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The Global Eagle logo as it appeared on the nose of the fuselage
during the early stages of the effort
Expedition Global Eagle was the first attempt
in history to circumnavigate the globe using an autogyro.[1][2][3]
The flight was attempted in 2004
by Warrant
Officer Barry Jones using an open-cockpit autogyro which he
named Global Eagle.[4] The
purpose of the mission was twofold; to set the world record and to
raise funds for three charities; the Dyslexia Institute, the NSPCC and the British Red
Cross.[3]
Jones embarked on his mission on 26 April 2004 from the Museum
of Army Flying, Middle Wallop, Hampshire with an honourary military
helicopter armada
accompanying him during the send off.[5][6]
The expedition was supported by a team of soldiers based at Dishforth, North
Yorkshire, United Kingdom.
The expedition encountered difficulties while flying through
Europe, including the Alps[7] and the
Middle East and it
was downgraded due to flight delays before finally being abandoned
after it landed in Guwahati, India around the onset of monsoon season.[8] Officer
Jones had set up a website where he described the details of each
stage of his trip.[9][10] The
images of the flight as well as details of each stage of the flight
were regularly uploaded on the website.[11]
History
The autogyro is the last remaining type of aircraft which has
not a yet been used to circumnavigate the globe.[1][12]
The expedition was the first attempt ever to fly an autogyro around
the Earth, a trip of about 25,000 miles (40,000 km).[13][14]
In February 2003, a year before the circumnavigation attempt, the
Global Eagle broke the world range record by flying
non-stop from Culdrose in Cornwall to Wick in Scotland, a total of 580 miles (928 km),
after a flight lasting 7 hours and 23 minutes, breaking the old
record of either 543.27 statute miles (874.32 km) or 869.23 km
(540.11 mi) held by Wing Commander Ken Wallis.[12][15][16][17][18]
During the record-breaking trip Jones drifted toward North America due
to a broken radio, before finally correcting the course. While
flying over Wales he had to fly
over the clouds in the open cockpit of the autogyro.[15]
He also flew for approximately 50 miles (80 km) over the North Sea which, as he
acknowledged during an interview, was a dangerous course due to the
fact the autogyro only had one engine and therefore in case it
cut-off there would be no alternative solution but to crash land in
the water.[15]
The average flight altitude was 4,000 ft and the average speed was
70 mph.[15]
In 2004, Jones, a Lynx helicopter
pilot,[17]
was one of 75 licensed autogyro pilots in the UK.[19]
Later in 2003 the original Eagle suffered an accident during
landing.[20]
The circumnavigation attempt trip commenced on 26 April 2004
under the patronage of General sir Michael
Walker,[12]
Chief of
Defence Staff of the British Armed Forces and it was
supposed to last about three and a half months. The autogyro flight
was to have touched down in twenty five countries with frequent
landings due to the limited range of the autogyro.[14]
The Global Eagle's route was planned to approximately
follow the flightpath taken by Brian Milton in 1998 when he became the
first person to circumnavigate the globe using a microlight.[12][21]
Due to technical difficulties with the original gyrocopter the gyro
at launch was supplied by the Italian manufacturer Magni
Gyro which also supplied spare parts and technical assistance
to the expedition.[22][23][24]
The new gyro featured a new colour scheme and the eagle logo was
not used.[23]
The
Magni VPM M16 commencing its take-off roll. The same
model was used in the
Global Eagle expedition.
