Sunday, November 4, 2007

 

Korea – more problems ahead!


As some of you have noticed the last post was written on a Friday, not Thursday! This tells you two things: First, we have TOTALLY lost track of what weekday it is – we do not have any breaks and it is one rush all day long. Second, contrary to what's written in the brochures there's self-guided tours through the Changdeokgung Palace site on other weekdays as well! :-)

Yesterday we walked to Gyeongbokgung Palace, the second best of the five major palace sites in Seoul. We had a look at the buildings and open spaces and finally explained at the tourist information what we'd come for. The woman there was very understanding and guided us to the responsible office; unlike in other countries every palace site has its own office. The people there liked the WSF project as well, but – like a number of times before – next door were some government buildings, and this was special security zone. Thus no flying permit. (The picture below was taken the first day - it is great, but like explained we do not have anything on video.)



However, the tourist office advised us to drive to the culture park right in the city center. There would be houses in typical Korean architecture style, plus we'd have a wonderful view of the Seoul Tower. OK, board a taxi and off it goes through the usual traffic chaos.
The site was nice but too small in a way that you always had not so nice parts of the city in the background - the harmony was somehow missing. As for the tower, not the nicest one we'd ever seen, but quite impressive; the only problem was that the sun spoiled the picture. The staff there were nice, a flying permit no problem. We flew one 3700 mAh pack to have at least something on video; the shots are quite ok but nothing compared to the Great Wall in China or the Taj Mahal.
The shock came right after landing: The 3700 mAh batt pack was ballooned as well! Hell, if the batteries continue dying at this rate then we lose one pack per flight!

What next? Well, there is three kinds of landmarks suitable for WSF. The first category is cultural monuments, in this case one of the famous palaces. The second group would be world-renowned technical structures, e.g. the Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysia. This leaves the third category, characteristic landscape or natural formations.
Okay, if the palace thing absolutely doesn't work, then let's go for the Seoul Tower! But similar problem like in Kuala Lumpur: No space for flying within the city! Most of the ancient settlements and towns were built near rivers: For one, this offered the possibility of agriculture and second, it was the gate to the world and enabled people to trade. Seoul, too, is divided by a mighty river – and that's exactly what we headed for next (don't let's talk about walking on highways with R/C helicopters …)!



It was quite cold and a firm wind blowing, still the flights were successful and left us with some good shots; we think they will look cool in the final film. After landing one of the Korean spectators fell over the helicopter and broke the vertical fin. Annoying, but not a problem – back in our small pension I replaced it by a new one.



Both Saskia and I are reasonably well again. The major problem now is another one: Our Flight Power battery packs. After the river flight our fourth and last pack showed signs of ballooning, too! We did not have any problems with Flight Power packs until the WSF project started; but it is fact that even though they haven't seen more than 40 cycles each, they obviously cannot cope with the fast changing conditions of WSF flights.

Rainer Hacker is one of the greatest guys we've ever met - if you have a problem with motors or battery packs, he'll do his very best to solve them for you. We got pretty much most of our batteries through him (Hacker Motor GmbH) - very unfortunately, we cannot reach him at the moment! They're on a trade fair and do not check their emails or answer the phone.

We talked to Nicolas Kaiser and Steven-V as well as our old friend Andrew Palmer from New Zealand (he'll be flying over to Australia just to meet us there - simply great, isn't it, and we'll talk about that once in Australia). All three of them are currently trying to locate 12s battery packs and checking alternatives. The situation is serious, but we're confident to find a durable solution.

Like mentioned earlier: As of now it is unclear what causes the ballooning of the FP packs and there is a chance it would have happened to ANY brand. BUT: You have to see our situation, too! We have flown half around the world and are fighting our way through a world-unique and very demanding mission. All our battery packs are dying like flies, and the project is at stake! So we have to do something FAST and NOW! Any thoughts/comments from you are welcome, too.

Right now we are minutes from boarding the plane to Australia; the flight is 9.5 hours, and we'll continue from there. Stay tuned!

