

DIY High-Altitude Ballooning 176
The Ape With No Name writes "Ever wanted to see the black of space but just can't pay a cool 20 million to do so? Well, just build your own small-scale, high-altitude balloon like these guys out of styrofoam, duct tape, electrical kit and a 'consumer-grade' weather balloon. They reached an estimated 52000 feet, had all kinds of tech issues, including hacking code to fly the mission minutes before launch. Cool pics and video were taken throughout the mission. Next flight is in approximately 2 weeks with 100,000 feet the goal."
Movie Mirrors (Score:5, Informative)
I ask that you please do not stream them. Thanks!
Re:Movie Mirrors (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Movie Mirrors (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Movie Mirrors (Score:3, Insightful)
Exciting but risky (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Exciting but risky (Score:1, Informative)
http://balloons.space.edu/habp/ [space.edu]
Not that risky (Score:4, Interesting)
Not really.
1 The earth is mostly empty land.
2. It will have a parachute so it should do no damage with it hits.
3. Even if the parachute fail odds are pretty good that unless it hits someone on the head it will not hurt anyone.
4. Noaa and the USAF have been doing the exact same thing for years and no one has been hurt yet.
USAF does bucket captures (Score:2)
http://spacecovers.com/articles/article_corona2.h t m [spacecovers.com]
Re:USAF does bucket captures (Score:2)
The normal landing (on soil, at least) is done by strapping on a bunch of corragated cardboard to the bottom of the payload and letting the cardboard take most of the landing abuse when it comes down on parachute.
Because they have a good idea on what the wind direction vs altitude profile is, even these parachute landings get put down pretty near where t
Re:Not that risky (Score:2)
Most of the land is empty, yes, but overwhelmingly the earth is empty water. Without any planning what-so-ever, you'd likely end up in an ocean, which woudlnt' hurt anyone.
--
Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU! [bobpaul.org]
Re:Not that risky (Score:2)
The Earth is mostly empty water: true
The earth is mostly empty land: true
The Earth is mostly empty land: false
THIS, children, is why we MUST pay attention to capitalization.
Re:Not that risky (Score:2)
I heard the earth was mostly water.
Basically there a regulations about weight (Score:3, Interesting)
http://vpizza.org/~jmeehan/balloon/ [vpizza.org]
was very careful to follow the regulations. Not sure if the UT guys knew what they were doing in that regards. Basically, you do not necessarily need FAA permission if the balloon is small enough, just so one does not end with one's payload smashing through an airplane windscreen or blowing up a turbine. To quote above link, one generally doesn't need to file a flight plan unless the balloon:
(i) Carries a payload package that weighs
Re:Exciting but risky (Score:2)
Cheaper (Score:5, Funny)
or alternatively, stick two pieces of aforementioned duct tape over your eyelids and experience the black of space right here at home.
DUHH!!! (Score:5, Funny)
>but just can't pay a cool 20 million to do so?
Yeah - just wait for the sunset.
Re:DUHH!!! (Score:1)
Re:DUHH!!! (Score:1, Funny)
I live in a major metropolitan area, you insensitive clod!
Re:DUHH!!! (Score:2, Funny)
I'm at the pole, you insensitive clod.
Re:DUHH!!! (Score:2)
"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along." (Score:1)
>As anyone who works with modern electronics knows, hardware is only half the equation
Lucky (Score:2, Insightful)
There is a good reason for that.
I realize
I am very happ
Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along (Score:2)
The code they had was not really "flight" code - the code did not control flight in any way - it was just a sealed baloon that went up and popped. The code was just controlling when to turn GPS / radio and camera on and off. In the end they wrote code to run it for 2 hours, then turn it off. Not exactly the most compl
Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along (Score:2)
Dang. Already /.ed (Score:1)
Re:Dang. Already /.ed (Score:1)
The UX-1 Story
by Mike Coffey (KJ4Z) and Dan Bowen (K2VOL)
Dan (K2VOL) and I originally decided we wanted to launch a balloon in the Spring of 2003. We had seen a few articles about hams launching balloons, visited a few websites about their adventures, and thought it sounded like something we'd like to get into. We made plans, did some research, and then life intervened. A year went by without any further real action. In the Fall of 2003, I acquired several
my god its a UFO! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:my god its a UFO! (Score:1)
Another Cool Page... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Another Cool Page... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Another Cool Page... (Score:2)
He's got you for that.
