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+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ A History of Aeronautics, by E. Charles Vivian
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
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+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of Aeronautics, by E. Charles Vivian
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A History of Aeronautics
+
+Author: E. Charles Vivian
+
+Release Date: July 26, 2008 [EBook #874]
+Last Updated: February 7, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF AERONAUTICS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ A HISTORY OF AERONAUTICS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by E. Charles Vivian
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_FORE" id="link2H_FORE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FOREWORD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although successful heavier-than-air flight is less than two decades old,
+ and successful dirigible propulsion antedates it by a very short period,
+ the mass of experiment and accomplishment renders any one-volume history
+ of the subject a matter of selection. In addition to the restrictions
+ imposed by space limits, the material for compilation is fragmentary, and,
+ in many cases, scattered through periodical and other publications.
+ Hitherto, there has been no attempt at furnishing a detailed account of
+ how the aeroplane and the dirigible of to-day came to being, but each
+ author who has treated the subject has devoted his attention to some
+ special phase or section. The principal exception to this rule&mdash;Hildebrandt&mdash;wrote
+ in 1906, and a good many of his statements are inaccurate, especially with
+ regard to heavier-than-air experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such statements as are made in this work are, where possible, given with
+ acknowledgment to the authorities on which they rest. Further
+ acknowledgment is due to Lieut.-Col. Lockwood Marsh, not only for the
+ section on aeroplane development which he has contributed to the work, but
+ also for his kindly assistance and advice in connection with the section
+ on aerostation. The author's thanks are also due to the Royal Aeronautical
+ Society for free access to its valuable library of aeronautical
+ literature, and to Mr A. Vincent Clarke for permission to make use of his
+ notes on the development of the aero engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this work is no claim to originality&mdash;it has been a matter mainly
+ of compilation, and some stories, notably those of the Wright Brothers and
+ of Santos Dumont, are better told in the words of the men themselves than
+ any third party could tell them. The author claims, however, that this is
+ the first attempt at recording the facts of development and stating, as
+ fully as is possible in the compass of a single volume, how flight and
+ aerostation have evolved. The time for a critical history of the subject
+ is not yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the matter of illustrations, it has been found very difficult to secure
+ suitable material. Even the official series of photographs of aeroplanes
+ in the war period is curiously incomplete' and the methods of censorship
+ during that period prevented any complete series being privately
+ collected. Omissions in this respect will probably be remedied in future
+ editions of the work, as fresh material is constantly being located.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ E.C.V. October, 1920.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_FORE"> FOREWORD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART"> <b>PART I. THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROPLANE</b>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> I. THE PERIOD OF LEGEND </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> II. EARLY EXPERIMENTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> III. SIR GEORGE CAYLEY&mdash;THOMAS WALKER
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> IV. THE MIDDLE NINETEENTH CENTURY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> V. WENHAM, LE BRIS, AND SOME OTHERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VI. THE AGE OF THE GIANTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> VII. LILIENTHAL AND PILCHER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VIII. AMERICAN GLIDING EXPERIMENTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> IX. NOT PROVEN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> X. SAMUEL PIERPOINT LANGLEY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XI. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XII. THE FIRST YEARS OF CONQUEST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XIII. FIRST FLIERS IN ENGLAND </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XIV. RHEIMS, AND AFTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XV. THE CHANNEL CROSSING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XVI. LONDON TO MANCHESTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XVII. A SUMMARY, TO 1911 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XVIII. A SUMMARY, TO 1914 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> XIX. THE WAR PERIOD&mdash;I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XX. THE WAR PERIOD&mdash;II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XXI. RECONSTRUCTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXII. 1919-20 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART2"> <b>PART II. 1903-1920: PROGRESS IN DESIGN</b>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> I. THE BEGINNINGS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> II. MULTIPLICITY OF IDEAS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> III. PROGRESS ON STANDARDISED LINES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> IV. THE WAR PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART3"> <b>PART III. AEROSTATICS</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> I. BEGINNINGS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> II. THE FIRST DIRIGIBLES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> III. SANTOS-DUMONT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> IV. THE MILITARY DIRIGIBLE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> V. BRITISH AIRSHIP DESIGN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> VI. THE AIRSHIP COMMERCIALLY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> VII. KITE BALLOONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART4"> <b>PART IV. ENGINE DEVELOPMENT</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> I. THE VERTICAL TYPE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> II. THE VEE TYPE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> III. THE RADIAL TYPE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> IV. THE ROTARY TYPE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> V. THE HORIZONTALLY-OPPOSED ENGINE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> VI. THE TWO-STROKE CYCLE ENGINE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> VII. ENGINES OF THE WAR PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPEa"> APPENDIX A </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPEb"> APPENDIX B </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPEc"> APPENDIX C </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PART I. THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROPLANE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE PERIOD OF LEGEND
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The blending of fact and fancy which men call legend reached its fullest
+ and richest expression in the golden age of Greece, and thus it is to
+ Greek mythology that one must turn for the best form of any legend which
+ foreshadows history. Yet the prevalence of legends regarding flight,
+ existing in the records of practically every race, shows that this form of
+ transit was a dream of many peoples&mdash;man always wanted to fly, and
+ imagined means of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this age of steel, a very great part of the inventive genius of man has
+ gone into devices intended to facilitate transport, both of men and goods,
+ and the growth of civilisation is in reality the facilitation of transit,
+ improvement of the means of communication. He was a genius who first
+ hoisted a sail on a boat and saved the labour of rowing; equally, he who
+ first harnessed ox or dog or horse to a wheeled vehicle was a genius&mdash;and
+ these looked up, as men have looked up from the earliest days of all,
+ seeing that the birds had solved the problem of transit far more
+ completely than themselves. So it must have appeared, and there is no age
+ in history in which some dreamers have not dreamed of the conquest of the
+ air; if the caveman had left records, these would without doubt have
+ showed that he, too, dreamed this dream. His main aim, probably, was
+ self-preservation; when the dinosaur looked round the corner, the
+ prehistoric bird got out of the way in his usual manner, and prehistoric
+ man, such of him as succeeded in getting out of the way after his fashion&mdash;naturally
+ envied the bird, and concluded that as lord of creation in a doubtful sort
+ of way he ought to have equal facilities. He may have tried, like Simon
+ the Magician, and other early experimenters, to improvise those
+ facilities; assuming that he did, there is the groundwork of much of the
+ older legend with regard to men who flew, since, when history began,
+ legends would be fashioned out of attempts and even the desire to fly,
+ these being compounded of some small ingredient of truth and much
+ exaggeration and addition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a study of the first beginnings of the art, it is worth while to
+ mention even the earliest of the legends and traditions, for they show the
+ trend of men's minds and the constancy of this dream that has become
+ reality in the twentieth century. In one of the oldest records of the
+ world, the Indian classic Mahabarata, it is stated that 'Krishna's enemies
+ sought the aid of the demons, who built an aerial chariot with sides of
+ iron and clad with wings. The chariot was driven through the sky till it
+ stood over Dwarakha, where Krishna's followers dwelt, and from there it
+ hurled down upon the city missiles that destroyed everything on which they
+ fell.' Here is pure fable, not legend, but still a curious forecast of
+ twentieth century bombs from a rigid dirigible. It is to be noted in this
+ case, as in many, that the power to fly was an attribute of evil, not of
+ good&mdash;it was the demons who built the chariot, even as at
+ Friedrichshavn. Mediaeval legend in nearly every case, attributes flight
+ to the aid of evil powers, and incites well-disposed people to stick to
+ the solid earth&mdash;though, curiously enough, the pioneers of medieval
+ times were very largely of priestly type, as witness the monk of
+ Malmesbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legends of the dawn of history, however, distribute the power of
+ flight with less of prejudice. Egyptian sculpture gives the figure of
+ winged men; the British Museum has made the winged Assyrian bulls familiar
+ to many, and both the cuneiform records of Assyria and the hieroglyphs of
+ Egypt record flights that in reality were never made. The desire fathered
+ the story then, and until Clement Ader either hopped with his Avion, as is
+ persisted by his critics, or flew, as is claimed by his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the origin of many legends is questionable, that of others is easy
+ enough to trace, though not to prove. Among the credulous the significance
+ of the name of a people of Asia Minor, the Capnobates, 'those who travel
+ by smoke,' gave rise to the assertion that Montgolfier was not first in
+ the field&mdash;or rather in the air&mdash;since surely this people must
+ have been responsible for the first hot-air balloons. Far less
+ questionable is the legend of Icarus, for here it is possible to trace a
+ foundation of fact in the story. Such a tribe as Daedalus governed could
+ have had hardly any knowledge of the rudiments of science, and even their
+ ruler, seeing how easy it is for birds to sustain themselves in the air,
+ might be excused for believing that he, if he fashioned wings for himself,
+ could use them. In that belief, let it be assumed, Daedalus made his
+ wings; the boy, Icarus, learning that his father had determined on an
+ attempt at flight secured the wings and fastened them to his own
+ shoulders. A cliff seemed the likeliest place for a 'take-off,' and Icarus
+ leaped from the cliff edge only to find that the possession of wings was
+ not enough to assure flight to a human being. The sea that to this day
+ bears his name witnesses that he made the attempt and perished by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this is assumed the bald story, from which might grow the legend of a
+ wise king who ruled a peaceful people&mdash;'judged, sitting in the sun,'
+ as Browning has it, and fashioned for himself wings with which he flew
+ over the sea and where he would, until the prince, Icarus, desired to
+ emulate him. Icarus, fastening the wings to his shoulders with wax, was so
+ imprudent as to fly too near the sun, when the wax melted and he fell, to
+ lie mourned of water-nymphs on the shores of waters thenceforth Icarian.
+ Between what we have assumed to be the base of fact, and the legend which
+ has been invested with such poetic grace in Greek story, there is no more
+ than a century or so of re-telling might give to any event among a people
+ so simple and yet so given to imagery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may set aside as pure fable the stories of the winged horse of Perseus,
+ and the flights of Hermes as messenger of the gods. With them may be
+ placed the story of Empedocles, who failed to take Etna seriously enough,
+ and found himself caught by an eruption while within the crater, so that,
+ flying to safety in some hurry, he left behind but one sandal to attest
+ that he had sought refuge in space&mdash;in all probability, if he escaped
+ at all, he flew, but not in the sense that the aeronaut understands it.
+ But, bearing in mind the many men who tried to fly in historic times, the
+ legend of Icarus and Daedalus, in spite of the impossible form in which it
+ is presented, may rank with the story of the Saracen of Constantinople, or
+ with that of Simon the Magician. A simple folk would naturally idealise
+ the man and magnify his exploit, as they magnified the deeds of some
+ strong man to make the legends of Hercules, and there, full-grown from a
+ mere legend, is the first record of a pioneer of flying. Such a theory is
+ not nearly so fantastic as that which makes the Capnobates, on the
+ strength of their name, the inventors of hot-air balloons. However it may
+ be, both in story and in picture, Icarus and his less conspicuous father
+ have inspired the Caucasian mind, and the world is the richer for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the unsupported myths&mdash;unsupported, that is, by even a shadow of
+ probability&mdash;there is no end. Although Latin legend approaches nearer
+ to fact than the Greek in some cases, in others it shows a disregard for
+ possibilities which renders it of far less account. Thus Diodorus of
+ Sicily relates that one Abaris travelled round the world on an arrow of
+ gold, and Cassiodorus and Glycas and their like told of mechanical birds
+ that flew and sang and even laid eggs. More credible is the story of Aulus
+ Gellius, who in his Attic Nights tells how Archytas, four centuries prior
+ to the opening of the Christian era, made a wooden pigeon that actually
+ flew by means of a mechanism of balancing weights and the breath of a
+ mysterious spirit hidden within it. There may yet arise one credulous
+ enough to state that the mysterious spirit was precursor of the internal
+ combustion engine, but, however that may be, the pigeon of Archytas almost
+ certainly existed, and perhaps it actually glided or flew for short
+ distances&mdash;or else Aulus Gellius was an utter liar, like Cassiodorus
+ and his fellows. In far later times a certain John Muller, better known as
+ Regiomontanus, is stated to have made an artificial eagle which
+ accompanied Charles V. on his entry to and exit from Nuremberg, flying
+ above the royal procession. But, since Muller died in 1436 and Charles was
+ born in 1500, Muller may be ruled out from among the pioneers of
+ mechanical flight, and it may be concluded that the historian of this
+ event got slightly mixed in his dates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far, we have but indicated how one may draw from the richest stores
+ from which the Aryan mind draws inspiration, the Greek and Latin
+ mythologies and poetic adaptations of history. The existing legends of
+ flight, however, are not thus to be localised, for with two possible
+ exceptions they belong to all the world and to every civilisation, however
+ primitive. The two exceptions are the Aztec and the Chinese; regarding the
+ first of these, the Spanish conquistadores destroyed such civilisation as
+ existed in Tenochtitlan so thoroughly that, if legend of flight was among
+ the Aztec records, it went with the rest; as to the Chinese, it is more
+ than passing strange that they, who claim to have known and done
+ everything while the first of history was shaping, even to antedating the
+ discovery of gunpowder that was not made by Roger Bacon, have not yet set
+ up a claim to successful handling of a monoplane some four thousand years
+ ago, or at least to the patrol of the Gulf of Korea and the Mongolian
+ frontier by a forerunner of the 'blimp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Inca civilisation of Peru yields up a myth akin to that of Icarus,
+ which tells how the chieftain Ayar Utso grew wings and visited the sun&mdash;it
+ was from the sun, too, that the founders of the Peruvian Inca dynasty,
+ Manco Capac and his wife Mama Huella Capac, flew to earth near Lake
+ Titicaca, to make the only successful experiment in pure tyranny that the
+ world has ever witnessed. Teutonic legend gives forth Wieland the Smith,
+ who made himself a dress with wings and, clad in it, rose and descended
+ against the wind and in spite of it. Indian mythology, in addition to the
+ story of the demons and their rigid dirigible, already quoted, gives the
+ story of Hanouam, who fitted himself with wings by means of which he
+ sailed in the air and, according to his desire, landed in the sacred
+ Lauka. Bladud, the ninth king of Britain, is said to have crowned his
+ feats of wizardry by making himself wings and attempting to fly&mdash;but
+ the effort cost him a broken neck. Bladud may have been as mythic as
+ Uther, and again he may have been a very early pioneer. The Finnish epic,
+ 'Kalevala,' tells how Ilmarinen the Smith 'forged an eagle of fire,' with
+ 'boat's walls between the wings,' after which he 'sat down on the bird's
+ back and bones,' and flew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pure myths, these, telling how the desire to fly was characteristic of
+ every age and every people, and how, from time to time, there arose an
+ experimenter bolder than his fellows, who made some attempt to translate
+ desire into achievement. And the spirit that animated these pioneers, in a
+ time when things new were accounted things accursed, for the most part,
+ has found expression in this present century in the utter daring and
+ disregard of both danger and pain that stamps the flying man, a type of
+ humanity differing in spirit from his earthbound fellows as fully as the
+ soldier differs from the priest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout mediaeval times, records attest that here and there some man
+ believed in and attempted flight, and at the same time it is clear that
+ such were regarded as in league with the powers of evil. There is the
+ half-legend, half-history of Simon the Magician, who, in the third year of
+ the reign of Nero announced that he would raise himself in the air, in
+ order to assert his superiority over St Paul. The legend states that by
+ the aid of certain demons whom he had prevailed on to assist him, he
+ actually lifted himself in the air&mdash;but St Paul prayed him down
+ again. He slipped through the claws of the demons and fell headlong on the
+ Forum at Rome, breaking his neck. The 'demons' may have been some
+ primitive form of hot-air balloon, or a glider with which the magician
+ attempted to rise into the wind; more probably, however, Simon threatened
+ to ascend and made the attempt with apparatus as unsuitable as Bladud's
+ wings, paying the inevitable penalty. Another version of the story gives
+ St Peter instead of St Paul as the one whose prayers foiled Simon&mdash;apart
+ from the identity of the apostle, the two accounts are similar, and both
+ define the attitude of the age toward investigation and experiment in
+ things untried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another and later circumstantial story, with similar evidence of some fact
+ behind it, is that of the Saracen of Constantinople, who, in the reign of
+ the Emperor Comnenus&mdash;some little time before Norman William made
+ Saxon Harold swear away his crown on the bones of the saints at Rouen&mdash;attempted
+ to fly round the hippodrome at Constantinople, having Comnenus among the
+ great throng who gathered to witness the feat. The Saracen chose for his
+ starting-point a tower in the midst of the hippodrome, and on the top of
+ the tower he stood, clad in a long white robe which was stiffened with
+ rods so as to spread and catch the breeze, waiting for a favourable wind
+ to strike on him. The wind was so long in coming that the spectators grew
+ impatient. 'Fly, O Saracen!' they called to him. 'Do not keep us waiting
+ so long while you try the wind!' Comnenus, who had present with him the
+ Sultan of the Turks, gave it as his opinion that the experiment was both
+ dangerous and vain, and, possibly in an attempt to controvert such
+ statement, the Saracen leaned into the wind and 'rose like a bird 'at the
+ outset. But the record of Cousin, who tells the story in his Histoire de
+ Constantinople, states that 'the weight of his body having more power to
+ drag him down than his artificial wings had to sustain him, he broke his
+ bones, and his evil plight was such that he did not long survive.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Obviously, the Saracen was anticipating Lilienthal and his gliders by some
+ centuries; like Simon, a genuine experimenter&mdash;both legends bear the
+ impress of fact supporting them. Contemporary with him, and belonging to
+ the history rather than the legends of flight, was Oliver, the monk of
+ Malmesbury, who in the year 1065 made himself wings after the pattern of
+ those supposed to have been used by Daedalus, attaching them to his hands
+ and feet and attempting to fly with them. Twysden, in his Historiae
+ Anglicanae Scriptores X, sets forth the story of Oliver, who chose a high
+ tower as his starting-point, and launched himself in the air. As a matter
+ of course, he fell, permanently injuring himself, and died some time
+ later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these, a gap of centuries, filled in by impossible stories of
+ magical flight by witches, wizards, and the like&mdash;imagination was
+ fertile in the dark ages, but the ban of the church was on all attempt at
+ scientific development, especially in such a matter as the conquest of the
+ air. Yet there were observers of nature who argued that since birds could
+ raise themselves by flapping their wings, man had only to make suitable
+ wings, flap them, and he too would fly. As early as the thirteenth century
+ Roger Bacon, the scientific friar of unbounded inquisitiveness and not a
+ little real genius, announced that there could be made 'some flying
+ instrument, so that a man sitting in the middle and turning some mechanism
+ may put in motion some artificial wings which may beat the air like a bird
+ flying.' But being a cautious man, with a natural dislike for being burnt
+ at the stake as a necromancer through having put forward such a dangerous
+ theory, Roger added, 'not that I ever knew a man who had such an
+ instrument, but I am particularly acquainted with the man who contrived
+ one.' This might have been a lame defence if Roger had been brought to
+ trial as addicted to black arts; he seems to have trusted to the
+ inadmissibility of hearsay evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some four centuries later there was published a book entitled Perugia
+ Augusta, written by one C. Crispolti of Perugia&mdash;the date of the work
+ in question is 1648. In it is recorded that 'one day, towards the close of
+ the fifteenth century, whilst many of the principal gentry had come to
+ Perugia to honour the wedding of Giovanni Paolo Baglioni, and some lancers
+ were riding down the street by his palace, Giovanni Baptisti Danti
+ unexpectedly and by means of a contrivance of wings that he had
+ constructed proportionate to the size of his body took off from the top of
+ a tower near by, and with a horrible hissing sound flew successfully
+ across the great Piazza, which was densely crowded. But (oh, horror of an
+ unexpected accident!) he had scarcely flown three hundred paces on his way
+ to a certain point when the mainstay of the left wing gave way, and, being
+ unable to support himself with the right alone, he fell on a roof and was
+ injured in consequence. Those who saw not only this flight, but also the
+ wonderful construction of the framework of the wings, said&mdash;and
+ tradition bears them out&mdash;that he several times flew over the waters
+ of Lake Thrasimene to learn how he might gradually come to earth. But,
+ notwithstanding his great genius, he never succeeded.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reads circumstantially enough, but it may be borne in mind that the
+ date of writing is more than half a century later than the time of the
+ alleged achievement&mdash;the story had had time to round itself out.
+ Danti, however, is mentioned by a number of writers, one of whom states
+ that the failure of his experiment was due to the prayers of some
+ individual of a conservative turn of mind, who prayed so vigorously that
+ Danti fell appropriately enough on a church and injured himself to such an
+ extent as to put an end to his flying career. That Danti experimented,
+ there is little doubt, in view of the volume of evidence on the point, but
+ the darkness of the Middle Ages hides the real truth as to the results of
+ his experiments. If he had actually flown over Thrasimene, as alleged,
+ then in all probability both Napoleon and Wellington would have had air
+ scouts at Waterloo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Danti's story may be taken as fact or left as fable, and with it the
+ period of legend or vague statement may be said to end&mdash;the rest is
+ history, both of genuine experimenters and of charlatans. Such instances
+ of legend as are given here are not a tithe of the whole, but there is
+ sufficient in the actual history of flight to bar out more than this brief
+ mention of the legends, which, on the whole, go farther to prove man's
+ desire to fly than his study and endeavour to solve the problems of the
+ air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. EARLY EXPERIMENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So far, the stories of the development of flight are either legendary or
+ of more or less doubtful authenticity, even including that of Danti, who,
+ although a man of remarkable attainments in more directions than that of
+ attempted flight, suffers&mdash;so far as reputation is concerned&mdash;from
+ the inexactitudes of his chroniclers; he may have soared over Thrasimene,
+ as stated, or a mere hop with an ineffectual glider may have grown with
+ the years to a legend of gliding flight. So far, too, there is no evidence
+ of the study that the conquest of the air demanded; such men as made
+ experiments either launched themselves in the air from some height with
+ made-up wings or other apparatus, and paid the penalty, or else
+ constructed some form of machine which would not leave the earth, and then
+ gave up. Each man followed his own way, and there was no attempt&mdash;without
+ the printing press and the dissemination of knowledge there was little
+ possibility of attempt&mdash;on the part of any one to benefit by the
+ failures of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Legend and doubtful history carries up to the fifteenth century, and then
+ came Leonardo da Vinci, first student of flight whose work endures to the
+ present day. The world knows da Vinci as artist; his age knew him as
+ architect, engineer, artist, and scientist in an age when science was a
+ single study, comprising all knowledge from mathematics to medicine. He
+ was, of course, in league with the devil, for in no other way could his
+ range of knowledge and observation be explained by his contemporaries; he
+ left a Treatise on the Flight of Birds in which are statements and
+ deductions that had to be rediscovered when the Treatise had been
+ forgotten&mdash;da Vinci anticipated modern knowledge as Plato anticipated
+ modern thought, and blazed the first broad trail toward flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One Cuperus, who wrote a Treatise on the Excellence of Man, asserted that
+ da Vinci translated his theories into practice, and actually flew, but the
+ statement is unsupported. That he made models, especially on the
+ helicopter principle, is past question; these were made of paper and wire,
+ and actuated by springs of steel wire, which caused them to lift
+ themselves in the air. It is, however, in the theories which he put
+ forward that da Vinci's investigations are of greatest interest; these
+ prove him a patient as well as a keen student of the principles of flight,
+ and show that his manifold activities did not prevent him from devoting
+ some lengthy periods to observations of bird flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A bird,' he says in his Treatise, 'is an instrument working according to
+ mathematical law, which instrument it is within the capacity of man to
+ reproduce with all its movements, but not with a corresponding degree of
+ strength, though it is deficient only in power of maintaining equilibrium.
+ We may say, therefore, that such an instrument constructed by man is
+ lacking in nothing except the life of the bird, and this life must needs
+ be supplied from that of man. The life which resides in the bird's members
+ will, without doubt, better conform to their needs than will that of a man
+ which is separated from them, and especially in the almost imperceptible
+ movements which produce equilibrium. But since we see that the bird is
+ equipped for many apparent varieties of movement, we are able from this
+ experience to deduce that the most rudimentary of these movements will be
+ capable of being comprehended by man's understanding, and that he will to
+ a great extent be able to provide against the destruction of that
+ instrument of which he himself has become the living principle and the
+ propeller.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this is the definite belief of da Vinci that man is capable of flight,
+ together with a far more definite statement of the principles by which
+ flight is to be achieved than any which had preceded it&mdash;and for that
+ matter, than many that have succeeded it. Two further extracts from his
+ work will show the exactness of his observations:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When a bird which is in equilibrium throws the centre of resistance of
+ the wings behind the centre of gravity, then such a bird will descend with
+ its head downward. This bird which finds itself in equilibrium shall have
+ the centre of resistance of the wings more forward than the bird's centre
+ of gravity; then such a bird will fall with its tail turned toward the
+ earth.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again: 'A man, when flying, shall be free from the waist up, that he
+ may be able to keep himself in equilibrium as he does in a boat, so that
+ the centre of his gravity and of the instrument may set itself in
+ equilibrium and change when necessity requires it to the changing of the
+ centre of its resistance.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, in this last quotation, are the first beginnings of the inherent
+ stability which proved so great an advance in design, in this twentieth
+ century. But the extracts given do not begin to exhaust the range of da
+ Vinci's observations and deductions. With regard to bird flight, he
+ observed that so long as a bird keeps its wings outspread it cannot fall
+ directly to earth, but must glide down at an angle to alight&mdash;a small
+ thing, now that the principle of the plane in opposition to the air is
+ generally grasped, but da Vinci had to find it out. From observation he
+ gathered how a bird checks its own speed by opposing tail and wing surface
+ to the direction of flight, and thus alights at the proper 'landing
+ speed.' He proved the existence of upward air currents by noting how a
+ bird takes off from level earth with wings outstretched and motionless,
+ and, in order to get an efficient substitute for the natural wing, he
+ recommended that there be used something similar to the membrane of the
+ wing of a bat&mdash;from this to the doped fabric of an aeroplane wing is
+ but a small step, for both are equally impervious to air. Again, da Vinci
+ recommended that experiments in flight be conducted at a good height from
+ the ground, since, if equilibrium be lost through any cause, the height
+ gives time to regain it. This recommendation, by the way, received ample
+ support in the training areas of war pilots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man's muscles, said da Vinci, are fully sufficient to enable him to fly,
+ for the larger birds, he noted, employ but a small part of their strength
+ in keeping themselves afloat in the air&mdash;by this theory he attempted
+ to encourage experiment, just as, when his time came, Borelli reached the
+ opposite conclusion and discouraged it. That Borelli was right&mdash;so
+ far&mdash;and da Vinci wrong, detracts not at all from the repute of the
+ earlier investigator, who had but the resources of his age to support
+ investigations conducted in the spirit of ages after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His chief practical contributions to the science of flight&mdash;apart
+ from numerous drawings which have still a value&mdash;are the helicopter
+ or lifting screw, and the parachute. The former, as already noted, he made
+ and proved effective in model form, and the principle which he
+ demonstrated is that of the helicopter of to-day, on which sundry
+ experimenters work spasmodically, in spite of the success of the plane
+ with its driving propeller. As to the parachute, the idea was doubtless
+ inspired by observation of the effect a bird produced by pressure of its
+ wings against the direction of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Da Vinci's conclusions, and his experiments, were forgotten easily by most
+ of his contemporaries; his Treatise lay forgotten for nearly four
+ centuries, overshadowed, mayhap, by his other work. There was, however, a
+ certain Paolo Guidotti of Lucca, who lived in the latter half of the
+ sixteenth century, and who attempted to carry da Vinci's theories&mdash;one
+ of them, at least, into practice. For this Guidotti, who was by profession
+ an artist and by inclination an investigator, made for himself wings, of
+ which the framework was of whalebone; these he covered with feathers, and
+ with them made a number of gliding flights, attaining considerable
+ proficiency. He is said in the end to have made a flight of about four
+ hundred yards, but this attempt at solving the problem ended on a house
+ roof, where Guidotti broke his thigh bone. After that, apparently, he gave
+ up the idea of flight, and went back to painting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One other a Venetian architect named Veranzio, studied da Vinci's theory
+ of the parachute, and found it correct, if contemporary records and even
+ pictorial presentment are correct. Da Vinci showed his conception of a
+ parachute as a sort of inverted square bag; Veranzio modified this to a
+ 'sort of square sail extended by four rods of equal size and having four
+ cords attached at the corners,' by means of which 'a man could without
+ danger throw himself from the top of a tower or any high place. For though
+ at the moment there may be no wind, yet the effort of his falling will
+ carry up the wind, which the sail will hold, by which means he does not
+ fall suddenly but descends little by little. The size of the sail should
+ be measured to the man.' By this last, evidently, Veranzio intended to
+ convey that the sheet must be of such content as would enclose sufficient
+ air to support the weight of the parachutist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Veranzio made his experiments about 1617-1618, but, naturally, they
+ carried him no farther than the mere descent to earth, and since a descent
+ is merely a descent, it is to be conjectured that he soon got tired of
+ dropping from high roofs, and took to designing architecture instead of
+ putting it to such a use. With the end of his experiments the work of da
+ Vinci in relation to flying became neglected for nearly four centuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from these two experimenters, there is little to record in the
+ matter either of experiment or study until the seventeenth century.
