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#1
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http://www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/
Lots of good info here with documentation, photos of aircraft and engines, affadavits, etc... For those who really are interested in who flew first... Rob |
#3
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![]() "robert arndt" wrote in message om... http://www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/ Lots of good info here with documentation, photos of aircraft and engines, affadavits, etc... For those who really are interested in who flew first... Should read: "For those who really are subject to baseless delusions..." Brooks Rob |
#4
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![]() "robert arndt" wrote in message om... http://www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/ Lots of good info here with documentation, photos of aircraft and engines, affadavits, etc... But without any credible evidence that Weisskopf ever flew. For those who really are interested in who flew first... No rational person believes Weisskopf ever flew. |
#5
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(robert arndt) wrote in message . com...
http://www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/ Lots of good info here with documentation, photos of aircraft and engines, affadavits, etc... For those who really are interested in who flew first... Rob Hey, wait a minute. What about Ader's bats, the Eole and Avion III? Also, didn't a New Zealander also fly some distance? Ashton Archer III |
#6
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![]() "Ashton Archer III" wrote in message m... Hey, wait a minute. What about Ader's bats, the Eole and Avion III? In 1890 Clement Ader's "Eole" rose from level ground under it's own power and traveled some 50 yards or so at an altitude of about one foot before settling back down. Since Ader had not equipped the craft with any kind of flight control system, this was obviously not controlled flight, but it was the first time a manned heavier-than-air machine took off from level ground under its own power. The later Avion III never left the ground. Also, didn't a New Zealander also fly some distance? You're thinking of Richard Pearse. Pearse was an experimenter that made several hops, apparently aided by gusty winds and a site that sloped downward. His propeller was so inefficient that it's very unlikely it could ever have provided sufficient thrust for sustained flight. While many have advanced a first flight claim on Pearse's behalf he never did so. In a series of letters written years later he stated he did not achieve true flight and recognized the Wrights as the first to achieve powered, sustained, controlled heavier than air flight. |
#7
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#8
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "robert arndt" wrote in message om... http://www.deepsky.com/~firstflight/ Lots of good info here with documentation, photos of aircraft and engines, affadavits, etc... But without any credible evidence that Weisskopf ever flew. What constitutes 'credible evidence'. You have to define that. There are several affidavits that he did fly. Replicas, that are in substance the same and very similar as far as can known, have flown. For those who really are interested in who flew first... No rational person believes Weisskopf ever flew. This statement is in essence ad hominem. Any rational person would entertain at least the possibility that Weiskopf/Whitehead did fly. A man who engineered several successful engines. On the one hand you say there is no credible evidence and on the other you say anyone who does not flatly deny the possibility that he flew is irrational. He had an horizontal tailplane and elevator, he had twin aircrews that could bee varied to change direction and he had roll control via weight shifting (not a good method but it works for hang gliders and it worked for Lilienthaal.) While his propellers are criticized for being inefficient it has to be remembered that he accelerated his vehicle via engaging road wheels: a method that must be near 100% efficient. I don't discredit the Wright Brothers, the thoroughness of their work is excellent and they clearly had got it right by 1905. By 1910 successful flight was going to be inevitable: the advances in engine power to weight ratio meant that the power was finally available to realize it. |
#9
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In article ,
"The Enlightenment" wrote: What constitutes 'credible evidence'. You have to define that. There are several affidavits that he did fly. ....affadavits from 20 to 30 years later, and not all of them agreed that he *did* manage actual controlled flight (two of the cites are from guys who helped build the planes). Replicas, that are in substance the same and very similar as far as can known, have flown. ....with much more powerful engines, giving about 50% more horsepower than the ones he had available in 1903 and before... -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
#10
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On Sun, 21 Dec 2003 02:40:55 GMT, "The Enlightenment"
wrote in Message-Id: : He had an horizontal tailplane and elevator, he had twin air[s]crews that could bee varied to change direction and he had roll control via weight shifting (not a good method but it works for hang gliders and it worked for Lilienthaal.) But what of the (arguably excessive) weight of Weisskopf's machine which included a separate engine to power the wheels? While his propellers are criticized for being inefficient it has to be remembered that he accelerated his vehicle via engaging road wheels: a method that must be near 100% efficient. If the motor which powered the wheels were able to propel Weisskopf's craft to flying speed (doubtful), it would have been forced to rely upon those alleged inefficient propellers to sustain its flight. I don't discredit the Wright Brothers, the thoroughness of their work is excellent and they clearly had got it right by 1905. By 1910 successful flight was going to be inevitable: the advances in engine power to weight ratio meant that the power was finally available to realize it. It was Glen Curtiss, the motorcycle racer and engine builder, who won aviation's first speed race at Reims, France, on August 29, 1909: http://www.esparacing.com/Air%20Raci...ain%20menu.htm |
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