Pilots break ballooning records by completing six-day Pacific crossing

Two pilots from the U.S. and Russia have travelled farther and longer in a gas balloon than anyone in history. The pair surpassed the distance and duration records that have held since the 1970s and 1980s, and landed safely off the coast of Mexico, according to their Two Eagles Balloon team. Troy Bradley of Albuquerque and Leonid Tiukhtyaev of Russia lifted off from Japan last Sunday and, by Friday, they beat what’s considered the “holy grail” of ballooning achievements: The 137-hour duration record set in 1978 by the Double Eagle crew of Ben Abruzzo, Maxie Anderson and Larry Newman in the first balloon flight across the Atlantic.

These are significant improvements over the existing records. We didn’t break them by just a little bit. They were broken by a significant amount.

Steve Shope, mission control director

By early Saturday morning, the Two Eagles team had been in the air nearly 155 hours and smashed the distance record, having travelled more than 11,200 kilometres, including the crossing of the Pacific Ocean. Their first target was the official distance record of 8,383 km set by the Double Eagle V team during the first trans-Pacific flight in 1981. They surpassed that on Thursday. The official distance and time of the Two Eagles flight have yet to be confirmed by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, which requires staying aloft 1% longer and farther than the previous record.