The expedition successfully completed the European leg of the journey which included Oostende,
Belgium, Friedrichshafen, Germany, the Alps, Bolzano, Trento, Casaleggio Novara, the location of
the Magni airfield in Italy,[25] Forlì, Pescara, Bari,
Italy, Corfu, Athens,[26] Mykonos, Kos and Rhodes, in Greece and the military base of Akrotiri
in Cyprus,[27]
albeit with delays.[28]
The journey through the Alps was very difficult because Jones had
to climb to 10,000 feet over the Alps where it was extremely
windy.[3]
Jones also had to make a forced landing in the Italian Alps.[13]
Also the trip from Athens to Akrotiri over the Mediterranean proved very frightening
because flying over the water, with only a few ships below, meant
that it would be very difficult to get any help in case of a
mishap.[3]
From Akrotiri, Global Eagle went to Amman, Jordan, Turaif, Saudi Arabia, Arar, Hafr Al-Batin, Qaisumah, Jubail, Bahrain, Abu Dhabi in the Arab Emirates and Muscat, Oman.[28][29][30][31]
Over Jordan and Saudi Arabia, Jones had to fly over the desert for hours and to battle sandstorms and hot weather at low altitudes
while at higher altitudes it would become very cold.[30]
Further, communication was impossible while flying over the desert
because of a lack of ground stations and the atmospheric conditions
prevailing in the area. While there, Jones had to communicate with
commercial aircraft flying over the desert which would then relay
his messages to the ground stations at the local airports. A Saudia flight
helped him approach and land at Turaif.[3]
Subsequently Jones arrived at Abu Dhabi and from there he flew to Muscat, Oman and then
Gawadar
and Ormara in Pakistan and, finally, Karachi.[28][32][33] The
flight from Muscat to Karachi broke the record for the longest
flight over water by an autogyro and lasted six hours.[34]
From Karachi, Jones flew the autogyro to India where it navigated to Ahmedabad, Udaipur, Jaipur, New Delhi, Bareilly, Gorakhpur, Patna and Baghdogra, sometimes through sandstorms, and finally landed during monsoon rains in the army base
of Guwahati.[13]
The delays incurred in the European leg of the journey proved
damaging to the effort because Jones was forced to arrive in India
during monsoon season. The monsoons he encountered were the worst
in 20 years with 100 people killed in the Guwahati area alone.[35]
The technical difficulties encountered in India, due to the
weather, led to the downgrading of the purpose of the mision from
circumnavigating the globe to flying to Australia.[36]
Jones and his support team then returned to the UK in order to
revise the plans for the truncated trip to Australia. Upon
returning to India they discovered that the gyro while at the army
base of Guwahati had spent
time submerged in water. The transponder, the radio and the rest of the instruments were
damaged. As well, the flying controls and the cables needed to be
replaced. The damage totalled BP₤10,000 and could not be raised on
time.[9]
In addition the team members, being soldiers, had to return to active duty by early
2005. This led to the attempt being abandoned.[36]
The trip when cancelled had covered between 6,550–7,500 miles
(10,480–12,100 km) and had lasted for four months due to the
delays experienced, averaging approximately 350 miles per flight
day.[13][24][35]
Even though the expedition did not succeed in its goal of
circumnavigating the globe it demonstrated the wide range of
conditions under which a light, open-cockpit autogyro could
operate.[24]
Completed route details
The detailed route, times and other details of the completed
trip were as follows:[37][38]
- 26 April 2004: Departure from Middle Wallop — Ostend (Belgium):
Total distance 300 km, including 70 km over the North Sea
- 30 April 2004: Ostend (EBOS, Belgium) — Friedrichshaven
(Germany): — 630 km Total distance since start :
930 km
- 3 May 2004: Friedrichshafen (Germany) — Bolzano — Trento — Casaleggio, Novara (Italy): — Total
distance: 457 km
- 3–6 May 2004: While on the way to Bolzano 60 km/h wind
gusts cause Eagle to force land on a sports field 30 km north
of Bolzano in the Alps.[39][40][41]
- 7 May 2004: Departure from Bolzano at 0900z and landing at
Magni airfield in Casaleggio,[42] Italy
13:22 local time
- 10 May 2004: Depart Magni at 12:00 local time, refuelling at Forlì LIPK 11:23–13:00 —
refuelling at Pescara LIBP —
Arrival Bari LIBD (Italy) 1700 — Trip distance: 828 km Total
distance since start : 2,215 km
- 12 May 2004: Lift-off from Bari at 10:21 local time —
refuelling at Ioannis Kapodistrias International Airport
Corfu LGKR.[43] —
Arrival at Athens Airport at 16:30 — Trip distance: 700 km
Total distance since start : 2,915 km
- 13 May 2004: Departure from Athens 0800 — Refuelling at Myconos
— refuelling at Kos. Strong headwinds force landing at Rhodes
LGRD.
- 14 May 2004: Early morning lift-off from Rhodes and landing in
Akrotiri (Cyprus) following a flight of more than 3 hours over the
Mediterranean, with ground speed of sometimes over 170 km/h.
Trip distance: 907 km Total distance since start:
3,822 km
- 16 May 2004: Akrotiri (Cyprus) — Amman (Jordan) :
420 km
- 17–19 May 2004: Break — 3 days off.
- 20 May 2004: Amman — Turaif (Saudi Arabia) — Ar'Ar :
580 km
- 21 May 2004: Ar'Ar — Hafr-AL-Batin : 420 km
- 22 May 2004: Hafr-AL-Batin — Al Quasumah — Jubail (Saudi Ar) —
Bahrain: 593 km. Total distance since start :
5,835 km
- 24 May 2004: Bahrain — Abu Dhabi (Arab Emirates) :
452 km
- 26 May 2004: Abu Dhabi — Muscat (Oman): 410 km. Total
distance since start: 6,697 km
- 30 May 2004: Muscat (Oman) — Karachi (Pakistan) :
880 km over the sea
- 1 June 2004: Karachi — Ahmedabad (India) :
592 km.
