kirjoitti
legroups.com...
From the Czech news service.
Headline: Brno pilots plan to fly around the world in glider
BRNO (PDM staff with CTK) 12 July - A team of experts from the
Brno-based Sport Aviation Association is preparing for the first ever
flight around the world in a glider, association head Vladislav Zejda
told CTK yesterday.
Is this a newspiece?
I found
http://www.radio.cz/en/article/35215 which is from Dec.2002
http://archiv.radio.cz/php/parse.pht...14-12-02.xml#1
But in general, it would be nice to hear wether there are any thermals on
the oceans?
They are mentioned at least here
http://www.antarcticconnection.com/a...lbatross.shtml
"Albatrosses are supreme gliders; with modified wings to maximize the
updrafts and thermals over the open ocean. Albatrosses are best observed
during rough weather, when high waves create strong uplifting air currents,
enabling them to remain aloft with hardly a wing beat for hours on end."
And what would be the ideal heigth to soar over the ocean? Is it over 20km
as Hana Zejdova said in the interview? Or is it so low over the water
surface, that you (or the glider) can utilize vertical air movements caused
by the water waves in the horizontal wind.
Is it possible to soar above these air waves?
And if it it impossible to glide over the ocean, could it be still possible
to make a record how long man can soar from from west to east over land
areas? And allow him to come down in the evenings for sleep and continue in
the morning? It would be a famous and memorable air rally even that way,
especially if it is flown as competition, and if it is possible to fly from
Siberia to Alaska across Bering Sea
Fancy imagination?
--
Erkki Mikola