Hot Air Ballon Accident
Posted: Tue Oct 06, 2009 7:11 pm
I remebered Keith B.'s avatar and thought I'd post this for him. Linky.
The focal point for Texas firearms information and discussions
https://mail.texaschlforum.com/
The balloon she had has a 'spring top' and not a parachute. For those unfamiliar with balloons, there is a 10 - 15 foot hole in the top called a deflation port. Most current balloons have a piece of fabric (nylon) that looks like an old fashioned parachute. It is held in place temporarily with Velcro until the balloon is heated up and the pressure of the hot air holds it in place. There are multiple lines that run down to a common point and a rope/pulley system that allows the pilot to pull on it and pull the sides of the parachute pull away from the rest of the balloon and allow hot air to escape out of the top. Unless you let too much heat out, the parachute will re-seat itself when you release the rope and seal the hole over again.jimlongley wrote:Keith, why did the balloon deflate that way after she lost her passenger? It didn't look like the top was popped to me, but of course I'm not a pilot, did she just not compensate for the sudden lift and hit the shear again? She was burning when she hit the tent, and after too, and I just wondered if she just over compensated and then overcompensated again. I didn't see any burn during the hard landing.
Did you fly at Plano this year? I was there, but not as crew for the first time in years, Home Depot sent me to do a presentation on Energy Star appliances.
A couple of years ago up in Hugo, Brian and I took a wild ride when the ground wind increased after we launched.
Not sure what he was shooting with, but those were actually taken and scanned from film acording to him.Wisewr wrote:That sounded like a good technical analysis of what happened. Thanks for ed-u-macting the rest of us.![]()
Also, those are some very nice pictures of your ballon. Looks like someone was using a very high quality camera.
That is why I try to tie all my stuff in the basket. Haver seriously thought about tying myself and passengers in; especially when I had one get out before I was cool enough to stay on the ground.jimlongley wrote:Keith, thanks for the clarification, it just looked to me like she was burning trying to lift over the tent and kept right on after the spill.
That whole thing could have been so much nastier.
I had a GPS in my pocket when Brian and I "crashed" and know exactly where we lit and where we stopped. The GPS readings taken while the balloon was horizontal are real interesting. The thing I remember most is our two way radio popping up into the air during the first bounce, and just kind of floating in front of me while we were all weightless, and then gravity reappeared and the radio disappeared. I know where the bounce was because I carried the GPS back to where I found the radio.