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#21
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"Corrie" wrote in message
om... "A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects." - Robert Heinlein, "The Notebooks of Lazarus Long" One of the best quotes ever :-) Along with the near corollary: An expert (specialist) is someone who knows more and more about less and less until they know absolutely everything about nothing at all! Eric |
#22
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![]() "Robert Bonomi" bonomi@c-ns. wrote in message hlink.net... In article , Corrie wrote: "Eric Miller" wrote in message v.net... Water and air are both fluids, but with densities of different magnitudes. I'd think that you'd want to develop your idea to work in water before you tried the thinner and vastly more difficult fluid of air. If air were more dense or gravity was less... BTW I remember something similar in a Heinlein book, maybe "The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress". I knew I'd come across it somewhere! Heinlein's most detailed discussion of man-powered flight is in "Podkayne of Mars". The Icarus variety -- i.e. strap on wings that you flap. ITYM "The Menace from Earth". A short story generally found in the compilation of the same name. Still, Holly Jones does bear some resemblance to Podkayne... Tim Ward |
#23
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Before you can "think outside the box", you have to have some idea of where
the box is. What box? Patrick |
#24
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One issue with your wing design is that the sphericon is a geometric
solid. I meant for the design to use only the edges of a sphericon, connected by a springy structure that would allow them to be scissored back and forth. The structure could be draped in foam the way different shaped bubble wands hold minimal surface bubbles. perhaps some utility in mechanical devices - wobbling bearings, maybe? I built this machine (sphericon machine) http://patricktimony.tvheaven.com/photo.html on a 3D printer. When you spin the central rod it makes the handles wobble back and forth which could be turned into pistoning. I thought it might be useful in a conventional ornithopter but I'm sure theres a gear out there that does this already. |
#25
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the seemingly random inclusion of the golden mean as
one of the concepts. I got this shape from looking at oar blade designs. See: http://www.concept2.com/products/oars/oartesting2.asp Also it's easy to test using cardboard. A 3x5 rectangle just feels like the best air scoop - it catches the most air. I'd think that you'd want to develop your idea to work in water before you tried the thinner and vastly more difficult fluid of air. I think a ray-shaped diving suit, made of sealed foam and with knife-like but really controlable edges would move really well. |
#26
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"Model Flyer" wrote in message
... Eric, that couldn't be truer, I know everything about the screw I'm holding in my hand, I know it length, diameter, pitch of thread, even the material it's made out of, however, I know absolutly nothing about where the damned thing goes!!!!!! -- Cheers, Jonathan Lowe So basically, what you're saying and what I'm hearing is... you're screwed! Eric big grin |
#27
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"Patrick Timony" wrote
I think a ray-shaped diving suit, made of sealed foam and with knife-like but really controlable edges would move really well. What you (or I) think doesn't matter... that's why we experiment! Eric |
#28
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"patrick timony" wrote
That makes sense. I trust Leonardo. I have a feeling that he didn't think any wrong thoughts. He wasn't a speculator as much as an instrument that allows you to see possibilities. And his designs and Otto Leilenthal's are so beautiful compared to anything since, they must be right. Functional and useful has a beauty all its own. Beauty plus useless is still useless =D Remember, Leo never got off the ground and Otto provided incorrect coefficients of lift (which is why the Wrights had to build a wind tunnel) AND he died in a crash after too few (very short) gliding flights. As someone else recently quoted Igor Sikorsky here on RAH: "There are good designers with bad designs and bad designers with good designs. If we all flew our own designs, there would soon be only good designers with good designs." Survival of the fittest with a vengeance! BTW did anyone else catch the First in Flight special showing (and still being re-shown) on the Discovery Channel? Apparently the Wrights' propellers were 80% efficient in converting engine HP into thrust compared to the 40% of their contemporaries. Meanwhile, modern propellers are only 85% efficient. I find that to be absolutely mind-blowing. Eric |
#30
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