+ Francis Bacon, it is true, wrote about flying in his Sylva Sylvarum, and
+ mentioned the subject in the New Atlantis, but, except for the insight
+ that he showed even in superficial mention of any specific subject, he
+ does not appear to have made attempt at serious investigation. 'Spreading
+ of Feathers, thin and close and in great breadth will likewise bear up a
+ great Weight,' says Francis, 'being even laid without Tilting upon the
+ sides.' But a lesser genius could have told as much, even in that age, and
+ though the great Sir Francis is sometimes adduced as one of the early
+ students of the problems of flight, his writings will not sustain the
+ reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seventeenth century, however, gives us three names, those of Borelli,
+ Lana, and Robert Hooke, all of which take definite place in the history of
+ flight. Borelli ranks as one of the great figures in the study of
+ aeronautical problems, in spite of erroneous deductions through which he
+ arrived at a purely negative conclusion with regard to the possibility of
+ human flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borelli was a versatile genius. Born in 1608, he was practically
+ contemporary with Francesco Lana, and there is evidence that he either
+ knew or was in correspondence with many prominent members of the Royal
+ Society of Great Britain, more especially with John Collins, Dr Wallis,
+ and Henry Oldenburgh, the then Secretary of the Society. He was author of
+ a long list of scientific essays, two of which only are responsible for
+ his fame, viz., Theorice Medicaearum Planetarum, published in Florence,
+ and the better known posthumous De Motu Animalium. The first of these two
+ is an astronomical study in which Borelli gives evidence of an instinctive
+ knowledge of gravitation, though no definite expression is given of this.
+ The second work, De Motu Animalium, deals with the mechanical action of
+ the limbs of birds and animals and with a theory of the action of the
+ internal organs. A section of the first part of this work, called De
+ Volatu, is a study of bird flight; it is quite independent of Da Vinci's
+ earlier work, which had been forgotten and remained unnoticed until near
+ on the beginning of practical flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marey, in his work, La Machine Animale, credits Borelli with the first
+ correct idea of the mechanism of flight. He says: 'Therefore we must be
+ allowed to render to the genius of Borelli the justice which is due to
+ him, and only claim for ourselves the merit of having furnished the
+ experimental demonstration of a truth already suspected.' In fact, all
+ subsequent studies on this subject concur in making Borelli the first
+ investigator who illustrated the purely mechanical theory of the action of
+ a bird's wings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borelli's study is divided into a series of propositions in which he
+ traces the principles of flight, and the mechanical actions of the wings
+ of birds. The most interesting of these are the propositions in which he
+ sets forth the method in which birds move their wings during flight and
+ the manner in which the air offers resistance to the stroke of the wing.
+ With regard to the first of these two points he says: 'When birds in
+ repose rest on the earth their wings are folded up close against their
+ flanks, but when wishing to start on their flight they first bend their
+ legs and leap into the air. Whereupon the joints of their wings are
+ straightened out to form a straight line at right angles to the lateral
+ surface of the breast, so that the two wings, outstretched, are placed, as
+ it were, like the arms of a cross to the body of the bird. Next, since the
+ wings with their feathers attached form almost a plane surface, they are
+ raised slightly above the horizontal, and with a most quick impulse beat
+ down in a direction almost perpendicular to the wing-plane, upon the
+ underlying air; and to so intense a beat the air, notwithstanding it to be
+ fluid, offers resistance, partly by reason of its natural inertia, which
+ seeks to retain it at rest, and partly because the particles of the air,
+ compressed by the swiftness of the stroke, resist this compression by
+ their elasticity, just like the hard ground. Hence the whole mass of the
+ bird rebounds, making a fresh leap through the air; whence it follows that
+ flight is simply a motion composed of successive leaps accomplished
+ through the air. And I remark that a wing can easily beat the air in a
+ direction almost perpendicular to its plane surface, although only a
+ single one of the corners of the humerus bone is attached to the scapula,
+ the whole extent of its base remaining free and loose, while the greater
+ transverse feathers are joined to the lateral skin of the thorax.
+ Nevertheless the wing can easily revolve about its base like unto a fan.
+ Nor are there lacking tendon ligaments which restrain the feathers and
+ prevent them from opening farther, in the same fashion that sheets hold in
+ the sails of ships. No less admirable is nature's cunning in unfolding and
+ folding the wings upwards, for she folds them not laterally, but by moving
+ upwards edgewise the osseous parts wherein the roots of the feathers are
+ inserted; for thus, without encountering the air's resistance the upward
+ motion of the wing surface is made as with a sword, hence they can be
+ uplifted with but small force. But thereafter when the wings are twisted
+ by being drawn transversely and by the resistance of the air, they are
+ flattened as has been declared and will be made manifest hereafter.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then with reference to the resistance to the air of the wings he explains:
+ 'The air when struck offers resistance by its elastic virtue through which
+ the particles of the air compressed by the wing-beat strive to expand
+ again. Through these two causes of resistance the downward beat of the
+ wing is not only opposed, but even caused to recoil with a reflex
+ movement; and these two causes of resistance ever increase the more the
+ down stroke of the wing is maintained and accelerated. On the other hand,
+ the impulse of the wing is continuously diminished and weakened by the
+ growing resistance. Hereby the force of the wing and the resistance become
+ balanced; so that, manifestly, the air is beaten by the wing with the same
+ force as the resistance to the stroke.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He concerns himself also with the most difficult problem that confronts
+ the flying man of to-day, namely, landing effectively, and his remarks on
+ this subject would be instructive even to an air pilot of these days: 'Now
+ the ways and means by which the speed is slackened at the end of a flight
+ are these. The bird spreads its wings and tail so that their concave
+ surfaces are perpendicular to the direction of motion; in this way, the
+ spreading feathers, like a ship's sail, strike against the still air,
+ check the speed, and so that most of the impetus may be stopped, the wings
+ are flapped quickly and strongly forward, inducing a contrary motion, so
+ that the bird absolutely or very nearly stops.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of his study Borelli came to a conclusion which militated
+ greatly against experiment with any heavier-than-air apparatus, until well
+ on into the nineteenth century, for having gone thoroughly into the
+ subject of bird flight he states distinctly in his last proposition on the
+ subject that 'It is impossible that men should be able to fly craftily by
+ their own strength.' This statement, of course, remains true up to the
+ present day for no man has yet devised the means by which he can raise
+ himself in the air and maintain himself there by mere muscular effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the time of Borelli up to the development of the steam engine it may
+ be said that flight by means of any heavier-than-air apparatus was
+ generally regarded as impossible, and apart from certain deductions which
+ a little experiment would have shown to be doomed to failure, this method
+ of flight was not followed up. It is not to be wondered at, when Borelli's
+ exaggerated estimate of the strength expended by birds in proportion to
+ their weight is borne in mind; he alleged that the motive force in birds'
+ wings is 10,000 times greater than the resistance of their weight, and
+ with regard to human flight he remarks:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When, therefore, it is asked whether men may be able to fly by their own
+ strength, it must be seen whether the motive power of the pectoral muscles
+ (the strength of which is indicated and measured by their size) is
+ proportionately great, as it is evident that it must exceed the resistance
+ of the weight of the whole human body 10,000 times, together with the
+ weight of enormous wings which should be attached to the arms. And it is
+ clear that the motive power of the pectoral muscles in men is much less
+ than is necessary for flight, for in birds the bulk and weight of the
+ muscles for flapping the wings are not less than a sixth part of the
+ entire weight of the body. Therefore, it would be necessary that the
+ pectoral muscles of a man should weigh more than a sixth part of the
+ entire weight of his body; so also the arms, by flapping with the wings
+ attached, should be able to exert a power 10,000 times greater than the
+ weight of the human body itself. But they are far below such excess, for
+ the aforesaid pectoral muscles do not equal a hundredth part of the entire
+ weight of a man. Wherefore either the strength of the muscles ought to be
+ increased or the weight of the human body must be decreased, so that the
+ same proportion obtains in it as exists in birds. Hence it is deducted
+ that the Icarian invention is entirely mythical because impossible, for it
+ is not possible either to increase a man's pectoral muscles or to diminish
+ the weight of the human body; and whatever apparatus is used, although it
+ is possible to increase the momentum, the velocity or the power employed
+ can never equal the resistance; and therefore wing flapping by the
+ contraction of muscles cannot give out enough power to carry up the heavy
+ body of a man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said that practically all the conclusions which Borelli reached
+ in his study were negative. Although contemporary with Lana, he perceived
+ the one factor which rendered Lana's project for flight by means of vacuum
+ globes an impossibility&mdash;he saw that no globe could be constructed
+ sufficiently light for flight, and at the same time sufficiently strong to
+ withstand the pressure of the outside atmosphere. He does not appear to
+ have made any experiments in flying on his own account, having, as he
+ asserts most definitely, no faith in any invention designed to lift man
+ from the surface of the earth. But his work, from which only the foregoing
+ short quotations can be given, is, nevertheless, of indisputable value,
+ for he settled the mechanics of bird flight, and paved the way for those
+ later investigators who had, first, the steam engine, and later the
+ internal combustion engine&mdash;two factors in mechanical flight which
+ would have seemed as impossible to Borelli as would wireless telegraphy to
+ a student of Napoleonic times. On such foundations as his age afforded
+ Borelli built solidly and well, so that he ranks as one of the greatest&mdash;if
+ not actually the greatest&mdash;of the investigators into this subject
+ before the age of steam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conclusion, that 'the motive force in birds' wings is apparently ten
+ thousand times greater than the resistance of their weight,' is erroneous,
+ of course, but study of the translation from which the foregoing excerpt
+ is taken will show that the error detracts very little from the value of
+ the work itself. Borelli sets out very definitely the mechanism of flight,
+ in such fashion that he who runs may read. His reference to 'the use of a
+ large vessel,' etc., concerns the suggestion made by Francesco Lana, who
+ antedated Borelli's publication of De Motu Animalium by some ten years
+ with his suggestion for an 'aerial ship,' as he called it. Lana's mind
+ shows, as regards flight, a more imaginative twist; Borelli dived down
+ into first causes, and reached mathematical conclusions; Lana conceived a
+ theory and upheld it&mdash;theoretically, since the manner of his life
+ precluded experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Francesco Lana, son of a noble family, was born in 1631; in 1647 he was
+ received as a novice into the Society of Jesus at Rome, and remained a
+ pious member of the Jesuit society until the end of his life. He was
+ greatly handicapped in his scientific investigations by the vows of
+ poverty which the rules of the Order imposed on him. He was more scientist
+ than priest all his life; for two years he held the post of Professor of
+ Mathematics at Ferrara, and up to the time of his death, in 1687, he spent
+ by far the greater part of his time in scientific research, He had the
+ dubious advantage of living in an age when one man could cover the whole
+ range of science, and this he seems to have done very thoroughly. There
+ survives an immense work of his entitled, Magisterium Naturae et Artis,
+ which embraces the whole field of scientific knowledge as that was
+ developed in the period in which Lana lived. In an earlier work of his,
+ published in Brescia in 1670, appears his famous treatise on the aerial
+ ship, a problem which Lana worked out with thoroughness. He was unable to
+ make practical experiments, and thus failed to perceive the one
+ insuperable drawback to his project&mdash;of which more anon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only extracts from the translation of Lana's work can be given here, but
+ sufficient can be given to show fully the means by which he designed to
+ achieve the conquest of the air. He begins by mention of the celebrated
+ pigeon of Archytas the Philosopher, and advances one or two theories with
+ regard to the way in which this mechanical bird was constructed, and then
+ he recites, apparently with full belief in it, the fable of Regiomontanus
+ and the eagle that he is said to have constructed to accompany Charles V.
+ on his entry into Nuremberg. In fact, Lana starts his work with a study of
+ the pioneers of mechanical flying up to his own time, and then outlines
+ his own devices for the construction of mechanical birds before proceeding
+ to detail the construction of the aerial ship. Concerning primary
+ experiments for this he says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I will, first of all, presuppose that air has weight owing to the vapours
+ and halations which ascend from the earth and seas to a height of many
+ miles and surround the whole of our terraqueous globe; and this fact will
+ not be denied by philosophers, even by those who may have but a
+ superficial knowledge, because it can be proven by exhausting, if not all,
+ at any rate the greater part of, the air contained in a glass vessel,
+ which, if weighed before and after the air has been exhausted, will be
+ found materially reduced in weight. Then I found out how much the air
+ weighed in itself in the following manner. I procured a large vessel of
+ glass, whose neck could be closed or opened by means of a tap, and holding
+ it open I warmed it over a fire, so that the air inside it becoming
+ rarified, the major part was forced out; then quickly shutting the tap to
+ prevent the re-entry I weighed it; which done, I plunged its neck in
+ water, resting the whole of the vessel on the surface of the water, then
+ on opening the tap the water rose in the vessel and filled the greater
+ part of it. I lifted the neck out of the water, released the water
+ contained in the vessel, and measured and weighed its quantity and
+ density, by which I inferred that a certain quantity of air had come out
+ of the vessel equal in bulk to the quantity of water which had entered to
+ refill the portion abandoned by the air. I again weighed the vessel, after
+ I had first of all well dried it free of all moisture, and found it
+ weighed one ounce more whilst it was full of air than when it was
+ exhausted of the greater part, so that what it weighed more was a quantity
+ of air equal in volume to the water which took its place. The water
+ weighed 640 ounces, so I concluded that the weight of air compared with
+ that of water was 1 to 640&mdash;that is to say, as the water which filled
+ the vessel weighed 640 ounces, so the air which filled the same vessel
+ weighed one ounce.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus detailed the method of exhausting air from a vessel, Lana goes
+ on to assume that any large vessel can be entirely exhausted of nearly all
+ the air contained therein. Then he takes Euclid's proposition to the
+ effect that the superficial area of globes increases in the proportion of
+ the square of the diameter, whilst the volume increases in the proportion
+ of the cube of the same diameter, and he considers that if one only
+ constructs the globe of thin metal, of sufficient size, and exhausts the
+ air in the manner that he suggests, such a globe will be so far lighter
+ than the surrounding atmosphere that it will not only rise, but will be
+ capable of lifting weights. Here is Lana's own way of putting it:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But so that it may be enabled to raise heavier weights and to lift men in
+ the air, let us take double the quantity of copper, 1,232 square feet,
+ equal to 308 lbs. of copper; with this double quantity of copper we could
+ construct a vessel of not only double the capacity, but of four times the
+ capacity of the first, for the reason shown by my fourth supposition.
+ Consequently the air contained in such a vessel will be 718 lbs. 4 2/3
+ ounces, so that if the air be drawn out of the vessel it will be 410 lbs.
+ 4 2/3 ounces lighter than the same volume of air, and, consequently, will
+ be enabled to lift three men, or at least two, should they weigh more than
+ eight pesi each. It is thus manifest that the larger the ball or vessel is
+ made, the thicker and more solid can the sheets of copper be made,
+ because, although the weight will increase, the capacity of the vessel
+ will increase to a greater extent and with it the weight of the air
+ therein, so that it will always be capable to lift a heavier weight. From
+ this it can be easily seen how it is possible to construct a machine
+ which, fashioned like unto a ship, will float on the air.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With four globes of these dimensions Lana proposed to make an aerial ship
+ of the fashion shown in his quaint illustration. He is careful to point
+ out a method by which the supporting globes for the aerial ship may be
+ entirely emptied of air; (this is to be done by connecting to each globe a
+ tube of copper which is 'at least a length of 47 modern Roman palm).' A
+ small tap is to close this tube at the end nearest the globe, and then
+ vessel and tube are to be filled with water, after which the tube is to be
+ immersed in water and the tap opened, allowing the water to run out of the
+ vessel, while no air enters. The tap is then closed before the lower end
+ of the tube is removed from the water, leaving no air at all in the globe
+ or sphere. Propulsion of this airship was to be accomplished by means of
+ sails, and also by oars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lana antedated the modern propeller, and realised that the air would offer
+ enough resistance to oars or paddle to impart motion to any vessel
+ floating in it and propelled by these means, although he did not realise
+ the amount of pressure on the air which would be necessary to accomplish
+ propulsion. As a matter of fact, he foresaw and provided against
+ practically all the difficulties that would be encountered in the working,
+ as well as the making, of the aerial ship, finally coming up against what
+ his religious training made an insuperable objection. This, again, is best
+ told in his own words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Other difficulties I do not foresee that could prevail against this
+ invention, save one only, which to me seems the greatest of them all, and
+ that is that God would surely never allow such a machine to be successful,
+ since it would create many disturbances in the civil and political
+ governments of mankind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ends by saying that no city would be proof against surprise, while the
+ aerial ship could set fire to vessels at sea, and destroy houses,
+ fortresses, and cities by fire balls and bombs. In fact, at the end of his
+ treatise on the subject, he furnishes a pretty complete resume of the
+ activities of German Zeppelins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As already noted, Lana himself, owing to his vows of poverty, was unable
+ to do more than put his suggestions on paper, which he did with a
+ thoroughness that has procured him a place among the really great pioneers
+ of flying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was nearly 200 years before any attempt was made to realise his
+ project; then, in 1843, M. Marey Monge set out to make the globes and the
+ ship as Lana detailed them. Monge's experiments cost him the sum of 25,000
+ francs 75 centimes, which he expended purely from love of scientific
+ investigation. He chose to make his globes of brass, about.004 in
+ thickness, and weighing 1.465 lbs. to the square yard. Having made his
+ sphere of this metal, he lined it with two thicknesses of tissue paper,
+ varnished it with oil, and set to work to empty it of air. This, however,
+ he never achieved, for such metal is incapable of sustaining the pressure
+ of the outside air, as Lana, had he had the means to carry out
+ experiments, would have ascertained. M. Monge's sphere could never be
+ emptied of air sufficiently to rise from the earth; it ended in the
+ melting-pot, ignominiously enough, and all that Monge got from his
+ experiment was the value of the scrap metal and the satisfaction of
+ knowing that Lana's theory could never be translated into practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert Hooke is less conspicuous than either Borelli or Lana; his work,
+ which came into the middle of the seventeenth century, consisted of
+ various experiments with regard to flight, from which emerged 'a Module,
+ which by the help of Springs and Wings, raised and sustained itself in the
+ air.' This must be reckoned as the first model flying machine which
+ actually flew, except for da Vinci's helicopters; Hooke's model appears to
+ have been of the flapping-wing type&mdash;he attempted to copy the motion
+ of birds, but found from study and experiment that human muscles were not
+ sufficient to the task of lifting the human body. For that reason, he
+ says, 'I applied my mind to contrive a way to make artificial muscles,'
+ but in this he was, as he expresses it, 'frustrated of my expectations.'
+ Hooke's claim to fame rests mainly on his successful model; the rest of
+ his work is of too scrappy a nature to rank as a serious contribution to
+ the study of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contemporary with Hooke was one Allard, who, in France, undertook to
+ emulate the Saracen of Constantinople to a certain extent. Allard was a
+ tight-rope dancer who either did or was said to have done short gliding
+ flights&mdash;the matter is open to question&mdash;and finally stated that
+ he would, at St Germains, fly from the terrace in the king's presence. He
+ made the attempt, but merely fell, as did the Saracen some centuries
+ before, causing himself serious injury. Allard cannot be regarded as a
+ contributor to the development of aeronautics in any way, and is only
+ mentioned as typical of the way in which, up to the time of the Wright
+ brothers, flying was regarded. Even unto this day there are many who still
+ believe that, with a pair of wings, man ought to be able to fly, and that
+ the mathematical data necessary to effective construction simply do not
+ exist. This attitude was reasonable enough in an unlearned age, and Allard
+ was one&mdash;a little more conspicuous than the majority&mdash;among many
+ who made experiment in ignorance, with more or less danger to themselves
+ and without practical result of any kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seventeenth century was not to end, however, without practical
+ experiment of a noteworthy kind in gliding flight. Among the recruits to
+ the ranks of pioneers was a certain Besnier, a locksmith of Sable, who
+ somewhere between 1675 and 1680 constructed a glider of which a crude
+ picture has come down to modern times. The apparatus, as will be seen,
+ consisted of two rods with hinged flaps, and the original designer of the
+ picture seems to have had but a small space in which to draw, since
+ obviously the flaps must have been much larger than those shown. Besnier
+ placed the rods on his shoulders, and worked the flaps by cords attached
+ to his hands and feet&mdash;the flaps opened as they fell, and closed as
+ they rose, so the device as a whole must be regarded as a sort of flapping
+ glider. Having by experiment proved his apparatus successful, Besnier
+ promptly sold it to a travelling showman of the period, and forthwith set
+ about constructing a second set, with which he made gliding flights of
+ considerable height and distance. Like Lilienthal, Besnier projected
+ himself into space from some height, and then, according to the
+ contemporary records, he was able to cross a river of considerable size
+ before coming to earth. It does not appear that he had any imitators, or
+ that any advantage whatever was taken of his experiments; the age was one
+ in which he would be regarded rather as a freak exhibitor than as a
+ serious student, and possibly, considering his origin and the sale of his
+ first apparatus to such a client, he regarded the matter himself as more
+ in the nature of an amusement than as a discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borelli, coming at the end of the century, proved to his own satisfaction
+ and that of his fellows that flapping wing flight was an impossibility;
+ the capabilities of the plane were as yet undreamed, and the prime mover
+ that should make the plane available for flight was deep in the womb of
+ time. Da Vinci's work was forgotten&mdash;flight was an impossibility, or
+ at best such a useless show as Besnier was able to give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eighteenth century was almost barren of experiment. Emanuel
+ Swedenborg, having invented a new religion, set about inventing a flying
+ machine, and succeeded theoretically, publishing the result of his
+ investigations as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let a car or boat or some like object be made of light material such as
+ cork or bark, with a room within it for the operator. Secondly, in front
+ as well as behind, or all round, set a widely-stretched sail parallel to
+ the machine forming within a hollow or bend which could be reefed like the
+ sails of a ship. Thirdly, place wings on the sides, to be worked up and
+ down by a spiral spring, these wings also to be hollow below in order to
+ increase the force and velocity, take in the air, and make the resistance
+ as great as may be required. These, too, should be of light material and
+ of sufficient size; they should be in the shape of birds' wings, or the
+ sails of a windmill, or some such shape, and should be tilted obliquely
+ upwards, and made so as to collapse on the upward stroke and expand on the
+ downward. Fourth, place a balance or beam below, hanging down
+ perpendicularly for some distance with a small weight attached to its end,
+ pendent exactly in line with the centre of gravity; the longer this beam
+ is, the lighter must it be, for it must have the same proportion as the
+ well-known vectis or steel-yard. This would serve to restore the balance
+ of the machine if it should lean over to any of the four sides. Fifthly,
+ the wings would perhaps have greater force, so as to increase the
+ resistance and make the flight easier, if a hood or shield were placed
+ over them, as is the case with certain insects. Sixthly, when the sails
+ are expanded so as to occupy a great surface and much air, with a balance
+ keeping them horizontal, only a small force would be needed to move the
+ machine back and forth in a circle, and up and down. And, after it has
+ gained momentum to move slowly upwards, a slight movement and an even
+ bearing would keep it balanced in the air and would determine its
+ direction at will.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only point in this worthy of any note is the first device for
+ maintaining stability automatically&mdash;Swedenborg certainly scored a
+ point there. For the rest, his theory was but theory, incapable of being
+ put to practice&mdash;he does not appear to have made any attempt at
+ advance beyond the mere suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some ten years before his time the state of knowledge with regard to
+ flying in Europe was demonstrated by an order granted by the King of
+ Portugal to Friar Lourenzo de Guzman, who claimed to have invented a
+ flying machine capable of actual flight. The order stated that 'In order
+ to encourage the suppliant to apply himself with zeal toward the
+ improvement of the new machine, which is capable of producing the effects
+ mentioned by him, I grant unto him the first vacant place in my College of
+ Barcelos or Santarem, and the first professorship of mathematics in my
+ University of Coimbra, with the annual pension of 600,000 reis during his
+ life.&mdash;Lisbon, 17th of March, 1709.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What happened to Guzman when the non-existence of the machine was
+ discovered is one of the things that is well outside the province of
+ aeronautics. He was charlatan pure and simple, as far as actual flight was
+ concerned, though he had some ideas respecting the design of hot-air
+ balloons, according to Tissandier. (La Navigation Aerienne.) His flying
+ machine was to contain, among other devices, bellows to produce artificial
+ wind when the real article failed, and also magnets in globes to draw the
+ vessel in an upward direction and maintain its buoyancy. Some draughtsman,
+ apparently gifted with as vivid imagination as Guzman himself, has given
+ to the world an illustration of the hypothetical vessel; it bears some
+ resemblance to Lana's aerial ship, from which fact one draws obvious
+ conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A rather amusing claim to solving the problem of flight was made in the
+ middle of the eighteenth century by one Grimaldi, a 'famous and unique
+ Engineer' who, as a matter of actual fact, spent twenty years in
+ missionary work in India, and employed the spare time that missionary work
+ left him in bringing his invention to a workable state. The invention is
+ described as a 'box which with the aid of clockwork rises in the air, and
+ goes with such lightness and strong rapidity that it succeeds in flying a
+ journey of seven leagues in an hour. It is made in the fashion of a bird;
+ the wings from end to end are 25 feet in extent. The body is composed of
+ cork, artistically joined together and well fastened with metal wire,
+ covered with parchment and feathers. The wings are made of catgut and
+ whalebone, and covered also with the same parchment and feathers, and each
+ wing is folded in three seams. In the body of the machine are contained
+ thirty wheels of unique work, with two brass globes and little chains
+ which alternately wind up a counterpoise; with the aid of six brass vases,
+ full of a certain quantity of quicksilver, which run in some pulleys, the
+ machine is kept by the artist in due equilibrium and balance. By means,
+ then, of the friction between a steel wheel adequately tempered and a very
+ heavy and surprising piece of lodestone, the whole is kept in a regulated
+ forward movement, given, however, a right state of the winds, since the
+ machine cannot fly so much in totally calm weather as in stormy. This
+ prodigious machine is directed and guided by a tail seven palmi long,
+ which is attached to the knees and ankles of the inventor by leather
+ straps; by stretching out his legs, either to the right or to the left, he
+ moves the machine in whichever direction he pleases.... The machine's
+ flight lasts only three hours, after which the wings gradually close
+ themselves, when the inventor, perceiving this, goes down gently, so as to
+ get on his own feet, and then winds up the clockwork and gets himself
+ ready again upon the wings for the continuation of a new flight. He
+ himself told us that if by chance one of the wheels came off or if one of
+ the wings broke, it is certain he would inevitably fall rapidly to the
+ ground, and, therefore, he does not rise more than the height of a tree or
+ two, as also he only once put himself in the risk of crossing the sea, and
+ that was from Calais to Dover, and the same morning he arrived in London.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet there are still quite a number of people who persist in stating
+ that Bleriot was the first man to fly across the Channel!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A study of the development of the helicopter principle was published in
+ France in 1868, when the great French engineer Paucton produced his
+ Theorie de la Vis d'Archimede. For some inexplicable reason, Paucton was
+ not satisfied with the term 'helicopter,' but preferred to call it a
+ 'pterophore,' a name which, so far as can be ascertained, has not been
+ adopted by any other writer or investigator. Paucton stated that, since a
+ man is capable of sufficient force to overcome the weight of his own body,
+ it is only necessary to give him a machine which acts on the air 'with all
+ the force of which it is capable and at its utmost speed,' and he will
+ then be able to lift himself in the air, just as by the exertion of all
+ his strength he is able to lift himself in water. 'It would seem,' says
+ Paucton, 'that in the pterophore, attached vertically to a carriage, the
+ whole built lightly and carefully assembled, he has found something that
+ will give him this result in all perfection. In construction, one would be
+ careful that the machine produced the least friction possible, and
+ naturally it ought to produce little, as it would not be at all
+ complicated. The new Daedalus, sitting comfortably in his carriage, would
+ by means of a crank give to the pterophore a suitable circular (or
+ revolving) speed. This single pterophore would lift him vertically, but in
+ order to move horizontally he should be supplied with a tail in the shape
+ of another pterophore. When he wished to stop for a little time, valves
+ fixed firmly across the end of the space between the blades would
+ automatically close the openings through which the air flows, and change
+ the pterophore into an unbroken surface which would resist the flow of air
+ and retard the fall of the machine to a considerable degree.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctrine thus set forth might appear plausible, but it is based on the
+ common misconception that all the force which might be put into the
+ helicopter or 'pterophore' would be utilised for lifting or propelling the
+ vehicle through the air, just as a propeller uses all its power to drive a
+ ship through water. But, in applying such a propelling force to the air,
+ most of the force is utilised in maintaining aerodynamic support&mdash;as
+ a matter of fact, more force is needed to maintain this support than the
+ muscle of man could possibly furnish to a lifting screw, and even if the
+ helicopter were applied to a full-sized, engine-driven air vehicle, the
+ rate of ascent would depend on the amount of surplus power that could be
+ carried. For example, an upward lift of 1,000 pounds from a propeller 15
+ feet in diameter would demand an expenditure of 50 horse-power under the
+ best possible conditions, and in order to lift this load vertically
+ through such atmospheric pressure as exists at sea-level or thereabouts,
+ an additional 20 horsepower would be required to attain a rate of 11 feet
+ per second&mdash;50 horse-power must be continually provided for the mere
+ support of the load, and the additional 20 horse-power must be continually
+ provided in order to lift it. Although, in model form, there is nothing
+ quite so strikingly successful as the helicopter in the range of flying
+ machines, yet the essential weight increases so disproportionately to the
+ effective area that it is necessary to go but very little beyond model
+ dimensions for the helicopter to become quite ineffective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is not to say that the lifting screw must be totally ruled out so far
+ as the construction of aircraft is concerned. Much is still empirical, so
+ far as this branch of aeronautics is concerned, and consideration of the
+ structural features of a propeller goes to show that the relations of
+ essential weight and effective area do not altogether apply in practice as
+ they stand in theory. Paucton's dream, in some modified form, may yet
+ become reality&mdash;it is only so short a time ago as 1896 that Lord
+ Kelvin stated he had not the smallest molecule of faith in aerial
+ navigation, and since the whole history of flight consists in proving the
+ impossible possible, the helicopter may yet challenge the propelled plane
+ surface for aerial supremacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It does not appear that Paucton went beyond theory, nor is there in his
+ theory any advance toward practical flight&mdash;da Vinci could have told
+ him as much as he knew. He was followed by Meerwein, who invented an
+ apparatus apparently something between a flapping wing machine and a
+ glider, consisting of two wings, which were to be operated by means of a
+ rod; the venturesome one who would fly by means of this apparatus had to
+ lie in a horizontal position beneath the wings to work the rod. Meerwein
+ deserves a place of mention, however, by reason of his investigations into
+ the amount of surface necessary to support a given weight. Taking that
+ weight at 200 pounds&mdash;which would allow for the weight of a man and a
+ very light apparatus&mdash;he estimated that 126 square feet would be
+ necessary for support. His pamphlet, published at Basle in 1784, shows him
+ to have been a painstaking student of the potentialities of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jean-Pierre Blanchard, later to acquire fame in connection with balloon