The black of space? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The black of space? (Score:4, Interesting)
Enough weather ballons and a lawn chair [panix.com], and you could actually go there, or close enough [clusterballoon.org].
Okay then: are these balloons or UFOs (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Okay then: are these balloons or UFOs (Score:2)
Giant Birds!!! (Score:2)
http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=42.345632,-83.3058
Re:Okay then: are these balloons or UFOs (Score:2)
Then it must have been someone at Google [google.com] or whoever it was they purchased the imagery from...
Planning on sending up a person? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Planning on sending up a person? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Planning on sending up a person? (Score:2)
already slashdotted? (Score:4, Interesting)
If these guys are going for 100.000 feet, they will need a very big accesible area to recover their instrument package. given that winds up high may be a stong as 100 km/h, that leaves a pretty big oval your package could drop in.
Re:already slashdotted? Text of article: (Score:1)
The UX-1 Story
by Mike Coffey (KJ4Z) and Dan Bowen (K2VOL)
Dan (K2VOL) and I originally decided we wanted to launch a balloon in the Spring of 2003. We had seen a few articles about hams launching balloons, visited a few websites about their adventures, and thought it sounded like something we'd like to get into. We made plans, did some research, and then life intervened. A year went by without any further real action. In the Fall of 2003, I acquired several Dakota Digital camera
Re:already slashdotted? (Score:2)
Re:already slashdotted? (Score:2)
Re:already slashdotted? (Score:2)
But the figures you mention make sense yes.
Re:already slashdotted? (Score:2)
If they are smart, they'll determine when th
Darwin Awards! (Score:5, Interesting)
http://darwinawards.com/stupid/stupid1998-11.html [darwinawards.com]
Re:Darwin Awards! (Score:2)
Some Googling will quickly find nice pictures of cluster balloons and yes, they do use lawn chairs...
Re:Darwin Awards! (Score:2)
Still, it's not exactly a popular sport. At only half a dozen pilots worldwide, cluster ballooning remains something between an extreme sport and a personal eccentricity!
Black of Space (Score:2)
Oblig. Bender quote: (Score:3, Funny)
Ever wanted to see the black of space but just can't pay a cool 20 million to do so?
I could beat you over the head with a pipe until you think that's what happened...
Photo's or actually getting there? (Score:1)
This compares very well with spending $20 million if true (somehow I doubt the writeup).
I'm assuming that this is more then just taking pictures in space (as I can look up thousands of them already). The $20 million referenced as a comparable is for an actual flight into space, and in fact is actually an orbital flight.
YaHABP (Yet another High Altitude Baloon Project) (Score:1, Informative)
Disorganized? Us? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Disorganized? Us? (Score:2)
confused [utk.edu]
Umm... hazard considerations? (Score:4, Insightful)
Full credit on the geek factor, but if this had gone wrong somehow or been perceived as an inbound Scary Payload coming down in the wrong place, it would make the idiots that get busted pointing mid-power lasers at aircraft cockpits look like they're not the only guys not thinking the whole thing through...
I'll bet money (Score:3, Funny)
You've got a piece of metal, designed to pull air in at 600miles an hour, heat it up, and eject it back out. Latex is not even worth worrying about.
Re:I'll bet money (Score:2)
Re:I'll bet money (Score:2)
Re:I'll bet money (Score:2)
Re:I'll bet money (Score:2)
I guess it could be done using ILS approach, but you better be DEAD on the money coming in. Or has aviation changed quite a bit since the days of barnstorming?
Re:I'll bet money (Score:2)
Re:Umm... hazard considerations? (Score:4, Informative)
The excerpt of their short answer on the main page is as follows:
Is there any danger to aviation?
