Trajectory

Fastest Wingsuit Basejump

Achieved the fastest wingsuit BASE jump, reaching a top speed of 347 km/h from the Eiger North Face in Switzerland.

It was never just about going fast. It was about discovering how far human flight could be pushed. On August 19, Peter Salzmann stepped onto a narrow ledge high above the north face of the Eiger, Switzerland. At 3,713 meters above sea level, there was no room for hesitation — only precision, preparation, and complete commitment.

Wearing a specially developed wingsuit built for maximum aerodynamic efficiency, Peter accelerated through the alpine air faster than any wingsuit pilot before him. Reaching a top speed of 347 km/h, he not only set a new world record, but also pushed the world’s fastest camera drone beyond its limits. For 35 seconds, every movement mattered. Body position, airflow, tension, and timing determined whether the flight remained controlled — or crossed the edge of what was survivable.

What followed was more than a speed record. It was proof that innovation, preparation, and relentless refinement can redefine the limits of human performance.

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The Journey

Phase 1

The Question

The project began with a simple but extreme question: how fast can a human truly fly in a wingsuit? For Peter, speed was never only about numbers — it was about understanding the absolute limits of flight.

Phase 2

The Mindset

Flying at these speeds leaves no room for mistakes. The challenge demanded complete focus, discipline, and the ability to stay calm while operating at the very edge of control.

Phase 3

Development

Together with manufacturers and Red Bull Advanced Technologies, Peter refined wingsuit designs, body positions, and aerodynamic efficiency in pursuit of maximum speed. Every detail mattered — even the smallest movement could change the airflow and affect the result.

Phase 4

The Team

Projects like this are built through collaboration. Engineers, drone specialists, safety teams, and performance experts worked together to transform an ambitious vision into a measurable reality.

Phase 5

Preparation and Research

Months of testing, simulations, weather analysis, and flight data evaluation shaped the final attempt. Special tracking systems and radar technology were integrated to precisely capture every part of the record flight.

Phase 6

The Record Flight

Launching from the Eiger at 3,713 meters, Peter accelerated to 347 km/h during a 2,073-meter free fall before safely deploying his parachute. The flight established a new world record for the fastest wingsuit BASE jump ever achieved.

Phase 7

Beyond the Limit

The record was never the final goal. It became another step toward understanding how innovation, technology, and human performance can continue pushing the future of flight into unknown territory.

What began as a question about speed evolved into one of the most extreme wingsuit projects ever attempted. Through relentless testing, aerodynamic innovation, and absolute precision, the impossible slowly became measurable.

In the end, the project proved that true progress happens when preparation meets the courage to explore beyond accepted limits.

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