+ flight, conceived and described a curious vehicle, of which he even
+ announced trials as impending. His trials were postponed time after time,
+ and it appears that he became convinced in the end of the futility of his
+ device, being assisted to such a conclusion by Lalande, the astronomer,
+ who repeated Borelli's statement that it was impossible for man ever to
+ fly by his own strength. This was in the closing days of the French
+ monarchy, and the ascent of the Montgolfiers' first hot-air balloon in
+ 1783&mdash;which shall be told more fully in its place&mdash;put an end to
+ all French experiments with heavier-than-air apparatus, though in England
+ the genius of Cayley was about to bud, and even in France there were those
+ who understood that ballooning was not true flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. SIR GEORGE CAYLEY&mdash;THOMAS WALKER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the fifth of June, 1783, the Montgolfiers' hot-air balloon rose at
+ Versailles, and in its rising divided the study of the conquest of the air
+ into two definite parts, the one being concerned with the propulsion of
+ gas lifted, lighter-than-air vehicles, and the other being crystallised in
+ one sentence by Sir George Cayley: 'The whole problem,' he stated, 'is
+ confined within these limits, viz.: to make a surface support a given
+ weight by the application of power to the resistance of the air.' For
+ about ten years the balloon held the field entirely, being regarded as the
+ only solution of the problem of flight that man could ever compass. So
+ definite for a time was this view on the eastern side of the Channel that
+ for some years practically all the progress that was made in the
+ development of power-driven planes was made in Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1800 a certain Dr Thomas Young demonstrated that certain curved
+ surfaces suspended by a thread moved into and not away from a horizontal
+ current of air, but the demonstration, which approaches perilously near to
+ perpetual motion if the current be truly horizontal, has never been
+ successfully repeated, so that there is more than a suspicion that Young's
+ air-current was NOT horizontal. Others had made and were making
+ experiments on the resistance offered to the air by flat surfaces, when
+ Cayley came to study and record, earning such a place among the pioneers
+ as to win the title of 'father of British aeronautics.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cayley was a man in advance of his time, in many ways. Of independent
+ means, he made the grand tour which was considered necessary to the
+ education of every young man of position, and during this excursion he was
+ more engaged in studies of a semi-scientific character than in the
+ pursuits that normally filled such a period. His various writings prove
+ that throughout his life aeronautics was the foremost subject in his mind;
+ the Mechanic's Magazine, Nicholson's Journal, the Philosophical Magazine,
+ and other periodicals of like nature bear witness to Cayley's continued
+ research into the subject of flight. He approached the subject after the
+ manner of the trained scientist, analysing the mechanical properties of
+ air under chemical and physical action. Then he set to work to ascertain
+ the power necessary for aerial flight, and was one of the first to
+ enunciate the fallacy of the hopes of successful flight by means of the
+ steam engine of those days, owing to the fact that it was impossible to
+ obtain a given power with a given weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet his conclusions on this point were not altogether negative, for as
+ early as 1810 he stated that he could construct a balloon which could
+ travel with passengers at 20 miles an hour&mdash;he was one of the first
+ to consider the possibilities of applying power to a balloon. Nearly
+ thirty years later&mdash;in 1837&mdash;he made the first attempt at
+ establishing an aeronautical society, but at that time the power-driven
+ plane was regarded by the great majority as an absurd dream of more or
+ less mad inventors, while ballooning ranked on about the same level as
+ tight-rope walking, being considered an adjunct to fairs and fetes, more a
+ pastime than a study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to the time of his death, in 1857, Cayley maintained his study of
+ aeronautical matters, and there is no doubt whatever that his work went
+ far in assisting the solution of the problem of air conquest. His
+ principal published work, a monograph entitled Aerial Navigation, has been
+ republished in the admirable series of 'Aeronautical Classics' issued by
+ the Royal Aeronautical Society. He began this work by pointing out the
+ impossibility of flying by means of attached wings, an impossibility due
+ to the fact that, while the pectoral muscles of a bird account for more
+ than two-thirds of its whole muscular strength, in a man the muscles
+ available for flying, no matter what mechanism might be used, would not
+ exceed one-tenth of his total strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cayley did not actually deny the possibility of a man flying by muscular
+ effort, however, but stated that 'the flight of a strong man by great
+ muscular exertion, though a curious and interesting circumstance, inasmuch
+ as it will probably be the means of ascertaining finis power and supplying
+ the basis whereon to improve it, would be of little use.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this he goes on to the possibility of using a Boulton and Watt steam
+ engine to develop the power necessary for flight, and in this he saw a
+ possibility of practical result. It is worthy of note that in this
+ connection he made mention of the forerunner of the modern internal
+ combustion engine; 'The French,' he said, 'have lately shown the great
+ power produced by igniting inflammable powders in closed vessels, and
+ several years ago an engine was made to work in this country in a similar
+ manner by inflammation of spirit of tar.' In a subsequent paragraph of his
+ monograph he anticipates almost exactly the construction of the Lenoir gas
+ engine, which came into being more than fifty-five years after his
+ monograph was published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain experiments detailed in his work were made to ascertain the size
+ of the surface necessary for the support of any given weight. He accepted
+ a truism of to-day in pointing out that in any matters connected with
+ aerial investigation, theory and practice are as widely apart as the
+ poles. Inclined at first to favour the helicopter principle, he finally
+ rejected this in favour of the plane, with which he made numerous
+ experiments. During these, he ascertained the peculiar advantages of
+ curved surfaces, and saw the necessity of providing both vertical and
+ horizontal rudders in order to admit of side steering as well as the
+ control of ascent and descent, and for preserving equilibrium. He may be
+ said to have anticipated the work of Lilienthal and Pilcher, since he
+ constructed and experimented with a fixed surface glider. 'It was
+ beautiful,' he wrote concerning this, 'to see this noble white bird
+ sailing majestically from the top of a hill to any given point of the
+ plain below it with perfect steadiness and safety, according to the set of
+ its rudder, merely by its own weight, descending at an angle of about
+ eight degrees with the horizon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that he once persuaded his gardener to trust himself in this
+ glider for a flight, but if Cayley himself ventured a flight in it he has
+ left no record of the fact. The following extract from his work, Aerial
+ Navigation, affords an instance of the thoroughness of his investigations,
+ and the concluding paragraph also shows his faith in the ultimate triumph
+ of mankind in the matter of aerial flight:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The act of flying requires less exertion than from the appearance is
+ supposed. Not having sufficient data to ascertain the exact degree of
+ propelling power exerted by birds in the act of flying, it is uncertain
+ what degree of energy may be required in this respect for vessels of
+ aerial navigation; yet when we consider the many hundreds of miles of
+ continued flight exerted by birds of passage, the idea of its being only a
+ small effort is greatly corroborated. To apply the power of the first
+ mover to the greatest advantage in producing this effect is a very
+ material point. The mode universally adopted by Nature is the oblique waft
+ of the wing. We have only to choose between the direct beat overtaking the
+ velocity of the current, like the oar of a boat, or one applied like the
+ wing, in some assigned degree of obliquity to it. Suppose 35 feet per
+ second to be the velocity of an aerial vehicle, the oar must be moved with
+ this speed previous to its being able to receive any resistance; then if
+ it be only required to obtain a pressure of one-tenth of a lb. upon each
+ square foot it must exceed the velocity of the current 7.3 feet per
+ second. Hence its whole velocity must be 42.5 feet per second. Should the
+ same surface be wafted downward like a wing with the hinder edge inclined
+ upward in an angle of about 50 deg. 40 feet to the current it will
+ overtake it at a velocity of 3.5 feet per second; and as a slight unknown
+ angle of resistance generates a lb. pressure per square foot at this
+ velocity, probably a waft of a little more than 4 feet per second would
+ produce this effect, one-tenth part of which would be the propelling
+ power. The advantage of this mode of application compared with the former
+ is rather more than ten to one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In continuing the general principles of aerial navigation, for the
+ practice of the art, many mechanical difficulties present themselves which
+ require a considerable course of skilfully applied experiments before they
+ can be overcome; but, to a certain extent, the air has already been made
+ navigable, and no one who has seen the steadiness with which weights to
+ the amount of ten stone (including four stone, the weight of the machine)
+ hover in the air can doubt of the ultimate accomplishment of this object.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This extract from his work gives but a faint idea of the amount of
+ research for which Cayley was responsible. He had the humility of the true
+ investigator in scientific problems, and so far as can be seen was never
+ guilty of the great fault of so many investigators in this subject&mdash;that
+ of making claims which he could not support. He was content to do, and
+ pass after having recorded his part, and although nearly half a century
+ had to pass between the time of his death and the first actual flight by
+ means of power-driven planes, yet he may be said to have contributed very
+ largely to the solution of the problem, and his name will always rank high
+ in the roll of the pioneers of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Practically contemporary with Cayley was Thomas Walker, concerning whom
+ little is known save that he was a portrait painter of Hull, where was
+ published his pamphlet on The Art of Flying in 1810, a second and
+ amplified edition being produced, also in Hull, in 1831. The pamphlet,
+ which has been reproduced in extenso in the Aeronautical Classics series
+ published by the Royal Aeronautical Society, displays a curious mixture of
+ the true scientific spirit and colossal conceit. Walker appears to have
+ been a man inclined to jump to conclusions, which carried him up to the
+ edge of discovery and left him vacillating there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The study of the two editions of his pamphlet side by side shows that
+ their author made considerable advances in the practicability of his
+ designs in the 21 intervening years, though the drawings which accompany
+ the text in both editions fail to show anything really capable of flight.
+ The great point about Walker's work as a whole is its suggestiveness; he
+ did not hesitate to state that the 'art' of flying is as truly mechanical
+ as that of rowing a boat, and he had some conception of the necessary
+ mechanism, together with an absolute conviction that he knew all there was
+ to be known. 'Encouraged by the public,' he says, 'I would not abandon my
+ purpose of making still further exertions to advance and complete an art,
+ the discovery of the TRUE PRINCIPLES (the italics are Walker's own) of
+ which, I trust, I can with certainty affirm to be my own.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pamphlet begins with Walker's admiration of the mechanism of flight as
+ displayed by birds. 'It is now almost twenty years,' he says, 'since I was
+ first led to think, by the study of birds and their means of flying, that
+ if an artificial machine were formed with wings in exact imitation of the
+ mechanism of one of those beautiful living machines, and applied in the
+ very same way upon the air, there could be no doubt of its being made to
+ fly, for it is an axiom in philosophy that the same cause will ever
+ produce the same effect.' With this he confesses his inability to produce
+ the said effect through lack of funds, though he clothes this delicately
+ in the phrase 'professional avocations and other circumstances.' Owing to
+ this inability he published his designs that others might take advantage
+ of them, prefacing his own researches with a list of the very early
+ pioneers, and giving special mention to Friar Bacon, Bishop Wilkins, and
+ the Portuguese friar, De Guzman. But, although he seems to suggest that
+ others should avail themselves of his theoretical knowledge, there is a
+ curious incompleteness about the designs accompanying his work, and about
+ the work itself, which seems to suggest that he had more knowledge to
+ impart than he chose to make public&mdash;or else that he came very near
+ to complete solution of the problem of flight, and stayed on the threshold
+ without knowing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a dissertation upon the history and strength of the condor, and on
+ the differences between the weights of birds, he says: 'The following
+ observations upon the wonderful difference in the weight of some birds,
+ with their apparent means of supporting it in their flight, may tend to
+ remove some prejudices against my plan from the minds of some of my
+ readers. The weight of the humming-bird is one drachm, that of the condor
+ not less than four stone. Now, if we reduce four stone into drachms we
+ shall find the condor is 14,336 times as heavy as the humming-bird. What
+ an amazing disproportion of weight! Yet by the same mechanical use of its
+ wings the condor can overcome the specific gravity of its body with as
+ much ease as the little humming-bird. But this is not all. We are informed
+ that this enormous bird possesses a power in its wings, so far exceeding
+ what is necessary for its own conveyance through the air, that it can take
+ up and fly away with a whole sheer in its talons, with as much ease as an
+ eagle would carry off, in the same manner, a hare or a rabbit. This we may
+ readily give credit to, from the known fact of our little kestrel and the
+ sparrow-hawk frequently flying off with a partridge, which is nearly three
+ times the weight of these rapacious little birds.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few more observations he arrives at the following conclusion: 'By
+ attending to the progressive increase in the weight of birds, from the
+ delicate little humming-bird up to the huge condor, we clearly discover
+ that the addition of a few ounces, pounds, or stones, is no obstacle to
+ the art of flying; the specific weight of birds avails nothing, for by
+ their possessing wings large enough, and sufficient power to work them,
+ they can accomplish the means of flying equally well upon all the various
+ scales and dimensions which we see in nature. Such being a fact, in the
+ name of reason and philosophy why shall not man, with a pair of artificial
+ wings, large enough, and with sufficient power to strike them upon the
+ air, be able to produce the same effect?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walker asserted definitely and with good ground that muscular effort
+ applied without mechanism is insufficient for human flight, but he states
+ that if an aeronautical boat were constructed so that a man could sit in
+ it in the same manner as when rowing, such a man would be able to bring
+ into play his whole bodily strength for the purpose of flight, and at the
+ same time would be able to get an additional advantage by exerting his
+ strength upon a lever. At first he concluded there must be expansion of
+ wings large enough to resist in a sufficient degree the specific gravity
+ of whatever is attached to them, but in the second edition of his work he
+ altered this to 'expansion of flat passive surfaces large enough to reduce
+ the force of gravity so as to float the machine upon the air with the man
+ in it.' The second requisite is strength enough to strike the wings with
+ sufficient force to complete the buoyancy and give a projectile motion to
+ the machine. Given these two requisites, Walker states definitely that
+ flying must be accomplished simply by muscular exertion. 'If we are secure
+ of these two requisites, and I am very confident we are, we may calculate
+ upon the success of flight with as much certainty as upon our walking.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walker appears to have gained some confidence from the experiments of a
+ certain M. Degen, a watchmaker of Vienna, who, according to the Monthly
+ Magazine of September, 1809, invented a machine by means of which a person
+ might raise himself into the air. The said machine, according to the
+ magazine, was formed of two parachutes which might be folded up or
+ extended at pleasure, while the person who worked them was placed in the
+ centre. This account, however, was rather misleading, for the magazine
+ carefully avoided mention of a balloon to which the inventor fixed his
+ wings or parachutes. Walker, knowing nothing of the balloon, concluded
+ that Degen actually raised himself in the air, though he is doubtful of
+ the assertion that Degen managed to fly in various directions, especially
+ against the wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walker, after considering Degen and all his works, proceeds to detail his
+ own directions for the construction of a flying machine, these being as
+ follows: 'Make a car of as light material as possible, but with sufficient
+ strength to support a man in it; provide a pair of wings about four feet
+ each in length; let them be horizontally expanded and fastened upon the
+ top edge of each side of the car, with two joints each, so as to admit of
+ a vertical motion to the wings, which motion may be effected by a man
+ sitting and working an upright lever in the middle of the car. Extend in
+ the front of the car a flat surface of silk, which must be stretched out
+ and kept fixed in a passive state; there must be the same fixed behind the
+ car; these two surfaces must be perfectly equal in length and breadth and
+ large enough to cover a sufficient quantity of air to support the whole
+ weight as nearly in equilibrium as possible, thus we shall have a great
+ sustaining power in those passive surfaces and the active wings will
+ propel the car forward.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A description of how to launch this car is subsequently given: 'It becomes
+ necessary,' says the theorist, 'that I should give directions how it may
+ be launched upon the air, which may be done by various means; perhaps the
+ following method may be found to answer as well as any: Fix a poll upright
+ in the earth, about twenty feet in height, with two open collars to admit
+ another poll to slide upwards through them; let there be a sliding
+ platform made fast upon the top of the sliding poll; place the car with a
+ man in it upon the platform, then raise the platform to the height of
+ about thirty feet by means of the sliding poll, let the sliding poll and
+ platform suddenly fall down, the car will then be left upon the air, and
+ by its pressing the air a projectile force will instantly propel the car
+ forward; the man in the car must then strike the active wings briskly upon
+ the air, which will so increase the projectile force as to become superior
+ to the force of gravitation, and if he inclines his weight a little
+ backward, the projectile impulse will drive the car forward in an
+ ascending direction. When the car is brought to a sufficient altitude to
+ clear the tops of hills, trees, buildings, etc., the man, by sitting a
+ little forward on his seat, will then bring the wings upon a horizontal
+ plane, and by continuing the action of the wings he will be impelled
+ forward in that direction. To descend, he must desist from striking the
+ wings, and hold them on a level with their joints; the car will then
+ gradually come down, and when it is within five or six feet of the ground
+ the man must instantly strike the wings downwards, and sit as far back as
+ he can; he will by this means check the projectile force, and cause the
+ car to alight very gently with a retrograde motion. The car, when up in
+ the air, may be made to turn to the right or to the left by forcing out
+ one of the fins, having one about eighteen inches long placed vertically
+ on each side of the car for that purpose, or perhaps merely by the man
+ inclining the weight of his body to one side.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having stated how the thing is to be done, Walker is careful to explain
+ that when it is done there will be in it some practical use, notably in
+ respect of the conveyance of mails and newspapers, or the saving of life
+ at sea, or for exploration, etc. It might even reduce the number of horses
+ kept by man for his use, by means of which a large amount of land might be
+ set free for the growth of food for human consumption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of his work Walker admits the idea of steam power for driving a
+ flying machine in place of simple human exertion, but he, like Cayley, saw
+ a drawback to this in the weight of the necessary engine. On the whole, he
+ concluded, navigation of the air by means of engine power would be mostly
+ confined to the construction of navigable balloons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As already noted, Walker's work is not over practical, and the foregoing
+ extract includes the most practical part of it; the rest is a series of
+ dissertations on bird flight, in which, evidently, the portrait painter's
+ observations were far less thorough than those of da Vinci or Borelli.
+ Taken on the whole, Walker was a man with a hobby; he devoted to it much
+ time and thought, but it remained a hobby, nevertheless. His observations
+ have proved useful enough to give him a place among the early students of
+ flight, but a great drawback to his work is the lack of practical
+ experiment, by means of which alone real advance could be made; for, as
+ Cayley admitted, theory and practice are very widely separated in the
+ study of aviation, and the whole history of flight is a matter of
+ unexpected results arising from scarcely foreseen causes, together with
+ experiment as patient as daring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE MIDDLE NINETEENTH CENTURY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Both Cayley and Walker were theorists, though Cayley supported his
+ theoretical work with enough of practice to show that he studied along
+ right lines; a little after his time there came practical men who brought
+ to being the first machine which actually flew by the application of
+ power. Before their time, however, mention must be made of the work of
+ George Pocock of Bristol, who, somewhere about 1840 invented what was
+ described as a 'kite carriage,' a vehicle which carried a number of
+ persons, and obtained its motive power from a large kite. It is on record
+ that, in the year 1846 one of these carriages conveyed sixteen people from
+ Bristol to London. Another device of Pocock's was what he called a
+ 'buoyant sail,' which was in effect a man-lifting kite, and by means of
+ which a passenger was actually raised 100 yards from the ground, while the
+ inventor's son scaled a cliff 200 feet in height by means of one of these,
+ 'buoyant sails.' This constitutes the first definitely recorded experiment
+ in the use of man-lifting kites. A History of the Charvolant or
+ Kite-carriage, published in London in 1851, states that 'an experiment of
+ a bold and very novel character was made upon an extensive down, where a
+ large wagon with a considerable load was drawn along, whilst this huge
+ machine at the same time carried an observer aloft in the air, realising
+ almost the romance of flying.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Experimenting, two years after the appearance of the 'kite-carriage,' on
+ the helicopter principle, W. H. Phillips constructed a model machine which
+ weighed two pounds; this was fitted with revolving fans, driven by the
+ combustion of charcoal, nitre, and gypsum, producing steam which,
+ discharging into the air, caused the fans to revolve. The inventor stated
+ that 'all being arranged, the steam was up in a few seconds, when the
+ whole apparatus spun around like any top, and mounted into the air faster
+ than a bird; to what height it ascended I had no means of ascertaining;
+ the distance travelled was across two fields, where, after a long search,
+ I found the machine minus the wings, which had been torn off in contact
+ with the ground.' This could hardly be described as successful flight, but
+ it was an advance in the construction of machines on the helicopter
+ principle, and it was the first steam-driven model of the type which
+ actually flew. The invention, however, was not followed up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Phillips, we come to the great figures of the middle nineteenth
+ century, W. S. Henson and John Stringfellow. Cayley had shown, in 1809,
+ how success might be attained by developing the idea of the plane surface
+ so driven as to take advantage of the resistance offered by the air, and
+ Henson, who as early as 1840 was experimenting with model gliders and
+ light steam engines, evolved and patented an idea for something very
+ nearly resembling the monoplane of the early twentieth century. His
+ patent, No. 9478, of the year 1842 explains the principle of the machine
+ as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order that the description hereafter given be rendered clear, I will
+ first shortly explain the principle on which the machine is constructed.
+ If any light and flat or nearly flat article be projected or thrown
+ edgewise in a slightly inclined position, the same will rise on the air
+ till the force exerted is expended, when the article so thrown or
+ projected will descend; and it will readily be conceived that, if the
+ article so projected or thrown possessed in itself a continuous power or
+ force equal to that used in throwing or projecting it, the article would
+ continue to ascend so long as the forward part of the surface was upwards
+ in respect to the hinder part, and that such article, when the power was
+ stopped, or when the inclination was reversed, would descend by gravity
+ aided by the force of the power contained in the article, if the power be
+ continued, thus imitating the flight of a bird.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the first part of my invention consists of an apparatus so
+ constructed as to offer a very extended surface or plane of a light yet
+ strong construction, which will have the same relation to the general
+ machine which the extended wings of a bird have to the body when a bird is
+ skimming in the air; but in place of the movement or power for onward
+ progress being obtained by movement of the extended surface or plane, as
+ is the case with the wings of birds, I apply suitable paddle-wheels or
+ other proper mechanical propellers worked by a steam or other sufficiently
+ light engine, and thus obtain the requisite power for onward movement to
+ the plane or extended surface; and in order to give control as to the
+ upward and downward direction of such a machine I apply a tail to the
+ extended surface which is capable of being inclined or raised, so that
+ when the power is acting to propel the machine, by inclining the tail
+ upwards, the resistance offered by the air will cause the machine to rise
+ on the air; and, on the contrary, when the inclination of the tail is
+ reversed, the machine will immediately be propelled downwards, and pass
+ through a plane more or less inclined to the horizon as the inclination of
+ the tail is greater or less; and in order to guide the machine as to the
+ lateral direction which it shall take, I apply a vertical rudder or second
+ tail, and, according as the same is inclined in one direction or the
+ other, so will be the direction of the machine.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The machine in question was very large, and differed very little from the
+ modern monoplane; the materials were to be spars of bamboo and hollow
+ wood, with diagonal wire bracing. The surface of the planes was to amount
+ to 4,500 square feet, and the tail, triangular in form (here modern
+ practice diverges) was to be 1,500 square feet. The inventor estimated
+ that there would be a sustaining power of half a pound per square foot,
+ and the driving power was to be supplied by a steam engine of 25 to 30
+ horse-power, driving two six-bladed propellers. Henson was largely
+ dependent on Stringfellow for many details of his design, more especially
+ with regard to the construction of the engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The publication of the patent attracted a great amount of public
+ attention, and the illustrations in contemporary journals, representing
+ the machine flying over the pyramids and the Channel, anticipated fact by
+ sixty years and more; the scientific world was divided, as it was up to
+ the actual accomplishment of flight, as to the value of the invention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strongfellow and Henson became associated after the conception of their
+ design, with an attorney named Colombine, and a Mr Marriott, and between
+ the four of them a project grew for putting the whole thing on a
+ commercial basis&mdash;Henson and Stringfellow were to supply the idea;
+ Marriott, knowing a member of Parliament, would be useful in getting a
+ company incorporated, and Colombine would look after the purely legal side
+ of the business. Thus an application was made by Mr Roebuck, Marriott's
+ M.P., for an act of incorporation for 'The Aerial Steam Transit Company,'
+ Roebuck moving to bring in the bill on the 24th of March, 1843. The
+ prospectus, calling for funds for the development of the invention, makes
+ interesting reading at this stage of aeronautical development; it was as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ PROPOSAL.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For subscriptions of sums of L100, in furtherance of an Extraordinary
+ Invention not at present safe to be developed by securing the necessary
+ Patents, for which three times the sum advanced, namely, L300, is
+ conditionally guaranteed for each subscription on February 1, 1844, in
+ case of the anticipations being realised, with the option of the
+ subscribers being shareholders for the large amount if so desired, but not
+ otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-An Invention has recently been discovered,
+ which if ultimately successful will be without parallel even in the age
+ which introduced to the world the wonderful effects of gas and of steam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The discovery is of that peculiar nature, so simple in principle yet so
+ perfect in all the ingredients required for complete and permanent
+ success, that to promulgate it at present would wholly defeat its
+ development by the immense competition which would ensue, and the views of
+ the originator be entirely frustrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This work, the result of years of labour and study, presents a wonderful
+ instance of the adaptation of laws long since proved to the scientific
+ world combined with established principles so judiciously and carefully
+ arranged, as to produce a discovery perfect in all its parts and alike in
+ harmony with the laws of Nature and of science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Invention has been subjected to several tests and examinations and the
+ results are most satisfactory so much so that nothing but the completion
+ of the undertaking is required to determine its practical operation, which
+ being once established its utility is undoubted, as it would be a
+ necessary possession of every empire, and it were hardly too much to say,
+ of every individual of competent means in the civilised world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its qualities and capabilities are so vast that it were impossible and,
+ even if possible, unsafe to develop them further, but some idea may be
+ formed from the fact that as a preliminary measure patents in Great
+ Britain Ireland, Scotland, the Colonies, France, Belgium, and the United
+ States, and every other country where protection to the first discoveries
+ of an Invention is granted, will of necessity be immediately obtained, and
+ by the time these are perfected, which it is estimated will be in the
+ month of February, the Invention will be fit for Public Trial, but until
+ the Patents are sealed any further disclosure would be most dangerous to
+ the principle on which it is based.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these circumstances, it is proposed to raise an immediate sum of
+ L2,000 in furtherance of the Projector's views, and as some protection to
+ the parties who may embark in the matter, that this is not a visionary
+ plan for objects imperfectly considered, Mr Colombine, to whom the secret
+ has been confided, has allowed his name to be used on the occasion, and
+ who will if referred to corroborate this statement, and convince any
+ inquirer of the reasonable prospects of large pecuniary results following
+ the development of the Invention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, therefore, intended to raise the sum of L2,000 in twenty sums of
+ L100 each (of which any subscriber may take one or more not exceeding five
+ in number to be held by any individual) the amount of which is to be paid
+ into the hands of Mr Colombine as General Manager of the concern to be by
+ him appropriated in procuring the several Patents and providing the
+ expenses incidental to the works in progress. For each of which sums of
+ L100 it is intended and agreed that twelve months after the 1st February
+ next, the several parties subscribing shall receive as an equivalent for
+ the risk to be run the sum of L300 for each of the sums of L100 now
+ subscribed, provided when the time arrives the Patents shall be found to
+ answer the purposes intended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As full and complete success is alone looked to, no moderate or imperfect
+ benefit is to be anticipated, but the work, if it once passes the
+ necessary ordeal, to which inventions of every kind must be first subject,
+ will then be regarded by every one as the most astonishing discovery of
+ modern times; no half success can follow, and therefore the full nature of
+ the risk is immediately ascertained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intention is to work and prove the Patent by collective instead of
+ individual aid as less hazardous at first end more advantageous in the
+ result for the Inventor, as well as others, by having the interest of
+ several engaged in aiding one common object&mdash;the development of a
+ Great Plan. The failure is not feared, yet as perfect success might, by
+ possibility, not ensue, it is necessary to provide for that result, and
+ the parties concerned make it a condition that no return of the subscribed
+ money shall be required, if the Patents shall by any unforeseen
+ circumstances not be capable of being worked at all; against which, the
+ first application of the money subscribed, that of securing the Patents,
+ affords a reasonable security, as no one without solid grounds would think
+ of such an expenditure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perfectly needless to state that no risk or responsibility of any
+ kind can arise beyond the payment of the sum to be subscribed under any
+ circumstances whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the Patents shall be perfected and proved it is contemplated,
+ so far as may be found practicable, to further the great object in view a
+ Company shall be formed but respecting which it is unnecessary to state
+ further details, than that a preference will be given to all those persons
+ who now subscribe, and to whom shares shall be appropriated according to
+ the larger amount (being three times the sum to be paid by each person)
+ contemplated to be returned as soon as the success of the Invention shall
+ have been established, at their option, or the money paid, whereby the
+ Subscriber will have the means of either withdrawing with a large
+ pecuniary benefit, or by continuing his interest in the concern lay the
+ foundation for participating in the immense benefit which must follow the
+ success of the plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not pretended to conceal that the project is a speculation&mdash;all
+ parties believe that perfect success, and thence incalculable advantage of
+ every kind, will follow to every individual joining in this great
+ undertaking; but the Gentlemen engaged in it wish that no concealment of
+ the consequences, perfect success, or possible failure, should in the
+ slightest degree be inferred. They believe this will prove the germ of a
+ mighty work, and in that belief call for the operation of others with no
+ visionary object, but a legitimate one before them, to attain that point
+ where perfect success will be secured from their combined exertions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All applications to be made to D. E. Colombine, Esquire, 8 Carlton
+ Chambers, Regent Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The applications did not materialise, as was only to be expected in view
+ of the vagueness of the proposals. Colombine did some advertising, and Mr
+ Roebuck expressed himself as unwilling to proceed further in the venture.
