PDA

View Full Version : Red Bull Jump : Live Stream Now


CoffmanStarter
14th Oct 2012, 18:03
Red Bull Jump (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/14/felix-baumgartner-jump-skydive-space-record_n_1949342.html?1350228990)

Coff.

CoffmanStarter
14th Oct 2012, 18:20
Brave bloke :D

brokenlink
15th Oct 2012, 18:15
Very brave, especially as the first step outside the capsule was 23 miles tall!

txdmy1
15th Oct 2012, 19:35
thought you lot might like it
Baumgartner suit absolutely full of urine (http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/science-technology/baumgartner-suit-absolutely-full-of-urine-2012101444834)

brokenlink
15th Oct 2012, 20:12
Only lost control of his bladder!? From that height I think I would have lost control of all bodily functions!

xray one
15th Oct 2012, 22:03
From his medical staff:

“Felix’s skill is managing to hold it together for that split second. Otherwise there would have been too much liquid, his chute would not have been able to cope with the extra weight and he would have hit the ground like a 2000 mile-an-hour space-hopper full of piss.”

He may have gone to medical school, but fluid in or out the man in the suit will weigh the same?!

This must surely be a pi55 take :p

Load Toad
15th Oct 2012, 22:43
er....it's the Daily Mash.

CoffmanStarter
16th Oct 2012, 08:24
Perhaps a bit too much pre-flight Red Bull me thinks :}

Motleycallsign
16th Oct 2012, 10:13
No-one ever died from falling/jumping from a great height it's the sudden stop at the bottom that does it apparently.

Courtney Mil
16th Oct 2012, 11:14
Well, Col Pyotr Dolgov jumped out of a balloon gondola from 93,970 feet in 1962 and died when his suit depressurized. THe sudden stop didn't matter to him.

LL of LL
16th Oct 2012, 11:27
When Felix Baumgartner made his ascent prior to his ridiculous jump, it took him 2.5 hours… and then 10 minutes to return.

With the earth rotating, how did he start and finish at the same airfield?

Load Toad
16th Oct 2012, 12:33
You don't think the air rotates too....?

Dg800
16th Oct 2012, 12:40
With the earth rotating, how did he start and finish at the same airfield?Objects that detach themselves from Earth's surface do not lose their rotational momentum. That said, winds aloft certainly carried him some distance from the launch point, that's why they had to go chase after him with a helicopter and then ferry him back to the actual launch point.

Load Toad
16th Oct 2012, 13:05
It's not like he was going to miss was it?

airborne_artist
16th Oct 2012, 13:07
All I know is that when I tried hovering one of HM's finest whistling chicken-legs I'm sure it was the earth revolving that caused all the problems. I'm certain I held the controls perfectly still :E

LL of LL
16th Oct 2012, 13:41
Objects that detach themselves from Earth's surface do not lose their rotational momentum.

Thanks for the response... I was wondering, at what altitude does this stop being the case? Or is it when the stratosphere becomes the mesosphere (50Km)?

Pace152
17th Oct 2012, 11:52
I don't think this is ever the case. The whole atmosphere spins along with the rest of the planet, other wise you'd have upper winds of over a 1000mph.

diginagain
17th Oct 2012, 13:22
All I know is that when I tried hovering one of HM's finest whistling chicken-legs I'm sure it was the earth revolving that caused all the problems. ...If it wasn't so, you'd never have got anywhere in a Scout.

Trim Stab
17th Oct 2012, 13:53
Better version of Baumagrner jump here:

Stratos jump successful! ORIGINAL VERSION - YouTube