Two get very high, and other hot air balloon related foolery

Friday, April 29, 2005

Hypobaric chamber visit

Lev and I enjoyed a hectic day yesterday that seems from 12 hours later almost to have not happened.



I was very pleased that, the Levster had managed to blag business class seats on BA/Commair and sitting at 31,000’ on the way up eating breakfast it seemed that the trip would be very straightforward. Until Lev asked what the outside temperature was and we were told a chilly -42. We also had a tailwind that got us to our destination 10 minutes early, ah um. But, the houses didn’t look too far away!!



The flight also gave me a chance to look at the Greytown / Tugela area in great detail.



A slight technical crisis had arisen at East Coast that was unwinding as we flew; the result was that rather than staying over in Pretoria and meeting David Mortimer, what would be right now, Lev had to quickly arrange to get us back the same day.



I went to the hire car office; we then proceeded to wait almost as long as it had taken to fly up from Durban for the car. You know the story, space for five people to help with only two working.



That made us fairly late onto the R21, we had been told it would take an hour to get to the Institute for Aviation medicine in Pretoria and of course there were traffic snarl ups being reported on the radio.



Stress is one of the factors that affect the early onset of Hypoxia, with a problem at East Coast, complete change of arrangements, delayed hire car and journey we thought impossible to do in the available time we managed to arrive on time and feeling not in any way flustered!



I was fairly amazed that Lev just uttering the words, ”We are here to see Sgt Major Ross”, made the gates open, it was effortless. I expected at least 20 minutes of being asked questions about my great grandparents.



As it should be, in the building in which big machines are held there were plenty of echoing corridors and steps. The chambers of which there were two had the appropriate number of levers and dials. Sgt Major Ross was the man operating the controls and unfortunately I cannot remember the names of the two doctors. One a physiologist and the other a straight forward medical man. Both of them seemed just older than my eldest son who is in grade 0.



We were to be taken fairly rapidly up to 12,000’ sit there a while making sure all was ok and then at 2000 fpm up to 20,000’ where we sat for several minutes without oxygen steadily loosing functions! Yet again sponsors HP came to the fore as the machine monitoring our health was made by them. The doc measured our blood saturation level dropping and would not let it drop below 60%.



Just for Lev here’s a chart explaining what range it should be in. I think, although my mind may not have got this right at 20,000’, I will have to review the video carefully. Lev’s saturation which was 100% at base point dropped to 65 and mine 79 although my saturation at the start was 95 I think. By the following chart that makes me indifferent normally. That can’t be right ;-)



Stage
Altitude in Feet
Saturation (%)

Indifferent 0 to 10000 95 to 90
Compensatory 10000 to 15000 90 to 80
Disturbance 15000 to 20000 80 to 90
Critical 20000 to 23000 70 to 60

My slightly better performance at altitude may be the km’s I have done in the gym. Or it could be that Lev had been up until two that morning preparing today’s show which then all fell apart and he’s sitting at the station making another plan right now! Or could also be the fact that Lev lives at sea level and I live at 4000’.



I was very nervous about the chamber, Lev on the other hand took the view that there were grown ups, sort of, with us and they wouldn’t let anything happen. I took no solace earlier when one of the Generals in a brief brief suggested that, “30,000’ is too high and we might be best to pray!” Hum sound medical advice, I’m not sure.



The chamber itself was noisy, brightly lit and with a bearded man outside at the big picture window operating levers.



If you suffered from claustrophobia the closing of the door would instantly bring on panic I should think. At one point Lev asked if Sgt Major Ross could hear us and then made some off colour remarks to which the psychologist replied that, “He couldn’t hear us which was just as well because he is the chap that lets us out”.



I personally felt the tingling at my extremities and anxiety. More than likely euphoria but its hard to tell. Lev seemed to get quieter. We obviously both survived but the stupidity of attempting anything at high altitude without the right equipment was underlined.



When they bought us down at 4000’ fpm my right ear very quickly became blocked and very painful. I asked them to slow the rate of descent, which Sgt Ross did and then we actually climbed back up to 18,000’ again which helped. We then descended at a much slower rate with me clearing my ears best I could.



