Hot Air Balloons



How Hot Air

Balloons Work


 









How Hot Air Balloons Work: The Magic Of Quiet Flight
Jon Wuebben


Have you ever looked at a hot air balloon off in the distance and
wondered how it works? What keeps those big, beautiful balloons up in
the air? How do you steer them? How do you land it? How do you ride in
one? Well, it all comes down to one simple law of physics: warmer air
rises in cooler air. Why is this? Because hot air is lighter than cool
air and as a result, it has less mass per unit of volume. For example,
a cubic foot of air weighs roughly 28 grams. When you heat the air by
100 degrees F, it weighs 7 grams less. How does this impact hot air
balloon flight? Each cubic foot of air contained in a hot air balloon
can lift about 7 grams. That's right - only 7 grams; not very much. So,
the way we compensate for this is by making the hot air balloon very
large, or enough to lift 1,000 pounds. How do you keep the balloon
rising? By reheating the air with a "burner" positioned under the open
balloon envelope. The pilot reheats the cooling air in the balloon by
firing the burner.

So what type of fuel do pilots use while hot air ballooning? Propane,
which is stored in compressed liquid form, in the balloon basket. Hers
how hot air balloon rides work:

* In order to draw the liquid out, the intake hose goes to the bottom
of the cylinder.
* It flows fairly fast through the hoses because the propane is highly
compressed.
* When the pilot starts up the burner, the propane flows out in liquid
form and is ignited by a pilot light.
* As the flame is burning, it heats up all of the metal in the
surrounding tubing area.
* When the tubing gets hot, it heats the propane flowing through it,
changing the propane from a liquid to a gas.
* How does this help? It makes for a more powerful flame and more
efficient fuel consumption.

Why doesn't the hot air escape from the hole at the bottom of the hot
air balloon? because buoyancy keeps it moving up. You've probably seen
hot air balloon pilots fire the burners. If they do this a lot, the
balloon will continue to rise. Of course, since air becomes thin at
high altitudes, the buoyant force eventually gets too weak to lift the
balloon.

So, how does a pilot maneuver this air craft? It does take some skill,
but the controls are fairly simple. To lift the hot air balloon during
the ride, the pilot moves a control that opens up the propane valve.
The flow of gas increases as they turn it, so the flame grows
correspondingly in size. How does the pilot increase the vertical
speed? By blasting a larger flame which heats the air faster.

So, that's really it. Only two main things to remember: heating to make
the balloon rise and venting to make it sink. How do hot air balloon
pilots they get the balloon from place to place? They actually can
maneuver horizontally by changing their vertical position, because wind
blows in different directions at different altitudes. Based on where
exactly they want to go, a pilot ascends and descends to the
appropriate level, and rides with the wind.

Hot air ballooning is one of life's simple pleasures!

(c) 2006 California Dreamin, offers hot air balloon rides and biplane
rides since 1977. Featuring sunrise flights in the Temecula valley wine
country and sunset flights over the Del Mar coastal valley. To take a
flight, contact http://www.californiadreamin.com/  or (800) 373-3359



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