+ Henson experimented with models to a certain extent, while Stringfellow
+ looked for funds for the construction of a full-sized monoplane. In
+ November of 1843 he suggested that he and Henson should construct a large
+ model out of their own funds. On Henson's suggestion Colombine and
+ Marriott were bought out as regards the original patent, and Stringfellow
+ and Henson entered into an agreement and set to work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their work is briefly described in a little pamphlet by F. J.
+ Stringfellow, entitled A few Remarks on what has been done with
+ screw-propelled Aero-plane Machines from 1809 to 1892. The author writes
+ with regard to the work that his father and Henson undertook:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They commenced the construction of a small model operated by a spring,
+ and laid down the larger model 20 ft. from tip to tip of planes, 3 1/2 ft.
+ wide, giving 70 ft. of sustaining surface, about 10 more in the tail. The
+ making of this model required great consideration; various supports for
+ the wings were tried, so as to combine lightness with firmness, strength
+ and rigidity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The planes were staid from three sets of fish-shaped masts, and rigged
+ square and firm by flat steel rigging. The engine and boiler were put in
+ the car to drive two screw-propellers, right and left-handed, 3 ft. in
+ diameter, with four blades each, occupying three-quarters of the area of
+ the circumference, set at an angle of 60 degrees. A considerable time was
+ spent in perfecting the motive power. Compressed air was tried and
+ abandoned. Tappets, cams, and eccentrics were all tried, to work the slide
+ valve, to obtain the best results. The piston rod of engine passed through
+ both ends of the cylinder, and with long connecting rods worked direct on
+ the crank of the propellers. From memorandum of experiments still
+ preserved the following is a copy of one: June, 27th, 1845, water 50 ozs.,
+ spirit 10 ozs., lamp lit 8.45, gauge moves 8.46, engine started 8.48 (100
+ lb. pressure), engine stopped 8.57, worked 9 minutes, 2,288 revolutions,
+ average 254 per minute. No priming, 40 ozs. water consumed, propulsion
+ (thrust of propellers), 5 lbs. 4 1/2 ozs. at commencement, steady, 4 lbs.
+ 1/2 oz., 57 revolutions to 1 oz. water, steam cut off one-third from
+ beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The diameter of cylinder of engine was 1 1/2 inch, length of stroke 3
+ inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In the meantime an engine was also made for the smaller model, and a wing
+ action tried, but with poor results. The time was mostly devoted to the
+ larger model, and in 1847 a tent was erected on Bala Down, about two miles
+ from Chard, and the model taken up one night by the workmen. The
+ experiments were not so favourable as was expected. The machine could not
+ support itself for any distance, but, when launched off, gradually
+ descended, although the power and surface should have been ample; indeed,
+ according to latest calculations, the thrust should have carried more than
+ three times the weight, for there was a thrust of 5 lbs. from the
+ propellers, and a surface of over 70 square feet to sustain under 30 lbs.,
+ but necessary speed was lacking.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stringfellow himself explained the failure as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There stood our aerial protegee in all her purity&mdash;too delicate, too
+ fragile, too beautiful for this rough world; at least those were my ideas
+ at the time, but little did I think how soon it was to be realised. I soon
+ found, before I had time to introduce the spark, a drooping in the wings,
+ a flagging in all the parts. In less than ten minutes the machine was
+ saturated with wet from a deposit of dew, so that anything like a trial
+ was impossible by night. I did not consider we could get the silk tight
+ and rigid enough. Indeed, the framework altogether was too weak. The
+ steam-engine was the best part. Our want of success was not for want of
+ power or sustaining surface, but for want of proper adaptation of the
+ means to the end of the various parts.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henson, who had spent a considerable amount of money in these experimental
+ constructions, consoled himself for failure by venturing into matrimony;
+ in 1849 he went to America, leaving Stringfellow to continue experimenting
+ alone. From 1846 to 1848 Stringfellow worked on what is really an
+ epoch-making item in the history of aeronautics&mdash;the first
+ engine-driven aeroplane which actually flew. The machine in question had a
+ 10 foot span, and was 2 ft. across in the widest part of the wing; the
+ length of tail was 3 ft. 6 ins., and the span of tail in the widest part
+ 22 ins., the total sustaining area being about 14 sq. ft. The motive power
+ consisted of an engine with a cylinder of three-quarter inch diameter and
+ a two-inch stroke; between this and the crank shaft was a bevelled gear
+ giving three revolutions of the propellers to every stroke of the engine;
+ the propellers, right and left screw, were four-bladed and 16 inches in
+ diameter. The total weight of the model with engine was 8 lbs. Its
+ successful flight is ascribed to the fact that Stringfellow curved the
+ wings, giving them rigid front edges and flexible trailing edges, as
+ suggested long before both by Da Vinci and Borelli, but never before put
+ into practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr F. J. Stringfellow, in the pamphlet quoted above, gives the best
+ account of the flight of this model: 'My father had constructed another
+ small model which was finished early in 1848, and having the loan of a
+ long room in a disused lace factory, early in June the small model was
+ moved there for experiments. The room was about 22 yards long and from 10
+ to 12 ft. high.... The inclined wire for starting the machine occupied
+ less than half the length of the room and left space at the end for the
+ machine to clear the floor. In the first experiment the tail was set at
+ too high an angle, and the machine rose too rapidly on leaving the wire.
+ After going a few yards it slid back as if coming down an inclined plane,
+ at such an angle that the point of the tail struck the ground and was
+ broken. The tail was repaired and set at a smaller angle. The steam was
+ again got up, and the machine started down the wire, and, upon reaching
+ the point of self-detachment, it gradually rose until it reached the
+ farther end of the room, striking a hole in the canvas placed to stop it.
+ In experiments the machine flew well, when rising as much as one in seven.
+ The late Rev. J. Riste, Esq., lace manufacturer, Northcote Spicer, Esq.,
+ J. Toms, Esq., and others witnessed experiments. Mr Marriatt, late of the
+ San Francisco News Letter brought down from London Mr Ellis, the then
+ lessee of Cremorne Gardens, Mr Partridge, and Lieutenant Gale, the
+ aeronaut, to witness experiments. Mr Ellis offered to construct a covered
+ way at Cremorne for experiments. Mr Stringfellow repaired to Cremorne, but
+ not much better accommodations than he had at home were provided, owing to
+ unfulfilled engagement as to room. Mr Stringfellow was preparing for
+ departure when a party of gentlemen unconnected with the Gardens begged to
+ see an experiment, and finding them able to appreciate his endeavours, he
+ got up steam and started the model down the wire. When it arrived at the
+ spot where it should leave the wire it appeared to meet with some
+ obstruction, and threatened to come to the ground, but it soon recovered
+ itself and darted off in as fair a flight as it was possible to make at a
+ distance of about 40 yards, where it was stopped by the canvas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Having now demonstrated the practicability of making a steam-engine fly,
+ and finding nothing but a pecuniary loss and little honour, this
+ experimenter rested for a long time, satisfied with what he had effected.
+ The subject, however, had to him special charms, and he still contemplated
+ the renewal of his experiments.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears that Stringfellow's interest did not revive sufficiently for
+ the continuance of the experiments until the founding of the Aeronautical
+ Society of Great Britain in 1866. Wenham's paper on Aerial Locomotion read
+ at the first meeting of the Society, which was held at the Society of Arts
+ under the Presidency of the Duke of Argyll, was the means of bringing
+ Stringfellow back into the field. It was Wenham's suggestion, in the first
+ place, that monoplane design should be abandoned for the superposition of
+ planes; acting on this suggestion Stringfellow constructed a model
+ triplane, and also designed a steam engine of slightly over one
+ horse-power, and a one horse-power copper boiler and fire box which,
+ although capable of sustaining a pressure of 500 lbs. to the square inch,
+ weighed only about 40 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both the engine and the triplane model were exhibited at the first
+ Aeronautical Exhibition held at the Crystal Palace in 1868. The triplane
+ had a supporting surface of 28 sq. ft.; inclusive of engine, boiler, fuel,
+ and water its total weight was under 12 lbs. The engine worked two 21 in.
+ propellers at 600 revolutions per minute, and developed 100 lbs. steam
+ pressure in five minutes, yielding one-third horse-power. Since no free
+ flight was allowed in the Exhibition, owing to danger from fire, the
+ triplane was suspended from a wire in the nave of the building, and it was
+ noted that, when running along the wire, the model made a perceptible
+ lift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A prize of L100 was awarded to the steam engine as the lightest steam
+ engine in proportion to its power. The engine and model together may be
+ reckoned as Stringfellow's best achievement. He used his L100 in
+ preparation for further experiments, but he was now an old man, and his
+ work was practically done. Both the triplane and the engine were
+ eventually bought for the Washington Museum; Stringfellow's earlier
+ models, together with those constructed by him in conjunction with Henson,
+ remain in this country in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Stringfellow died on December 13th, 1883. His place in the history of
+ aeronautics is at least equal to that of Cayley, and it may be said that
+ he laid the foundation of such work as was subsequently accomplished by
+ Maxim, Langley, and their fellows. It was the coming of the internal
+ combustion engine that rendered flight practicable, and had this prime
+ mover been available in John Stringfellow's day the Wright brothers'
+ achievement might have been antedated by half a century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. WENHAM, LE BRIS, AND SOME OTHERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There are few outstanding events in the development of aeronautics between
+ Stringfellow's final achievement and the work of such men as Lilienthal,
+ Pilcher, Montgomery, and their kind; in spite of this, the later middle
+ decades of the nineteenth century witnessed a considerable amount of spade
+ work both in England and in France, the two countries which led in the way
+ in aeronautical development until Lilienthal gave honour to Germany, and
+ Langley and Montgomery paved the way for the Wright Brothers in America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two abortive attempts characterised the sixties of last century in France.
+ As regards the first of these, it was carried out by three men, Nadar,
+ Ponton d'Amecourt, and De la Landelle, who conceived the idea of a
+ full-sized helicopter machine. D'Amecourt exhibited a steam model,
+ constructed in 1865, at the Aeronautical Society's Exhibition in 1868. The
+ engine was aluminium with cylinders of bronze, driving two screws placed
+ one above the other and rotating in Opposite directions, but the power was
+ not sufficient to lift the model. De la Landelle's principal achievement
+ consisted in the publication in 1863 of a book entitled Aviation which has
+ a certain historical value; he got out several designs for large machines
+ on the helicopter principle, but did little more until the three combined
+ in the attempt to raise funds for the construction of their full-sized
+ machine. Since the funds were not forthcoming, Nadar took to ballooning as
+ the means of raising money; apparently he found this substitute for real
+ flight sufficiently interesting to divert him from the study of the
+ helicopter principle, for the experiment went no further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other experimenter of this period, one Count d'Esterno, took out a
+ patent in 1864 for a soaring machine which allowed for alteration of the
+ angle of incidence of the wings in the manner that was subsequently
+ carried out by the Wright Brothers. It was not until 1883 that any attempt
+ was made to put this patent to practical use, and, as the inventor died
+ while it was under construction, it was never completed. D'Esterno was
+ also responsible for the production of a work entitled Du Vol des Oiseaux,
+ which is a very remarkable study of the flight of birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mention has already been made of the founding of the Aeronautical Society
+ of Great Britain, which, since 1918 has been the Royal Aeronautical
+ Society. 1866 witnessed the first meeting of the Society under the
+ Presidency of the Duke of Argyll, when in June, at the Society of Arts,
+ Francis Herbert Wenham read his now classic paper Aerial Locomotion.
+ Certain quotations from this will show how clearly Wenham had thought out
+ the problems connected with flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The first subject for consideration is the proportion of surface to
+ weight, and their combined effect in descending perpendicularly through
+ the atmosphere. The datum is here based upon the consideration of safety,
+ for it may sometimes be needful for a living being to drop passively,
+ without muscular effort. One square foot of sustaining surface for every
+ pound of the total weight will be sufficient for security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'According to Smeaton's table of atmospheric resistances, to produce a
+ force of one pound on a square foot, the wind must move against the plane
+ (or which is the same thing, the plane against the wind), at the rate of
+ twenty-two feet per second, or 1,320 feet per minute, equal to fifteen
+ miles per hour. The resistance of the air will now balance the weight on
+ the descending surface, and, consequently, it cannot exceed that speed.
+ Now, twenty-two feet per second is the velocity acquired at the end of a
+ fall of eight feet&mdash;a height from which a well-knit man or animal may
+ leap down without much risk of injury. Therefore, if a man with parachute
+ weigh together 143 lbs., spreading the same number of square feet of
+ surface contained in a circle fourteen and a half feet in diameter, he
+ will descend at perhaps an unpleasant velocity, but with safety to life
+ and limb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It is a remarkable fact how this proportion of wing-surface to weight
+ extends throughout a great variety of the flying portion of the animal
+ kingdom, even down to hornets, bees, and other insects. In some instances,
+ however, as in the gallinaceous tribe, including pheasants, this area is
+ somewhat exceeded, but they are known to be very poor fliers. Residing as
+ they do chiefly on the ground, their wings are only required for short
+ distances, or for raising them or easing their descent from their
+ roosting-places in forest trees, the shortness of their wings preventing
+ them from taking extended flights. The wing-surface of the common swallow
+ is rather more than in the ratio of two square feet per pound, but having
+ also great length of pinion, it is both swift and enduring in its flight.
+ When on a rapid course this bird is in the habit of furling its wings into
+ a narrow compass. The greater extent of surface is probably needful for
+ the continual variations of speed and instant stoppages for obtaining its
+ insect food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'On the other hand, there are some birds, particularly of the duck tribe,
+ whose wing-surface but little exceeds half a square foot, or seventy-two
+ inches per pound, yet they may be classed among the strongest and swiftest
+ of fliers. A weight of one pound, suspended from an area of this extent,
+ would acquire a velocity due to a fall of sixteen feet&mdash;a height
+ sufficient for the destruction or injury of most animals. But when the
+ plane is urged forward horizontally, in a manner analogous to the wings of
+ a bird during flight, the sustaining power is greatly influenced by the
+ form and arrangement of the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In the case of perpendicular descent, as a parachute, the sustaining
+ effect will be much the same, whatever the figure of the outline of the
+ superficies may be, and a circle perhaps affords the best resistance of
+ any. Take, for example, a circle of twenty square feet (as possessed by
+ the pelican) loaded with as many pounds. This, as just stated, will limit
+ the rate of perpendicular descent to 1,320 feet per minute. But instead of
+ a circle sixty-one inches in diameter, if the area is bounded by a
+ parallelogram ten feet long by two feet broad, and whilst at perfect
+ freedom to descend perpendicularly, let a force be applied exactly in a
+ horizontal direction, so as to carry it edgeways, with the long side
+ foremost, at a forward speed of thirty miles per hour&mdash;just double
+ that of its passive descent: the rate of fall under these conditions will
+ be decreased most remarkably, probably to less than one-fifteenth part, or
+ eighty-eight feet per minute, or one mile per hour.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again: 'It has before been shown how utterly inadequate the mere
+ perpendicular impulse of a plane is found to be in supporting a weight,
+ when there is no horizontal motion at the time. There is no material
+ weight of air to be acted upon, and it yields to the slightest force,
+ however great the velocity of impulse may be. On the other hand, suppose
+ that a large bird, in full flight, can make forty miles per hour, or 3,520
+ feet per minute, and performs one stroke per second. Now, during every
+ fractional portion of that stroke, the wing is acting upon and obtaining
+ an impulse from a fresh and undisturbed body of air; and if the vibration
+ of the wing is limited to an arc of two feet, this by no means represents
+ the small force of action that would be obtained when in a stationary
+ position, for the impulse is secured upon a stratum of fifty-eight feet in
+ length of air at each stroke. So that the conditions of weight of air for
+ obtaining support equally well apply to weight of air and its reaction in
+ producing forward impulse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So necessary is the acquirement of this horizontal speed, even in
+ commencing flight, that most heavy birds, when possible, rise against the
+ wind, and even run at the top of their speed to make their wings
+ available, as in the example of the eagle, mentioned at the commencement
+ of this paper. It is stated that the Arabs, on horseback, can approach
+ near enough to spear these birds, when on the plain, before they are able
+ to rise; their habit is to perch on an eminence, where possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The tail of a bird is not necessary for flight. A pigeon can fly
+ perfectly with this appendage cut short off; it probably performs an
+ important function in steering, for it is to be remarked, that most birds
+ that have either to pursue or evade pursuit are amply provided with this
+ organ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The foregoing reasoning is based upon facts, which tend to show that the
+ flight of the largest and heaviest of all birds is really performed with
+ but a small amount of force, and that man is endowed with sufficient
+ muscular power to enable him also to take individual and extended flights,
+ and that success is probably only involved in a question of suitable
+ mechanical adaptations. But if the wings are to be modelled in imitation
+ of natural examples, but very little consideration will serve to
+ demonstrate its utter impracticability when applied in these forms.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Wenham, one of the best theorists of his age. The Society with which
+ this paper connects his name has done work, between that time and the
+ present, of which the importance cannot be overestimated, and has been of
+ the greatest value in the development of aeronautics, both in theory and
+ experiment. The objects of the Society are to give a stronger impulse to
+ the scientific study of aerial navigation, to promote the intercourse of
+ those interested in the subject at home and abroad, and to give advice and
+ instruction to those who study the principles upon which aeronautical
+ science is based. From the date of its foundation the Society has given
+ special study to dynamic flight, putting this before ballooning. Its
+ library, its bureau of advice and information, and its meetings, all
+ assist in forwarding the study of aeronautics, and its twenty-three early
+ Annual Reports are of considerable value, containing as they do a large
+ amount of useful information on aeronautical subjects, and forming
+ practically the basis of aeronautical science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ante to Wenham, Stringfellow and the French experimenters already noted,
+ by some years, was Le Bris, a French sea captain, who appears to have
+ required only a thorough scientific training to have rendered him of equal
+ moment in the history of gliding flight with Lilienthal himself. Le Bris,
+ it appears, watched the albatross and deduced, from the manner in which it
+ supported itself in the air, that plane surfaces could be constructed and
+ arranged to support a man in like manner. Octave Chanute, himself a
+ leading exponent of gliding, gives the best description of Le Bris's
+ experiments in a work, Progress in Flying Machines, which, although
+ published as recently as I 1894, is already rare. Chanute draws from a
+ still rarer book, namely, De la Landelle's work published in 1884. Le Bris
+ himself, quoted by De la Landelle as speaking of his first visioning of
+ human flight, describes how he killed an albatross, and then&mdash;'I took
+ the wing of the albatross and exposed it to the breeze; and lo! in spite
+ of me it drew forward into the wind; notwithstanding my resistance it
+ tended to rise. Thus I had discovered the secret of the bird! I
+ comprehended the whole mystery of flight.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This apparently took place while at sea; later on Le Bris, returning to
+ France, designed and constructed an artificial albatross of sufficient
+ size to bear his own weight. The fact that he followed the bird outline as
+ closely as he did attests his lack of scientific training for his task,
+ while at the same time the success of the experiment was proof of his
+ genius. The body of his artificial bird, boat-shaped, was 13 1/2 ft. in
+ length, with a breadth of 4 ft. at the widest part. The material was cloth
+ stretched over a wooden framework; in front was a small mast rigged after
+ the manner of a ship's masts to which were attached poles and cords with
+ which Le Bris intended to work the wings. Each wing was 23 ft. in length,
+ giving a total supporting surface of nearly 220 sq. ft.; the weight of the
+ whole apparatus was only 92 pounds. For steering, both vertical and
+ horizontal, a hinged tail was provided, and the leading edge of each wing
+ was made flexible. In construction throughout, and especially in that of
+ the wings, Le Bris adhered as closely as possible to the original
+ albatross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He designed an ingenious kind of mechanism which he termed 'Rotules,'
+ which by means of two levers gave a rotary motion to the front edge of the
+ wings, and also permitted of their adjustment to various angles. The
+ inventor's idea was to stand upright in the body of the contrivance,
+ working the levers and cords with his hands, and with his feet on a pedal
+ by means of which the steering tail was to be worked. He anticipated that,
+ given a strong wind, he could rise into the air after the manner of an
+ albatross, without any need for flapping his wings, and the account of his
+ first experiment forms one of the most interesting incidents in the
+ history of flight. It is related in full in Chanute's work, from which the
+ present account is summarised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Le Bris made his first experiment on a main road near Douarnenez, at
+ Trefeuntec. From his observation of the albatross Le Bris concluded that
+ it was necessary to get some initial velocity in order to make the machine
+ rise; consequently on a Sunday morning, with a breeze of about 12 miles an
+ hour blowing down the road, he had his albatross placed on a cart and set
+ off, with a peasant driver, against the wind. At the outset the machine
+ was fastened to the cart by a rope running through the rails on which the
+ machine rested, and secured by a slip knot on Le Bris's own wrist, so that
+ only a jerk on his part was necessary to loosen the rope and set the
+ machine free. On each side walked an assistant holding the wings, and when
+ a turn of the road brought the machine full into the wind these men were
+ instructed to let go, while the driver increased the pace from a walk to a
+ trot. Le Bris, by pressure on the levers of the machine, raised the front
+ edges of his wings slightly; they took the wind almost instantly to such
+ an extent that the horse, relieved of a great part of the weight he had
+ been drawing, turned his trot into a gallop. Le Bris gave the jerk of the
+ rope that should have unfastened the slip knot, but a concealed nail on
+ the cart caught the rope, so that it failed to run. The lift of the
+ machine was such, however, that it relieved the horse of very nearly the
+ weight of the cart and driver, as well as that of Le Bris and his machine,
+ and in the end the rails of the cart gave way. Le Bris rose in the air,
+ the machine maintaining perfect balance and rising to a height of nearly
+ 300 ft., the total length of the glide being upwards of an eighth of a
+ mile. But at the last moment the rope which had originally fastened the
+ machine to the cart got wound round the driver's body, so that this
+ unfortunate dangled in the air under Le Bris and probably assisted in
+ maintaining the balance of the artificial albatross. Le Bris,
+ congratulating himself on his success, was prepared to enjoy just as long
+ a time in the air as the pressure of the wind would permit, but the howls
+ of the unfortunate driver at the end of the rope beneath him dispelled his
+ dreams; by working his levers he altered the angle of the front wing edges
+ so skilfully as to make a very successful landing indeed for the driver,
+ who, entirely uninjured, disentangled himself from the rope as soon as he
+ touched the ground, and ran off to retrieve his horse and cart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently his release made a difference in the centre of gravity, for Le
+ Bris could not manipulate his levers for further ascent; by skilful
+ manipulation he retarded the descent sufficiently to escape injury to
+ himself; the machine descended at an angle, so that one wing, striking the
+ ground in front of the other, received a certain amount of damage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may have been on account of the reluctance of this same or another
+ driver that Le Bris chose a different method of launching himself in
+ making a second experiment with his albatross. He chose the edge of a
+ quarry which had been excavated in a depression of the ground; here he
+ assembled his apparatus at the bottom of the quarry, and by means of a
+ rope was hoisted to a height of nearly 100 ft. from the quarry bottom,
+ this rope being attached to a mast which he had erected upon the edge of
+ the depression in which the quarry was situated. Thus hoisted, the
+ albatross was swung to face a strong breeze that blew inland, and Le Bris
+ manipulated his levers to give the front edges of his wings a downward
+ angle, so that only the top surfaces should take the wing pressure. Having
+ got his balance, he obtained a lifting angle of incidence on the wings by
+ means of his levers, and released the hook that secured the machine,
+ gliding off over the quarry. On the glide he met with the inevitable
+ upward current of air that the quarry and the depression in which it was
+ situated caused; this current upset the balance of the machine and flung
+ it to the bottom of the quarry, breaking it to fragments. Le Bris,
+ apparently as intrepid as ingenious, gripped the mast from which his
+ levers were worked, and, springing upward as the machine touched earth,
+ escaped with no more damage than a broken leg. But for the rebound of the
+ levers he would have escaped even this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interest of these experiments is enhanced by the fact that Le Bris was
+ a seafaring man who conducted them from love of the science which had
+ fired his imagination, and in so doing exhausted his own small means. It
+ was in 1855 that he made these initial attempts, and twelve years passed
+ before his persistence was rewarded by a public subscription made at Brest
+ for the purpose of enabling him to continue his experiments. He built a
+ second albatross, and on the advice of his friends ballasted it for flight
+ instead of travelling in it himself. It was not so successful as the
+ first, probably owing to the lack of human control while in flight; on one
+ of the trials a height of 150 ft. was attained, the glider being secured
+ by a thin rope and held so as to face into the wind. A glide of nearly an
+ eighth of a mile was made with the rope hanging slack, and, at the end of
+ this distance, a rise in the ground modified the force of the wind,
+ whereupon the machine settled down without damage. A further trial in a
+ gusty wind resulted in the complete destruction of this second machine; Le
+ Bris had no more funds, no further subscriptions were likely to
+ materialise, and so the experiments of this first exponent of the art of
+ gliding (save for Besnier and his kind) came to an end. They constituted a
+ notable achievement, and undoubtedly Le Bris deserves a better place than
+ has been accorded him in the ranks of the early experimenters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contemporary with him was Charles Spencer, the first man to practice
+ gliding in England. His apparatus consisted of a pair of wings with a
+ total area of 30 sq. ft., to which a tail and body were attached. The
+ weight of this apparatus was some 24 lbs., and, launching himself on it
+ from a small eminence, as was done later by Lilienthal in his experiments,
+ the inventor made flights of over 120 feet. The glider in question was
+ exhibited at the Aeronautical Exhibition of 1868.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. THE AGE OF THE GIANTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Until the Wright Brothers definitely solved the problem of flight and
+ virtually gave the aeroplane its present place in aeronautics, there were
+ three definite schools of experiment. The first of these was that which
+ sought to imitate nature by means of the ornithopter or flapping-wing
+ machines directly imitative of bird flight; the second school was that
+ which believed in the helicopter or lifting screw; the third and
+ eventually successful school is that which followed up the principle
+ enunciated by Cayley, that of opposing a plane surface to the resistance
+ of the air by supplying suitable motive power to drive it at the requisite
+ angle for support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Engineering problems generally go to prove that too close an imitation of
+ nature in her forms of recipro-cating motion is not advantageous; it is
+ impossible to copy the minutiae of a bird's wing effectively, and the bird
+ in flight depends on the tiniest details of its feathers just as much as
+ on the general principle on which the whole wing is constructed. Bird
+ flight, however, has attracted many experimenters, including even
+ Lilienthal; among others may be mentioned F. W. Brearey, who invented what
+ he called the 'Pectoral cord,' which stored energy on each upstroke of the
+ artificial wing; E. P. Frost; Major R. Moore, and especially Hureau de
+ Villeneuve, a most enthusiastic student of this form of flight, who began
+ his experiments about 1865, and altogether designed and made nearly 300
+ artificial birds, one of his later constructions was a machine in bird
+ form with a wing span of about 50 ft.; the motive power for this was
+ supplied by steam from a boiler which, being stationary on the ground, was
+ connected by a length of hose to the machine. De Villeneuve, turning on
+ steam for his first trial, obtained sufficient power to make the wings
+ beat very forcibly; with the inventor on the machine the latter rose
+ several feet into the air, whereupon de Villeneuve grew nervous and turned
+ off the steam supply. The machine fell to the earth, breaking one of its
+ wings, and it does not appear that de Villeneuve troubled to reconstruct
+ it. This experiment remains as the greatest success yet achieved by any
+ machine constructed on the ornithopter principle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be that, as forecasted by the prophet Wells, the flapping-wing
+ machine will yet come to its own and compete with the aeroplane in
+ efficiency. Against this, however, are the practical advantages of the
+ rotary mechanism of the aeroplane propeller as compared with the movement
+ of a bird's wing, which, according to Marey, moves in a figure of eight.
