Flying Around the World in under 80 Days

(pinchito.es)

46 points | by alexfernandez 2 days ago

6 comments

  • lukeinator42 36 minutes ago

    This is an interesting article from a couple of days ago about tracking diy balloons long distance: https://spectrum.ieee.org/explore-stratosphere-diy-pico-ball.... Given the tracker can be built for $14 it might be worth it to test a version with just the custom hydrogen enclosure and tracker and see how far it gets.

    • cyberax 20 minutes ago

      Hydrogen containment: you might want to look at topping up hydrogen along the way. Have a small compartment inside the gas bag with lithium shavings and a small servo that can release water into this compartment.

      You'll get about 1/15-th of the lithium+water mass as hydrogen. So if you want to replenish 1 m^3 of hydrogen at STP (or around 1/8-th of the gas bag volume), you'll need around 600 grams of reagents.

      • bigiain 22 hours ago

        Speaking of Jules Vern and Round The World.

        A new sailing record was set recently, which didn't _quite_ beat 40 days - it took them 40 days and almost 11 hours.

        If you've ever seen a SailGP boat flying up out of the water on their hydrofoils and doing 100kmh - imagine a 32m long 26m wide ocean going trimaran doing the same thing in a non stop circumnavigation of the globe. I think they _averaged_ 27knots or 50kmh!

        https://youtu.be/ffqhFyaCUFA

        If you _haven't_ seen the SailGP boats and are curious, here's somewhere to start: https://youtu.be/BQWOoP-Iwn8

      • moss_dog 23 hours ago

        Delightful read, thanks for sharing. The website design is very pleasant, too!

        Also FYI the link to "Aves Æternæ" is broken.

      • Trufa 3 hours ago

        Can someone give me some notes on the legality of this?

        • simonebrunozzi 58 minutes ago

          Perhaps next time read the whole article?

          > Finally, can it be flown legally? Most of the trajectory can pass over the oceans, but skipping land completely would take too much of a detour, and likely be incompatible with prevailing winds. Although the political climate may be hostile, it is still legal to fly civil craft over other countries.

        • alexfernandez 2 days ago

          Project to Circumnavigate using an Autonomous Airship Drone

          • bryanrasmussen 23 hours ago

            PTCUAAAD. As acronyms go: too Lovecraftian I fear.

            PCAAD: Too Microsoftie.

            • awesome_dude 23 hours ago

              PiCArD?

              - Piloted Intelligent Circumnavigation Airship for Research and Development

              - Prototype Integrated Control Autonomous Route Drone

              - Programmable Intelligent Circumnavigation Aeronautical Remote Device

              - Piloted Intelligent Craft: Autonomous Route, Data-driven

              - Primary Intelligence Control And Route Determination

              - Precision Integrated Circumnavigation And Remote Deployment

              • alexfernandez 18 hours ago

                I'm loving "Project for Intelligent Circumnavigation Airship Research Drone" myself.