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#21
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In article ,
Matt Whiting wrote: Ron Wanttaja wrote: On Sat, 28 May 2005 13:23:25 GMT, "Turbo Tiger" wrote: Now a helicopter landed on top of Everest. A woman, asking for directions? :-) Got to be. A man never would have stopped to ask. :-) _Why_ stop to ask? In that situation, the answer will *always* be "down"! *GRIN* |
#22
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Darrel Toepfer wrote:
Highest Flying Birds The highest altitude recorded for a bird is 11,300 m. (37,000 ft.), for a Ruppell’s vulture (Gyps rueppellii), which collided with a commercial aircraft over Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, on November 29, 1973. http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/...recordid=56167 So for a bird to claim a new record, it must collide with an aircraft? Man, that's rough! ry -- |
#23
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![]() David O wrote: In 1989, Eric Scott Winton flew his Facet Opal (an ultralight as defined by Australian regs) to an altitude of 9,189 m (approx 30,150 ft) over Tyagarah Aerodrome, NSW Australia. The powerplant was a 40 hp Rotax 447. That's a neat looking airplane. Are there any design parameters published, stuff like wingspan, airfoil, chord etc? -- FF |
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