54th Gordon Bennett Air Race
54th Gordon Bennett Air Race
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Discussion

Geneve

Original Poster:

3,999 posts

242 months

Sunday 26th September 2010
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CatherineJ

9,586 posts

266 months

Sunday 26th September 2010
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I was a bit disappointed that I didn't see this mentioned on the local news until yesterday morning. If I had have known earlier in the week, I would have liked to have gone and watched the start of the race.

anonymous-user

77 months

Sunday 26th September 2010
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So it's not a who get there first race but a who goes the longest distance? or is it who stays up for the longest?

Geneve

Original Poster:

3,999 posts

242 months

Sunday 26th September 2010
quotequote all
Who travels furthest from the starting point, I believe.

threespires

4,431 posts

234 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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The Swiss team have made it almost impossible to be beaten, terrific navigation, landing so close to the Black Sea.

Geneve

Original Poster:

3,999 posts

242 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
Great Race - now getting very tight and tense.

Yes the Swiss have been very clever - but how did they manage to go soooooooo fast?

Here: http://www.gordonbennett2010.com/tracking

Simpo Two

91,354 posts

288 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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You can't really navigate a balloon - ask de Rozier, Blanchard et al. You can only go up and down.

(currently reading 'The Aeronauts' by LTC Rolt smile)

Geneve

Original Poster:

3,999 posts

242 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
But you can go "up and down" into different air streams.

Simpo Two

91,354 posts

288 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
Indeed - but (originally at least) you didn't know if they were going to be better or worse, and you only had so much ballast/lift to experiment. Perhaps now you can get a live satellite GPS weather wind-direction feed into your gondola, but air currents aren't as predictable as sea currents.

If it was that scientific, they'd all be parked on the Black Sea - so I think there's a lot of luck involved.

Edited by Simpo Two on Tuesday 28th September 23:09

davepoth

29,395 posts

222 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Indeed - but (originally at least) you didn't know if they were going to be better or worse, and you only had so much ballast/lift to experiment. Perhaps now you can get a live satellite GPS weather wind-direction feed into your gondola, but air currents aren't as predictable as sea currents.

If it was that scientific, they'd all be parked on the Black Sea - so I think there's a lot of luck involved.

Edited by Simpo Two on Tuesday 28th September 23:09
The swiss took a calculated risk I think. They found a fast wind going east, but it took them too far south, meaning they would have to cross the Black Sea (which I guess they didn't want to attempt). They went as far as they safely could. According to the website everyone else is going for a more northerly track.

anonymous-user

77 months

Wednesday 29th September 2010
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Looks like the American one is missing in the Adriatic, and only three are left in.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-11433...

One of the remaining balloons is British.

Edited by el stovey on Wednesday 29th September 11:01

Geneve

Original Poster:

3,999 posts

242 months

Wednesday 29th September 2010
quotequote all
The Race is over - GBR 3rd, but more seriously US balloon still missing

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-11434...