yvesg Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 We lost spot for about an hour and it is back now. Last hour and a half he is 147 knots. Yves Quote
Piloto Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 I just tried to reach Brian on 14,346 KHz on my way KORL but no luck. Contacted two other hams trying to reach him but they have not heard him either. Maybe his HF broke again or he is busy on Dakar HF frequencies. José KP4DAC Quote
BCrystal Posted June 9, 2017 Author Report Posted June 9, 2017 1 minute ago, Piloto said: I just tried to reach Brian on 14,346 KHz on my way KORL but no luck. Contacted two other hams trying to reach him but they have not heard him either. Maybe his HF broke again or he is busy on Dakar HF frequencies. José KP4DAC To Jose KP4DAC, I heard you today on 14346.0 several times calling WB6RQN. Brian reported about an hour ago by satellite that he has been quite busy so far on this leg with weather and with HF ATC. Quote
Piloto Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 Just now, BCrystal said: To Jose KP4DAC, I heard you today on 14346.0 several times calling WB6RQN. Brian reported about an hour ago by satellite that he has been quite busy so far on this leg with weather and with HF ATC. Thanks for the report, really appreciated. José Quote
yvesg Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 At 18:18:43 Z his ground speed check is 143 knots. Yves Quote
gsxrpilot Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 I wonder if he'd be faster down lower? Quote
Andy95W Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 Probably, but circumnavigating the weather would probably suck. Quote
gsxrpilot Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 It looks like he's through/past the weather. Quote
BCrystal Posted June 9, 2017 Author Report Posted June 9, 2017 4 minutes ago, gsxrpilot said: I wonder if he'd be faster down lower? Brian's position report in mid-Atlantic talking to Dakar ATC station, as copied on 13357.0 kHz HF radio by Cedric F4GFZ in France: http://projectameliaearhart.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Brian_Lloyd_Spirit_position_report_13357kHz_mid_Atlantic_to_Dakar_received_in_France_by_Cedric_F4GFZ.mp3 Quote
Piloto Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 39 minutes ago, peevee said: Wonder if he can see land from there. Brian is too far from land to be visible. And most likely he is over the clouds with no ocean in view. At 24,000ft he would have a 200nm VHF range with Dakar ATC. José Quote
yvesg Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 Looks like he is passed the (bad) weather however the satellite image is at least an half hour old. Yves Quote
Stephen Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 9 hours ago, Stephen said: He's still on route @ FL24 as of this post ; maybe landfall around 4-5 PM Central on pace....ish? here re is the live map link: http://projectameliaearhart.org/tracker/map.php At the coast at 5K ' at 5PM CST; he made it Quote
peevee Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 Bet it felt good to get out and stretch a little. That's a long day. 1 Quote
cliffy Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 Let's see, he has HF , GPS, ground tracking satellite, inflight weather radar being relayed, etc etc etc and what did Amelia and Fred have? Not knocking the trip or effort just a comment on the contrasting issues. 80 years of progress and its still not just a walk in the park! Quote
HRM Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 6 hours ago, Stephen said: Halfway there... Jeez that's a lot of ocean. 1 Quote
Jerry Pressley Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 In 1959 a Meyers 200 did the first single engine single pilot round the world. Peter Gluckman did 18 hour legs. I just sold the plane but kept the 52 gallon ferry tank that Richard Bach used for extra fuel until his FAA friend chained his plane to the ground until he removed it. I use it for ferrying when mooney tanks are bad. Gluckman landed in the wrong country and wrong airport a couple times but considering his radio was an Omnigator I think he did great. Personally I only did the Tennessee to Europe leg once 30 years ago. Northern route so wasn't too bad a trip Jerry Pressley Quote
Piloto Posted June 10, 2017 Report Posted June 10, 2017 Air temperature today at Chad, a balmy 108F and 113F on the ramp. Try to get a hangar for the Mooney. Recommend departing before sunrise to avoid the extreme heat on the ramp and in the cockpit. Get plenty of water and two gallons empty containers for relief if you don't have a relief tube. This time of the year the Tropic of Cancer route is a hot one. Keep cool José Quote
Piloto Posted June 10, 2017 Report Posted June 10, 2017 CarolAnn Garrat another daring pilot around the world in a Mooney M20J http://20thcenturyaviationmagazine.com/eddie-gold-gase/g-a-s-e-news-stories-and-pilots/carolann-story/ Had a chance to meet this charming lady in 2008. José Quote
aviatoreb Posted June 10, 2017 Report Posted June 10, 2017 23 hours ago, HRM said: Jeez that's a lot of ocean. I get tired crossing the Atlantic back in coach in a 787 by the time I get to my 3rd movie and my legs are stiff.... 2 Quote
TCC Posted June 10, 2017 Report Posted June 10, 2017 Absolutely love when people do an RTW trip. With technology today, being able to watch it in real time is great. Doing a circumnavigation by air or sea is in my bucket list. Quote
Marauder Posted June 10, 2017 Report Posted June 10, 2017 I get tired crossing the Atlantic back in coach in a 787 by the time I get to my 3rd movie and my legs are stiff.... Not to mention there are sometime lines to the bathroomSent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro 1 Quote
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