- 2 June 2004: Udaipur — Jaipur: 525 km.
- 3 June 2004: Jaipur — Delhi (India): 249 km — Sandstorms.
Total distance since start: 8,943 km. Barry Jones sick with
stomach disease, resting.
- 7 June 2004: Jones recovers, but the monsoon season has
started. Waiting for delivery of administrative clearances
- 9 June 2004: Departs from Indira Gandhi International Airport
(New Delhi, India) — Bareilly: 220 km. Barry Jones forced to
return back to Delhi due to inclement weather.
- 10 June 2004: Delhi — Bareilly: 249 km. Second attempt
successful. Arrival at 10:05 local time.
- 11 June 2004: Bareilly-Gorakhpur: 436 km.
- 12 June 2004: Gorakhpur — — Patna — Baghdogra :
552 km. Departure at 08:30 local time. Arrival at 16:10 local
time. Total distance since start: 10,150 km
- 13 June 2004: Baghdogra — Guwahati : 330 km. Delays
due to bad weather
- 14 June 2004: Bad weather for the whole week. Flight clearances
need to be renewed. Jones considers returning to Delhi using a
commercial flight.
- 15 June 2004: Jones arrives in Delhi. Trying to recoup and
rethink the plan. New flights will be over hills and jungles.
Weather is bad.
- 21 June 2004: Baghdogra — Guwahati: 330 km. Jones
departure at 0353 and arrival at Guwahati in monsoon rain. Flight
time: 3 hrs 40 minutes.
- 21 June 2004: Rain continues. Total distance travelled since
start: 10,480 km Route now changes to Australia as the final
destination due to difficulties and bad weather.
- 1–5 October 2004: Barry Jones returns to India to re-evaluate
mission.[41]
Decision is made to abandon effort.
Remaining
route
This is the list of the unfinished part of the expedition:[21][44]
- India — Imphal
- Burma — Mandalay Intl
- Laos — Luang Prabang
- Vietnam — Noibai Intl
- China — Wuxu — Baiyun
- Hong Kong — Hong Kong Intl
- China — Gaoqi — Changle — Lishe — Hongqiao — Liuting — Beijing
Intl — Zhoushuizi — Taoxian — Dafangshen — Taiping
- Russia — Igatevo — Sokoc — Ugolny — Provideniya Bay
- Alaska — Tin City — Nome — Koyuk — Pitka — Minchumina —
Cantwell — Gulkana
- Canada — Burwash — Atlin — Dease Lake — Smithers — Belia Coola
— Puntzi Mountain — Pemberton — Abbotsford
- USA — Plan not finalised
- Canada — Mirabel Intl —- Bagotville — Rimouski — Sept-Iles —
Wabush — Schefferville — Kuujjuaq — Quaqtaq — Kimmirut — Iqaluit —
Pangnirtung — Qikiqtarjuaq
- Greenland — Kangerlussuaq — Kulusuk
- Iceland — Reykjavik — Hornafjordur
- Denmark — Vagar
- UK — Kirkwall — Wick — Inverness — Leuchars — Edinburgh —
Carlisle — Dishforth — Middle Wallop
Technical specifications
The Magni gyrocopter model: Magni VPM M16 (Similar to the Magni
M16 - 2000) used in the expedition had the following
specifications:[22]
- Weight: Empty weight 261/266 kg, maximum take-off gross
weight 450 kg
- Maximum speed 115 mph
- Cruising speed 90 mph
- Absolute ceiling 4000 m
- Service ceiling 3500 m
- Take-off roll 70 m
- Landing roll from 0 to 30 m
- Rate of climb 5 m/s
- Fuel tank capacity 72 L
- Rotor diameter 8230/8535 mm
- Propeller diameter 1700 mm
- Overall width 1800 mm
- Overall length 4655 mm
- Overall height 2600 mm
- Airframe: chrome-alloy aeronautical 4130 steel, tig welded.
Fiberglass fairing, wheel pants and instrument panel.
- Seat: epoxy / fiberglass with integral fuel-tank,
- Instruments: rotor tachometer, altimeter, air speed indicator,
Flydat and fuel gauge
- Engine used for expedition:[45] 914
Rotax Turbo,[46] 4
cylinders, 4 stroke, water cooled, 115 hp, with electric starter
and mechanical prerotator. (Also available: Rotax 912 ULS, 100
Hp)
- Propeller: three-blades, carbon fiber, ground adjustable
pitch.
- Rotor: two-blades, composite.
- Controls: double. Electric trim.
External
links
References
- ^ a
b
BBC News You only live
twice? A Nottingham man is part of a team hoping to circumnavigate
the globe in one of James Bond's gadgets. Quote: "The autogyro is
the only aircraft never to circumnavigate the globe. But now a team
of soldiers are bidding to do just that and make a piece of
aviation history."