+ The force derived from a propeller is of necessity continual, while it is
+ equally obvious that that derived from a flapping movement is
+ intermittent, and, in the recovery of a wing after completion of one
+ stroke for the next, there is necessarily a certain cessation, if not
+ loss, of power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matter of experiment along any lines in connection with aviation is
+ primarily one of hard cash. Throughout the whole history of flight up to
+ the outbreak of the European war development has been handicapped on the
+ score of finance, and, since the arrival of the aeroplane, both
+ ornithopter and helicopter schools have been handicapped by this
+ consideration. Thus serious study of the efficiency of wings in imitation
+ of those of the living bird has not been carried to a point that might win
+ success for this method of propulsion. Even Wilbur Wright studied this
+ subject and propounded certain theories, while a later and possibly more
+ scientific student, F. W. Lanchester, has also contributed empirical
+ conclusions. Another and earlier student was Lawrence Hargrave, who made a
+ wing-propelled model which achieved successful flight, and in 1885 was
+ exhibited before the Royal Society of New South Wales. Hargrave called the
+ principle on which his propeller worked that of a 'Trochoided plane'; it
+ was, in effect, similar to the feathering of an oar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hargrave, to diverge for a brief while from the machine to the man, was
+ one who, although he achieved nothing worthy of special remark,
+ contributed a great deal of painstaking work to the science of flight. He
+ made a series of experiments with man-lifting kites in addition to making
+ a study of flapping-wing flight. It cannot be said that he set forth any
+ new principle; his work was mainly imitative, but at the same time by
+ developing ideas originated in great measure by others he helped toward
+ the solution of the problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attempts at flight on the helicopter principle consist in the work of De
+ la Landelle and others already mentioned. The possibility of flight by
+ this method is modified by a very definite disadvantage of which lovers of
+ the helicopter seem to take little account. It is always claimed for a
+ machine of this type that it possesses great advantages both in rising and
+ in landing, since, if it were effective, it would obviously be able to
+ rise from and alight on any ground capable of containing its own bulk; a
+ further advantage claimed is that the helicopter would be able to remain
+ stationary in the air, maintaining itself in any position by the vertical
+ lift of its propeller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These potential assets do not take into consideration the fact that
+ efficiency is required not only in rising, landing, and remaining
+ stationary in the air, but also in actual flight. It must be evident that
+ if a certain amount of the motive force is used in maintaining the machine
+ off the ground, that amount of force is missing from the total of
+ horizontal driving power. Again, it is often assumed by advocates of this
+ form of flight that the rapidity of climb of the helicopter would be far
+ greater than that of the driven plane; this view overlooks the fact that
+ the maintenance of aerodynamic support would claim the greater part of the
+ engine-power; the rate of ascent would be governed by the amount of power
+ that could be developed surplus to that required for maintenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is best explained by actual figures: assuming that a propeller 15 ft.
+ in diameter is used, almost 50 horse-power would be required to get an
+ upward lift of 1,000 pounds; this amount of horse-power would be
+ continually absorbed in maintaining the machine in the air at any given
+ level; for actual lift from one level to another at a speed of eleven feet
+ per second a further 20 horse-power would be required, which means that 70
+ horse-power must be constantly provided for; this absorption of power in
+ the mere maintenance of aero-dynamic support is a permanent drawback.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attraction of the helicopter lies, probably, in the ease with which
+ flight is demonstrated by means of models constructed on this principle,
+ but one truism with regard to the principles of flight is that the
+ problems change remarkably, and often unexpectedly, with the size of the
+ machine constructed for experiment. Berriman, in a brief but very
+ interesting manual entitled Principles of Flight, assumed that 'there is a
+ significant dimension of which the effective area is an expression of the
+ second power, while the weight became an expression of the third power.
+ Then once again we have the two-thirds power law militating against the
+ successful construction of large helicopters, on the ground that the
+ essential weight increases disproportionately fast to the effective area.
+ From a consideration of the structural features of propellers it is
+ evident that this particular relationship does not apply in practice, but
+ it seems reasonable that some such governing factor should exist as an
+ explanation of the apparent failure of all full-sized machines that have
+ been constructed. Among models there is nothing more strikingly successful
+ than the toy helicopter, in which the essential weight is so small
+ compared with the effective area.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De la Landelle's work, already mentioned, was carried on a few years later
+ by another Frenchman, Castel, who constructed a machine with eight
+ propellers arranged in two fours and driven by a compressed air motor or
+ engine. The model with which Castel experimented had a total weight of
+ only 49 lbs.; it rose in the air and smashed itself by driving against a
+ wall, and the inventor does not seem to have proceeded further.
+ Contemporary with Castel was Professor Forlanini, whose design was for a
+ machine very similar to de la Landelle's, with two superposed screws. This
+ machine ranks as the second on the helicopter principle to achieve flight;
+ it remained in the air for no less than the third of a minute in one of
+ its trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later experimenters in this direction were Kress, a German; Professor
+ Wellner, an Austrian; and W. R. Kimball, an American. Kress, like most
+ Germans, set to the development of an idea which others had originated; he
+ followed de la Landelle and Forlanini by fitting two superposed propellers
+ revolving in opposite directions, and with this machine he achieved good
+ results as regards horse-power to weight; Kimball, it appears, did not get
+ beyond the rubber-driven model stage, and any success he may have achieved
+ was modified by the theory enunciated by Berriman and quoted above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Comparing these two schools of thought, the helicopter and bird-flight
+ schools, it appears that the latter has the greater chance of eventual
+ success&mdash;that is, if either should ever come into competition with
+ the aeroplane as effective means of flight. So far, the aeroplane holds
+ the field, but the whole science of flight is so new and so full of
+ unexpected developments that this is no reason for assuming that other
+ means may not give equal effect, when money and brains are diverted from
+ the driven plane to a closer imitation of natural flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverting from non-success to success, from consideration of the two
+ methods mentioned above to the direction in which practical flight has
+ been achieved, it is to be noted that between the time of Le Bris,
+ Stringfellow, and their contemporaries, and the nineties of last century,
+ there was much plodding work carried out with little visible result, more
+ especially so far as English students were concerned. Among the incidents
+ of those years is one of the most pathetic tragedies in the whole history
+ of aviation, that of Alphonse Penaud, who, in his thirty years of life,
+ condensed the experience of his predecessors and combined it with his own
+ genius to state in a published patent what the aeroplane of to-day should
+ be. Consider the following abstract of Penaud's design as published in his
+ patent of 1876, and comparison of this with the aeroplane that now exists
+ will show very few divergences except for those forced on the inventor by
+ the fact that the internal combustion engine had not then developed. The
+ double surfaced planes were to be built with wooden ribs and arranged with
+ a slight dihedral angle; there was to be a large aspect ratio and the
+ wings were cambered as in Stringfellow's later models. Provision was made
+ for warping the wings while in flight, and the trailing edges were so
+ designed as to be capable of upward twist while the machine was in the
+ air. The planes were to be placed above the car, and provision was even
+ made for a glass wind-screen to give protection to the pilot during
+ flight. Steering was to be accomplished by means of lateral and vertical
+ planes forming a tail; these controlled by a single lever corresponding to
+ the 'joy stick' of the present day plane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Penaud conceived this machine as driven by two propellers; alternatively
+ these could be driven by petrol or steam-fed motor, and the centre of
+ gravity of the machine while in flight was in the front fifth of the
+ wings. Penaud estimated from 20 to 30 horse-power sufficient to drive this
+ machine, weighing with pilot and passenger 2,600 lbs., through the air at
+ a speed of 60 miles an hour, with the wings set at an angle of incidence
+ of two degrees. So complete was the design that it even included
+ instruments, consisting of an aneroid, pressure indicator, an anemometer,
+ a compass, and a level. There, with few alterations, is the aeroplane as
+ we know it&mdash;and Penaud was twenty-seven when his patent was
+ published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For three years longer he worked, experimenting with models, contributing
+ essays and other valuable data to French papers on the subject of
+ aeronautics. His gains were ill health, poverty, and neglect, and at the
+ age of thirty a pistol shot put an end to what had promised to be one of
+ the most brilliant careers in all the history of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years before the publication of Penaud's patent Thomas Moy
+ experimented at the Crystal Palace with a twin-propelled aeroplane, steam
+ driven, which seems to have failed mainly because the internal combustion
+ engine had not yet come to give sufficient power for weight. Moy anchored
+ his machine to a pole running on a prepared circular track; his engine
+ weighed 80 lbs. and, developing only three horse-power, gave him a speed
+ of 12 miles an hour. He himself estimated that the machine would not rise
+ until he could get a speed of 35 miles an hour, and his estimate was
+ correct. Two six-bladed propellers were placed side by side between the
+ two main planes of the machine, which was supported on a triangular
+ wheeled undercarriage and steered by fairly conventional tail planes. Moy
+ realised that he could not get sufficient power to achieve flight, but he
+ went on experimenting in various directions, and left much data concerning
+ his experiments which has not yet been deemed worthy of publication, but
+ which still contains a mass of information that is of practical utility,
+ embodying as it does a vast amount of painstaking work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Penaud and Moy were followed by Goupil, a Frenchman, who, in place of
+ attempting to fit a motor to an aeroplane, experimented by making the wind
+ his motor. He anchored his machine to the ground, allowing it two feet of
+ lift, and merely waited for a wind to come along and lift it. The machine
+ was stream lined, and the wings, curving as in the early German patterns
+ of war aeroplanes, gave a total lifting surface of about 290 sq. ft.
+ Anchored to the ground and facing a wind of 19 feet per second, Goupil's
+ machine lifted its own weight and that of two men as well to the limit of
+ its anchorage. Although this took place as late as 1883 the inventor went
+ no further in practical work. He published a book, however, entitled La
+ Locomotion Aerienne, which is still of great importance, more especially
+ on the subject of inherent stability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1884 came the first patents of Horatio Phillips, whose work lay mainly
+ in the direction of investigation into the curvature of plane surfaces,
+ with a view to obtaining the greatest amount of support. Phillips was one
+ of the first to treat the problem of curvature of planes as a matter for
+ scientific experiment, and, great as has been the development of the
+ driven plane in the 36 years that have passed since he began, there is
+ still room for investigation into the subject which he studied so
+ persistently and with such valuable result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point it may be noted that, with the solitary exception of Le
+ Bris, practically every student of flight had so far set about
+ constructing the means of launching humanity into the air without any
+ attempt at ascertaining the nature and peculiarities of the sustaining
+ medium. The attitude of experimenters in general might be compared to that
+ of a man who from boyhood had grown up away from open water, and, at the
+ first sight of an expanse of water, set to work to construct a boat with a
+ vague idea that, since wood would float, only sufficient power was
+ required to make him an efficient navigator. Accident, perhaps, in the
+ shape of lack of means of procuring driving power, drove Le Bris to the
+ form of experiment which he actually carried out; it remained for the
+ later years of the nineteenth century to produce men who were content to
+ ascertain the nature of the support the air would afford before attempting
+ to drive themselves through it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the age in which these men lived and worked, giving their all in many
+ cases to the science they loved, even to life itself, it may be said with
+ truth that 'there were giants on the earth in those days,' as far as
+ aeronautics is in question. It was an age of giants who lived and dared
+ and died, venturing into uncharted space, knowing nothing of its dangers,
+ giving, as a man gives to his mistress, without stint and for the joy of
+ the giving. The science of to-day, compared with the glimmerings that were
+ in that age of the giants, is a fixed and certain thing; the problems of
+ to-day are minor problems, for the great major problem vanished in
+ solution when the Wright Brothers made their first ascent. In that age of
+ the giants was evolved the flying man, the new type in human species which
+ found full expression and came to full development in the days of the war,
+ achieving feats of daring and endurance which leave the commonplace
+ landsman staggered at thought of that of which his fellows prove
+ themselves capable. He is a new type, this flying man, a being of
+ self-forgetfulness; of such was Lilienthal, of such was Pilcher; of such
+ in later days were Farman, Bleriot, Hamel, Rolls, and their fellows; great
+ names that will live for as long as man flies, adventurers equally with
+ those of the spacious days of Elizabeth. To each of these came the call,
+ and he worked and dared and passed, having, perhaps, advanced one little
+ step in the long march that has led toward the perfecting of flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not yet twenty years since man first flew, but into that twenty
+ years have been compressed a century or so of progress, while, in the two
+ decades that preceded it, was compressed still more. We have only to
+ recall and recount the work of four men: Lilienthal, Langley, Pilcher, and
+ Clement Ader to see the immense stride that was made between the time when
+ Penaud pulled a trigger for the last time and the Wright Brothers first
+ left the earth. Into those two decades was compressed the investigation
+ that meant knowledge of the qualities of the air, together with the
+ development of the one prime mover that rendered flight a possibility&mdash;the
+ internal combustion engine. The coming and progress of this latter is a
+ thing apart, to be detailed separately; for the present we are concerned
+ with the evolution of the driven plane, and with it the evolution of that
+ daring being, the flying man. The two are inseparable, for the men gave
+ themselves to their art; the story of Lilienthal's life and death is the
+ story of his work; the story of Pilcher's work is that of his life and
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considering the flying man as he appeared in the war period, there entered
+ into his composition a new element&mdash;patriotism&mdash;which brought
+ about a modification of the type, or, perhaps, made it appear that certain
+ men belonged to the type who in reality were commonplace mortals,
+ animated, under normal conditions, by normal motives, but driven by the
+ stress of the time to take rank with the last expression of human energy,
+ the flying type. However that may be, what may be termed the mathematising
+ of aeronautics has rendered the type itself evanescent; your pilot of
+ to-day knows his craft, once he is trained, much in the manner that a
+ driver of a motor-lorry knows his vehicle; design has been systematised,
+ capabilities have been tabulated; camber, dihedral angle, aspect ratio,
+ engine power, and plane surface, are business items of drawing office and
+ machine shop; there is room for enterprise, for genius, and for skill;
+ once and again there is room for daring, as in the first Atlantic flight.
+ Yet that again was a thing of mathematical calculation and petrol storage,
+ allied to a certain stark courage which may be found even in landsmen. For
+ the ventures into the unknown, the limit of daring, the work for work's
+ sake, with the almost certainty that the final reward was death, we must
+ look back to the age of the giants, the age when flying was not a
+ business, but romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. LILIENTHAL AND PILCHER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was never a more enthusiastic and consistent student of the problems
+ of flight than Otto Lilienthal, who was born in 1848 at Anklam, Pomerania,
+ and even from his early school-days dreamed and planned the conquest of
+ the air. His practical experiments began when, at the age of thirteen, he
+ and his brother Gustav made wings consisting of wooden framework covered
+ with linen, which Otto attached to his arms, and then ran downhill
+ flapping them. In consequence of possible derision on the part of other
+ boys, Otto confined these experiments for the most part to moonlit nights,
+ and gained from them some idea of the resistance offered by flat surfaces
+ to the air. It was in 1867 that the two brothers began really practical
+ work, experimenting with wings which, from their design, indicate some
+ knowledge of Besnier and the history of his gliding experiments; these
+ wings the brothers fastened to their backs, moving them with their legs
+ after the fashion of one attempting to swim. Before they had achieved any
+ real success in gliding the Franco-German war came as an interruption;
+ both brothers served in this campaign, resuming their experiments in 1871
+ at the conclusion of hostilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The experiments made by the brothers previous to the war had convinced
+ Otto that previous experimenters in gliding flight had failed through
+ reliance on empirical conclusions or else through incomplete observation
+ on their own part, mostly of bird flight. From 1871 onward Otto Lilenthal
+ (Gustav's interest in the problem was not maintained as was his brother's)
+ made what is probably the most detailed and accurate series of
+ observations that has ever been made with regard to the properties of
+ curved wing surfaces. So far as could be done, Lilienthal tabulated the
+ amount of air resistance offered to a bird's wing, ascertaining that the
+ curve is necessary to flight, as offering far more resistance than a flat
+ surface. Cayley, and others, had already stated this, but to Lilienthal
+ belongs the honour of being first to put the statement to effective proof&mdash;he
+ made over 2,000 gliding flights between 1891 and the regrettable end of
+ his experiments; his practical conclusions are still regarded as part of
+ the accepted theory of students of flight. In 1889 he published a work on
+ the subject of gliding flight which stands as data for investigators, and,
+ on the conclusions embodied in this work, he began to build his gliders
+ and practice what he had preached, turning from experiment with models to
+ wings that he could use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the summer of 1891 that he built his first glider of rods of
+ peeled willow, over which was stretched strong cotton fabric; with this,
+ which had a supporting surface of about 100 square feet, Otto Lilienthal
+ launched himself in the air from a spring board, making glides which, at
+ first of only a few feet, gradually lengthened. As his experience of the
+ supporting qualities of the air progressed he gradually altered his
+ designs until, when Pilcher visited him in the spring of 1895, he
+ experimented with a glider, roughly made of peeled willow rods and cotton
+ fabric, having an area of 150 square feet and weighing half a
+ hundredweight. By this time Lilienthal had moved from his springboard to a
+ conical artificial hill which he had had thrown up on level ground at
+ Grosse Lichterfelde, near Berlin. This hill was made with earth taken from
+ the excavations incurred in constructing a canal, and had a cave inside in
+ which Lilienthal stored his machines. Pilcher, in his paper on 'Gliding,'
+ [*] gives an excellent short summary of Lilienthal's experiments, from
+ which the following extracts are taken:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Aeronautical Classes, No. 5. Royal Aeronautical Society's
+ publications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'At first Lilienthal used to experiment by jumping off a springboard with
+ a good run. Then he took to practicing on some hills close to Berlin. In
+ the summer of 1892 he built a flat-roofed hut on the summit of a hill,
+ from the top of which he used to jump, trying, of course, to soar as far
+ as possible before landing.... One of the great dangers with a soaring
+ machine is losing forward speed, inclining the machine too much down in
+ front, and coming down head first. Lilienthal was the first to introduce
+ the system of handling a machine in the air merely by moving his weight
+ about in the machine; he always rested only on his elbows or on his elbows
+ and shoulders....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In 1892 a canal was being cut, close to where Lilienthal lived, in the
+ suburbs of Berlin, and with the surplus earth Lilienthal had a special
+ hill thrown up to fly from. The country round is as flat as the sea, and
+ there is not a house or tree near it to make the wind unsteady, so this
+ was an ideal practicing ground; for practicing on natural hills is
+ generally rendered very difficult by shifty and gusty winds.... This hill
+ is 50 feet high, and conical. Inside the hill there is a cave for the
+ machines to be kept in.... When Lilienthal made a good flight he used to
+ land 300 feet from the centre of the hill, having come down at an angle of
+ 1 in 6; but his best flights have been at an angle of about 1 in 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If it is calm, one must run a few steps down the hill, holding the
+ machine as far back on oneself as possible, when the air will gradually
+ support one, and one slides off the hill into the air. If there is any
+ wind, one should face it at starting; to try to start with a side wind is
+ most unpleasant. It is possible after a great deal of practice to turn in
+ the air, and fairly quickly. This is accomplished by throwing one's weight
+ to one side, and thus lowering the machine on that side towards which one
+ wants to turn. Birds do the same thing&mdash;crows and gulls show it very
+ clearly. Last year Lilienthal chiefly experimented with double-surfaced
+ machines. These were very much like the old machines with awnings spread
+ above them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The object of making these double-surfaced machines was to get more
+ surface without increasing the length and width of the machine. This, of
+ course, it does, but I personally object to any machine in which the wing
+ surface is high above the weight. I consider that it makes the machine
+ very difficult to handle in bad weather, as a puff of wind striking the
+ surface, high above one, has a great tendency to heel the machine over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Herr Lilienthal kindly allowed me to sail down his hill in one of these
+ double-surfaced machines last June. With the great facility afforded by
+ his conical hill the machine was handy enough; but I am afraid I should
+ not be able to manage one at all in the squally districts I have had to
+ practice in over here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Herr Lilienthal came to grief through deserting his old method of
+ balancing. In order to control his tipping movements more rapidly he
+ attached a line from his horizontal rudder to his head, so that when he
+ moved his head forward it would lift the rudder and tip the machine up in
+ front, and vice versa. He was practicing this on some natural hills
+ outside Berlin, and he apparently got muddled with the two motions, and,
+ in trying to regain speed after he had, through a lull in the wind, come
+ to rest in the air, let the machine get too far down in front, came down
+ head first and was killed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then in another passage Pilcher enunciates what is the true value of such
+ experiments as Lilienthal&mdash;and, subsequently, he himself&mdash;made:
+ 'The object of experimenting with soaring machines,' he says, 'is to
+ enable one to have practice in starting and alighting and controlling a
+ machine in the air. They cannot possibly float horizontally in the air for
+ any length of time, but to keep going must necessarily lose in elevation.
+ They are excellent schooling machines, and that is all they are meant to
+ be, until power, in the shape of an engine working a screw propeller, or
+ an engine working wings to drive the machine forward, is added; then a
+ person who is used to soaring down a hill with a simple soaring machine
+ will be able to fly with comparative safety. One can best compare them to
+ bicycles having no cranks, but on which one could learn to balance by
+ coming down an incline.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1895 that Lilienthal passed from experiment with the monoplane
+ type of glider to the construction of a biplane glider which, according to
+ his own account, gave better results than his previous machines. 'Six or
+ seven metres velocity of wind,' he says, 'sufficed to enable the sailing
+ surface of 18 square metres to carry me almost horizontally against the
+ wind from the top of my hill without any starting jump. If the wind is
+ stronger I allow myself to be simply lifted from the point of the hill and
+ to sail slowly towards the wind. The direction of the flight has, with
+ strong wind, a strong upwards tendency. I often reach positions in the air
+ which are much higher than my starting point. At the climax of such a line
+ of flight I sometimes come to a standstill for some time, so that I am
+ enabled while floating to speak with the gentlemen who wish to photograph
+ me, regarding the best position for the photographing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lilienthal's work did not end with simple gliding, though he did not live
+ to achieve machine-driven flight. Having, as he considered, gained
+ sufficient experience with gliders, he constructed a power-driven machine
+ which weighed altogether about 90 lbs., and this was thoroughly tested.
+ The extremities of its wings were made to flap, and the driving power was
+ obtained from a cylinder of compressed carbonic acid gas, released through
+ a hand-operated valve which, Lilienthal anticipated, would keep the
+ machine in the air for four minutes. There were certain minor accidents to
+ the mechanism, which delayed the trial flights, and on the day that
+ Lilienthal had determined to make his trial he made a long gliding flight
+ with a view to testing a new form of rudder that&mdash;as Pilcher relates&mdash;was
+ worked by movements of his head. His death came about through the causes
+ that Pilcher states; he fell from a height of 50 feet, breaking his spine,
+ and the next day he died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said that Lilienthal accomplished as much as any one of the
+ great pioneers of flying. As brilliant in his conceptions as da Vinci had
+ been in his, and as conscientious a worker as Borelli, he laid the
+ foundations on which Pilcher, Chanute, and Professor Montgomery were able
+ to build to such good purpose. His book on bird flight, published in 1889,
+ with the authorship credited both to Otto and his brother Gustav, is
+ regarded as epoch-making; his gliding experiments are no less entitled to
+ this description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England Lilienthal's work was carried on by Percy Sinclair Pilcher,
+ who, born in 1866, completed six years' service in the British Navy by the
+ time that he was nineteen, and then went through a course of engineering,
+ subsequently joining Maxim in his experimental work. It was not until 1895
+ that he began to build the first of the series of gliders with which he
+ earned his plane among the pioneers of flight. Probably the best account
+ of Pilcher's work is that given in the Aeronautical Classics issued by the
+ Royal Aeronautical Society, from which the following account of Pilcher's
+ work is mainly abstracted.[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Aeronautical Classes, No. 5. Royal Aeronautical Society publications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 'Bat,' as Pilcher named his first glider, was a monoplane which he
+ completed before he paid his visit to Lilienthal in 1895. Concerning this
+ Pilcher stated that he purposely finished his own machine before going to
+ see Lilienthal, so as to get the greatest advantage from any original
+ ideas he might have; he was not able to make any trials with this machine,
+ however, until after witnessing Lilienthal's experiments and making
+ several glides in the biplane glider which Lilienthal constructed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wings of the 'Bat' formed a pronounced dihedral angle; the tips being
+ raised 4 feet above the body. The spars forming the entering edges of the
+ wings crossed each other in the centre and were lashed to opposite sides
+ of the triangle that served as a mast for the stay-wires that guyed the
+ wings. The four ribs of each wing, enclosed in pockets in the fabric,
+ radiated fanwise from the centre, and were each stayed by three steel
+ piano-wires to the top of the triangular mast, and similarly to its base.
+ These ribs were bolted down to the triangle at their roots, and could be
+ easily folded back on to the body when the glider was not in use. A small
+ fixed vertical surface was carried in the rear. The framework and ribs
+ were made entirely of Riga pine; the surface fabric was nainsook. The area
+ of the machine was 150 square feet; its weight 45 lbs.; so that in flight,
+ with Pilcher's weight of 145 lbs. added, it carried one and a half pounds
+ to the square foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pilcher's first glides, which he carried out on a grass hill on the banks
+ of the Clyde near Cardross, gave little result, owing to the exaggerated
+ dihedral angle of the wings, and the absence of a horizontal tail. The
+ 'Bat 'was consequently reconstructed with a horizontal tail plane added to
+ the vertical one, and with the wings lowered so that the tips were only
+ six inches above the level of the body. The machine now gave far better
+ results; on the first glide into a head wind Pilcher rose to a height of
+ twelve feet and remained in the the air for a third of a minute; in the
+ second attempt a rope was used to tow the glider, which rose to twenty
+ feet and did not come to earth again until nearly a minute had passed.
+ With experience Pilcher was able to lengthen his glide and improve his
+ balance, but the dropped wing tips made landing difficult, and there were
+ many breakages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In consequence of this Pilcher built a second glider which he named the
+ 'Beetle,' because, as he said, it looked like one. In this the square-cut
+ wings formed almost a continuous plane, rigidly fixed to the central body,
+ which consisted of a shaped girder. These wings were built up of five
+ transverse bamboo spars, with two shaped ribs running from fore to aft of
+ each wing, and were stayed overhead to a couple of masts. The tail,
+ consisting of two discs placed crosswise (the horizontal one alone being
+ movable), was carried high up in the rear. With the exception of the
+ wing-spars, the whole framework was built of white pine. The wings in this
+ machine were actually on a higher level than the operator's head; the
+ centre of gravity was, consequently, very low, a fact which, according to
+ Pilcher's own account, made the glider very difficult to handle. Moreover,
+ the weight of the 'Beetle,' 80 lbs., was considerable; the body had been
+ very solidly built to enable it to carry the engine which Pilcher was then
+ contemplating; so that the glider carried some 225 lbs. with its area of
+ 170 square feet&mdash;too great a mass for a single man to handle with
+ comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the spring of 1896 that Pilcher built his third glider, the
+ 'Gull,' with 300 square feet of area and a weight of 55 lbs. The size of
+ this machine rendered it unsuitable for experiment in any but very calm
+ weather, and it incurred such damage when experiments were made in a
+ breeze that Pilcher found it necessary to build a fourth, which he named
+ the 'Hawk.' This machine was very soundly built, being constructed of
+ bamboo, with the exception of the two main transverse beams. The wings
+ were attached to two vertical masts, 7 feet high, and 8 feet apart, joined
+ at their summits and their centres by two wooden beams. Each wing had nine
+ bamboo ribs, radiating from its mast, which was situated at a distance of
+ 2 feet 6 inches from the forward edge of the wing. Each rib was rigidly
+ stayed at the top of the mast by three tie-wires, and by a similar number
+ to the bottom of the mast, by which means the curve of each wing was
+ maintained uniformly. The tail was formed of a triangular horizontal
+ surface to which was affixed a triangular vertical surface, and was
+ carried from the body on a high bamboo mast, which was also stayed from
+ the masts by means of steel wires, but only on its upper surface, and it
+ was the snapping of one of these guy wires which caused the collapse of
+ the tail support and brought about the fatal end of Pilcher's experiments.
