Hopper balloon
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A hopper balloon (or simply hopper) is a small, one-person hot air balloon. Unlike a conventional hot air balloon where people ride inside a basket, there is no basket on a hopper balloon. Instead, the hopper pilot usually sits on a seat or wears a harness similar to a parachute harness. Hoppers are typically flown for recreation.
These aircraft are sometimes called "Cloud Hoppers" or "Cloudhoppers." However, these terms formally refer to the products of a particular manufacturer, specifically Lindstrand Balloons. Nonetheless, "Cloudhopper" is used by many people as a genericized trademark, which refers to all craft of this general type. In more careful usage, "hopper" is the generic term.
Most hopper balloons have envelopes that range in volume from 14,000 to 35,000 cubic feet (400 to 1000 m3) and have a maximum flight duration of 1 to 1.5 hours.
The two principal commercial balloon manufacturers today offering hopper balloons for sale are Cameron Balloons and Lindstrand Balloons. Most other hopper balloons are experimental aircraft designed and built by amateur constructors.
[edit] History
Balloon jumping as a sport dates back to at least 1927 in England[1]. The first modern hot air balloon was flown by Ed Yost under sponsorship by the U.S. Office of Naval Research on October 22, 1960, in Bruning, Nebraska. Since Yost's balloon had a small envelope of 31,000 cubic feet (900 m3) and a chair for the pilot, not a basket, this was arguably also the first hopper balloon ever flown.
[edit] Cloudhopper
The name Cloudhopper is often used to refer to a one-person hot air balloon where the pilot sits in a harness or small seat. There is often a propane tank behind the pilot's back, and the burner is on a frame above the pilot's head. Often the balloon's burner, tank, and pilot's harness can swivel independently of the hot air balloon envelope, to let him turn to any direction he wants or needs while in flight and for landing.
The term "Cloudhopper" was originally coined and trademarked by British balloonist Colin Prescot. The development of the Cloudhopper was carried out by Per Lindstrand of Colt Balloons in 1979.
Colt Balloons later merged with Thunder Balloons to form Thunder & Colt Balloons, which inherited the Cloudhopper name. Finally, Per Lindstrand left Thunder & Colt to form his own Lindstrand Balloons, which manufactures the present-day Cloudhopper.
Shortly after the team at Colt built and flew its first Cloudhopper, Cameron Balloons came up with its own backpack-style balloon, called the SkyHopper. Its main distinguishing feature was a twist-grip mounted on an arm rest to control the burner. On the original Colt Cloudhopper, as well as all modern-day Cloudhopper designs, the burner controls are mounted at the bottom of the burner, like on regular passenger-carrying hot air balloons.
[edit] Hopper trivia
- A Cloudhopper advertising Smirnoff Vodka was flown over the River Thames in central London in 1979.
- Texas balloonist and plastic surgeon Dr. Coy Foster set several dozen world records flying a Cloudhopper.
- In the movie Green Ice (1981), diamond robbers used three Cloudhoppers to escape from a Mexico City skyscraper.
- Frenchman Nicolas Hulot and a colleague flew two Cloudhoppers between tiny coral atolls in the Pacific Ocean for French TV show "Ushuaïa."
- Larry Walters' notorious 1982 flight in a lawn chair carried by helium balloons could be considered a hopper flight.
[edit] External links
- Cloudhopper site with a US-focus
- Cloudhopper site with a UK/Europe-focus
- Cloudhoppers and other experimental LTA aircraft
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ TIME Magazine. Balloon Jumping. Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
- History of the Small Balloon; Glen Moyer; Balloon Life Magazine (July 1995)
- Ballooning - The Complete Guide to Riding the Winds; Dick Wirth and Jerry Young; London (1980 and 1991)