BEAR

(Balloon Experiments with Amateur Radio)

 

A view from near space and SABLE-3 at 117,597 feet, August 11th - 2007

Near space is within the Stratosphere and Ozone layers, from 75,000 feet to the beginning of space at 62.5 miles. The earth's curvature and thin blue layer of atmosphere hugging the earth can easily be seen from here and at 117,000 ft. the horizon is at 460 miles, rather then only 2-3 miles when standing at ground level. The air pressure is <1% of that at sea level and with so little atmosphere there is next to no filtering of cosmic rays or ultraviolet light, blue sun light is not scattered so the sky is inky black, stars are visible, and there's no weather so always bright and sunny, but very cold at -60 to -90 degrees Fahrenheit.

A few friends and myself decided to start launching high altitude balloons with experimental amateur radio payloads which we nicknamed BEAR (Balloon Experiments with Amateur Radio) after watching others do this and seeing no reason why they should have all the fun. We are not a club or official group, but simply a few individual amateur radio operators with similar interests, a common goal and hope that our BEAR projects, which anyone is welcome to participate in, will help promote education, experimentation and camaraderie between all amateurs and amateur radio clubs in the area.

An APRS tracker is essential to track and recover balloon payloads and our first flight, BEAR-1, was to confirm the GPS receiver chosen for our tracker would work above the 60,000 ft. ITAR altitude limit. BEAR-2 included a cross-band repeater and future flights are planned with cameras and other equipment.

August 2009 - It's been 9 years since BEAR-2 and some have asked if the BEAR group is still active. It is, but it's not an official group and simply myself that enjoys building payload packages, a few others that enjoy helping launch, track and recover them and a number more that enjoy simply watching. So progress is slow with myself being the only one building everything, especially with all the other projects and things I'm involved with. The slow progress has been good however. Digital cameras were something new and much too expensive to risk using in 2000, but they've become inexpensive and capable of much higher quality images. Video cameras used to be much too large, expensive and have short recording times, but we now also have small, light weight, inexpensive ones with long recording times to use and now even have the capability to transmit high quality real time video.

 

Date Flight Duration
H:M
Max. Alt.
Feet
Balloon Payload Pkg. Total Weight Distance
to Landing
Kg Lbs Kg Lbs
May 27, 2000 BEAR-1 4:34 104,206 1200g  0.977 2.15 2.333 5.14 76.2 Miles
Aug   5, 2000 BEAR-2 2:48    99,481 1200g 1.564 3.45 2.920 6.44 53.8 Miles
May 20, 2006  -  SABLE-1
July   8, 2006  -  SABLE-2
Aug 11, 2007  -  SABLE-3
See the SABLE Home Page for these flights
that BEAR members assisted with.
May 2008 TBJ Myself and other BEAR members became involved with The Big Jump
Helium was $80 in 2007, but it's $280/bottle now so Hydrogen will be used for all future flights as it's only $60/bottle.
Aug 22, 2009 BEAR-3 2:39 116,387 1800g .0958 0.21 .0958 0.21 47.7 Miles
Aug 24, 2009 BEAR-4 3:56 107,145 1800g 1.5 3.31 1.74 3.84 89.0 Miles
TBA BEAR-5  This will be another Altitude Record Attempt

 

 

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This page was last updated - November 05, 2009 09:55:06 AM

Information and pages on this site © Copyright 2004 by Barry Sloan - VE6SBS