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Hello,
Just read he http://www.americanscientist.org/tem.../assetid/28339 This is not very good to deform the history... Bests regards |
#2
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![]() "Platon67" wrote in message ... Just read he http://www.americanscientist.org/tem.../assetid/28339 This is not very good to deform the history... Do you believe history is being deformed? In what way? |
#3
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![]() "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? |
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" a =E9crit dans le = message de news: et... =20 "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) =20 Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? The flight of the Wrights was not the first flight of an airplane by = using his motor.=20 It was the first "controlled" flight.=20 |
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![]() "Platon67" wrote in message ... The flight of the Wrights was not the first flight of an airplane by using his motor. It was the first "controlled" flight. Exactly. Ader is duly credited with what he achieved, but without control flight is not particularly useful. |
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Platon67 wrote:
"Steven P. McNicoll" a écrit dans le message de news: et... "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? The flight of the Wrights was not the first flight of an airplane by using his motor. It was the first "controlled" flight. I'm not the greatest supporter of all the hoopla surrounding the Wrights - they get a lot of credit that should belong to others and there is a tendency to believe that the Wrights invented the aeroplane, full stop. That said, the Wrights were unquestionably the first to achieve manned, powered, sustained, *controlled* flight in a heavier-than-air machine. That's what intelligent and knowledgeable people claim for the Wrights. While many of the design components of the Wright Flyer that led to its success were not inventions of the Wrights (superposed planes, high aspect ratio, curved wing surfaces, elevators - and so it goes on) - there Wrights added a couple of critical elements of their own. Most significant of all was the fact that the Wright Flyer was controllable in *all three axes* -- that was the real breakthrough (plus the use of co-ordinated rudder and roll control to effect turns). The Wrights' adoption of aerodynamic roll control is what we should be celebrating on the 17th, because it's that that led to the final emergence (after at least 100 years of development) of the true aeroplane. The aeroplane took a long time to evolve - and it was an evolution, not an invention, despite what popular histories and TV science might have you believe. The first significant breakthrough came with Cayley's identification of the four forces of flight -- an insight without which the Wrights would never have got started. Over the next 100 years, there were many advances -- so much so that the basic form of the aeroplane was already defined before the Wrights ever became interested, thanks to the like of Pénaud, Wenham et al. And there were many near-successes. But the fact is, the aeroplane is not one invention, but numerous inventions and concepts flying in close formation. It needed all the pieces to be in place for the final success to come. The Wrights are often portrayed as great scientists. They weren't. Their greatest breakthroughs (such as choice of wing camber) came about as the result of trial & error, not the true scientific method of hypothesis-experiment-theory. However, they were great engineers, and it's that skill that gave them the insight to add those final key elements to the design of the aeroplane. Of course, people like easy labels, and the Wrights themselves were keen to adopt the title of 'inventors of the aeroplane' (they were, above everything, businessmen). In such a simplistic worldview, it's not surprising that competitors for the crown keep appearing: but of all the contenders, Ader is one of the most feeble. The Eole lacked any real control surfaces - no rudder or elevator and just a horribly complex wing-moving mechanism. It achieved a height in flight, in 1890, of about eight inches, purely due to power - pure grunt force that owed nothing to aerodynamics. As for the Avion III, in 1897, this was blown off its circular track by a gust of wind - a failure made plain by the official report of the time that put an end to Ader's funding. However, the report didn't actually appear until 1910, so Ader took the opportunity, in 1906, to lie about his 'successes' - claiming that he'd made a second flight in the Eole, twice the distance of the first (which was 165ft), and that he'd flown 1,000ft in the Avion III. The claims that Ader was first keep reappearing. The sad truth is, it's based on lies. He has no more claim than other 'brute force' types like Maxim. |
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On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 15:13:34 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote: "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? There are a number of claimants to the first powered heavier-than-air flight. Clément Ader, 9 October 1890 to 14 October 1897 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Ader www.daviesharbour.com/aiaa/hist/fra.html Lyman Gilmore, 15 May 15 1902 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyman_Gilmore Gustave Whitehead, (Gustav Weisskopf, he was a German) 14 August 1901 www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/Pages/gpage4.html http://www.weisskopf.de/ Richard Pearse, 31 March 1903 www.destination.co.nz/temuka/pearse.htm www.billzilla.org/pearce.htm Karl Jatho, 18 August 1903 www.flyingmachines.org/jatho.html May be the first kiter: Otto Lilienthal, 1891 http://www.lilienthal-museum.de/olma/ehome.htm There were many powered lighter-than-air flights well before the Wright Brothers were even born. Henri Giffard, 24 September 1852 www.skytamer.com/famous/1800.htm the borther Wrights were just be filmed doing that, and they were USamercians. bye m. vanselow |
#8
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Damn French, always claiming they did it first.
