ChrisK
En-Route
By Ohio you mean the birthplace of aviation??Next thing simplex is going to tell us is that the scales were invented in Toledo, Ohio.
By Ohio you mean the birthplace of aviation??Next thing simplex is going to tell us is that the scales were invented in Toledo, Ohio.
Next thing simplex is going to tell us is that the scales were invented in Toledo, Ohio.
1) The theory that (wing warping) ailerons made the powered flight possible is a pure myth. People (Henri Farman or Leon Delagrange) flew without ailerons of any kind, in a close circuit, for about 20 minutes before the moment the Wright brothers showed their planes (Aug 8, 1908).
By Ohio you mean the birthplace of aviation??
The reality is that the Wrights have witness accounts and pictures of the 1903 flights.
Ron Levy was one of the eye witnesses.
-Skip
I've heard it all now. Next we'll be hearing that Columbus didn't discover America and Grizzly Adams had a beard.
Well the Indians were already here, and the Norwegians briefly, some Eskimos and likely some Russians as well. Wasn't grizzly Adams a TV show in the 1970s?
We all fly gliders - some of them even have engines.
Well the Indians were already here, and the Norwegians briefly, some Eskimos and likely some Russians as well. Wasn't grizzly Adams a TV show in the 1970s?
Simulating aerodynamics correctly is rather literally rocket science. It's hard, especially with flexible surfaces. Making something kinda sorta look like flying is a lot easier, but only a fool would make strong conclusions from that. The Wrights themselves said the 1903 Flyer was unstable in pitch, and they lengthened the elevator. That it was so unstable that no one could fly it for a second is unlikely. This would have been caught in their kite and glider experiments years earlier.
Regardless of who was the first to successfully take off and fly under power, there was a bitter legal battle between the Wright Brothers and everyone else that attempted powered flight. The Wrights contended that their patent on wing warping covered all controls for aircraft roll.
The reality is that the Wrights have witness accounts and pictures of the 1903 flights. In addition, there were hundreds of witnesses to their 1904-1905 flights in Huffman Prairie where they were advancing the art.
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Now I am worried if Otis was the first person to push all the buttons in an elevator....
Prof. Fred Culick performed one of the most serious chain of tests about the stability of "Flyer I 1903" and found the plane to be unflyable by a human being.
snip...
However, Culick in not the only one who built a replica of "Flyer I". There is also the people from "Wright Experience" project ( http://www.wrightexperience.com/ ) who really attempted to fly the 1903 plane after finishing it and the best they could achieve was a set of two unstable flights of 100 and 115 feet respectively.
snip....
... the best they could achieve was a set of two unstable flights of 100 and 115 feet respectively.
So you admit that the Wright Bros. flew in 1903 and it was proven possible by the WrightExperience crew.
They also proved Pros. Culick tests to be inaccurate.
Piloting "Flyer I 1903" is "like balancing a yardstick on one finger, two at one time. If you lose it, it goes — quickly, said Fred Culick ..."
The Wright brothers started to publish pictures about their alleged flights from 1903-1905 only beginning with September 1908.
see: "The Wright Brothers' Aeroplane" that appeared in The Century Magazine (see http://www.loc.gov/resource/mwright.05001574/#seq-1 , page 644 ).
They simply claimed in the Sep. 1908 article the photos had been taken at various moments between Dec. 17, 1903 and the autumn of 1905. We have to thrust them. There is no evidence about the authenticity of the dates.
Details from large pictures the Library of Congress has (see the attachments), which you do not normally see in books, show "Flyer I" just about to go down a slope and landed in front of a large sand dune, respectively. It is quite clear from the images the two brothers landed below the starting point which disqualifies the Dec. 17, 1903 flights as true powered flights. We can talk at best about engine assisted descents in strong headwinds not about what is normally understood by powered flights.
Regarding the witnesses the two brothers had in 1904-1905 this is again a pure claim. I want to see the list of witnesses and their declarations.
Image 1: "First flight, 120 feet in 12 seconds, 10:35 a.m., December 17, 1903; Kitty Hawk, North Carolina", Library of Congress.
Image 2: "Close-up view of damaged 1903 machine, rudder frame broken in landing, on ground at end of last flight, December 17, 1903; Kitty Hawk, North Carolina", Library of Congress.
Thats because we know how an aircraft is 'supposed' to fly and understand the concepts of positive, negative and neutral stability. They had very little understanding of how an airplane was 'supposed' to fly - so they flew what they had. There is a tremendous difference between doing something for the first time in a sustained fashion and then doing it a 100 years later.
What takes a Nobel prize to do the first time can be done by a competent engineer in the future - look at the atomic bomb for example.
The Wright brothers had no contribution in correcting Smeaton's coefficient as some authors claimAerodynamics traces back to Cayley, decades earlier, and they were intimately familiar with his work, enough to figure out he had a lift coefficient wrong.
So you admit that the Wright Bros. flew in 1903 and it was proven possible by the WrightExperience crew.
They also proved Pros. Culick tests to be inaccurate.
Stop feeding the troll.
I've heard it all now. Next we'll be hearing that Columbus didn't discover America and Grizzly Adams had a beard.
It is self evident the Wright brothers took the true value of Smeaton's coefficient from Langley and they had no real contribution in correcting this constant as some authors have claimed.
Maybe one of them will find the topic in the future.Do you believe that any of these authors that you disagree with comment on POA?
Maybe one of them will find the topic in the future.
The development of aileron and rudder control by the Wright Bros. is undisputed.
Wing warping and rudder control were used and reported on by John Montgomery in 1895, long before the Wrights "developed" them.