First Flight 99 Years Ago...

Lost Cause

It's a wrap!
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Oct 7, 2001
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My question is do you think we'd be flying like we are now anyway? If not the Wrights, across the Atlantic the work was well underway to get aloft also. I know WW1 & WW2 accelerated development into what we have now, but would we have got there anyway, maybe later?

Anyway, here's to the Wright brothers:


Near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Orville and Wilbur Wright make the first successful flight in history of a self-propelled, heavier-than-air aircraft. Orville piloted the gasoline-powered, propeller-driven biplane, which stayed aloft for 12 seconds and covered 120 feet on its inaugural flight.

Orville and Wilbur Wright grew up in Dayton, Ohio, and developed an interest in aviation after learning of the glider flights of the German engineer Otto Lilienthal in the 1890s. Unlike their older brothers, Orville and Wilbur did not attend college, but they possessed extraordinary technical ability and a sophisticated approach to solving problems in mechanical design. They built printing presses and in 1892 opened a bicycle sales and repair shop. Soon, they were building their own bicycles, and this experience, combined with profits from their various businesses, allowed them to pursue actively their dream of building the world's first airplane.

After exhaustively researching other engineers' efforts to build a heavier-than-air, controlled aircraft, the Wright brothers wrote the U.S. Weather Bureau inquiring about a suitable place to conduct glider tests. They settled on Kitty Hawk, an isolated village on North Carolina's Outer Banks, which offered steady winds and sand dunes from which to glide and land softly. Their first glider, tested in 1900, performed poorly, but a new design, tested in 1901, was more successful. Later that year, they built a wind tunnel where they tested nearly 200 wings and airframes of different shapes and designs. The brothers' systematic experimentations paid off--they flew hundreds of successful flights in their 1902 glider at Kill Devils Hills near Kitty Hawk. Their biplane glider featured a steering system, based on a movable rudder, that solved the problem of controlled flight. They were now ready for powered flight.

In Dayton, they designed a 12-horsepower internal combustion engine with the assistance of machinist Charles Taylor and built a new aircraft to house it. They transported their aircraft in pieces to Kitty Hawk in the autumn of 1903, assembled it, made a few further tests, and on December 14 Orville made the first attempt at powered flight. The engine stalled during take-off and the plane was damaged, and they spent three days repairing it. Then at 10:35 a.m. on December 17, in front of five witnesses, the aircraft ran down a monorail track and into the air, staying aloft for 12 seconds and flying 120 feet. The modern aviation age was born. Three more tests were made that day, with Wilbur and Orville alternately flying the airplane. Wilbur flew the last flight, covering 852 feet in 59 seconds.

During the next few years, the Wright brothers further developed their airplanes but kept a low profile about their successes in order to secure patents and contracts for their flying machines. By 1905, their aircraft could perform complex maneuvers and remain aloft for up to 39 minutes at a time. In 1908, they traveled to France and made their first public flights, arousing widespread public excitement. In 1909, the U.S. Army's Signal Corps purchased an especially constructed plane, and the brothers founded the Wright Company to build and market their aircraft. Wilbur Wright died of typhoid fever in 1912; Orville lived until 1948.

The historic Wright brothers' aircraft of 1903 is on permanent display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

:D
 
HMM, this one is a contenious issue in New Zealand.
A certain Richard Pearce flew a powered aircraft 98 feet in late 1902, but he was discounted for being the village eccentric (read IDIOT). It happened in Temuka, South Island New Zealand.
History reports that his wife and two sons and one daughter witnessed his historic flight, but as they were all either married or realated to Richard, their testimonies were discounted as well.

His aircraft (well, a replica) now hangs in the main atrium of The Air Force World museum at Wigram in Christchurch New Zealand.

I'm currently web-searching for more info and articles. I'll post some links when I track them.

http://www.afw.co.nz/
 
Can you believe it - only 99 years, too.

The thing that amazed me as a kid was knowing how new the airplane was and how much it had developed by WWI, and how quickly it was integrated into military thinking as a weapons system. And, of course, during WWII, it made the battleship obsolete and changed the course of warfare forever, so that current military conflicts cannot be won without securing the skys.

And how many people depend on air travel for the successful pursuit of their business goals?

Happy 99th, Powered Flight.
 
I for one, believe it...