Anyhow enough for now, I just wanted to get something down whilst it’s fresh in my mind. If you listen to ECR (don’t forget you can listen online) http://www.ecr.co.za on Monday Lev should broadcast a piece although I’m not sure if he will have time as they are doing an OB from PMB (more capital letters please)



Monday will be one week to the day until we have the first big attempt.



I will pull pictures from my camcorder and place them with this in the blog later. It will be interesting to see what Lev has to write about this.



Cheers all

Tuesday, April 19, 2005


No entrys for ages then two come along at once, rough idea of where we would go based on observations on the 18th of April Posted by Hello

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Lazy I know

Things get ever more exciting as the big week approaches.

We have decided to have another technical run through on the Monday the 9th, if its going well and the weather is right we might just keep on going.

The training at the Insititute for Aviation Medicine is booked along with the ride ot 30,000' in the hypobaric chamber for the 28th of April, gulp.

More later

Cheers

G



Monday, April 04, 2005


Tell me Lev which way to the pub Posted by Hello

Sunday, April 03, 2005


Its really heavy Posted by Hello

Press release

Heres what Lev had to say about it all

Gary Mortimer and Lev David are proud to announce that the first official test of in-flight systems for their forthcoming attempt at the South African high flight balloon record was enormously successful.

Gary and Lev launched from Rosetta in the KwaZulu-Natal on Saturday morning (April 2, 2005) to test tracking and communications systems developed by H Communications in Johannesburg especially for the flight, and running on laptops sponsored by HP.

The ingenious systems will not only be essential for the team to break the high altitude record, but will enable anyone to track the much-anticipated flight in real-time on the internet at www.ecr.co.za and www.airborneadventuresafrica.com.

The team also got to test their extreme weather clothing for the first time. The gear from The North Face is widely considered to be the best extreme weather clothing in the world and has only recently been made available in South Africa through an exclusive agreement with Duesouth. The team expects temperatures to be as low as –50 degrees Celsius at the peak of their flight, so the gear will definitely be pushed to its limits when the team flies in May.

Gary Mortimer is a professional balloonist operating from Nottingham Road. Lev David is producer and co-presenter KwaZulu-Natal’s biggest breakfast show, The Bokomo East Coast Breakfast Serial on East Coast Radio. In the past few months, the show has grown in popularity to become the most listened-to breakfast show in the history of East Coast Radio, a feat virtually unheard of in the radio industry for a show less than a year old.

Gary and Lev’s record attempt will be extensively covered on the show, providing a uniquely thrilling story for the listeners. Given the extraordinary risks involved, nobody can say for sure how the story will turn out, although the team remains confident.

Saturday’s test flight was not without its problems, though—a temporary tracking failure meant that Lev had to perform emergency repairs while in the air, being talked through the repair by the technical team on the ground, having to scramble over the balloon basket at 10000 to get to the tracking box.

The landing in Estcourt was also particularly hair-raising, with the team having to contend with frighteningly strong winds. It was only an ant heap that stopped the team from crashing into a barbed wire fence.

The pilots would like to extend its condolences to the no doubt very large extended family of the ants who died valiantly stopping the balloon just in time.

Issued by

The Pilots

April 3, 2005


Don't call your mum now Lev Posted by Hello

Lev to the Rescue

Lev climbed over the compartments to open up the small poly coolbox in which ZS0 HOT lives in order to make sure it was connected correctly.

Maybe next time we will put it in the same compartment as Lev!!


Images from the practice flight 2nd April 2005 Posted by Hello

Saturday, April 02, 2005

Great test

Just back from a test flight,

The APRS tracking worked great, managed to talk to Joburg air traffic, the modified burners were fine.

All in all a great time.

The weather did'nt really play ball though, cold front passing through with strong winds at the surface and at high levels with a funny sorted middle bit of slow winds.

We therefore did'nt go too high but got all the communication issues sorted and Lev worked out how to find and follow the data on the laptop.

Very pleased.

G