The launch site for the Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer record attempt
has been confirmed as the Salina Municipal (KSLN) Airport, Kansas, USA. Mission control will also be based in Salina at Kansas State University at Salina. The record attempt is planned to
take place from early January 2005 dependent on favourable weather conditions and the route will take the aircraft over cities
such as Chicago, Montreal, London, Paris, Rome, Cairo, Karachi, Shanghai, Tokyo, Honolulu and Los Angeles.
The radical aircraft will be piloted by Steve Fossett, the current Round the World Record holder in both balloons and sailboats.
He will attempt to break the last great aviation record by making the first solo non-stop flight around the world. The pioneering
aircraft - the world’s most efficient jet plane - has been designed by aviation legend Burt Rutan. It is hoped the record attempt
will be successfully completed within 80 hours. Sir Richard Branson will follow the flight in the support aircraft
as the reserve pilot.
The Municipal Salina Airport has been chosen for a number of reasons including its location near the geographic centre of the
United States, the excellent facilities available at the airport itself and crucially its brand new runway which is 12,300 ft – one of
the longest in North America. Mission control will be based at K-State’s Kansas State University, Salina’s College of Technology
and Aviation, which is located directly adjacent to the Salina Municipal Airport. From there the Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer’s
progress around the world will be monitored through constant communication with Steve Fossett in the aircraft.
Sir Richard Branson, chairman of Virgin Atlantic,
said, “Virgin Atlantic is delighted to be launching this historic record attempt
from Salina, Kansas and I hope that we can add Salina to the roll call of sites like Kitty Hawk which have been the setting for
milestones in aviation history.
“The Salina Municipal Airport has excellent facilities to offer for this unique aircraft, giving the pioneering record attempt the
very best chance of success. I would like to take this opportunity to thank both the Salina Airport Authority and Kansas State
University and the Salina Area Chamber of Commerce for supporting the record attempt and we look forward to working with our
Salina partners in January.”
Steve
Fossett, pilot of the Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer, said, “This will be an endurance test for me and the Virgin Atlantic
GlobalFlyer. Salina’s location in the middle of the USA is a major advantage. If I run out of fuel in the last thousand miles, I will be
able to glide to a safe landing in any airport in Western USA. If I had chosen a West Coast airport, I would risk ditching in the
Pacific if I run out of fuel near the end of the Round the World Flight.”
Built by Scaled Composites, the aircraft is a single pilot, single engine turbofan aircraft designed for non-stop global
circumnavigation. Scaled used computer aided aerodynamics to design the aircraft. The structure of the plane is entirely made
from composite material and will be ultra light. The aircraft will fly at 45,000ft and travel 40,000 km at speeds in excess of 250
knots (285 mph, 440 kph). The aircraft will fly 75% further than the range record for jet-powered planes.
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