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History
of the aeronautics: Gliders, airplanes , hydroplanes, multiplanes
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| From 1883 to 1895, Lawrence Hargrave, Australian,
inventor of the cellular comets, tried models driven by rubbers and compressed
air. He was interested specially in the ornithopters, or apparatuses of
moving wings, and one of his apparatuses of this type made a flight of
about 100 meters. Nevertheless, he began to study other problems, but
he did not get to construct an apparatus that could transport a person.
Sir Hiram Maxim tries
the control of the air with his giant bird.
Following the experiments
of Wenham, an English young person, called Horatio Phillips, whose first
apparatuses were helicopters, built an airplane in which he took to the
extreme limit the ideas of Wenham, of superposed narrow surfaces. This
apparatus had until twenty surfaces one over another , each one of them
only a few centimeters wide, having all the apparatus the aspect of a
veneciana lattice window with the horizontal tablets. It was verified
in a circular track, tied at a post that was in the center of the same
track, and got to do pilotless flights of 300 meters in 1893 , using a
small steam engine. The most important contribution of Phillips to the
aeronautical science was his study on the wings. The section of the wings
devised by him were very similar to several ones used later, and predicted
its properties with remarkable exactitude.
Sir Hiram Maxim undertook the study of
the mechanical flight as a problem purely scientist and got to formulate
the fundamental principles, with his habitual patience and perfection.
After having installed a laboratory in which he determined the resistance
of several objects to an airflow and its aerodynamic properties, and to
have made extensive studies of the helices and the problems related to
them, he began the construction of an apparatus of great dimensions that
weighed about 3,500 kilograms and provided with a steam engine with 359
horses of power. Maxim, understanding that without a previous practice
nobody could not handle such enormous mechanical bird, constructed several
superior tracks that would prevented him to separate so much from the
ground that could put in danger his own integrity or the security of the
passengers. During a test, in 1893, the apparatus made a such a hard pressure
against the tracks, that it broke them, overturning and been seriously
damaged. Maxim. had demonstrated the possibility of the dynamic flight
with great weights; but its project was too ambitious for the advanced
state in which was then the aviation, and served to demonstrate solely
once again that the mere capacity to rise from the ground had little value
if it did not go accompanied of suitable means of steering. |

R-4 model of military tractor
Curtiss .

Tractor type biplane.

An exploratory triplane
that could fly up to 190 kilometers per hour and rise to 3.000 meters
in 10 minutes (model Curtiss S-3)

