From Oregon to space: High-altitude glider tests
planned
BEND, Ore. (AP) - The sky is hardly the limit for the latest aviation
project at the Redmond Airport.
Next week, the Perlan 2, an experimental glider that aims to eventually go
more than 90,000 feet in the air, will make its initial test flight at the
Redmond Airport. The low-altitude flight - the sailplane will run through a
series of checks approximately 5,000 feet off the ground - will be the first
in-air test for the glider, which later hopes to shatter the fixed-wing aircraft
altitude record of 50,722 feet set by Perlan Project founder Einar Enevoldson
and his co-pilot and noted adventurer Steve Fossett in 2006.
"It's going to be a milestone in aviation history," boasted Doug Perrenod,
the project coordinator for the Perlan 2 launch. "This glider is going to go
higher than any other fixed-wing aircraft with a pilot in it. That includes the
Air Force's U-2 (spy plane). It really will be the edge of space."
The dream of Enevoldson, a former NASA test pilot, the Perlan Project looks
to build a glider that can travel to the edge of the Earth's atmosphere. The
Perlan 2, an 1,800-pound glider with an 84-foot wingspan, will be towed into the
air like a traditional glider, but will then ride high altitude mountain waves
in its later flights when it attempts to go beyond 50,000 feet.
"Before, there's never been a glider that could sustain pilots that high,"
Perrenod said. "Aircrafts that go into higher altitudes have pressurized
systems. Commercial aircrafts, for example, pump air into their planes for their
crew and passengers.
"Gliders don't have engines, though," Perrenod added. "What glider pilots
have discovered at high altitudes is that they needed some way to pressurize the
cockpit."
The Perlan Project developed its own life-support system for its
high-altitude flights, a "re-breather" system similar to underwater
diving.
"This is not an off-the-shelf thing," Perrenod added. "We've taken some
different components and ideas and customized them for our own application.
Almost everything from nose to tail (on the glider) is new technology. If we
accomplish everything we're trying to do, this thing will wind up in the
Smithsonian."
Pressurizing the Perlan 2's cockpit gives it a unique look among gliders,
Perrenod says.
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