+ In flight, Pilcher's head, shoulders, and the greater part of his chest
+ projected above the wings. He took up his position by passing his head and
+ shoulders through the top aperture formed between the two wings, and
+ resting his forearms on the longitudinal body members. A very simple form
+ of undercarriage, which took the weight off the glider on the ground, was
+ fitted, consisting of two bamboo rods with wheels suspended on steel
+ springs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Balance and steering were effected, apart from the high degree of inherent
+ stability afforded by the tail, as in the case of Lilienthal's glider, by
+ altering the position of the body. With this machine Pilcher made some
+ twelve glides at Eynsford in Kent in the summer of 1896, and as he
+ progressed he increased the length of his glides, and also handled the
+ machine more easily, both in the air and in landing. He was occupied with
+ plans for fitting an engine and propeller to the 'Hawk,' but, in these
+ early days of the internal combustion engine, was unable to get one light
+ enough for his purpose. There were rumours of an engine weighing 15 lbs.
+ which gave 1 horse-power, and was reported to be in existence in America,
+ but it could not be traced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring of 1897 Pilcher took up his gliding experiments again,
+ obtaining what was probably the best of his glides on June 19th, when he
+ alighted after a perfectly balanced glide of over 250 yards in length,
+ having crossed a valley at a considerable height. From his various
+ experiments he concluded that once the machine was launched in the air an
+ engine of, at most, 3 horse-power would suffice for the maintenance of
+ horizontal flight, but he had to allow for the additional weight of the
+ engine and propeller, and taking into account the comparative inefficiency
+ of the propeller, he planned for an engine of 4 horse-power. Engine and
+ propeller together were estimated at under 44 lbs. weight, the engine was
+ to be fitted in front of the operator, and by means of an overhead shaft
+ was to operate the propeller situated in rear of the wings. 1898 went by
+ while this engine was under construction. Then in 1899 Pilcher became
+ interested in Lawrence Hargrave's soaring kites, with which he carried out
+ experiments during the summer of 1899. It is believed that he intended to
+ incorporate a number of these kites in a new machine, a triplane, of which
+ the fragments remaining are hardly sufficient to reconstitute the complete
+ glider. This new machine was never given a trial. For on September 30th,
+ 1899, at Stamford Hall, Market Harborough, Pilcher agreed to give a
+ demonstration of gliding flight, but owing to the unfavourable weather he
+ decided to postpone the trial of the new machine and to experiment with
+ the 'Hawk,' which was intended to rise from a level field, towed by a line
+ passing over a tackle drawn by two horses. At the first trial the machine
+ rose easily, but the tow-line snapped when it was well clear of the
+ ground, and the glider descended, weighed down through being sodden with
+ rain. Pilcher resolved on a second trial, in which the glider again rose
+ easily to about thirty feet, when one of the guy wires of the tail broke,
+ and the tail collapsed; the machine fell to the ground, turning over, and
+ Pilcher was unconscious when he was freed from the wreckage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hopes were entertained of his recovery, but he died on Monday, October
+ 2nd, 1899, aged only thirty-four. His work in the cause of flying lasted
+ only four years, but in that time his actual accomplishments were
+ sufficient to place his name beside that of Lilienthal, with whom he ranks
+ as one of the greatest exponents of gliding flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. AMERICAN GLIDING EXPERIMENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Pilcher was carrying on Lilienthal's work in England, the great
+ German had also a follower in America; one Octave Chanute, who, in one of
+ the statements which he has left on the subject of his experiments
+ acknowledges forty years' interest in the problem of flight, did more to
+ develop the glider in America than&mdash;with the possible exception of
+ Montgomery&mdash;any other man. Chanute had all the practicality of an
+ American; he began his work, so far as actual gliding was concerned, with
+ a full-sized glider of the Lilienthal type, just before Lilienthal was
+ killed. In a rather rare monograph, entitled Experiments in Flying,
+ Chanute states that he found the Lilienthal glider hazardous and decided
+ to test the value of an idea of his own; in this he followed the same
+ general method, but reversed the principle upon which Lilienthal had
+ depended for maintaining his equilibrium in the air. Lilienthal had
+ shifted the weight of his body, under immovable wings, as fast and as far
+ as the sustaining pressure varied under his surfaces; this shifting was
+ mainly done by moving the feet, as the actions required were small except
+ when alighting. Chanute's idea was to have the operator remain seated in
+ the machine in the air, and to intervene only to steer or to alight;
+ moving mechanism was provided to adjust the wings automatically in order
+ to restore balance when necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chanute realised that experiments with models were of little use; in order
+ to be fully instructive, these experiments should be made with a
+ full-sized machine which carried its operator, for models seldom fly twice
+ alike in the open air, and no relation can be gained from them of the
+ divergent air currents which they have experienced. Chanute's idea was
+ that any flying machine which might be constructed must be able to operate
+ in a wind; hence the necessity for an operator to report upon what
+ occurred in flight, and to acquire practical experience of the work of the
+ human factor in imitation of bird flight. From this point of view he
+ conducted his own experiments; it must be noted that he was over sixty
+ years of age when he began, and, being no longer sufficiently young and
+ active to perform any but short and insignificant glides, the courage of
+ the man becomes all the more noteworthy; he set to work to evolve the
+ state required by the problem of stability, and without any expectation of
+ advancing to the construction of a flying machine which might be of
+ commercial value. His main idea was the testing of devices to secure
+ equilibrium; for this purpose he employed assistants to carry out the
+ practical work, where he himself was unable to supply the necessary
+ physical energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Together with his assistants he found a suitable place for experiments
+ among the sandhills on the shore of Lake Michigan, about thirty miles
+ eastward from Chicago. Here a hill about ninety-five feet high was
+ selected as a point from which Chanute's gliders could set off; in
+ practice, it was found that the best observation was to be obtained from
+ short glides at low speed, and, consequently, a hill which was only
+ sixty-one feet above the shore of the lake was employed for the
+ experimental work done by the party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the years 1896 and 1897, with parties of from four to six persons, five
+ full-sized gliders were tried out, and from these two distinct types were
+ evolved: of these one was a machine consisting of five tiers of wings and
+ a steering tail, and the other was of the biplane type; Chanute believed
+ these to be safer than any other machine previously evolved, solving, as
+ he states in his monograph, the problem of inherent equilibrium as fully
+ as this could be done. Unfortunately, very few photographs were taken of
+ the work in the first year, but one view of a multiple wing-glider
+ survives, showing the machine in flight. In 1897 a series of photographs
+ was taken exhibiting the consecutive phases of a single flight; this
+ series of photographs represents the experience gained in a total of about
+ one thousand glides, but the point of view was varied so as to exhibit the
+ consecutive phases of one single flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The experience gained is best told in Chanute's own words. 'The first
+ thing,' he says, 'which we discovered practically was that the wind
+ flowing up a hill-side is not a steadily-flowing current like that of a
+ river. It comes as a rolling mass, full of tumultuous whirls and eddies,
+ like those issuing from a chimney; and they strike the apparatus with
+ constantly varying force and direction, sometimes withdrawing support when
+ most needed. It has long been known, through instrumental observations,
+ that the wind is constantly changing in force and direction; but it needed
+ the experience of an operator afloat on a gliding machine to realise that
+ this all proceeded from cyclonic action; so that more was learned in this
+ respect in a week than had previously been acquired by several years of
+ experiments with models. There was a pair of eagles, living in the top of
+ a dead tree about two miles from our tent, that came almost daily to show
+ us how such wind effects are overcome and utilised. The birds swept in
+ circles overhead on pulseless wings, and rose high up in the air.
+ Occasionally there was a side-rocking motion, as of a ship rolling at sea,
+ and then the birds rocked back to an even keel; but although we thought
+ the action was clearly automatic, and were willing to learn, our teachers
+ were too far off to show us just how it was done, and we had to experiment
+ for ourselves.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chanute provided his multiple glider with a seat, but, since each glide
+ only occupied between eight and twelve seconds, there was little
+ possibility of the operator seating himself. With the multiple glider a
+ pair of horizontal bars provided rest for the arms, and beyond these was a
+ pair of vertical bars which the operator grasped with his hands; beyond
+ this, the operator was in no way attached to the machine. He took, at the
+ most, four running steps into the wind, which launched him in the air, and
+ thereupon he sailed into the wind on a generally descending course. In the
+ matter of descent Chanute observed the sparrow and decided to imitate it.
+ 'When the latter,' he says, 'approaches the street, he throws his body
+ back, tilts his outspread wings nearly square to the course, and on the
+ cushion of air thus encountered he stops his speed and drops lightly to
+ the ground. So do all birds. We tried it with misgivings, but found it
+ perfectly effective. The soft sand was a great advantage, and even when
+ the experts were racing there was not a single sprained ankle.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the multiple winged glider some two to three hundred glides were made
+ without any accident either to the man or to the machine, and the action
+ was found so effective, the principle so sound, that full plans were
+ published for the benefit of any experimenters who might wish to improve
+ on this apparatus. The American Aeronautical Annual for 1897 contains
+ these plans; Chanute confessed that some movement on the part of the
+ operator was still required to control the machine, but it was only a
+ seventh or a sixth part of the movement required for control of the
+ Lilienthal type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chanute waxed enthusiastic over the possibilities of gliding, concerning
+ which he remarks that 'There is no more delightful sensation than that of
+ gliding through the air. All the faculties are on the alert, and the
+ motion is astonishingly smooth and elastic. The machine responds instantly
+ to the slightest movement of the operator; the air rushes by one's ears;
+ the trees and bushes flit away underneath, and the landing comes all too
+ quickly. Skating, sliding, and bicycling are not to be compared for a
+ moment to aerial conveyance, in which, perhaps, zest is added by the spice
+ of danger. For it must be distinctly understood that there is constant
+ danger in such preliminary experiments. When this hazard has been
+ eliminated by further evolution, gliding will become a most popular
+ sport.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later experiments proved that the biplane type of glider gave better
+ results than the rather cumbrous model consisting of five tiers of planes.
+ Longer and more numerous glides, to the number of seven to eight hundred,
+ were obtained, the rate of descent being about one in six. The longest
+ distance traversed was about 120 yards, but Chanute had dreams of starting
+ from a hill about 200 feet high, which would have given him gliding
+ flights of 1,200 feet. He remarked that 'In consequence of the speed
+ gained by running, the initial stage of the flight is nearly horizontal,
+ and it is thrilling to see the operator pass from thirty to forty feet
+ overhead, steering his machine, undulating his course, and struggling with
+ the wind-gusts which whistle through the guy wires. The automatic
+ mechanism restores the angle of advance when compromised by variations of
+ the breeze; but when these come from one side and tilt the apparatus, the
+ weight has to be shifted to right the machine... these gusts sometimes
+ raise the machine from ten to twenty feet vertically, and sometimes they
+ strike the apparatus from above, causing it to descend suddenly. When
+ sailing near the ground, these vicissitudes can be counteracted by
+ movements of the body from three to four inches; but this has to be done
+ instantly, for neither wings nor gravity will wait on meditation. At a
+ height of three hundred or four hundred feet the regulating mechanism
+ would probably take care of these wind-gusts, as it does, in fact, for
+ their minor variations. The speed of the machine is generally about
+ seventeen miles an hour over the ground, and from twenty-two to thirty
+ miles an hour relative to the air. Constant effort was directed to keep
+ down the velocity, which was at times fifty-two miles an hour. This is the
+ purpose of the starting and gliding against the wind, which thus furnishes
+ an initial velocity without there being undue speed at the landing. The
+ highest wind we dared to experiment in blew at thirty-one miles an hour;
+ when the wind was stronger, we waited and watched the birds.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chanute details an amusing little incident which occurred in the course of
+ experiment with the biplane glider. He says that 'We had taken one of the
+ machines to the top of the hill, and loaded its lower wings with sand to
+ hold it while we e went to lunch. A gull came strolling inland, and
+ flapped full-winged to inspect. He swept several circles above the
+ machine, stretched his neck, gave a squawk and went off. Presently he
+ returned with eleven other gulls, and they seemed to hold a conclave about
+ one hundred feet above the big new white bird which they had discovered on
+ the sand. They circled round after round, and once in a while there was a
+ series of loud peeps, like those of a rusty gate, as if in conference,
+ with sudden flutterings, as if a terrifying suggestion had been made. The
+ bolder birds occasionally swooped downwards to inspect the monster more
+ closely; they twisted their heads around to bring first one eye and then
+ the other to bear, and then they rose again. After some seven or eight
+ minutes of this performance, they evidently concluded either that the
+ stranger was too formidable to tackle, if alive, or that he was not good
+ to eat, if dead, and they flew off to resume fishing, for the weak point
+ about a bird is his stomach.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gliders were found so stable, more especially the biplane form, that
+ in the end Chanute permitted amateurs to make trials under guidance, and
+ throughout the whole series of experiments not a single accident occurred.
+ Chanute came to the conclusion that any young, quick, and handy man could
+ master a gliding machine almost as soon as he could get the hang of a
+ bicycle, although the penalty for any mistake would be much more severe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the conclusion of his experiments he decided that neither the multiple
+ plane nor the biplane type of glider was sufficiently perfected for the
+ application of motive power. In spite of the amount of automatic stability
+ that he had obtained he considered that there was yet more to be done, and
+ he therefore advised that every possible method of securing stability and
+ safety should be tested, first with models, and then with full-sized
+ machines; designers, he said, should make a point of practice in order to
+ make sure of the action, to proportion and adjust the parts of their
+ machine, and to eliminate hidden defects. Experimental flight, he
+ suggested, should be tried over water, in order to break any accidental
+ fall; when a series of experiments had proved the stability of a glider,
+ it would then be time to apply motive power. He admitted that such a
+ process would be both costly and slow, but, he said, that 'it greatly
+ diminished the chance of those accidents which bring a whole line of
+ investigation into contempt.' He saw the flying machine as what it has, in
+ fact, been; a child of evolution, carried on step by step by one
+ investigator after another, through the stages of doubt and perplexity
+ which lie behind the realm of possibility, beyond which is the present day
+ stage of actual performance and promise of ultimate success and triumph
+ over the earlier, more cumbrous, and slower forms of the transport that we
+ know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chanute's monograph, from which the foregoing notes have been comprised,
+ was written soon after the conclusion of his series of experiments. He
+ does not appear to have gone in for further practical work, but to have
+ studied the subject from a theoretical view-point and with great attention
+ to the work done by others. In a paper contributed in 1900 to the American
+ Independent, he remarks that 'Flying machines promise better results as to
+ speed, but yet will be of limited commercial application. They may carry
+ mails and reach other inaccessible places, but they cannot compete with
+ railroads as carriers of passengers or freight. They will not fill the
+ heavens with commerce, abolish custom houses, or revolutionise the world,
+ for they will be expensive for the loads which they can carry, and subject
+ to too many weather contingencies. Success is, however, probable. Each
+ experimenter has added something to previous knowledge which his
+ successors can avail of. It now seems likely that two forms of flying
+ machines, a sporting type and an exploration type, will be gradually
+ evolved within one or two generations, but the evolution will be costly
+ and slow, and must be carried on by well-equipped and thoroughly informed
+ scientific men; for the casual inventor, who relies upon one or two happy
+ inspirations, will have no chance of success whatever.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Follows Professor John J. Montgomery, who, in the true American spirit,
+ describes his own experiments so well that nobody can possibly do it
+ better. His account of his work was given first of all in the American
+ Journal, Aeronautics, in January, 1909, and thence transcribed in the
+ English paper of the same name in May, 1910, and that account is here
+ copied word for word. It may, however, be noted first that as far back as
+ 1860, when Montgomery was only a boy, he was attracted to the study of
+ aeronautical problems, and in 1883 he built his first machine, which was
+ of the flapping-wing ornithopter type, and which showed its designer, with
+ only one experiment, that he must design some other form of machine if he
+ wished to attain to a successful flight. Chanute details how, in 1884 and
+ 1885 Montgomery built three gliders, demonstrating the value of curved
+ surfaces. With the first of these gliders Montgomery copied the wing of a
+ seagull; with the second he proved that a flat surface was virtually
+ useless, and with the third he pivoted his wings as in the Antoinette type
+ of power-propelled aeroplane, proving to his own satisfaction that success
+ lay in this direction. His own account of the gliding flights carried out
+ under his direction is here set forth, being the best description of his
+ work that can be obtained:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When I commenced practical demonstration in my work with aeroplanes I had
+ before me three points; first, equilibrium; second, complete control; and
+ third, long continued or soaring flight. In starting I constructed and
+ tested three sets of models, each in advance of the other in regard to the
+ continuance of their soaring powers, but all equally perfect as to
+ equilibrium and control. These models were tested by dropping them from a
+ cable stretched between two mountain tops, with various loads, adjustments
+ and positions. And it made no difference whether the models were dropped
+ upside down or any other conceivable position, they always found their
+ equilibrium immediately and glided safely to earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then I constructed a large machine patterned after the first model, and
+ with the assistance of three cowboy friends personally made a number of
+ flights in the steep mountains near San Juan (a hundred miles distant). In
+ making these flights I simply took the aeroplane and made a running jump.
+ These tests were discontinued after I put my foot into a squirrel hole in
+ landing and hurt my leg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The following year I commenced the work on a larger scale, by engaging
+ aeronauts to ride my aeroplane dropped from balloons. During this work I
+ used five hot-air balloons and one gas balloon, five or six aeroplanes,
+ three riders&mdash;Maloney, Wilkie, and Defolco&mdash;and had sixteen
+ applicants on my list, and had a training station to prepare any when I
+ needed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Exhibitions were given in Santa Cruz, San Jose, Santa Clara, Oaklands,
+ and Sacramento. The flights that were made, instead of being haphazard
+ affairs, were in the order of safety and development. In the first flight
+ of an aeronaut the aeroplane was so arranged that the rider had little
+ liberty of action, consequently he could make only a limited flight. In
+ some of the first flights, the aeroplane did little more than settle in
+ the air. But as the rider gained experience in each successive flight I
+ changed the adjustments, giving him more liberty of action, so he could
+ obtain longer flights and more varied movements in the flights. But in
+ none of the flights did I have the adjustments so that the riders had full
+ liberty, as I did not consider that they had the requisite knowledge and
+ experience necessary for their safety; and hence, none of my aeroplanes
+ were launched so arranged that the rider could make adjustments necessary
+ for a full flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This line of action caused a good deal of trouble with aeronauts or
+ riders, who had unbounded confidence and wanted to make long flights after
+ the first few trials; but I found it necessary, as they seemed slow in
+ comprehending the important elements and were willing to take risks. To
+ give them the full knowledge in these matters I was formulating plans for
+ a large starting station on the Mount Hamilton Range from which I could
+ launch an aeroplane capable of carrying two, one of my aeronauts and
+ myself, so I could teach him by demonstration. But the disasters
+ consequent on the great earthquake completely stopped all my work on these
+ lines. The flights that were given were only the first of the series with
+ aeroplanes patterned after the first model. There were no aeroplanes
+ constructed according to the two other models, as I had not given the full
+ demonstration of the workings of the first, though some remarkable and
+ startling work was done. On one occasion Maloney, in trying to make a very
+ short turn in rapid flight, pressed very hard on the stirrup which gives a
+ screw-shape to the wings, and made a side somersault. The course of the
+ machine was very much like one turn of a corkscrew. After this movement
+ the machine continued on its regular course. And afterwards Wilkie, not to
+ be outdone by Maloney, told his friends he would do the same, and in a
+ subsequent flight made two side somersaults, one in one direction and the
+ other in an opposite, then made a deep dive and a long glide, and, when
+ about three hundred feet in the air, brought the aeroplane to a sudden
+ stop and settled to the earth. After these antics, I decreased the extent
+ of the possible change in the form of wing-surface, so as to allow only
+ straight sailing or only long curves in turning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'During my work I had a few carping critics that I silenced by this
+ standing offer: If they would deposit a thousand dollars I would cover it
+ on this proposition. I would fasten a 150 pound sack of sand in the
+ rider's seat, make the necessary adjustments, and send up an aeroplane
+ upside down with a balloon, the aeroplane to be liberated by a time fuse.
+ If the aeroplane did not immediately right itself, make a flight, and come
+ safely to the ground, the money was theirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now a word in regard to the fatal accident. The circumstances are these:
+ The ascension was given to entertain a military company in which were many
+ of Maloney's friends, and he had told them he would give the most
+ sensational flight they ever heard of. As the balloon was rising with the
+ aeroplane, a guy rope dropping switched around the right wing and broke
+ the tower that braced the two rear wings and which also gave control over
+ the tail. We shouted Maloney that the machine was broken, but he probably
+ did not hear us, as he was at the same time saying, "Hurrah for
+ Montgomery's airship," and as the break was behind him, he may not have
+ detected it. Now did he know of the breakage or not, and if he knew of it
+ did he take a risk so as not to disappoint his friends? At all events,
+ when the machine started on its flight the rear wings commenced to flap
+ (thus indicating they were loose), the machine turned on its back, and
+ settled a little faster than a parachute. When we reached Maloney he was
+ unconscious and lived only thirty minutes. The only mark of any kind on
+ him was a scratch from a wire on the side of his neck. The six attending
+ physicians were puzzled at the cause of his death. This is remarkable for
+ a vertical descent of over 2,000 feet.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flights were brought to an end by the San Francisco earthquake in
+ April, 1906, which, Montgomery states, 'Wrought such a disaster that I had
+ to turn my attention to other subjects and let the aeroplane rest for a
+ time.' Montgomery resumed experiments in 1911 in California, and in
+ October of that year an accident brought his work to an end. The report in
+ the American Aeronautics says that 'a little whirlwind caught the machine
+ and dashed it head on to the ground; Professor Montgomery landed on his
+ head and right hip. He did not believe himself seriously hurt, and talked
+ with his year-old bride in the tent. He complained of pains in his back,
+ and continued to grow worse until he died.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. NOT PROVEN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The early history of flying, like that of most sciences, is replete with
+ tragedies; in addition to these it contains one mystery concerning Clement
+ Ader, who was well known among European pioneers in the development of the
+ telephone, and first turned his attention to the problems of mechanical
+ flight in 1872. At the outset he favoured the ornithopter principle,
+ constructing a machine in the form of a bird with a wing-spread of
+ twenty-six feet; this, according to Ader's conception, was to fly through
+ the efforts of the operator. The result of such an attempt was past
+ question and naturally the machine never left the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A pause of nineteen years ensued, and then in 1886 Ader turned his mind to
+ the development of the aeroplane, constructing a machine of bat-like form
+ with a wingspread of about forty-six feet, a weight of eleven hundred
+ pounds, and a steam-power plant of between twenty and thirty horse-power
+ driving a four-bladed tractor screw. On October 9th, 1890, the first
+ trials of this machine were made, and it was alleged to have flown a
+ distance of one hundred and sixty-four feet. Whatever truth there may be
+ in the allegation, the machine was wrecked through deficient equilibrium
+ at the end of the trial. Ader repeated the construction, and on October
+ 14th, 1897, tried out his third machine at the military establishment at
+ Satory in the presence of the French military authorities, on a circular
+ track specially prepared for the experiment. Ader and his friends alleged
+ that a flight of nearly a thousand feet was made; again the machine was
+ wrecked at the end of the trial, and there Ader's practical work may be
+ said to have ended, since no more funds were forthcoming for the subsidy
+ of experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is the bald narrative, but it is worthy of some amplification. If
+ Ader actually did what he claimed, then the position which the Wright
+ Brothers hold as first to navigate the air in a power-driven plane is
+ nullified. Although at this time of writing it is not a quarter of a
+ century since Ader's experiment in the presence of witnesses competent to
+ judge on his accomplishment, there is no proof either way, and whether he
+ was or was not the first man to fly remains a mystery in the story of the
+ conquest of the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The full story of Ader's work reveals a persistence and determination to
+ solve the problem that faced him which was equal to that of Lilienthal. He
+ began by penetrating into the interior of Algeria after having disguised
+ himself as an Arab, and there he spent some months in studying flight as
+ practiced by the vultures of the district. Returning to France in 1886 he
+ began to construct the 'Eole,' modelling it, not on the vulture, but in
+ the shape of a bat. Like the Lilienthal and Pilcher gliders this machine
+ was fitted with wings which could be folded; the first flight made, as
+ already noted, on October 9th, 1890, took place in the grounds of the
+ chateau d'Amainvilliers, near Bretz; two fellow-enthusiasts named Espinosa
+ and Vallier stated that a flight was actually made; no statement in the
+ history of aeronautics has been subject of so much question, and the claim
+ remains unproved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in September of 1891 that Ader, by permission of the Minister of
+ War, moved the 'Eole' to the military establishment at Satory for the
+ purpose of further trial. By this time, whether he had flown or not, his
+ nineteen years of work in connection with the problems attendant on
+ mechanical flight had attracted so much attention that henceforth his work
+ was subject to the approval of the military authorities, for already it
+ was recognised that an efficient flying machine would confer an
+ inestimable advantage on the power that possessed it in the event of war.
+ At Satory the 'Eole' was alleged to have made a flight of 109 yards, or,
+ according to another account, 164 feet, as stated above, in the trial in
+ which the machine wrecked itself through colliding with some carts which
+ had been placed near the track&mdash;the root cause of this accident,
+ however, was given as deficient equilibrium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever the sceptics may say, there is reason for belief in the
+ accomplishment of actual flight by Ader with his first machine in the fact
+ that, after the inevitable official delay of some months, the French War
+ Ministry granted funds for further experiment. Ader named his second
+ machine, which he began to build in May, 1892, the 'Avion,' and&mdash;an
+ honour which he well deserve&mdash;that name remains in French aeronautics
+ as descriptive of the power-driven aeroplane up to this day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This second machine, however, was not a success, and it was not until 1897
+ that the second 'Avion,' which was the third power-driven aeroplane of
+ Ader's construction, was ready for trial. This was fitted with two steam
+ motors of twenty horse-power each, driving two four-bladed propellers; the
+ wings warped automatically: that is to say, if it were necessary to raise
+ the trailing edge of one wing on the turn, the trailing edge of the
+ opposite wing was also lowered by the same movement; an under-carriage was
+ also fitted, the machine running on three small wheels, and levers
+ controlled by the feet of the aviator actuated the movement of the tail
+ planes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On October the 12th, 1897, the first trials of this 'Avion' were made in
+ the presence of General Mensier, who admitted that the machine made
+ several hops above the ground, but did not consider the performance as one
+ of actual flight. The result was so encouraging, in spite of the partial
+ failure, that, two days later, General Mensier, accompanied by General
+ Grillon, a certain Lieutenant Binet, and two civilians named respectively
+ Sarrau and Leaute, attended for the purpose of giving the machine an
+ official trial, over which the great controversy regarding Ader's success
+ or otherwise may be said to have arisen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will take first Ader's own statement as set out in a very competent
+ account of his work published in Paris in 1910. Here are Ader's own words:
+ 'After some turns of the propellers, and after travelling a few metres, we
+ started off at a lively pace; the pressure-gauge registered about seven
+ atmospheres; almost immediately the vibrations of the rear wheel ceased; a
+ little later we only experienced those of the front wheels at intervals.
