Pacific balloon crossing unofficially breaks world records
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Two balloonists landed safely in Mexico on Saturday, ending a flight that looks to have set two world records.
"The pilots: an American, Troy Bradley, and a top Russian balloonist, Leonid Tiukhtyaev," the BBC's Alistair Leithead said.
Their balloon, Two Eagles, launched from Japan on Jan. 25. It made a water landing off the coast of Baja California on Saturday afternoon. (Video via KRQE)
Bradley and Tiukhtyaev reportedly spent 160 hours, 37 minutes aloft and traveled about 6,646 miles.
This would handily beat previous records for duration — 137 hours in 1978 during the first transatlantic balloon crossing — and distance, when Double Eagle V made a 5,209-mile Pacific crossing in 1981. (Video via YouTube / TwoEagles)
But nothing's official until the U.S. National Aeronautic Association and the World Air Sports Federation say so. Regulators have to check the data to ensure the team broke existing records by at least 1 percent.
In the meantime, the Two Eagles team reports its balloonists are safe aboard a fishing boat and headed to solid ground for the first time in nearly a week.