Hoisting of a hydroplane
of two motors to the flight deck of a military ship. |
| From 1895 to 1899, Mr. Percy Pilcher, English
naval engineer, constructed a certain number of gliders, the first ones
, very similar to those of Lilienthal, and the last ones with a visible
advance on those of the German inventor. In most of the experiments he
towed his glider by a horse, and measuring the tension of the tractor
cable, he could calculate with much exactitude the force that needed the
apparatus to stay in the air. Just like Lilienthal, was on the verge of
beginning to work with it airplane provided with motor when he died of
a falling, as a result of the breakage of the frame of the glider.
Until the time that we have been mentioning
we have had little to say regarding the work of the American inventors
and scientists; but from the death of Pilcher until the day in that it
was achieved completely the domain of the air , when a man made a long
and perfectly directed flight, the history of the aeronautics became essentially
a splendid and continuous series of American victories.
The Professor Samuel P. Langley, physical of universal fame and secretary
of the Smithsonian Institution, began the systematic study of the aeronautics
just before 1890. As Maxim, he tried to go back to the fundamental principles,
and he mounted a laboratory, in which he made many delicate experiences.
In this time, however, his investigations were limited to the study of
the plane surfaces and he almost scorned the big advantages of the curved
wings. In 1896 he finished his first great model, powered by steam, and
it threw it over the Potomac river. The complete weight of the apparatus
was 15 kilograms and the thrust force was of a horse-power. This model,
as, practically, all those that continued afterwards, was a monoplane,
but with two wings of the same size and one behind the other, provided
of two propellers behind the previous wing. This airplane rose from the
roof of a floating house and it flew in several occasions a minute and
half. After experiencing with models during several more years , the professor
Langley believed that it was an opportune time of building an apparatus
that could transport a man, and he proceeded to project such a model.
Before finishing it he built a model to scale exactly same way to one
forth of the size and he equipped it with a gasoline motor of three horsepower.
On August 8 of 1916, this model happily made a flight from the ceiling
of the floating house, the first flight achieved by a model powered by
an internal combustion motor , as it had been anticipated by Sir Jorge
Cayley ninety years before. A month later the apparatus was readied for
the test, and the test of launching it was done with the professor Langley's
assistant in the pilot's seat . Unfortunately, a part of the frame hooked
in the launching artifice and the apparatus fell to the river. It was
repaired, and the test in December was repeated, with almost equal result.
These accidents were very lamentable, because the airplane of Langley
was by all points of view superior to any of the other invented machines
until then and his project was deserving a success. Almost at the same
time that Lilienthal killed himself in an accident , Mr. Octave Chanute,
a distinguished American civil engineer and A. Herring, his assistant,
began to work following similar norms to those followed by Lilienthal
. They constructed gliders with one, two, three and up to five planes,
on which Herring made great number of flights. Chanute, nevertheless,
seeing clearly that the deviation of the weight of the pilot to maintain
the balance by means of the pilot's
body was not more than a coarse resource, left the works of construction
to investigate some other means of automatic stabilization. By the end
of XIX Century there were still many men of science of great reputation
who denied the possibility of constructing an apparatus able to transport
people, and several of them made an effort in demonstrating this impossibility.
In 1900, nevertheless, none of those who had followed this problem with
interest already doubted that the success was close and that the accomplishment
of the dream expected for so many centuries was a question of a few years.
Just a short time after the death of Lilienthal two bicycles repairers
of Dayton, Ohío, whose interest had been maintained by the news
of Lilienthal's experiments , began the study of the flight. They found
that many of the data that were believed to be exact were erroneous, and
that they were themselves forced to construct verification apparatuses
to determine those values again. Wilbur and Orville Wright did not finish
their first airplane until 1900. This glider was distinguished of all
the previous tests in the fact that the stability was not achieved by
difficult and dangerous acrobatics, but by the warp of the wings, so the
angle and by consequence the upward impulse of a side was greater than
that of the other. Thus when the apparatus inclined to a side the pilot
only had to move a handle so that he increased the angle of the wing in
the part that inclined. Although this idea was not completely original,
the practice of it put to the Wright brothers in the way of the success.
After consulting Mr. Chanute, they constructed another glider in 1901
and another one in 1902, each one of them was an improvement of the previous
one. In 1902, the apparatus they used had a movable vertical rudder for
the first time. All the Wright brothers' gliders characterized by the
fact that the pilot went lying down in the inferior plane instead of going
suspended under it. They learned in addition, after the adoption of the
vertical rudder, that this one and the warp of the wings had to be handled
shared in common to obtain the best results. This simultaneous use of
the two regulations was the vital fact of the invention of the Wrights
, who after obtaining a satisfactory balance and acquired a suitable practice
, felt themselves to be in conditions for undertaking the construction
of an apparatus with motor. Consequently, the Wright brothers returned
to Dayton, and began the construction of a motor of 16 horsepower , that
equipped an apparatus of the same type that one of their gliders, but
of greater dimensions When they finished the construction they took it
to Kitty Hawk, N. C., where all their tests had been done , and there,
on December 17 of 1903, Orville Wright left the ground, doing a perfect
flight of fifty nine seconds of duration. The progress since then was
slow, but steady, and two years afterwards, both Orville and Wilbur Wright,
made flights of more than one hour of duration. The era of the uncertainty
had passed: the human flight was a real fact. During the following years
the number of apparatuses sent to the air were counted literally by dozens.
The first man to really fly in Europe was Santos Dumont, whose biplane
made several short flights in 1906. During the following summer, Enrique
Farman, on a Voisin apparatus, made a flight of approximately a kilometer
and a half, and on September of 1908 the same man made a flight of forty
five minutes of duration. His triumph was brief. The record of the Wright
brothers had not received much credit in Europe yet; but in October of
1908 Wilbur Wright took his airplane to France, and before the year had
finished he left speechless the skeptics remaining in the air during two
hours and twenty minutes without interruption.
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