Space Elevator Competition Extended One Day

Las Cruces, New Mexico -- Space elevators might be thenext big things in space transportation, but Saturday's Space Elevator Games atthe Wirefly X-Prize Cup showed that they are still a long way off.

After battling winds on Friday that twisted the elevator ribbon, on Saturday the teams faced mechanical andspeed challenges in getting their respective ribbon crawlers off the ground. Still, by the end of second day, several teams could not compete and had their attempts moved to today for a post-event make-up.

Most ofthe competitors managed two attempts each. The University of British Columbia's crawlercouldn't get traction; the Germans' motor didn't start on their first attempt.A high school team from California got their flimsy-looking crawlernear the top in about five minutes on their first attempt; their second made itall the way up in just over two minutes. The KC Space Pirates' crawler wasbuffeted by the wind, to the point where the team directing the mirrors couldnot keep their aim on the curved solar collector. And the games aren't overyet. One team qualified late; two other teams were using technology that Las Cruces International Airport did not allow: an infrared beam anda microwave beam, both of which have characteristics similar to radar.

Contributing Writer

Bart Leahy is a freelance technical writer residing in Orlando, Florida. Over the course of his career he's  worked for The Walt Disney Company, NASA, the Department of Defense, Nissan, commercial space companies, small businesses, nonprofits, and the Science Cheerleaders. He's contributed to Space.com and Spaceflight Insider over the years and is currently Senior Technical Writer with Advanced Space where he'll be supporting multiple aspects of their operations, including website content, marketing, proposals, and technical deliverables.