So belatedly, here's to Richard Pearse: "Mad Pearse", "Bamboo Dick", self-taught inventor, prophetic designer, trail blazing aviator and eccentric visionary. On or about 31st March 1903 a reclusive New Zealand farmer Richard Pearse climbed into a self-built monoplane and flew for about 140 metres before crashing into a gorse hedge on his Waitohi property. :rose:
 
Draco said:
HMM, this one is a contenious issue in New Zealand.
A certain Richard Pearce flew a powered aircraft 98 feet in late 1902, but he was discounted for being the village eccentric (read IDIOT). It happened in Temuka, South Island New Zealand.
History reports that his wife and two sons and one daughter witnessed his historic flight, but as they were all either married or realated to Richard, their testimonies were discounted as well.

His aircraft (well, a replica) now hangs in the main atrium of The Air Force World museum at Wigram in Christchurch New Zealand.

I'm currently web-searching for more info and articles. I'll post some links when I track them.

http://www.afw.co.nz/
Yeah, I've heard of him and his flight. Learned it in school, along with the Wrights.
So, even better! This is the 100th anniversary! Cool!
 
I did come across an article which mentioned a steam powered airplane which 'flew' (indoors!) at the Great Exhibition at Crystal Pallace in the 1800s. Concerns about safety led to the craft being mounted on rails to prevent it leaving the ground. However the engine was powerful enough to tear the craft from the rails and it actually flew - much to the horror of the Victorian gentlemen watching the spectacle.

It was only mentioned briefly and too few details to make following it up easy enough to warrant the time.
 
Bump because I want to know if anyone else has the time and energy to find anything out about my above post.
 
Not an airplane, Mad..

I'm still looking, the first motorcycles were not Harley or Indian...

The first motorbike was built in 1868. It was not powered by a gasoline engine, but by a steam engine. Its builder was Sylvester Howard Roper. His steam-powered bike was demonstrated at fairs and circuses in the eastern US in 1867 and did not catch on, but it anticipated many modern motorbike features, including the twisting-handgrip throttle control. There is an existing example of a Roper machine, dated 1869. It's powered by a charcoal-fired two-cylinder engine, whose connecting rods directly drive a crank on the rear wheel. This machine predates the invention of the safety bicycle by many years, so its chassis is also based on the "bone-crusher" bike.


Gottlieb Daimler (who later teamed up with Karl Benz to form the Daimler-Benz Corporation) is often credited with building the first motorcycle in 1885, one wheel in the front and one in the back, although it had a smaller spring-loaded outrigger wheel on each side. It was constructed mostly of wood, with the wheels being of the iron-banded wooden-spoked wagon-type, definitely a "bone-crusher" chassis. It was indeed powered by a single-cylinder Otto-cycle engine, and may have had a spray-type carburetor. (Daimler's assistant, Wilhelm Maybach was working on the invention of the spray carburetor at the time). Daimler was an an assistant to Nicholaus Otto (who invented the Otto cycle, a kind of engine). In 1885, Daimler added a gasoline motor to a wooden bicycle, replacing the pedals. Daimler's motorbike was propelled by an engine, but it was not the first motor-driven cycle as was previously thought.



:D
 
Not just flight in air, but in space travel, we have spread our wings. My grandfather grew up with airplanes. I grew up with rocketships. His war, the trenches of France. Mine, the jungles of Vietnam... I wonder, what is my daughter's technology, what is her war?
 
LMAO @ Draco, that was my first thought too. Bugger was found upside down in an 8 foot hedge around a potato field. *shrug* But the Americans . . .
 
Lost Cause,

Sounds like it. Thanks.

:large bottle of whisky and a shot glass: (You'll just have to use your imagination)

:)
 
SINthysist said:
I wonder, what is my daughter's technology, what is her war?
15 inch, black, vibrator with GPS and mobile phone technology built in.
Her war? Christmas shopping at the mall...
:D
 
What is her war?

Those rat bastards that want to kill her because she's alive!
The technology that springs from this war will revolutionize the entire human condition. The night vision stuff will be civilian auto heads up displays, and the satellite technology will be able to locate anyone lost, anywhere! And space, we're already working on plasma, and ion drive, who knows?, we may discover a time-space ripple! :D
 
Re: What is her war?

Lost Cause said:
Those rat bastards that want to kill her because she's alive!
The technology that springs from this war will revolutionize the entire human condition. The night vision stuff will be civilian auto heads up displays, and the satellite technology will be able to locate anyone lost, anywhere! And space, we're already working on plasma, and ion drive, who knows?, we may discover a time-space ripple! :D
I'd prefer time-space Nipples....
 
I'mVan said:
LMAO @ Draco, that was my first thought too. Bugger was found upside down in an 8 foot hedge around a potato field. *shrug* But the Americans . . .

Perhaps the Wright brothers' claim to fame should be not the first to fly, but the first to land a heavier than air craft.
 
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