+ 'Unhappily, the wind became suddenly strong, and we had some difficulty in
+ keeping the "Avion" on the white line. We increased the pressure to
+ between eight and nine atmospheres, and immediately the speed increased
+ considerably, and the vibrations of the wheels were no longer sensible; we
+ were at that moment at the point marked G in the sketch; the "Avion" then
+ found itself freely supported by its wings; under the impulse of the wind
+ it continually tended to go outside the (prepared) area to the right, in
+ spite of the action of the rudder. On reaching the point V it found itself
+ in a very critical position; the wind blew strongly and across the
+ direction of the white line which it ought to follow; the machine then,
+ although still going forward, drifted quickly out of the area; we
+ immediately put over the rudder to the left as far as it would go; at the
+ same time increasing the pressure still more, in order to try to regain
+ the course. The "Avion" obeyed, recovered a little, and remained for some
+ seconds headed towards its intended course, but it could not struggle
+ against the wind; instead of going back, on the contrary it drifted
+ farther and farther away. And ill-luck had it that the drift took the
+ direction towards part of the School of Musketry, which was guarded by
+ posts and barriers. Frightened at the prospect of breaking ourselves
+ against these obstacles, surprised at seeing the earth getting farther
+ away from under the "Avion," and very much impressed by seeing it rushing
+ sideways at a sickening speed, instinctively we stopped everything. What
+ passed through our thoughts at this moment which threatened a tragic turn
+ would be difficult to set down. All at once came a great shock,
+ splintering, a heavy concussion: we had landed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus speaks the inventor; the cold official mind gives out a different
+ account, crediting the 'Avion' with merely a few hops, and to-day, among
+ those who consider the problem at all, there is a little group which
+ persists in asserting that to Ader belongs the credit of the first
+ power-driven flight, while a larger group is equally persistent in stating
+ that, save for a few ineffectual hops, all three wheels of the machine
+ never left the ground. It is past question that the 'Avion' was capable of
+ power-driven flight; whether it achieved it or no remains an unsettled
+ problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ader's work is negative proof of the value of such experiments as
+ Lilienthal, Pilcher, Chanute, and Montgomery conducted; these four set to
+ work to master the eccentricities of the air before attempting to use it
+ as a supporting medium for continuous flight under power; Ader attacked
+ the problem from the other end; like many other experimenters he regarded
+ the air as a stable fluid capable of giving such support to his machine as
+ still water might give to a fish, and he reckoned that he had only to
+ produce the machine in order to achieve flight. The wrecked 'Avion' and
+ the refusal of the French War Ministry to grant any more funds for further
+ experiment are sufficient evidence of the need for working along the lines
+ taken by the pioneers of gliding rather than on those which Ader himself
+ adopted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let it not be thought that in this comment there is any desire to derogate
+ from the position which Ader should occupy in any study of the pioneers of
+ aeronautical enterprise. If he failed, he failed magnificently, and if he
+ succeeded, then the student of aeronautics does him an injustice and
+ confers on the Brothers Wright an honour which, in spite of the value of
+ their work, they do not deserve. There was one earlier than Ader, Alphonse
+ Penaud, who, in the face of a lesser disappointment than that which Ader
+ must have felt in gazing on the wreckage of his machine, committed
+ suicide; Ader himself, rendered unable to do more, remained content with
+ his achievement, and with the knowledge that he had played a good part in
+ the long search which must eventually end in triumph. Whatever the world
+ might say, he himself was certain that he had achieved flight. This, for
+ him, was perforce enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before turning to consideration of the work accomplished by the Brothers
+ Wright, and their proved conquest of the air, it is necessary first to
+ sketch as briefly as may be the experimental work of Sir (then Mr) Hiram
+ Maxim, who, in his book, Artificial and Natural Flight, has given a fairly
+ complete account of his various experiments. He began by experimenting
+ with models, with screw-propelled planes so attached to a horizontal
+ movable arm that when the screw was set in motion the plane described a
+ circle round a central point, and, eventually, he built a giant aeroplane
+ having a total supporting area of 1,500 square feet, and a wing-span of
+ fifty feet. It has been thought advisable to give a fairly full
+ description of the power plant used to the propulsion of this machine in
+ the section devoted to engine development. The aeroplane, as Maxim
+ describes it, had five long and narrow planes projecting from each side,
+ and a main or central plane of pterygoid aspect. A fore and aft rudder was
+ provided, and had all the auxiliary planes been put in position for
+ experimental work a total lifting surface of 6,000 square feet could have
+ been obtained. Maxim, however, did not use more than 4,000 square feet of
+ lifting surface even in his later experiments; with this he judged the
+ machine capable of lifting slightly under 8,000 lbs. weight, made up of
+ 600 lbs. water in the boiler and tank, a crew of three men, a supply of
+ naphtha fuel, and the weight of the machine itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maxim's intention was, before attempting free flight, to get as much data
+ as possible regarding the conditions under which flight must be obtained,
+ by what is known in these days as 'taxi-ing'&mdash;that is, running the
+ propellers at sufficient speed to drive the machine along the ground
+ without actually mounting into the air. He knew that he had an immense
+ lifting surface and a tremendous amount of power in his engine even when
+ the total weight of the experimental plant was taken into consideration,
+ and thus he set about to devise some means of keeping the machine on the
+ nine foot gauge rail track which had been constructed for the trials. At
+ the outset he had a set of very heavy cast-iron wheels made on which to
+ mount the machine, the total weight of wheels, axles, and connections
+ being about one and a half tons. These were so constructed that the light
+ flanged wheels which supported the machine on the steel rails could be
+ lifted six inches above the track, still leaving the heavy wheels on the
+ rails for guidance of the machine. 'This arrangement,' Maxim states, 'was
+ tried on several occasions, the machine being run fast enough to lift the
+ forward end off the track. However, I found considerable difficulty in
+ starting and stopping quickly on account of the great weight, and the
+ amount of energy necessary to set such heavy wheels spinning at a high
+ velocity. The last experiment with these wheels was made when a head wind
+ was blowing at the rate of about ten miles an hour. It was rather
+ unsteady, and when the machine was running at its greatest velocity, a
+ sudden gust lifted not only the front end, but also the heavy front wheels
+ completely off the track, and the machine falling on soft ground was soon
+ blown over by the wind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consequently, a safety track was provided, consisting of squared pine
+ logs, three inches by nine inches, placed about two feet above the steel
+ way and having a thirty-foot gauge. Four extra wheels were fitted to the
+ machine on outriggers and so adjusted that, if the machine should lift one
+ inch clear of the steel rails, the wheels at the ends of the outriggers
+ would engage the under side of the pine trackway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first fully loaded run was made in a dead calm with 150 lbs. steam
+ pressure to the square inch, and there was no sign of the wheels leaving
+ the steel track. On a second run, with 230 lbs. steam pressure the machine
+ seemed to alternate between adherence to the lower and upper tracks, as
+ many as three of the outrigger wheels engaging at the same time, and the
+ weight on the steel rails being reduced practically to nothing. In
+ preparation for a third run, in which it was intended to use full power, a
+ dynamometer was attached to the machine and the engines were started at
+ 200 lbs. pressure, which was gradually increased to 310 lbs per square
+ inch. The incline of the track, added to the reading of the dynamometer,
+ showed a total screw thrust of 2,164 lbs. After the dynamometer test had
+ been completed, and everything had been made ready for trial in motion,
+ careful observers were stationed on each side of the track, and the order
+ was given to release the machine. What follows is best told in Maxim's own
+ words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The enormous screw-thrust started the engine so quickly that it nearly
+ threw the engineers off their feet, and the machine bounded over the track
+ at a great rate. Upon noticing a slight diminution in the steam pressure,
+ I turned on more gas, when almost instantly the steam commenced to blow a
+ steady blast from the small safety valve, showing that the pressure was at
+ least 320 lbs. in the pipes supplying the engines with steam. Before
+ starting on this run, the wheels that were to engage the upper track were
+ painted, and it was the duty of one of my assistants to observe these
+ wheels during the run, while another assistant watched the pressure gauges
+ and dynagraphs. The first part of the track was up a slight incline, but
+ the machine was lifted clear of the lower rails and all of the top wheels
+ were fully engaged on the upper track when about 600 feet had been
+ covered. The speed rapidly increased, and when 900 feet had been covered,
+ one of the rear axle trees, which were of two-inch steel tubing, doubled
+ up and set the rear end of the machine completely free. The pencils ran
+ completely across the cylinders of the dynagraphs and caught on the
+ underneath end. The rear end of the machine being set free, raised
+ considerably above the track and swayed. At about 1,000 feet, the left
+ forward wheel also got clear of the upper track, and shortly afterwards
+ the right forward wheel tore up about 100 feet of the upper track. Steam
+ was at once shut off and the machine sank directly to the earth, embedding
+ the wheels in the soft turf without leaving any other marks, showing most
+ conclusively that the machine was completely suspended in the air before
+ it settled to the earth. In this accident, one of the pine timbers forming
+ the upper track went completely through the lower framework of the machine
+ and broke a number of the tubes, but no damage was done to the machinery
+ except a slight injury to one of the screws.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pity that the multifarious directions in which Maxim turned his
+ energies did not include further development of the aeroplane, for it
+ seems fairly certain that he was as near solution of the problem as Ader
+ himself, and, but for the holding-down outer track, which was really the
+ cause of his accident, his machine would certainly have achieved free
+ flight, though whether it would have risen, flown and alighted, without
+ accident, is matter for conjecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difference between experiments with models and with full-sized
+ machines is emphasised by Maxim's statement to the effect that with a
+ small apparatus for ascertaining the power required for artificial flight,
+ an angle of incidence of one in fourteen was most advantageous, while with
+ a large machine he found it best to increase his angle to one in eight in
+ order to get the maximum lifting effect on a short run at a moderate
+ speed. He computed the total lifting effect in the experiments which led
+ to the accident as not less than 10,000 lbs., in which is proof that only
+ his rail system prevented free flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. SAMUEL PIERPOINT LANGLEY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Langley was an old man when he began the study of aeronautics, or, as he
+ himself might have expressed it, the study of aerodromics, since he
+ persisted in calling the series of machines he built 'Aerodromes,' a word
+ now used only to denote areas devoted to use as landing spaces for flying
+ machines; the Wright Brothers, on the other hand, had the great gift of
+ youth to aid them in their work. Even so it was a great race between
+ Langley, aided by Charles Manly, and Wilbur and Orville Wright, and only
+ the persistent ill-luck which dogged Langley from the start to the finish
+ of his experiments gave victory to his rivals. It has been proved
+ conclusively in these later years of accomplished flight that the machine
+ which Langley launched on the Potomac River in October of 1903 was fully
+ capable of sustained flight, and only the accidents incurred in launching
+ prevented its pilot from being the first man to navigate the air
+ successfully in a power-driven machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best account of Langley's work is that diffused throughout a weighty
+ tome issued by the Smithsonian Institution, entitled the Langley Memoir on
+ Mechanical Flight, of which about one-third was written by Langley
+ himself, the remainder being compiled by Charles M. Manly, the engineer
+ responsible for the construction of the first radial aero-engine, and
+ chief assistant to Langley in his experiments. To give a twentieth of the
+ contents of this volume in the present short account of the development of
+ mechanical flight would far exceed the amount of space that can be devoted
+ even to so eminent a man in aeronautics as S. P. Langley, who, apart from
+ his achievement in the construction of a power-driven aeroplane really
+ capable of flight, was a scientist of no mean order, and who brought to
+ the study of aeronautics the skill of the trained investigator allied to
+ the inventive resource of the genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That genius exemplified the antique saw regarding the infinite capacity
+ for taking pains, for the Langley Memoir shows that as early as 1891
+ Langley had completed a set of experiments, lasting through years, which
+ proved it possible to construct machines giving such a velocity to
+ inclined surfaces that bodies indefinitely heavier than air could be
+ sustained upon it and propelled through it at high speed. For full account
+ (very full) of these experiments, and of a later series leading up to the
+ construction of a series of 'model aerodromes' capable of flight under
+ power, it is necessary to turn to the bulky memoir of Smithsonian origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The account of these experiments as given by Langley himself reveals the
+ humility of the true investigator. Concerning them, Langley remarks that,
+ 'Everything here has been done with a view to putting a trial aerodrome
+ successfully in flight within a few years, and thus giving an early
+ demonstration of the only kind which is conclusive in the eyes of the
+ scientific man, as well as of the general public&mdash;a demonstration
+ that mechanical flight is possible&mdash;by actually flying. All that has
+ been done has been with an eye principally to this immediate result, and
+ all the experiments given in this book are to be considered only as
+ approximations to exact truth. All were made with a view, not to some
+ remote future, but to an arrival within the compass of a few years at some
+ result in actual flight that could not be gainsaid or mistaken.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a series of over thirty rubber-driven models Langley demonstrated the
+ practicability of opposing curved surfaces to the resistance of the air in
+ such a way as to achieve flight, in the early nineties of last century; he
+ then set about finding the motive power which should permit of the
+ construction of larger machines, up to man-carrying size. The internal
+ combustion engine was then an unknown quantity, and he had to turn to
+ steam, finally, as the propulsive energy for his power plant. The chief
+ problem which faced him was that of the relative weight and power of his
+ engine; he harked back to the Stringfellow engine of 1868, which in 1889
+ came into the possession of the Smithsonian Institution as a historical
+ curiosity. Rightly or wrongly Langley concluded on examination that this
+ engine never had developed and never could develop more than a tenth of
+ the power attributed to it; consequently he abandoned the idea of copying
+ the Stringfellow design and set about making his own engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How he overcame the various difficulties that faced him and constructed a
+ steam-engine capable of the task allotted to it forms a story in itself,
+ too long for recital here. His first power-driven aerodrome of model size
+ was begun in November of 1891, the scale of construction being decided
+ with the idea that it should be large enough to carry an automatic
+ steering apparatus which would render the machine capable of maintaining a
+ long and steady flight. The actual weight of the first model far exceeded
+ the theoretical estimate, and Langley found that a constant increase of
+ weight under the exigencies of construction was a feature which could
+ never be altogether eliminated. The machine was made principally of steel,
+ the sustaining surfaces being composed of silk stretched from a steel tube
+ with wooden attachments. The first engines were the oscillating type, but
+ were found deficient in power. This led to the construction of
+ single-acting inverted oscillating engines with high and low pressure
+ cylinders, and with admission and exhaust ports to avoid the complication
+ and weight of eccentric and valves. Boiler and furnace had to be specially
+ designed; an analysis of sustaining surfaces and the settlement of
+ equilibrium while in flight had to be overcome, and then it was possible
+ to set about the construction of the series of model aerodromes and make
+ test of their 'lift.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time Langley had advanced sufficiently far to consider it possible
+ to conduct experiments in the open air, even with these models, he had got
+ to his fifth aerodrome, and to the year 1894. Certain tests resulted in
+ failure, which in turn resulted in further modifications of design, mainly
+ of the engines. By February of 1895 Langley reported that under favourable
+ conditions a lift of nearly sixty per cent of the flying weight was
+ secured, but although this was much more than was required for flight, it
+ was decided to postpone trials until two machines were ready for the test.
+ May, 1896, came before actual trials were made, when one machine proved
+ successful and another, a later design, failed. The difficulty with these
+ models was that of securing a correct angle for launching; Langley records
+ how, on launching one machine, it rose so rapidly that it attained an
+ angle of sixty degrees and then did a tail slide into the water with its
+ engines working at full speed, after advancing nearly forty feet and
+ remaining in the air for about three seconds. Here, Langley found that he
+ had to obtain greater rigidity in his wings, owing to the distortion of
+ the form of wing under pressure, and how he overcame this difficulty
+ constitutes yet another story too long for the telling here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Field trials were first attempted in 1893, and Langley blamed his
+ launching apparatus for their total failure. There was a brief, but at the
+ same time practical, success in model flight in 1894, extending to between
+ six and seven seconds, but this only proved the need for strengthening of
+ the wing. In 1895 there was practically no advance toward the solution of
+ the problem, but the flights of May 6th and November 28th, 1896, were
+ notably successful. A diagram given in Langley's memoir shows the track
+ covered by the aerodrome on these two flights; in the first of them the
+ machine made three complete circles, covering a distance of 3,200 feet; in
+ the second, that of November 28th, the distance covered was 4,200 feet, or
+ about three-quarters of a mile, at a speed of about thirty miles an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These achievements meant a good deal; they proved mechanically propelled
+ flight possible. The difference between them and such experiments as were
+ conducted by Clement Ader, Maxim, and others, lay principally in the fact
+ that these latter either did or did not succeed in rising into the air
+ once, and then, either willingly or by compulsion, gave up the quest,
+ while Langley repeated his experiments and thus attained to actual proof
+ of the possibilities of flight. Like these others, however, he decided in
+ 1896 that he would not undertake the construction of a large man-carrying
+ machine. In addition to a multitude of actual duties, which left him
+ practically no time available for original research, he had as an adverse
+ factor fully ten years of disheartening difficulties in connection with
+ his model machines. It was President McKinley who, by requesting Langley
+ to undertake the construction and test of a machine which might finally
+ lead to the development of a flying machine capable of being used in
+ warfare, egged him on to his final experiment. Langley's acceptance of the
+ offer to construct such a machine is contained in a letter addressed from
+ the Smithsonian Institution on December 12th, 1898, to the Board of
+ Ordnance and Fortification of the United States War Department; this
+ letter is of such interest as to render it worthy of reproduction:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Gentlemen,&mdash;In response to your invitation I repeat what I had the
+ honour to say to the Board&mdash;that I am willing, with the consent of
+ the Regents of this Institution, to undertake for the Government the
+ further investigation of the subject of the construction of a flying
+ machine on a scale capable of carrying a man, the investigation to include
+ the construction, development and test of such a machine under conditions
+ left as far as practicable in my discretion, it being understood that my
+ services are given to the Government in such time as may not be occupied
+ by the business of the Institution, and without charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have reason to believe that the cost of the construction will come
+ within the sum of $50,000.00, and that not more than one-half of that will
+ be called for in the coming year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I entirely agree with what I understand to be the wish of the Board that
+ privacy be observed with regard to the work, and only when it reaches a
+ successful completion shall I wish to make public the fact of its success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I attach to this a memorandum of my understanding of some points of
+ detail in order to be sure that it is also the understanding of the Board,
+ and I am, gentlemen, with much respect, your obedient servant, S. P.
+ Langley.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the chief problems in connection with the construction of a
+ full-sized apparatus was that of the construction of an engine, for it was
+ realised from the first that a steam power plant for a full-sized machine
+ could only be constructed in such a way as to make it a constant menace to
+ the machine which it was to propel. By this time (1898) the internal
+ combustion engine had so far advanced as to convince Langley that it
+ formed the best power plant available. A contract was made for the
+ delivery of a twelve horse-power engine to weigh not more than a hundred
+ pounds, but this contract was never completed, and it fell to Charles M.
+ Manly to design the five-cylinder radial engine, of which a brief account
+ is included in the section of this work devoted to aero engines, as the
+ power plant for the Langley machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of the years 1899 to 1903 in the Langley series of experiments
+ contains a multitude of detail far beyond the scope of this present study,
+ and of interest mainly to the designer. There were frames, engines, and
+ propellers, to be considered, worked out, and constructed. We are
+ concerned here mainly with the completed machine and its trials. Of these
+ latter it must be remarked that the only two actual field trials which
+ took place resulted in accidents due to the failure of the launching
+ apparatus, and not due to any inherent defect in the machine. It was
+ intended that these two trials should be the first of a series, but the
+ unfortunate accidents, and the fact that no further funds were forthcoming
+ for continuance of experiments, prevented Langley's success, which, had he
+ been free to go through as he intended with his work, would have been
+ certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best brief description of the Langley aerodrome in its final form, and
+ of the two attempted trials, is contained in the official report of Major
+ M. M. Macomb of the United States Artillery Corps, which report is here
+ given in full:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ REPORT
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Experiments with working models which were concluded August 8 last having
+ proved the principles and calculations on which the design of the Langley
+ aerodrome was based to be correct, the next step was to apply these
+ principles to the construction of a machine of sufficient size and power
+ to permit the carrying of a man, who could control the motive power and
+ guide its flight, thus pointing the way to attaining the final goal of
+ producing a machine capable of such extensive and precise aerial flight,
+ under normal atmospheric conditions, as to prove of military or commercial
+ utility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr C. M. Manly, working under Professor Langley, had, by the summer of
+ 1903, succeeded in completing an engine-driven machine which under
+ favourable atmospheric conditions was expected to carry a man for any time
+ up to half an hour, and to be capable of having its flight directed and
+ controlled by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The supporting surface of the wings was ample, and experiment showed the
+ engine capable of supplying more than the necessary motive power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to the necessity of lightness, the weight of the various elements
+ had to be kept at a minimum, and the factor of safety in construction was
+ therefore exceedingly small, so that the machine as a whole was delicate
+ and frail and incapable of sustaining any unusual strain. This defect was
+ to be corrected in later models by utilising data gathered in future
+ experiments under varied conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most remarkable results attained was the production of a
+ gasoline engine furnishing over fifty continuous horse-power for a weight
+ of 120 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aerodrome, as completed and prepared for test, is briefly described by
+ Professor Langley as 'built of steel, weighing complete about 730 lbs.,
+ supported by 1,040 feet of sustaining surface, having two propellers
+ driven by a gas engine developing continuously over fifty brake
+ horse-power.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The appearance of the machine prepared for flight was exceedingly light
+ and graceful, giving an impression to all observers of being capable of
+ successful flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On October 7 last everything was in readiness, and I witnessed the
+ attempted trial on that day at Widewater, Va. On the Potomac. The engine
+ worked well and the machine was launched at about 12.15 p.m. The trial was
+ unsuccessful because the front guy-post caught in its support on the
+ launching car and was not released in time to give free flight, as was
+ intended, but, on the contrary, caused the front of the machine to be
+ dragged downward, bending the guy-post and making the machine plunge into
+ the water about fifty yards in front of the house-boat. The machine was
+ subsequently recovered and brought back to the house-boat. The engine was
+ uninjured and the frame only slightly damaged, but the four wings and
+ rudder were practically destroyed by the first plunge and subsequent
+ towing back to the house-boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This accident necessitated the removal of the house-boat to Washington for
+ the more convenient repair of damages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On December 8 last, between 4 and 5 p.m., another attempt at a trial was
+ made, this time at the junction of the Anacostia with the Potomac, just
+ below Washington Barracks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this occasion General Randolph and myself represented the Board of
+ Ordnance and Fortification. The launching car was released at 4.45 p.m.
+ being pointed up the Anacostia towards the Navy Yard. My position was on
+ the tug Bartholdi, about 150 feet from and at right angles to the
+ direction of proposed flight. The car was set in motion and the propellers
+ revolved rapidly, the engine working perfectly, but there was something
+ wrong with the launching. The rear guy-post seemed to drag, bringing the
+ rudder down on the launching ways, and a crashing, rending sound, followed
+ by the collapse of the rear wings, showed that the machine had been
+ wrecked in the launching, just how, it was impossible for me to see. The
+ fact remains that the rear wings and rudder were wrecked before the
+ machine was free of the ways. Their collapse deprived the machine of its
+ support in the rear, and it consequently reared up in front under the
+ action of the motor, assumed a vertical position, and then toppled over to
+ the rear, falling into the water a few feet in front of the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr Manly was pulled out of the wreck uninjured and the wrecked machine&mdash;was
+ subsequently placed upon the house-boat, and the whole brought back to
+ Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From what has been said it will be seen that these unfortunate accidents
+ have prevented any test of the apparatus in free flight, and the claim
+ that an engine-driven, man-carrying aerodrome has been constructed lacks
+ the proof which actual flight alone can give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having reached the present stage of advancement in its development, it
+ would seem highly desirable, before laying down the investigation, to
+ obtain conclusive proof of the possibility of free flight, not only
+ because there are excellent reasons to hope for success, but because it
+ marks the end of a definite step toward the attainment of the final goal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just what further procedure is necessary to secure successful flight with
+ the large aerodrome has not yet been decided upon. Professor Langley is
+ understood to have this subject under advisement, and will doubtless
+ inform the Board of his final conclusions as soon as practicable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, to avoid any possible misunderstanding, it should be
+ stated that even after a successful test of the present great aerodrome,
+ designed to carry a man, we are still far from the ultimate goal, and it
+ would seem as if years of constant work and study by experts, together
+ with the expenditure of thousands of dollars, would still be necessary
+ before we can hope to produce an apparatus of practical utility on these
+ lines.&mdash;Washington, January 6, 1904.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A subsequent report of the Board of ordnance and Fortification to the
+ Secretary of War embodied the principal points in Major Macomb's report,
+ but as early as March 3rd, 1904, the Board came to a similar conclusion to
+ that of the French Ministry of War in respect of Clement Ader's work,
+ stating that it was not 'prepared to make an additional allotment at this
+ time for continuing the work.' This decision was in no small measure due
+ to hostile newspaper criticisms. Langley, in a letter to the press
+ explaining his attitude, stated that he did not wish to make public the
+ results of his work till these were certain, in consequence of which he
+ refused admittance to newspaper representatives, and this attitude
+ produced a hostility which had effect on the United States Congress. An
+ offer was made to commercialise the invention, but Langley steadfastly
+ refused it. Concerning this, Manly remarks that Langley had 'given his
+ time and his best labours to the world without hope of remuneration, and
+ he could not bring himself, at his stage of life, to consent to capitalise
+ his scientific work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The final trial of the Langley aerodrome was made on December 8th, 1903;
+ nine days later, on December 17th, the Wright Brothers made their first
+ flight in a power-propelled machine, and the conquest of the air was thus
+ achieved. But for the two accidents that spoilt his trials, the honour
+ which fell to the Wright Brothers would, beyond doubt, have been secured
+ by Samuel Pierpoint Langley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Such information as is given here concerning the Wright Brothers is
+ derived from the two best sources available, namely, the writings of
+ Wilbur Wright himself, and a lecture given by Dr Griffith Brewer to
+ members of the Royal Aeronautical Society. There is no doubt that so far
+ as actual work in connection with aviation accomplished by the two
+ brothers is concerned, Wilbur Wright's own statements are the clearest and
+ best available. Apparently Wilbur was, from the beginning, the historian
+ of the pair, though he himself would have been the last to attempt to
+ detract in any way from the fame that his brother's work also deserves.
+ Throughout all their experiments the two were inseparable, and their work
+ is one indivisible whole; in fact, in every department of that work, it is
+ impossible to say where Orville leaves off and where Wilbur begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a great story, this of the Wright Brothers, and one worth all the
+ detail that can be spared it. It begins on the 16th April, 1867, when
+ Wilbur Wright was born within eight miles of Newcastle, Indiana. Before
+ Orville's birth on the 19th August, 1871, the Wright family had moved to
+ Dayton, Ohio, and settled on what is known as the 'West Side' of the town.
+ Here the brothers grew up, and, when Orville was still a boy in his teens,
+ he started a printing business, which, as Griffith Brewer remarks, was
+ only limited by the smallness of his machine and small quantity of type at
+ his disposal. This machine was in such a state that pieces of string and
+ wood were incorporated in it by way of repair, but on it Orville managed
+ to print a boys' paper which gained considerable popularity in Dayton
+ 'West Side.' Later, at the age of seventeen, he obtained a more efficient
+ outfit, with which he launched a weekly newspaper, four pages in size,
+ entitled The West Side News. After three months' running the paper was
+ increased in size and Wilbur came into the enterprise as editor, Orville
+ remaining publisher. In 1894 the two brothers began the publication of a
+ weekly magazine, Snap-Shots, to which Wilbur contributed a series of
+ articles on local affairs that gave evidence of the incisive and often
+ sarcastic manner in which he was able to express himself throughout his
+ life. Dr Griffith Brewer describes him as a fearless critic, who wrote on
+ matters of local interest in a kindly but vigorous manner, which did much
+ to maintain the healthy public municipal life of Dayton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Editorial and publishing enterprise was succeeded by the formation, just
+ across the road from the printing works, of the Wright Cycle Company,
+ where the two brothers launched out as cycle manufacturers with the 'Van
+ Cleve' bicycle, a machine of great local repute for excellence of
+ construction, and one which won for itself a reputation that lasted long
+ after it had ceased to be manufactured. The name of the machine was that
+ of an ancestor of the brothers, Catherine Van Cleve, who was one of the
+ first settlers at Dayton, landing there from the River Miami on April 1st,
+ 1796, when the country was virgin forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until 1896 that the mechanical genius which characterised the
+ two brothers was turned to the consideration of aeronautics. In that year
+ they took up the problem thoroughly, studying all the aeronautical
+ information then in print. Lilienthal's writings formed one basis for
+ their studies, and the work of Langley assisted in establishing in them a
+ confidence in the possibility of a solution to the problems of mechanical
+ flight. In 1909, at the banquet given by the Royal Aero Club to the Wright
+ Brothers on their return to America, after the series of demonstration
+ flights carried out by Wilbur Wright on the Continent, Wilbur paid tribute
+ to the great pioneer work of Stringfellow, whose studies and achievements
+ influenced his own and Orville's early work. He pointed out how
+ Stringfellow devised an aeroplane having two propellers and vertical and
+ horizontal steering, and gave due place to this early pioneer of
+ mechanical flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither of the brothers was content with mere study of the work of others.
+ They collected all the theory available in the books published up to that
+ time, and then built man-carrying gliders with which to test the data of
+ Lilienthal and such other authorities as they had consulted. For two years
+ they conducted outdoor experiments in order to test the truth or otherwise
+ of what were enunciated as the principles of flight; after this they
+ turned to laboratory experiments, constructing a wind tunnel in which they
+ made thousands of tests with models of various forms of curved planes.
+ From their experiments they tabulated thousands of readings, which
+ Griffith Brewer remarks as giving results equally efficient with those of
+ the elaborate tables prepared by learned institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilbur Wright has set down the beginnings of the practical experiments
+ made by the two brothers very clearly. 'The difficulties,' he says, 'which
+ obstruct the pathway to success in flying machine construction are of
+ three general classes: (1) Those which relate to the construction of the
+ sustaining wings; (2) those which relate to the generation and application
+ of the power required to drive the machine through the air; (3) those
+ relating to the balancing and steering of the machine after it is actually
+ in flight. Of these difficulties two are already to a certain extent
+ solved. Men already know how to construct wings, or aeroplanes, which,
+ when driven through the air at sufficient speed, will not only sustain the
+ weight of the wings themselves, but also that of the engine and the
+ engineer as well. Men also know how to build engines and' screws of
+ sufficient lightness and power to drive these planes at sustaining speed.
+ Inability to balance and steer still confronts students of the flying
+ problem, although nearly ten years have passed (since Lilienthal's
+ success). When this one feature has been worked out, the age of flying
+ machines will have arrived, for all other difficulties are of minor
+ importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The person who merely watches the flight of a bird gathers the impression
+ that the bird has nothing to think of but the flapping of its wings. As a
+ matter of fact, this is a very small part of its mental labour. Even to
+ mention all the things the bird must constantly keep in mind in order to
+ fly securely through the air would take a considerable time. If I take a
+ piece of paper and, after placing it parallel with the ground, quickly let
+ it fall, it will not settle steadily down as a staid, sensible piece of
+ paper ought to do, but it insists on contravening every recognised rule of
+ decorum, turning over and darting hither and thither in the most erratic
+ manner, much after the style of an untrained horse. Yet this is the style
+ of steed that men must learn to manage before flying can become an
+ everyday sport. The bird has learned this art of equilibrium, and learned
+ it so thoroughly that its skill is not apparent to our sight. We only
+ learn to appreciate it when we can imitate it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now, there are only two ways of learning to ride a fractious horse: one
+ is to get on him and learn by actual practice how each motion and trick
+ may be best met; the other is to sit on a fence and watch the beast
+ awhile, and then retire to the house and at leisure figure out the best
+ way of overcoming his jumps and kicks. The latter system is the safer, but
+ the former, on the whole, turns out the larger proportion of good riders.
