The Philippine Star

Round-the-world trips that made aviation history

-

ABU DHABI ( AFP) – Whether in aircraft or hot-air balloons, with or without stop-offs, and sometimes solo: round-the-world trips by air have produced several records since 1924.

Solar Impulse 2, which on Tuesday completed the first round-the-world journey using only solar energy, is the latest to circumnavi­gate the globe and enter the record books.

American pioneers

In 1924, the American duos Lowell Smith and Leslie Arnold and Erik Nelson and John Harding carried out the first round- the- world trip from Seattle to Seattle in the United States aboard two Douglas DT2s. The journey took them 175 days – from April 6 to Sept. 28 – or 371 hours and 11 minutes of flying time over 66 days.

In 1931, it took eight days, 11 hours and 45 minutes for Wiley Post and Harold Gatty to complete their round-the-world trip in a propeller plane, with stop-offs. Post in 1933 became the first to fly around the world solo, with multiple stop-offs.

In 1986, the duo Jeana Yeager and Dick Rutan flew the Voyager on the first round-theworld trip without stop-offs or refueling. They left on Dec. 14 from the Edwards Air Force Base in California and returned on Dec. 23 after a flight of around 42,000 kilometers in nine days.

Round-the-world by balloon

Swiss national Bertrand Piccard, one of the heroes of the Solar Impulse adventure, already made his mark in the skies back in March 1999 when he completed the first roundthe-world trip in a balloon, without stop-offs.

With Britain’s Brian Jones, aboard the Breitling Orbiter III, he accomplish­ed the feat in 15 days, 10 hours and 24 minutes over a distance of 40,814 kilometers.

The two men actually left from Chateau d’Oex in Switzerlan­d and had been in the air for 19 days, 21 hours and 47 minutes travelling 45,633 kilometers before landing in the Egyptian desert. It was the longest flight in air transport history in terms of distance and duration.

On July 4, 2002, in his balloon Spirit of Freedom, America’s Steve Fossett entered aviation history with a solo roundthe-world trip in a balloon, after five previous fruitless attempts by the adventurer- businessma­n. He left on June 19 from the town of Northam in western Australia, covering more than 29,853 kilometers in 14 days and 19 hours in a gondola of six square meters.

Catamaran in the skies

On March 3, 2005, Fossett became the first man to achieve, in just under three days, a solo round-the-world trip without stop-offs or refueling aboard the Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlye­r, an ultra-light engine aircraft which can be compared to a catamaran boat.

The multi-millionair­e adventurer travelled 36,817 kilometers in 67 hours, one minute and 46 seconds. The aircraft, slender like a glider, flew at a speed of more than 600 kilometers an hour at an altitude of more than 13,000 meters.

On Feb. 11, 2006, he again circumnavi­gated the globe non-stop and without refueling in 76 hours, 45 minutes in the GlobalFlye­r, setting the record for the longest flight by any aircraft in history covering a distance of 42,450 kilometers.

It turned out to be his last record: his bones were found a year after he disappeare­d when flying a small plane on Sept. 3, 2007.

 ??  ?? A handout picture made available by Solar Impulse last Tuesday, and shot by Swiss pilot Bertrand Piccard, shows Solar Impulse 2 during its flight over the Red Sea Sunday in the last leg of the round-the-world journey as it heads to Abu Dhabi, UAE. The...
A handout picture made available by Solar Impulse last Tuesday, and shot by Swiss pilot Bertrand Piccard, shows Solar Impulse 2 during its flight over the Red Sea Sunday in the last leg of the round-the-world journey as it heads to Abu Dhabi, UAE. The...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines