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Airbus Perlan Mission II Kicks Off Second Season Exploring Skies Above the Sierra Nevada

MINDEN, Nev., April 24, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Airbus Perlan Mission II, an initiative to fly a glider without an engine to the edge of space to collect ground-breaking insights on high-altitude flight, weather, and climate change, returned to flight this week at its U.S. headquarters at the Minden-Tahoe Airport. Perlan Project Pilots Jim Payne and Miguel Iturmendi soared the pressurized glider to its highest altitude to date, reaching 30,615 feet.

Airbus Perlan Mission II Soars Above Patagonia in 2016
The Perlan 2 pressurized glider, designed to reach the edge of space without an engine, soars in the Patagonia region of Argentina in 2016, during the first season of Airbus Perlan Mission II. ‎The aircraft will return to Patagonia in June 2017 for a second season of exploration. Photo by James Darcy


Perlan Pilots Emerge After 30,000-foot Flight
Airbus Perlan Mission II pilots Miguel Iturmendi (left) and Jim Payne emerge from the pressurized Perlan 2 glider after soaring it to 30,000 feet above the Sierra Nevada mountain range, while pilot Tim Gardner (right) prepares to secure the aicraft. Photo by Jackie Payne


Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:

http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/de775b44-0b2b-43d6-83bf-a961173fe63a

http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/e7ef20a0-8c08-46fc-9bab-c092b52fc234

The Perlan 2 will spend spring soaring in the rising wind currents – called mountain waves – in the skies above the Sierra Nevada, before deploying in May to Argentina for its second year of flight operations in Patagonia. 

“This past year our team gained invaluable insight and experience from flying the glider in and around the Andes Mountains,” said Ed Warnock, CEO of The Perlan Project. “Using that information, we’ve made improvements to the aircraft that will help us have even greater success this year, first in Nevada and later in Argentina, if the wave and weather conditions are optimal.”

To reach the altitudes that will enable the aircraft to conduct its unique research, the team is searching for elusive “stratospheric mountain waves,” which only occur a few places on earth – such as Patagonia – and a few weeks out of the year.

“We’re thrilled that the Perlan 2 glider is back in the air for another season of exploration, because this endeavor inspires us all to expand the limits of our thinking,” said Allan McArtor, Chairman of Airbus Americas. “In today’s competitive environment, innovation can’t just be a buzzword, and Airbus Perlan Mission II is just one example of how we’re turning ideas into action.”

The Perlan Project's all-volunteer team has recently updated the experimental Perlan 2 glider, which features a pressurized cockpit, enhanced avionics and life support systems. Key improvements include:

For more information about Airbus Perlan Mission II, please go to www.perlanproject.org.

Press Kit with images, infographic, fact sheet, and video is available at: http://bit.ly/perlanpress.

About Airbus
Airbus is a global leader in aeronautics, space and related services. In 2016, it generated revenues of € 67 billion and employed a workforce of around 134,000. Airbus offers the most comprehensive range of passenger airliners from 100 to more than 600 seats. Airbus is also a European leader providing tanker, combat, transport and mission aircraft, as well as Europe’s number one space enterprise and the world’s second largest space business. In helicopters, Airbus provides the most efficient civil and military rotorcraft solutions worldwide.

About Airbus Perlan Mission II
Airbus Perlan Mission II is an initiative to fly an engineless glider to the edge of space, higher than any other winged aircraft has operated in level, controlled flight, to open up a world of new discoveries related to high-altitude flight, weather and climate change. This historic endeavor is the culmination of decades of research and engineering innovation, and the work of a tireless international team of aviators and scientists who volunteer their time and expertise for the non-profit  Perlan Project. The project is supported by Airbus Group and a group of other sponsors that includes  Weather Extreme Ltd.United Technologies and  BRS Aerospace.

Perlan’s other sponsors:
United Technologies
Weather Extreme Ltd.
BRS Aerospace

   
Equipment, service and institutional donors:  
Aero Club Lago Argentino Kiloyankeepapa
AGM Container Controls Laviasa
ANAC Leading Edge Jet Center 
Automated Metal Products LX Nav
Argentina Air Force Directorate-General of Research and Development Miller Nash Graham & Dunn
Biomarine Rebreathers MH Aviation Oxygen Systems
Bonehead Composites Omni
Cobra Trailer Pro-Tint
Community Foundation of Western Nevada RDD
Clouddancers Sandia Aerospace
DeLorme inReach Silicon Valley Community Foundation
Dragonfly Energy SIMCOM
EANA SoaringNV
Epic Aircraft Soaring Society of America
Garmin Sports Aviation Foundation
Intel Trig Avionics
Iridium Communications Inc. University of Washington Applied Physics Laboratory
  Whelen Engineering
Media contact

James Darcy 
james.darcy@airbus.com
+1 571 214 1722

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