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Friday, November 2, 2007

 

South Korea - problems ahead!


South Korea is a modern country, and even though the capital Seoul is situated slightly more South than Beijing, it is quite cold here. Part of the city looks like many of the modern metropolises, which means life at a fast pace and expensive, many lights and heavy traffic. They give you about 15 seconds to cross the major multi-lane roads. After that the pedestrian lights go to red again and it's waiting for another 5 - 10 minutes. This really trains you to RUN!



What's the best-known monuments in Korea? Well, for one there is the city of Gyeongju, but with 400 km distance it's too far away from here. No need to go there anyway since in Seoul you will find the remains of the Joseon dynasty (15th century). It's basically a town-like structure with a collection of many beautiful buildings, temples and pagodas. Due to vandalism in the past you can only walk through it on guided tours. However, self-guided tours are available on Thursdays - lucky us! We found the office in charge, and the Korean guys there called some nice English-speaking representative. We explained the WSF project, and she seemed less worried about the heli but that we'd have to pay quite a sum to get a permission to take pictures. Sounded reasonably good, so we'd be back the next day (= Thursday).



This morning we walked up to the ticket office and paid the fee for taking pictures as well as the money for the regular entrance tickets. Looked good, so far no trace of problems. The nice lady from the office guided us right to the open space in front of the biggest and most famous palace called Changdeokgung. It's UNESCO world cultural heritage again, by the way (we should ask them for a map with the rest of that stuff :-) ).
The open space turned out to be not as wide as it appeared to be from the pictures; there seems to be a pattern behind this, some clever wide angle photography. It's the same all over the world: You go there, and boom - where's the magic from the pictures?!



After 25 minutes of waiting (did we mention that extra time costs extra money?!) we realized that the constant stream of new guided tours just didn't end. The nice lady said she was surprised, too, but we should start after the current tour had left. There's always one idiot who lags behind the group and has to take 10,000 extra pictures of the same object from angles as different as one arc second. We waited patiently until his guide called out to him, then wound up the rotor.
The first minute was reserved for pictures so the lady and other people would get used to the looks of the heli and that it's safe. Next we pulled out the camera and tried to let the heli fall into the picture, morph it into a pie dish, and then exit to the side. Not trivial in this confined area.

After a total of 4 minutes somebody came running and shouting, and we had to land. The guy was so mad he tried to block my vision of the landing heli. Luckily, Koreans aren't that tall. Anyway, the guy was quite upset and it turned out he was the guide of a group from the building next door, and that people had complained about the noise. Hmm …
Electric helis and blade flutter can cause some resonance, but it is highly unlikely this was louder than all the school kids crying around. What probably happened was that for the four minutes nobody cared about the building, but everybody liked the heli; the guide just couldn't cope with that. After this incident we did not get permission to take off again - because of the noise! We tried hard, but no way.

And here comes the worst: Due to a seemingly trivial camera problem we do not have any recordings at all! I was (and still am) so shocked I refused to speak much.
We'd like to seize the chance to thank you for emails and comments as this really motivates us. We do read all of them; you're welcome to feel at home and leave any thoughts on whatever topic you may have.
BTW, the internet is censored here in Korea as well, so we still cannot see the blog (including comments) and have to use the backdoor for updates!



An additional problem is that since we do not have many breaks we're quite exhausted after all the travelling and long walks. I sort of collapsed from exhaustion yesterday night, and Saskia is in poor condition today (vomited several times).
Then we found out that either after the heli flight in China or on the way to Korea our second FP 4900 mAh pack has ballooned. We have no idea what's the problem. The HeliGraphix SwissUnit around Nicolas Kaiser are busy to fix the problem for us. It looks as if we won't get a spare 4900 mAh, only 3700 mAh. That's bad because like here in Korea you sometimes only get the chance to do one single flight - and it's crucial that this one does not last just 4 min.

Keep you fingers crossed that we're back on our feet tomorrow and will be able to come up with a backup plan.

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