"vanselow" wrote in message ... On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 15:13:34 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? There are a number of claimants to the first powered heavier-than-air flight. Clément Ader, 9 October 1890 to 14 October 1897 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Ader www.daviesharbour.com/aiaa/hist/fra.html Lyman Gilmore, 15 May 15 1902 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyman_Gilmore Gustave Whitehead, (Gustav Weisskopf, he was a German) 14 August 1901 www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/Pages/gpage4.html http://www.weisskopf.de/ Richard Pearse, 31 March 1903 www.destination.co.nz/temuka/pearse.htm www.billzilla.org/pearce.htm Karl Jatho, 18 August 1903 www.flyingmachines.org/jatho.html May be the first kiter: Otto Lilienthal, 1891 http://www.lilienthal-museum.de/olma/ehome.htm There were many powered lighter-than-air flights well before the Wright Brothers were even born. Henri Giffard, 24 September 1852 www.skytamer.com/famous/1800.htm the borther Wrights were just be filmed doing that, and they were USamercians. bye m. vanselow |
#9
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vanselow wrote:
On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 15:13:34 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? There are a number of claimants to the first powered heavier-than-air flight. Clément Ader, 9 October 1890 to 14 October 1897 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Ader www.daviesharbour.com/aiaa/hist/fra.html Lyman Gilmore, 15 May 15 1902 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyman_Gilmore Gustave Whitehead, (Gustav Weisskopf, he was a German) 14 August 1901 www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/Pages/gpage4.html http://www.weisskopf.de/ Richard Pearse, 31 March 1903 www.destination.co.nz/temuka/pearse.htm www.billzilla.org/pearce.htm Karl Jatho, 18 August 1903 www.flyingmachines.org/jatho.html May be the first kiter: Otto Lilienthal, 1891 http://www.lilienthal-museum.de/olma/ehome.htm There were many powered lighter-than-air flights well before the Wright Brothers were even born. Henri Giffard, 24 September 1852 www.skytamer.com/famous/1800.htm the borther Wrights were just be filmed doing that, and they were USamercians. Nonsense. None of these stand up to scrutiny. I've already dealt with Ader's false claims. Whitehead made an uncontrolled hop and later tried to boost his claim into something it wasn't. Pearse made some hops - but in all these cases, not one of the aircraft was capable of lateral control. As I've already said, the key contribution of the Wrights was to produce an aircraft capable of aerodynamic control in all three axes. Theirs was the first (and for several years after, the only) aircraft to have actual roll control capable of turning the aircraft in the way we do it now (all others were trying to turn the aircraft using rudder). So yes, although there were many hops into the air before the Wrights, none of these were in aircraft capable of full control. Also, most (such as Ader) achieved these hops through pure brute force - the aircraft were not capable of sustaining flight because their 'flight' was more ballistic than aerodynamic. So the claim that the Wrights were the first to achieve powered, sustained, controlled flight in a heavier-than-air craft is unassailable. The sad thing about all this hoopla surrounding the Wrights is that it is so distorted. The Wrights did not invent the aeroplane - that had started at least a century before (earlier claims for people like Leonardo don't stand up). If you want to give the credit for the intellectual process of inventing the aeroplane, that should go to George Cayley and the publication of his 'On Aerial Navigation' papers in 1809/10. Cayley identified the four forces of flight - the defining and critical concept that underlies the aeroplane. However, the Wrights took what existed in the way of knowledge, added a little of their own, then applied their engineering excellence to make it all *work* - and that's why they get the credit. The irony is that, just six years after they first flew, the Wright design of aircraft (which was inherently unstable) was already obsolete, replaced by a European concept which is the true ancestor of today's aeroplanes. That European concept, however, would not have worked without the Wrights' contribution of three-axis aerodynamic control. Therefore, the claim that the Wrights made the first |
#10
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Hi,
I'm not French, but that is what people know today. It is much more then a doubt, that the brother Wright did it first. regards m. vanselow On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 05:33:17 GMT, "Troy Towner" wrote: Damn French, always claiming they did it first. "vanselow" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 15:13:34 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "Platon67" wrote in message ... Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Flight (1903-2003) Are you saying that the Wrights did not achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier-than-air flight in 1903, or are you saying that someone else achieved it before them? There are a number of claimants to the first powered heavier-than-air flight. Clément Ader, 9 October 1890 to 14 October 1897 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Ader www.daviesharbour.com/aiaa/hist/fra.html Lyman Gilmore, 15 May 15 1902 http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyman_Gilmore Gustave Whitehead, (Gustav Weisskopf, he was a German) 14 August 1901 www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/Pages/gpage4.html http://www.weisskopf.de/ Richard Pearse, 31 March 1903 www.destination.co.nz/temuka/pearse.htm www.billzilla.org/pearce.htm Karl Jatho, 18 August 1903 www.flyingmachines.org/jatho.html May be the first kiter: Otto Lilienthal, 1891 http://www.lilienthal-museum.de/olma/ehome.htm There were many powered lighter-than-air flights well before the Wright Brothers were even born. Henri Giffard, 24 September 1852 www.skytamer.com/famous/1800.htm the borther Wrights were just be filmed doing that, and they were USamercians. bye m. vanselow |
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