The power beaming games are now scheduled to be held on the week of 11/2 at NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base near Mojave, CA.
The first two days of the week will be dedicated to set-up, testing, and calibrations, and the first competitive climb will take place on Wednesday, 11/4.
Each team will get one 45-minute climb window per day, and we will repeat the process over 3 days to make sure each team can achieve the best score they are capable of.
For media inquiries, please contact Alan Brown (alan.brown-1@nasa.gov)
This is going to be exciting. We are well rehearsed, having practiced setting up the 1-km vertical raceway 8 times now (with no problems), and seen one battery-powered climb to the top. Still, there’s zero room for errors, and so my state of mind right now is “confident, but scared $%&^less”. As it should be, really – a lot is riding on getting this right.
This is the place to acknowledge NASA Centennial Challenges and NASA Dryden’s commitment to the games. As in any ground-breaking project, progress is not always smooth, and we appreciate the backing we’ve received.
In addition, we should acknowledge the backing we have from TRUMPF, the tremendous help we got from Northwest helicopters in Olympia, the guidance of Mackey International, Dynon avionics, and Bitter Jester Creative – we’ll get this done with a little help from our friends.
More details soon -
Ben






For the obvious reasons, I invariably get too busy to blog exactly when things get interesting...