The short answer is no; there is very little risk to larger aircraft. According to an MIT study, the risk of a small Unmanned Aerial Vehicle such as this being hit by a jetliner is on the order of 1 in 1 billion per UAV flight hour. The risk to light aircraft, in a relatively busy area such as the Fraser Valley, is higher, but can be made easily below the risk light aircraft pose to each other. For the long answer, please read further.
Re:Umm... hazard considerations? (Score:2)
You mean those cooling towers in the background...
Re:Umm... hazard considerations? (Score:2)
OK, reactor complex. Where there are cooling towers, there's a reactor. Still, sending odd-looking flying contraptions, sprouting antenna, into the air anywhere near one... it's seems like you're asking for a little scrutiny, don't you think?
Re:Umm... hazard considerations? (Score:2)
Cool, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
I always thought that a high-altitude balloon ride to 100,000 feet would be a lot of fun. With the whole low pressure thing, being able to see the curvature of the earth, seeing a black sky, it would be the closest that a normal person can hope to get into space. And this is completly do-able to make it within the budget of the average person from North America, Western Europe, etc. Yes a few people have done manned balloon rides to those heights, but they have always been super-funded. Never normal people doing a hobby project.
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
I think you mean: do this cheaper than Rutan (Score:2, Informative)
- You have to choose between popping the baloon at altitude and parachuting back, or taking a huge amount of ballast to keep you from plummeting back to earth once your balloon envelope begins to shrink alarmingly on the way back down. If you don't drop ballast, you will die.
- Above 55,000 feet or so you need a full-fledged pressurized space suit. If your s
Re:I think you mean: do this cheaper than Rutan (Score:2)
Re:I think you mean: do this cheaper than Rutan (Score:2)
Now that sounds awesome and everything but what I'd really like to do is parachute from the ISS (or other tourist-space-station). Not possible now, sure, but can the physics geeks tell us if it'll be possible in our lifetime? Or do those kinds of speeds make it impossible to slow down fast enough? How about some ki
Re:I think you mean: do this cheaper than Rutan (Score:2)
theres no easy way round this. The normal way spacecraft do it is to use atnospheric friction but this needs a MASSIVE heat shield.
retro rockets would be another option but i can't see this being practical in anything suit like either. (they don't use it for spacecraft because it would mean sending up so much extra fuel)
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
someones planning a 131000 foot jump (Score:2)
I remember reading about one of the previous jumpers and he said that without any wind (no air), there was no sensation of falling for the first few minutes -- it was just like floating.
High... (Score:2)
In the days before duct tape, we were getting at LEAST that high from smoking cellophane and vinyl!
[Evil laugh] (Score:4, Funny)
submitter seems to have missed the point (Score:2)
ok, this is about building something to go to an extremely high altitude. The pictures are secondary.
I mean if they just want pictures of space, NASA has lots.
aka (Score:2)
FAA Approval for a launch? (Score:5, Insightful)
I saw no mention of permits (before slashdotting) of this sort of information being obtained.... which has me rather worried.
Yes, the odds of coming in contact with a commercial jet at altitudes between 11,000 and 29,000 is probably very small, and and yes it was only a small payload (talk about scaring the shit out of a pilot seeing it up there), but I'd still feel rather safer knowing that the FAA was alerted to a possible flight hazard on a lane- perhaps it should have had a simple radar reflector to show its location?
Wish I could have seen the photos, but I was too busy reading.
Re:FAA Approval for a launch? (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.eoss.org/pubs/faaball.htm [eoss.org]
Basically, total weight needs to be under 12 pounds. Most people try to keep it under 4-5. The FAA would like you to file in advance and inform them when you launch.
Re:FAA Approval for a launch? (Score:2)
IIRC, from my days as an air traffic controller, the US Gov't has laid claim to all airspace between 18,000 feet and FL600 (about 60,000 feet) as "positive control airspace" (PCA). I believe parent is correct. These individuals face some hefty civil fines if they didn't ge
Re:FAA Approval for a launch? (Score:2)
Contact your local Flight Standards District Office [faa.gov] for a Special Flight Permit [faa.gov].
