Terrifying New footage of Felix Baumgartner’s Jump From Space Reveals Exactly What He Saw on His Outrageous Descent! (Brand New HD Video Footage! Absolute Must-See!)
Saturday, February 1, 2014
This is
incredible! I actually worked up a sweat watching it. You can feel the
anxiety as you watch this amazing video of Fexlix Baumgartner jumping
from outerspace. You will see it from cameras attached to his head,
legs and arms! Yes, this is crazy, but you must give this guy credit for
being brave enough to ever do such a thing!
For the full
effect, after hitting play, hit the icon in the lower right of the
screen titled “settings” and then bump up the quality as high as you
can. If it pauses a lot, you will have to bump it back down. You may
not have a fast enough connection. Then, enlarge the video to full
screen. You will be amazed just how intense this video is!
YouTube Desc:
October 14,
2012, Felix Baumgartner ascended more than 24 miles above Earth’s
surface to the edge of space in a stratospheric balloon. Millions across
the globe watched as he opened the door of the capsule, stepped off the
platform, and broke the speed of sound while free falling safely back
to Earth. Felix set three world records that day—and inspired us all to
reach beyond the limits of our own realities, and reimagine our
potential to achieve the incredible.
GoPro was honored to be a part of this epic achievement, with seven HERO2 cameras documenting every moment. From the airless freeze of outer space, to the record-breaking free fall and momentous return to ground—see it all through Felix’s eyes as captured by GoPro, and experience this incredible mission like never before. No one gets you closer than this.
GoPro was honored to be a part of this epic achievement, with seven HERO2 cameras documenting every moment. From the airless freeze of outer space, to the record-breaking free fall and momentous return to ground—see it all through Felix’s eyes as captured by GoPro, and experience this incredible mission like never before. No one gets you closer than this.
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