If memory serves, the jump was in the late 50's/early 60's. The Fellow
(an Air Force Capt as I recall) jumped from a high altitude balloon (He
also holds/held the balloon altitude record), and yse his terminal velocity
was just under Mach 1.
Al Gettier
D 5850
Because he used a drogue chute for part of the decent, it is not classified
as the world's longest freefall, even though the drogue exerted little force
on him. It wasn't even the highest manned balloon ride -- you have to land
in the balloon to qualify for this record. It was, however, the highest
baloon jump. A Russian beat it soon afterwards, I think.
On another attempt, a scream was heard through the radio. The ground crew
cut him away from the balloon, let him and the gondola fall to a safe
altitude, then deployed a chute on the gondola. The best guess as to what
happened was that he had opened a valve on his helmet to clear the lens, and
was unable to close it. (Blood boils at less than body temperature at that
particular altitude -- probably not the most pleasant sensation.) As I
remeber, he lived as a vegetable for the rest of his few remaining months.
Do not put great credance in all that I said, it could have been a montage
from a few different accounts that I read about (possibly) different people.
When I get the book back, I will post the details gleaned from the book.
-- Mike Balenger
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<cute quote> Michael S. Balenger (201) 949-8789
<cute disclamer> AT&T Bell Labs
Crawfords Corner Road
ihnp4!link!msb Holmdel, NJ 07733
The story about the world's longest freefall didn't sound too
appetizing, escpecially when his blood boiled in his face.
What's a drogue chute?
--
Mark Smith
NYIT Computer Graphics Laboratory
Old Westbury, New York
...{philabs,sbcs}!nyit!mark