Sure, thanks for posting this great story. I’ve been searching all my archives for an article I saved about Steve Fossett’s unsuccessful attempt to balloon solo around the world. I copied the file from hard drive to hard drive for years but couldn’t find it in any of my e-mail accounts or cloud drives. Finally it turned up ten levels deep in an old webserver backup. It’s too long to fit in a comment, but maybe someone can find a copy online or I’ll find a way to post it somewhere. happened. I was flying at an altitude above the thunderstorm line, which was clearing the tops of the thunderstorm. But I suspect there was some interaction with the tops of the thunderstorm and the jet stream where I was flying, which was at 29,000 feet, and I started a descent. At first the descent was at 500 feet a minute, and then I reversed it by turning on the burners and climbing back up. But then I was already under the influence of the thunderstorm and started a descent of 1,500 feet a minute. I used the burners more and I flew back up at an extreme rate of 1,500 feet a minute. And I believe at that point the balloon ruptured. So I started a descent, and I don't know how fast the descent was because my variometer has a maximum rate on it of 2,500 feet a minute and it was pegged at 2,500 feet a minute for my entire descent down from 29,000 feet to the surface.I'm going to have to do some debriefing as to what really