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I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which
is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. I was really trying to play with HD exporting. The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. If you have the bandwidth, you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 |
#2
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On May 31, 9:55*pm, 33 wrote:
I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. *I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found at *http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. *I was really trying to play with HD exporting. *The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. *If you have the bandwidth, *you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. *The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 WOW! never done Mt Whitney like that cool! Dan WO |
#3
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On May 31, 9:55*pm, 33 wrote:
I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. *I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found at *http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. *I was really trying to play with HD exporting. *The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. *If you have the bandwidth, *you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. *The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 Cool- Air-ajavo bobsledding! -P |
#4
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On May 31, 11:55*pm, 33 wrote:
I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. *I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found at *http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. *I was really trying to play with HD exporting. *The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. *If you have the bandwidth, *you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. *The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 Wow that is pretty nifty! Just one question though. Why did you keep pulling the airbrakes out? Were you approacing Vne, or were you simply not low enough to the terrain? :-) Pete |
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My guess is that he could not descend as fast as the terrain did without
going through Vne. "vontresc" wrote in message ... On May 31, 11:55 pm, 33 wrote: I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. I was really trying to play with HD exporting. The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. If you have the bandwidth, you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 Wow that is pretty nifty! Just one question though. Why did you keep pulling the airbrakes out? Were you approacing Vne, or were you simply not low enough to the terrain? :-) Pete |
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Some day we will be able to read about "another beautiful white glider"
found in pieces on the side of a mountain. "BT" wrote in message ... My guess is that he could not descend as fast as the terrain did without going through Vne. "vontresc" wrote in message ... On May 31, 11:55 pm, 33 wrote: I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. I was really trying to play with HD exporting. The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. If you have the bandwidth, you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 Wow that is pretty nifty! Just one question though. Why did you keep pulling the airbrakes out? Were you approacing Vne, or were you simply not low enough to the terrain? :-) Pete |
#7
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On Jun 1, 7:37*pm, "Fred Blair"
wrote: Some day we will be able to read about "another beautiful white glider" found in pieces on the side of a mountain. "BT" wrote in message ... My guess is that he could not descend as fast as the terrain did without going through Vne. "vontresc" wrote in message .... On May 31, 11:55 pm, 33 wrote: I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found athttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. I was really trying to play with HD exporting. The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. If you have the bandwidth, you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 Wow that is pretty nifty! Just one question though. Why did you keep pulling the airbrakes out? Were you approacing Vne, or were you simply not low enough to the terrain? :-) Pete I should have added a disclaimer to the video to be clear that flying in the mountains and close to terra firma is not for everyone. As Co- Pilot and I think the pilot would agree, flying close to the terrain can be dangerous and should only be performed with adequate separation according to personal safety margins. |
#8
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On Jun 1, 5:04*pm, "BT" wrote:
My guess is that he could not descend as fast as the terrain did without going through Vne. "vontresc" wrote in message ... On May 31, 11:55 pm, 33 wrote: I recently participated in the annual Soar-in at Lone Pine, CA, which is hosted by Caracole Soaring every year over Memorial Day weekend. After spectacular soaring weather and great flights, we punctuated the weekend with a roller coaster ride from Mount Whitney peak, which is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States at 14,505 FT. I shot a video of the ride and loaded it on YouTube for anyone that is interested. It can be found athttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjTmNJmJXbk I did not spend any time editing the sound or content as you will see. I was really trying to play with HD exporting. The video was loaded in YouTube's new HD format. If you have the bandwidth, you can click on the HD icon at the bottom right corner of the video window. The picture quality is much better in HD. Air brakes were necessary to match the terrain slope without exceeding VNE, so you may need to turn your volume down if the gear warning horn gets too offensive. -33 Wow that is pretty nifty! Just one question though. Why did you keep pulling the airbrakes out? Were you approacing Vne, or were you simply not low enough to the terrain? :-) Pete Yes--Matching terrain slope without exceeding VNE required air brakes. Putting the wheel down would have eliminated the horrible noise. |
#9
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Of course this was after your run up to Schulman Grove last Monday.
Cool. So now I know why I heard: "Duo, Whitney, 14,000" and not long afterwards: "Duo, Whitney Portal, 9000." (then not long after that: "Duo, south of Lone Pine, 6000") At least the lift was decent under the OD by Cerro Gordo and we all got home. Jim |
#10
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Way below my minimums...
mj |
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