is the part that has got me puzzled. You want to measure wind speeds high up in the air to assess possible wind turbine placings (you're a bored millionaire or what?), even though you realize ground level wind speed and high altitude wind speeds are unrelated?!? I really don't get it. Also, anemometers won't work, because the balloon is drifting along with the wind, so measured wind speed will be close to zero, even though the balloon can be moving at 100km/h. What you need to measure is the position of the balloon over time, and from that data you can deduce the wind speed.
Also note that wind turbines are placed based on avg. *long term* wind speeds, not on ad hoc measurements from a single balloon. You'll have to make measurements for multiple years.
So, based on all those arguments, I think your idea is majorly flawed, or else I've misunderstood you. Sorry in either case
Re:A semi-related question (Score:4, Interesting)
My friend Bill Brown (WB8ELK) has flown more than 200 balloons and has had great success of long term flights with balloons that simply have a pinholes poked in them. One he launched in Alabama a few years ago flew all night and was last heard off the coast of Nova Scotia [tapr.org].
Re:A semi-related question (Score:2)
It's a semi-long-term project, I'm still studying to get my HAM licence, but you really increased my motivation to get it real soon now! Ballooning seems like a fun way to get people together, young and old, both from the local HAM-club and the astronomy club (another hobby of mine).
73's,
ON????
Re:A semi-related question (Score:1)
Re:A semi-related question (Score:1)
Re:A semi-related question (Score:1)
I think he's wanting to do a tethered balloon. With anemometers at different spots on the tether. At first glance I see one major problem with this idea. The tether will pull the balloon downward as the wind pushes the balloon horizontally until the horizontal force of the wind and the lift of the balloon equalize. That might make it a little difficult use the balloon to simulate a
Re:A semi-related question (Score:1)
Simply by using common sense, won't tethered balloons have to follow the same regulations as pylons? As long as you stay below the maximum height, there shouldn't be any problem, if you want to go higher, you need to get a permit.
And thanks for the links, I'm learning a lot today
Re:A semi-related question (Score:1)
Re:A semi-related question (Score:2)
The triangle is only stable if it has a solid frame, that you can compress an pull alike. Some tethers won't do it. You could argue that you can
Re:A semi-related question (Score:2)
Re:A semi-related question (Score:2)
Any country that shoots down $25 balloons is probably your mortal enemy, and you'll have caused them to spend far more to shoot down the balloon than you spent getting it up t
Excellent (Score:2)
What's the point? (Score:1, Insightful)
Why does this get reported everywhere / anywhere?
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2, Informative)
Cost-effective way to solve some highly-parallelizable computing problems.
What's the point of MySQL?
Open-source, easy to use database. Well integrated with PHP for web applications.
What's the point of the iPod?
Attractive, easy-to-use, portable music player. Integrates well with ITMS.
What's the point of lighting in PC's?
I'm still trying to figure this one out.
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
This argument usually comes from people who aren't passionate about anything. It must be exhausting to sit at home every day laughing at and criticizing other people who are out there living life.
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
I mean, thats cool that he's setting a balloon flight record, but what does the fact that he has lots of money have to do anything?
Its like.....oh look, I'm doing this incredibly cool thing, and by the way did you know I'm filthy rich?!
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Why don't you understand? I don't get it.
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
People dream and desire to do things.
Projects like this fill some with wonder, others with hope.
It's the human experience.
Some little girl may hear of this and get interested in science.
Some little boy could decide to become a pilot.
Some person with power/money might decide to fund more research projects.
Some whiney bitch on a message board may say WTF?
If all we needed out of life was immediate value, we would still be hunter/gatherers
calc (Score:1)
perspecive... (Score:5, Informative)
A very good source for some perspective is this Wikipedia page on atmospheric heights [wikipedia.org]. Note that the troposphere (illustrated nicely with Mt. Everest just jutting into it, an airplane flying in this layer) only extends up to 17 km (at the equator, lowers as you near the poles - the figure at the right in the Wikipedia page is in miles though, so be careful) -- this guy flew well above that (21 km).
:
So this guy is in the stratosphere, where we see only weather balloons illustrated. The layer above (mesosphere, from about 50 km on) is practically space, it's apparently where meteors burn up. So I guess this guy reached the high stratosphere - for comparison check out that Mount Everest [wikipedia.org] is at 8.84 km elevation!
