Naar Eenzame Hoogten
(Nederlandse vertaling in voorbereiding)
In de toekomst hopen Fons en Rob Hughes (Brits-Nederlandes
ex-marinier, bergbeklimmer en parachutist) te kunnen opstijgen tot een
hoogte van minstens 40.000 m (131,000 ft) met een speciaal voor dit
exploot ontworpen ballon.
In 1994, startte Fons met de
ontwikkeling van dit bijzondere ballon-project. Zijn idee was om het
hoogterecord voor eensolo-balonvlucht te verbreken, en dan vanop 40.000
m hoogte met een parachute terug naar de aarde te keren.
Ook hier weer was hij de eerste die op het idee kwam een wereldrecord aan te vallen dat al zo lang standhoudt.
This
time he wanted to honor Nicolas Piantanida who, in 1966, set an
unofficial altitude world record for balloons by reaching an amazing
altitude of 37,759 meters. But Nicolas was unable to make his intended
space jump because icing prevented him from disconnecting his pressure
suit's oxygen hose from the gondola's main tank. However, he did manage
to return to earth safely.
The official balloon altitude record
(34,690 meter) has stood for the past 41 years, ever since Malcolm Ross
established it in 1961.
Fons had designed and built a sound,
one-person space gondola, and an American scientific balloon builder,
was prepared to construct a giant, fragile envelope to lift him into
space.
However, in a later stage a change of company policy
forced the balloon manufacturer to cancel the order. A setback for Fons
but he immediately started the development and construction of the
giant envelope himself. Twice he had to change his main goal and found
a companion (Rob Hughes) to realize the 'Apollo 19 Project'.
The
target is to set the intended high altitude ballooning records and if
possible to make a jump from space to realize the longest delayed drop.
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Launch Balloon Ross-Prather 1961 Gulf of Mexico |
| Rob and Fons in front of "APOLLO 19" gondola 2000 |