Do not expect this process to be simple or fast. It will involve a lot of red tape and it will take a while (probably a few weeks unless you're EXTREMELY well-prepared for the fone call). However, it's better than having to explain to the FBI, local police, and FAA why you decided to launch a large balloon to a ridiculous altitude without their permission or knowledge.
p
Shameless plug (Score:3, Informative)
My standard deal is 20% off for balloons and other educational uses. I also donate freebies from time to time for good causes.
Oh, and of course, it's all Open Source. BSD license. And the firmware's recently been rehosted on SourceForge [sourceforge.net].
... pretty neat ... (Score:2)
Some of the posts have talked about what would happen if a jet sucked the thing in, but as a balloon gets higher and higher, it also gets REALLY REALLY big and much easier to see. If "sucked in", it's more likely
Re:... pretty neat ... (Score:5, Funny)
"Ah," the pilot remarked, "the dreaded seven-engine approach."
Re:... pretty neat ... (Score:2)
It was one of those documentaries about the 777. I later learned that these types of tests, with ice in particular, were done by the defense department, too, when they were getting jets rolling in high altitudes. Rolls Royce and GE both have done testing of foreign bodies through jets, mostly because birds can be around at takeoff and landing, both at sea and on land.
Jet turbines run really hot, too, and they chop anything (mostly air) into little tiny pieces that
Commercial airline high altitude (Score:3, Interesting)
So, if you can do the balloon thing, GO FOR IT!
materials (Score:2)
PCB manufacturing is a pretty remarkable case study. there are some extremely low cost pcb manufacturers who will run any very small batches of PCB's. this has driven down costs across th
Re:materials (Score:2)
Future Now post [iftf.org]
FAB [amazon.com]
Compared with Google Maps (Score:2)
Compare:
http://sunsite.utk.edu/~mcoffey/ux-1/ballooncam/2 0
with:
http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=35.621495,-84.73656 2&spn=0.029655,0.029697&t=k&hl=en [google.com]
Also
http://sunsite.utk.edu/~mcoffey/ux-1/ballooncam/18
Hmm? (Score:2)
I know omnidirectional wireless technologies like 802.11 work only a few hundred feet max without tremendous signal boosting, but what about a more focused, directional approach? Could it somehow really reach nine miles up? What about a sattelite intermediary to create a the connection like airplanes use? Granted, that would need some pretty fancy tracking software.
Also, how long coul
altitude (Score:2)
Next project: Launch Your Own UFO (Score:2)
Metallized kevlar high altitude baloons were probably responsible for most UFO sightings. Airforce used lot of them from late 40s to analyse radioisotope falout from Soviet nukes. Close to sunset, metalized baloons make for realy impresive sightings.
Yawn - been there, done that. (Score:2)
They actually have great video of lots of flights, they have their payloads nailed down to designs that work and are practical, and they've been involved with helping University students all over the U.S. fly payloads for their aerospace engineering students.
Almost every major city has a high-altitude ballooning club similar to EOSS already.
This isn't news.
Reading about a bunch of guys strugging through dumb stuff t
Re:I Wonder . . . (Score:2)
I wonder how high one would get?
All the way to the crash site.
Re:I Wonder . . . (Score:2)
Re:Actually, not that hazardous (Score:2)
You don't even need to do that. Check out FAR (Federal Aviation Rule) 103. As long as your craft does not weigh more than 254 pounds and cannot go faster than 55 knots or carry more than 5 gallons of fuel, you are good to go (except over populated areas, restricted airspace, or above any cloud cover). Legally, you need no training or certification for this type of 'ultralight' aircraft.
Hmm, maybe FAR 103 does not apply to lighter-than-air craft... eh, I'm too la
Re:I Wonder . . . (Score:3, Interesting)
Photos here
http://www.clusterballoon.org/intro/intro.html [clusterballoon.org]