It's no wonder, then, that from the article (which I actually read, just for you)
He travelled in a pressurised cabin attached to a balloon as high as a 22-storey building.
This "pressurized cabin" is just mentioned once more, in this "quick facts" table:
whoops, sorry, there's once more mention of this enclosure, here are a couple of more paragraphs quoted for you, the appropriate text in bold):
And what the hell, there's so little I didn't reproduce, you might as well have a mirror. (Although I find only the following other fact interesting: "During the ascent, air temperatures plummeted to around -93C (-135F)." And maybe a quote from his wife Asha telling of her relief and joy at the success of the trip: "When I heard that he had broken the record, I became numb in mind and heart". I'm sure there's a funny to be made about that.)
CAREFUL, THERE IS NOTHING ELSE INTERESTING BELOW!!
Re:perspecive... (Score:2)
Let Me Be The First To Say (Score:2)
What's that you said?...
Re:Let Me Be The First To Say (Score:2)
Like this.
Record? What about Joe Kittinger? (Score:1)
Helium != Hot Air (Score:1, Informative)
Nothing to see here... (Score:1)
Rubbish (Score:1)
Psssh.
useless records (Score:1)
Balloon Delivery (Score:2)
Well they were (Score:1)
Re:Well they were (Score:1)
I figured that out from your name, either Indian or golfer from Fiji.
Yawn! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Yawn! (Score:2)
I wonder what it sounded like to him? Or if he went deaf with the bang.
Re:Yawn! (Score:1)
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Re:Yawn! (Score:1)
Indian Tycoon? (Score:1)
Really a record? (Score:1)
Is it better than Zoo Tycoon or Prison Tycoon? (Score:1)
I was thinking of NES Balloon Fight (Score:1)
Freefall (Score:1)
India and Pakistan (Score:1, Troll)
IND: We are holding world record for highest balloon pilot now.
PAK: Not you are!
IND: Yes we are. You are still third world country now.
PAK: We will still bomb you with our A-Bomb! You will be glowing ashes, while we will remain the center of human culture.
IND: You will not, you can not do any of that. You are third world country who eats the flesh of animals.
PAK: And you are stupid balloon flyers who answer the phone for your American bosses!
IND: And you are terrorists who eat dead cows!
Re:India and Pakistan (Score:2)
But when you get right down to it, racism, bigotry
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:1, Insightful)
Or you could be a normal person and spend your money as you see fit. If you think people should be forced to spend their money for causes you like, become a politic
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:1)
Maybe Saddam was the only one that could not understand the definition. Everyone else took the notion quite seriously.
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:1)
"God bless those pagans."
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, aren't there people in your country who are billionaires? People who have far more money than they could possibly spend? Well, there are also people who live in abject poverty too.
Tell me, how is that any different?
P.S. The earthquake affected parts of India too.
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:2)
No, we Americans have zero billionaires. I think that pretty much refutes your entire point quite nicely, doesn't it? Yes, hm, well maybe you should stick to the facts, sir, and leave all these crazy hypothetical angles where they belong - in the hearts and minds of naive little children who still dare to dream of a world where America has billionaires.
Oh look, you were modded "Insightful". You're probably a
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:2)
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:2)
My point is still valid. Pick any country and you will find people who are shockingly rich and those who are shockingly poor.
My point, made through satire, is that this is the most uninteresting sentiment I've seen moderated as "Insightful" in a long, long time. And as far as Slashdot moderation goes, that's saying a hell of a lot.
I need help, you say. Hm. You're the guy who's posting a whole string of thoughtful comments to point out that some people are r
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:2)
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:1)
Meh. You posted it. I've long since given up on the moderation system.
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:1)
A list of billionares in 2005 [wikipedia.org] (measured by United States Dollars), or a count by nationality [wikipedia.org] You can see that Americans make up the majority. Of course, I assume that "America" refers to "The United States", if you're being tricky and meaning something like "Paraguay" then you'd be right.
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Re:and at the same time ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Short of forced redistribution of wealth on a massive scale that puts us all on a level playing field, that's always going to be the case, so why make a big deal about this particular case?
Re:and at the same time ... (Score:1)
Re:Later that day (Score:2)
-russ
Re:Later that day (Score:2)
No seriously. Mumbai is the only megalopolis in the world with a leopard problem [industelegraph.com].