- ^
BBC News World Record With
A Purpose
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Gulf News British pilot
on a daring world tour for charity
- ^
Pilot battles on through
illness, heat and storms Article from: Yorkshire Post Article
date: May 19, 2004
- ^
Picture of liftoff from
Middle Wallop
- ^ Picture of Honourary Armada
escorting Global Eagle from Middle Wallop
- ^
Picture of Barry Jones over
the Alps (Internet archive)
- ^
BBC News Monsoon stops
record flight bid
- ^ a
b
Global Eagle website GE
termination notice through Internet Archive
- ^
Earlier napshot of Global
Eagle website through Internet Archive
- ^
Flight images from Web
archive snapshot of Global Eagle website
- ^ a
b
c
d
BJR Systems Quote: "General Sir Michael Walker,
Chief of Defence Staff, is the patron of Expedition Global Eagle."
and "The autogyro is now on the brink of making aviation history
and in the bid to do so, WO2 Jones will closely follow the route
taken by Brian Milton in 1998, when he became the first person to
fly a microlight around the world." and "The autogyro is the last
remaining class of aircraft yet to circumnavigate the globe."
- ^ a
b
c
d
BBC news Weather halts
record flight bid
- ^ a
b
Mission Description from Chess
Dynamics (sponsor) Quote: "Expedition Global Eagle is the
worlds first attempt to fly around the world in an autogyro. Global
Eagle departed in April 2004 and will take approximately three and
a half months to complete its journey. which will see the gyroplane
visit 25 different countries."
- ^ a
b
c
d
Pilot celebrates distance
record in '007' gyroplane From the Northern Echo, first published
Tuesday 25th Feb 2003. Quote: "After his landing yesterday he
said: "I am absolutely delighted. There were several tricky moments
but the journey has gone very well. I am now looking forward to
celebrating with the rest of the team in Wick later on." He said
the flight had uncovered teething problems with the aircraft,
Global Eagle, which would now be put right before he sets out on
his next record attempt—flying round the world in June. "Soon after
setting out I lost power to the radio and drifted off course
towards America, without a visa. "I was forced to fly above the
cloud over Wales, which was a totally new experience in an
open-cockpit. "The hairiest bit was flying for about 50 miles over
open sea, which is all right in a twin-engined helicopter but a
different matter in a single-engined gyroplane. If the engine cuts
out then that is it, you are down. "One thing that will need a
rethink is the design of the cockpit—there was no room to read a
map.""
- ^
Army pilot breaks gyroplane
flight record Independent, The (London), Feb 25, 2003
- ^ a
b
BBC news Army pilot's
gyroplane record bid 26 April 2004
- ^ Story of the record
- ^ Yorkshire pilot speaks of
nerves over world trip Published Date: 15 April 2004 Julie
Hemmings
- ^
Magni South Africa
Newsletter p. 6
- ^ a
b
Proposed Route
- ^ a
b
Magni Gyro Details from
Global Eagle Website
- ^ a
b
Picture of Barry Jones and
his Magni Gyro
- ^ a
b
c
Magnigyro website
Quote:"The “Eagle” _ as the gyro is named _ left Middle Wallop
(England) on 26th April 2003 and reached India after nearly 4
months’ flying over land and sea. This was a demonstration of the
wide range of conditions a gyro can operate within."
- ^
Picture of Barry Jones while
flying over Italy
- ^
Picture of Barry Jones at
Athens airport
- ^
Picture at Acrotiri
Cyprus
- ^ a
b
c
Global Eagle website
details
- ^
Picture at Bahrain airport
showing the autogyro
- ^ a
b
Picture of Brian Jones flying
over the desert of Saudi Arabia
- ^
Picture of Global Eagle at
Bahrain airport
- ^
Picture of Barry Jones over
the sea of Oman
- ^
Picture taken while flying
over Muscat Harbour
- ^
The Yorkshire Post The
Eagle has landed – but pilot vows to try again Quote: "509-mile
flight from Muscat to Karachi, the longest over water by an
autogyro" 22 October 2004
- ^ a
b
Record attempt in doubt after
gyro is damaged Published Date: 12 October 2004 DISASTER has
struck a Yorkshire-based pilot's attempt to set a world record by
flying an autogyro from England to Australia single handed. Bill
Bridge
- ^ a
b
Flyer UK Expedition Global
Eagle washed out
- ^
Route page 1
- ^
Route page 2
- ^
Sports field details
- ^
Forced landing details from
the diary
- ^ a
b
General Diary
- ^
Magni Airfield info
- ^
Diary entry on
Greece
- ^
Supplementary route
- ^
Diary entry mentioning
turbo
- ^
Engine and Turbo
details