+ It is very much the same in learning to ride a flying machine; if you are
+ looking for perfect safety you will do well to sit on a fence and watch
+ the birds, but if you really wish to learn you must mount a machine and
+ become acquainted with its tricks by actual trial. The balancing of a
+ gliding or flying machine is very simple in theory. It merely consists in
+ causing the centre of pressure to coincide with the centre of gravity.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These comments are taken from a lecture delivered by Wilbur Wright before
+ the Western Society of Engineers in September of 1901, under the
+ presidency of Octave Chanute. In that lecture Wilbur detailed the way in
+ which he and his brother came to interest themselves in aeronautical
+ problems and constructed their first glider. He speaks of his own notice
+ of the death of Lilienthal in 1896, and of the way in which this fatality
+ roused him to an active interest in aeronautical problems, which was
+ stimulated by reading Professor Marey's Animal Mechanism, not for the
+ first time. 'From this I was led to read more modern works, and as my
+ brother soon became equally interested with myself, we soon passed from
+ the reading to the thinking, and finally to the working stage. It seemed
+ to us that the main reason why the problem had remained so long unsolved
+ was that no one had been able to obtain any adequate practice. We figured
+ that Lilienthal in five years of time had spent only about five hours in
+ actual gliding through the air. The wonder was not that he had done so
+ little, but that he had accomplished so much. It would not be considered
+ at all safe for a bicycle rider to attempt to ride through a crowded city
+ street after only five hours' practice, spread out in bits of ten seconds
+ each over a period of five years; yet Lilienthal with this brief practice
+ was remarkably successful in meeting the fluctuations and eddies of
+ wind-gusts. We thought that if some method could be found by which it
+ would be possible to practice by the hour instead of by the second there
+ would be hope of advancing the solution of a very difficult problem. It
+ seemed feasible to do this by building a machine which would be sustained
+ at a speed of eighteen miles per hour, and then finding a locality where
+ winds of this velocity were common. With these conditions a rope attached
+ to the machine to keep it from floating backward would answer very nearly
+ the same purpose as a propeller driven by a motor, and it would be
+ possible to practice by the hour, and without any serious danger, as it
+ would not be necessary to rise far from the ground, and the machine would
+ not have any forward motion at all. We found, according to the accepted
+ tables of air pressure on curved surfaces, that a machine spreading 200
+ square feet of wing surface would be sufficient for our purpose, and that
+ places would easily be found along the Atlantic coast where winds of
+ sixteen to twenty-five miles were not at all uncommon. When the winds were
+ low it was our plan to glide from the tops of sandhills, and when they
+ were sufficiently strong to use a rope for our motor and fly over one
+ spot. Our next work was to draw up the plans for a suitable machine. After
+ much study we finally concluded that tails were a source of trouble rather
+ than of assistance, and therefore we decided to dispense with them
+ altogether. It seemed reasonable that if the body of the operator could be
+ placed in a horizontal position instead of the upright, as in the machines
+ of Lilienthal, Pilcher, and Chanute, the wind resistance could be very
+ materially reduced, since only one square foot instead of five would be
+ exposed. As a full half horse-power would be saved by this change, we
+ arranged to try at least the horizontal position. Then the method of
+ control used by Lilienthal, which consisted in shifting the body, did not
+ seem quite as quick or effective as the case required; so, after long
+ study, we contrived a system consisting of two large surfaces on the
+ Chanute double-deck plan, and a smaller surface placed a short distance in
+ front of the main surfaces in such a position that the action of the wind
+ upon it would counterbalance the effect of the travel of the centre of
+ pressure on the main surfaces. Thus changes in the direction and velocity
+ of the wind would have little disturbing effect, and the operator would be
+ required to attend only to the steering of the machine, which was to be
+ effected by curving the forward surface up or down. The lateral
+ equilibrium and the steering to right or left was to be attained by a
+ peculiar torsion of the main surfaces which was equivalent to presenting
+ one end of the wings at a greater angle than the other. In the main frame
+ a few changes were also made in the details of construction and trussing
+ employed by Mr Chanute. The most important of these were: (1) The moving
+ of the forward main crosspiece of the frame to the extreme front edge; (2)
+ the encasing in the cloth of all crosspieces and ribs of the surfaces; (3)
+ a rearrangement of the wires used in trussing the two surfaces together,
+ which rendered it possible to tighten all the wires by simply shortening
+ two of them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brothers intended originally to get 200 square feet of supporting
+ surface for their glider, but the impossibility of obtaining suitable
+ material compelled them to reduce the area to 165 square feet, which, by
+ the Lilienthal tables, admitted of support in a wind of about twenty-one
+ miles an hour at an angle of three degrees. With this glider they went in
+ the summer of I 1900 to the little settlement of Kitty Hawk, North
+ Carolina, situated on the strip of land dividing Albemarle Sound from the
+ Atlantic. Here they reckoned on obtaining steady wind, and here, on the
+ day that they completed the machine, they took it out for trial as a kite
+ with the wind blowing at between twenty-five and thirty miles an hour.
+ They found that in order to support a man on it the glider required an
+ angle nearer twenty degrees than three, and even with the wind at thirty
+ miles an hour they could not get down to the planned angle of three
+ degrees. 'Later, when the wind was too light to support the machine with a
+ man on it, they tested it as a kite, working the rudders by cords.
+ Although they obtained satisfactory results in this way they realised
+ fully that actual gliding experience was necessary before the tests could
+ be considered practical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A series of actual measurements of lift and drift of the machine gave
+ astonishing results. 'It appeared that the total horizontal pull of the
+ machine, while sustaining a weight of 52 lbs., was only 8.5 lbs., which
+ was less than had been previously estimated for head resistance of the
+ framing alone. Making allowance for the weight carried, it appeared that
+ the head resistance of the framing was but little more than fifty per cent
+ of the amount which Mr Chanute had estimated as the head resistance of the
+ framing of his machine. On the other hand, it appeared sadly deficient in
+ lifting power as compared with the calculated lift of curved surfaces of
+ its size... we decided to arrange our machine for the following year so
+ that the depth of curvature of its surfaces could be varied at will, and
+ its covering air-proofed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these experiments the brothers decided to turn to practical gliding,
+ for which they moved four miles to the south, to the Kill Devil sandhills,
+ the principal of which is slightly over a hundred feet in height, with an
+ inclination of nearly ten degrees on its main north-western slope. On the
+ day after their arrival they made about a dozen glides, in which, although
+ the landings were made at a speed of more than twenty miles an hour, no
+ injury was sustained either by the machine or by the operator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The slope of the hill was 9.5 degrees, or a drop of one foot in six. We
+ found that after attaining a speed of about twenty-five to thirty miles
+ with reference to the wind, or ten to fifteen miles over the ground, the
+ machine not only glided parallel to the slope of the hill, but greatly
+ increased its speed, thus indicating its ability to glide on a somewhat
+ less angle than 9.5 degrees, when we should feel it safe to rise higher
+ from the surface. The control of the machine proved even better than we
+ had dared to expect, responding quickly to the slightest motion of the
+ rudder. With these glides our experiments for the year 1900 closed.
+ Although the hours and hours of practice we had hoped to obtain finally
+ dwindled down to about two minutes, we were very much pleased with the
+ general results of the trip, for, setting out as we did with almost
+ revolutionary theories on many points and an entirely untried form of
+ machine, we considered it quite a point to be able to return without
+ having our pet theories completely knocked on the head by the hard logic
+ of experience, and our own brains dashed out in the bargain. Everything
+ seemed to us to confirm the correctness of our original opinions: (1) That
+ practice is the key to the secret of flying; (2) that it is practicable to
+ assume the horizontal position; (3) that a smaller surface set at a
+ negative angle in front of the main bearing surfaces, or wings, will
+ largely counteract the effect of the fore and aft travel of the centre of
+ pressure; (4) that steering up and down can be attained with a rudder
+ without moving the position of the operator's body; (5) that twisting the
+ wings so as to present their ends to the wind at different angles is a
+ more prompt and efficient way of maintaining lateral equilibrium than
+ shifting the body of the operator.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the gliding experiments of 1901 it was decided to retain the form of
+ the 1900 glider, but to increase the area to 308 square feet, which, the
+ brothers calculated, would support itself and its operator in a wind of
+ seventeen miles an hour with an angle of incidence of three degrees. Camp
+ was formed at Kitty Hawk in the middle of July, and on July 27th the
+ machine was completed and tried for the first time in a wind of about
+ fourteen miles an hour. The first attempt resulted in landing after a
+ glide of only a few yards, indicating that the centre of gravity was too
+ far in front of the centre of pressure. By shifting his position farther
+ and farther back the operator finally achieved an undulating flight of a
+ little over 300 feet, but to obtain this success he had to use full power
+ of the rudder to prevent both stalling and nose-diving. With the 1900
+ machine one-fourth of the rudder action had been necessary for far better
+ control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Practically all glides gave the same result, and in one the machine rose
+ higher and higher until it lost all headway. 'This was the position from
+ which Lilienthal had always found difficulty in extricating himself, as
+ his machine then, in spite of his greatest exertions, manifested a
+ tendency to dive downward almost vertically and strike the ground head on
+ with frightful velocity. In this case a warning cry from the ground caused
+ the operator to turn the rudder to its full extent and also to move his
+ body slightly forward. The machine then settled slowly to the ground,
+ maintaining its horizontal position almost perfectly, and landed without
+ any injury at all. This was very encouraging, as it showed that one of the
+ very greatest dangers in machines with horizontal tails had been overcome
+ by the use of the front rudder. Several glides later the same experience
+ was repeated with the same result. In the latter case the machine had even
+ commenced to move backward, but was nevertheless brought safely to the
+ ground in a horizontal position. On the whole this day's experiments were
+ encouraging, for while the action of the rudder did not seem at all like
+ that of our 1900 machine, yet we had escaped without difficulty from
+ positions which had proved very dangerous to preceding experimenters, and
+ after less than one minute's actual practice had made a glide of more than
+ 300 feet, at an angle of descent of ten degrees, and with a machine nearly
+ twice as large as had previously been considered safe. The trouble with
+ its control, which has been mentioned, we believed could be corrected when
+ we should have located its cause.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was finally ascertained that the defect could be remedied by trussing
+ down the ribs of the whole machine so as to reduce the depth of curvature.
+ When this had been done gliding was resumed, and after a few trials glides
+ of 366 and 389 feet were made with prompt response on the part of the
+ machine, even to small movements of the rudder. The rest of the story of
+ the gliding experiments of 1901 cannot be better told than in Wilbur
+ Wright's own words, as uttered by him in the lecture from which the
+ foregoing excerpts have been made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The machine, with its new curvature, never failed to respond promptly to
+ even small movements of the rudder. The operator could cause it to almost
+ skim the ground, following the undulations of its surface, or he could
+ cause it to sail out almost on a level with the starting point, and,
+ passing high above the foot of the hill, gradually settle down to the
+ ground. The wind on this day was blowing eleven to fourteen miles per
+ hour. The next day, the conditions being favourable, the machine was again
+ taken out for trial. This time the velocity of the wind was eighteen to
+ twenty-two miles per hour. At first we felt some doubt as to the safety of
+ attempting free flight in so strong a wind, with a machine of over 300
+ square feet and a practice of less than five minutes spent in actual
+ flight. But after several preliminary experiments we decided to try a
+ glide. The control of the machine seemed so good that we then felt no
+ apprehension in sailing boldly forth. And thereafter we made glide after
+ glide, sometimes following the ground closely and sometimes sailing high
+ in the air. Mr Chanute had his camera with him and took pictures of some
+ of these glides, several of which are among those shown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We made glides on subsequent days, whenever the conditions were
+ favourable. The highest wind thus experimented in was a little over twelve
+ metres per second&mdash;nearly twenty-seven miles per hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been our intention when building the machine to do the larger part
+ of the experimenting in the following manner:&mdash;When the wind blew
+ seventeen miles an hour, or more, we would attach a rope to the machine
+ and let it rise as a kite with the operator upon it. When it should reach
+ a proper height the operator would cast off the rope and glide down to the
+ ground just as from the top of a hill. In this way we would be saved the
+ trouble of carrying the machine uphill after each glide, and could make at
+ least ten glides in the time required for one in the other way. But when
+ we came to try it, we found that a wind of seventeen miles, as measured by
+ Richards' anemometer, instead of sustaining the machine with its operator,
+ a total weight of 240 lbs., at an angle of incidence of three degrees, in
+ reality would not sustain the machine alone&mdash;100 lbs.&mdash;at this
+ angle. Its lifting capacity seemed scarcely one third of the calculated
+ amount. In order to make sure that this was not due to the porosity of the
+ cloth, we constructed two small experimental surfaces of equal size, one
+ of which was air-proofed and the other left in its natural state; but we
+ could detect no difference in their lifting powers. For a time we were led
+ to suspect that the lift of curved surfaces very little exceeded that of
+ planes of the same size, but further investigation and experiment led to
+ the opinion that (1) the anemometer used by us over-recorded the true
+ velocity of the wind by nearly 15 per cent; (2) that the well-known
+ Smeaton co-efficient of.005 V squared for the wind pressure at 90 degrees
+ is probably too great by at least 20 per cent; (3) that Lilienthal's
+ estimate that the pressure on a curved surface having an angle of
+ incidence of 3 degrees equals.545 of the pressure at go degrees is too
+ large, being nearly 50 per cent greater than very recent experiments of
+ our own with a pressure testing-machine indicate; (4) that the
+ superposition of the surfaces somewhat reduced the lift per square foot,
+ as compared with a single surface of equal area.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In gliding experiments, however, the amount of lift is of less relative
+ importance than the ratio of lift to drift, as this alone decides the
+ angle of gliding descent. In a plane the pressure is always perpendicular
+ to the surface, and the ratio of lift to drift is therefore the same as
+ that of the cosine to the sine of the angle of incidence. But in curved
+ surfaces a very remarkable situation is found. The pressure, instead of
+ being uniformly normal to the chord of the arc, is usually inclined
+ considerably in front of the perpendicular. The result is that the lift is
+ greater and the drift less than if the pressure were normal. Lilienthal
+ was the first to discover this exceedingly important fact, which is fully
+ set forth in his book, Bird Flight the Basis of the Flying Art, but owing
+ to some errors in the methods he used in making measurements, question was
+ raised by other investigators not only as to the accuracy of his figures,
+ but even as to the existence of any tangential force at all. Our
+ experiments confirm the existence of this force, though our measurements
+ differ considerably from those of Lilienthal. While at Kitty Hawk we spent
+ much time in measuring the horizontal pressure on our unloaded machine at
+ various angles of incidence. We found that at 13 degrees the horizontal
+ pressure was about 23 lbs. This included not only the drift proper, or
+ horizontal component of the pressure on the side of the surface, but also
+ the head resistance of the framing as well. The weight of the machine at
+ the time of this test was about 108 lbs. Now, if the pressure had been
+ normal to the chord of the surface, the drift proper would have been to
+ the lift (108 lbs.) as the sine of 13 degrees is to the cosine of 13
+ degrees, or.22 X 108/.97 = 24+ lbs.; but this slightly exceeds the total
+ pull of 23 pounds on our scales. Therefore it is evident that the average
+ pressure on the surface, instead of being normal to the chord, was so far
+ inclined toward the front that all the head resistance of framing and
+ wires used in the construction was more than overcome. In a wind of
+ fourteen miles per hour resistance is by no means a negligible factor, so
+ that tangential is evidently a force of considerable value. In a higher
+ wind, which sustained the machine at an angle of 10 degrees the pull on
+ the scales was 18 lbs. With the pressure normal to the chord the drift
+ proper would have been 17 X 98/.98. The travel of the centre of pressure
+ made it necessary to put sand on the front rudder to bring the centres of
+ gravity and pressure into coincidence, consequently the weight of the
+ machine varied from 98 lbs. to 108 lbs. in the different tests= 17 lbs.,
+ so that, although the higher wind velocity must have caused an increase in
+ the head resistance, the tangential force still came within 1 lb. of
+ overcoming it. After our return from Kitty Hawk we began a series of
+ experiments to accurately determine the amount and direction of the
+ pressure produced on curved surfaces when acted upon by winds at the
+ various angles from zero to 90 degrees. These experiments are not yet
+ concluded, but in general they support Lilienthal in the claim that the
+ curves give pressures more favourable in amount and direction than planes;
+ but we find marked differences in the exact values, especially at angles
+ below 10 degrees. We were unable to obtain direct measurements of the
+ horizontal pressures of the machine with the operator on board, but by
+ comparing the distance travelled with the vertical fall, it was easily
+ calculated that at a speed of 24 miles per hour the total horizontal
+ resistances of our machine, when bearing the operator, amounted to 40
+ lbs., which is equivalent to about 2 1/3 horse-power. It must not be
+ supposed, however, that a motor developing this power would be sufficient
+ to drive a man-bearing machine. The extra weight of the motor would
+ require either a larger machine, higher speed, or a greater angle of
+ incidence in order to support it, and therefore more power. It is
+ probable, however, that an engine of 6 horse-power, weighing 100 lbs.
+ would answer the purpose. Such an engine is entirely practicable. Indeed,
+ working motors of one-half this weight per horse-power (9 lbs. per
+ horse-power) have been constructed by several different builders.
+ Increasing the speed of our machine from 24 to 33 miles per hour reduced
+ the total horizontal pressure from 40 to about 35 lbs. This was quite an
+ advantage in gliding, as it made it possible to sail about 15 per cent
+ farther with a given drop. However, it would be of little or no advantage
+ in reducing the size of the motor in a power-driven machine, because the
+ lessened thrust would be counterbalanced by the increased speed per
+ minute. Some years ago Professor Langley called attention to the great
+ economy of thrust which might be obtained by using very high speeds, and
+ from this many were led to suppose that high speed was essential to
+ success in a motor-driven machine. But the economy to which Professor
+ Langley called attention was in foot pounds per mile of travel, not in
+ foot pounds per minute. It is the foot pounds per minute that fixes the
+ size of the motor. The probability is that the first flying machines will
+ have a relatively low speed, perhaps not much exceeding 20 miles per hour,
+ but the problem of increasing the speed will be much simpler in some
+ respects than that of increasing the speed of a steamboat; for, whereas in
+ the latter case the size of the engine must increase as the cube of the
+ speed, in the flying machine, until extremely high speeds are reached, the
+ capacity of the motor increases in less than simple ratio; and there is
+ even a decrease in the fuel per mile of travel. In other words, to double
+ the speed of a steamship (and the same is true of the balloon type of
+ airship) eight times the engine and boiler capacity would be required, and
+ four times the fuel consumption per mile of travel: while a flying machine
+ would require engines of less than double the size, and there would be an
+ actual decrease in the fuel consumption per mile of travel. But looking at
+ the matter conversely, the great disadvantage of the flying machine is
+ apparent; for in the latter no flight at all is possible unless the
+ proportion of horse-power to flying capacity is very high; but on the
+ other hand a steamship is a mechanical success if its ratio of horse-power
+ to tonnage is insignificant. A flying machine that would fly at a speed of
+ 50 miles per hour with engines of 1,000 horse-power would not be upheld by
+ its wings at all at a speed of less than 25 miles an hour, and nothing
+ less than 500 horse-power could drive it at this speed. But a boat which
+ could make 40 miles an hour with engines of 1,000 horse-power would still
+ move 4 miles an hour even if the engines were reduced to 1 horse-power.
+ The problems of land and water travel were solved in the nineteenth
+ century, because it was possible to begin with small achievements, and
+ gradually work up to our present success. The flying problem was left over
+ to the twentieth century, because in this case the art must be highly
+ developed before any flight of any considerable duration at all can be
+ obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'However, there is another way of flying which requires no artificial
+ motor, and many workers believe that success will come first by this road.
+ I refer to the soaring flight, by which the machine is permanently
+ sustained in the air by the same means that are employed by soaring birds.
+ They spread their wings to the wind, and sail by the hour, with no
+ perceptible exertion beyond that required to balance and steer themselves.
+ What sustains them is not definitely known, though it is almost certain
+ that it is a rising current of air. But whether it be a rising current or
+ something else, it is as well able to support a flying machine as a bird,
+ if man once learns the art of utilising it. In gliding experiments it has
+ long been known that the rate of vertical descent is very much retarded,
+ and the duration of the flight greatly prolonged, if a strong wind blows
+ UP the face of the hill parallel to its surface. Our machine, when gliding
+ in still air, has a rate of vertical descent of nearly 6 feet per second,
+ while in a wind blowing 26 miles per hour up a steep hill we made glides
+ in which the rate of descent was less than 2 feet per second. And during
+ the larger part of this time, while the machine remained exactly in the
+ rising current, THERE WAS NO DESCENT AT ALL, BUT EVEN A SLIGHT RISE. If
+ the operator had had sufficient skill to keep himself from passing beyond
+ the rising current he would have been sustained indefinitely at a higher
+ point than that from which he started. The illustration shows one of these
+ very slow glides at a time when the machine was practically at a
+ standstill. The failure to advance more rapidly caused the photographer
+ some trouble in aiming, as you will perceive. In looking at this picture
+ you will readily understand that the excitement of gliding experiments
+ does not entirely cease with the breaking up of camp. In the photographic
+ dark-room at home we pass moments of as thrilling interest as any in the
+ field, when the image begins to appear on the plate and it is yet an open
+ question whether we have a picture of a flying machine or merely a patch
+ of open sky. These slow glides in rising current probably hold out greater
+ hope of extensive practice than any other method within man's reach, but
+ they have the disadvantage of requiring rather strong winds or very large
+ supporting surfaces. However, when gliding operators have attained greater
+ skill, they can with comparative safety maintain themselves in the air for
+ hours at a time in this way, and thus by constant practice so increase
+ their knowledge and skill that they can rise into the higher air and
+ search out the currents which enable the soaring birds to transport
+ themselves to any desired point by first rising in a circle and then
+ sailing off at a descending angle. This illustration shows the machine,
+ alone, flying in a wind of 35 miles per hour on the face of a steep hill,
+ 100 feet high. It will be seen that the machine not only pulls upward, but
+ also pulls forward in the direction from which the wind blows, thus
+ overcoming both gravity and the speed of the wind. We tried the same
+ experiment with a man on it, but found danger that the forward pull would
+ become so strong, that the men holding the ropes would be dragged from
+ their insecure foothold on the slope of the hill. So this form of
+ experimenting was discontinued after four or five minutes' trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In looking over our experiments of the past two years, with models and
+ full-size machines, the following points stand out with clearness:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '1. That the lifting power of a large machine, held stationary in a wind
+ at a small distance from the earth, is much less than the Lilienthal table
+ and our own laboratory experiments would lead us to expect. When the
+ machine is moved through the air, as in gliding, the discrepancy seems
+ much less marked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '2. That the ratio of drift to lift in well-shaped surfaces is less at
+ angles of incidence of 5 degrees to 12 degrees than at an angle of 3
+ degrees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '3. That in arched surfaces the centre of pressure at 90 degrees is near
+ the centre of the surface, but moves slowly forward as the angle becomes
+ less, till a critical angle varying with the shape and depth of the curve
+ is reached, after which it moves rapidly toward the rear till the angle of
+ no lift is found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '4. That with similar conditions large surfaces may be controlled with not
+ much greater difficulty than small ones, if the control is effected by
+ manipulation of the surfaces themselves, rather than by a movement of the
+ body of the operator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '5. That the head resistances of the framing can be brought to a point
+ much below that usually estimated as necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '6. That tails, both vertical and horizontal, may with safety be
+ eliminated in gliding and other flying experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '7. That a horizontal position of the operator's body may be assumed
+ without excessive danger, and thus the head resistance reduced to about
+ one-fifth that of the upright position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '8. That a pair of superposed, or tandem surfaces, has less lift in
+ proportion to drift than either surface separately, even after making
+ allowance for weight and head resistance of the connections.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, to the end of the 1901 experiments, Wilbur Wright provided a fairly
+ full account of what was accomplished; the record shows an amount of
+ patient and painstaking work almost beyond belief&mdash;it was no question
+ of making a plane and launching it, but a business of trial and error,
+ investigation and tabulation of detail, and the rejection time after time
+ of previously accepted theories, till the brothers must have felt the the
+ solid earth was no longer secure, at times. Though it was Wilbur who set
+ down this and other records of the work done, yet the actual work was so
+ much Orville's as his brother's that no analysis could separate any set of
+ experiments and say that Orville did this and Wilbur that&mdash;the two
+ were inseparable. On this point Griffith Brewer remarked that 'in the
+ arguments, if one brother took one view, the other brother took the
+ opposite view as a matter of course, and the subject was thrashed to
+ pieces until a mutually acceptable result remained. I have often been
+ asked since these pioneer days, "Tell me, Brewer, who was really the
+ originator of those two?" In reply, I used first to say, "I think it was
+ mostly Wilbur," and later, when I came to know Orville better, I said,
+ "The thing could not have been without Orville." Now, when asked, I have
+ to say, "I don't know," and I feel the more I think of it that it was only
+ the wonderful combination of these two brothers, who devoted their lives
+ together or this common object, that made the discovery of the art of
+ flying possible.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the 1901 experiments in gliding, the record grows more scrappy,
+ less detailed. It appears that once power-driven flight had been achieved,
+ the brothers were not so willing to talk as before; considering the amount
+ of work that they put in, there could have been little time for verbal
+ description of that work&mdash;as already remarked, their tables still
+ stand for the designer and experimenter. The end of the 1901 experiments
+ left both brothers somewhat discouraged, though they had accomplished more
+ than any others. 'Having set out with absolute faith in the existing
+ scientific data, we ere driven to doubt one thing after another, finally,
+ after two years of experiment, we cast it all aside, and decided to rely
+ entirely on our own investigations. Truth and error were everywhere so
+ intimately mixed as to be indistinguishable.... We had taken up
+ aeronautics as a sport. We reluctantly entered upon the scientific side of
+ it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, driven thus to the more serious aspect of the work, they found in the
+ step its own reward, for the work of itself drew them on and on, to the
+ construction of measuring machines for the avoidance of error, and to the
+ making of series after series of measurements, concerning which Wilbur
+ wrote in 1908 (in the Century Magazine) that 'after making preliminary
+ measurements on a great number of different shaped surfaces, to secure a
+ general understanding of the subject, we began systematic measurements of
+ standard surfaces, so varied in design as to bring out the underlying
+ causes of differences noted in their pressures. Measurements were
+ tabulated on nearly fifty of these at all angles from zero to 45 degrees,
+ at intervals of 2 1/2 degrees. Measurements were also secured showing the
+ effects on each other when surfaces are superposed, or when they follow
+ one another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Some strange results were obtained. One surface, with a heavy roll at the
+ front edge, showed the same lift for all angles from 7 1/2 to 45 degrees.
+ This seemed so anomalous that we were almost ready to doubt our own
+ measurements, when a simple test was suggested. A weather vane, with two
+ planes attached to the pointer at an angle of 80 degrees with each other,
+ was made. According to our table, such a vane would be in unstable
+ equilibrium when pointing directly into the wind, for if by chance the
+ wind should happen to strike one plane at 39 degrees and the other at 41
+ degrees, the plane with the smaller angle would have the greater pressure
+ and the pointer would be turned still farther out of the course of the
+ wind until the two vanes again secured equal pressures, which would be at
+ approximately 30 and 50 degrees. But the vane performed in this very
+ manner. Further corroboration of the tables was obtained in experiments
+ with the new glider at Kill Devil Hill the next season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In September and October, 1902 nearly 1,000 gliding flights were made,
+ several of which covered distances of over 600 feet. Some, made against a
+ wind of 36 miles an hour, gave proof of the effectiveness of the devices
+ for control. With this machine, in the autumn of 1903, we made a number of
+ flights in which we remained in the air for over a minute, often soaring
+ for a considerable time in one spot, without any descent at all. Little
+ wonder that our unscientific assistant should think the only thing needed
+ to keep it indefinitely in the air would be a coat of feathers to make it
+ light!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at the conclusion of these experiments of 1903 that the brothers
+ concluded they had obtained sufficient data from their thousands of glides
+ and multitude of calculations to permit of their constructing and making
+ trial of a power-driven machine. The first designs got out provided for a
+ total weight of 600 lbs., which was to include the weight of the motor and
+ the pilot; but on completion it was found that there was a surplus of
+ power from the motor, and thus they had 150 lbs. weight to allow for
+ strengthening wings and other parts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They came up against the problem to which Riach has since devoted so much
+ attention, that of propeller design. 'We had thought of getting the theory
+ of the screw-propeller from the marine engineers, and then, by applying
+ our table of air-pressures to their formulae, of designing air-propellers
+ suitable for our uses. But, so far as we could learn, the marine engineers
+ possessed only empirical formulae, and the exact action of the screw
+ propeller, after a century of use, was still very obscure. As we were not
+ in a position to undertake a long series of practical experiments to
+ discover a propeller suitable for our machine, it seemed necessary to
+ obtain such a thorough understanding of the theory of its reactions as
+ would enable us to design them from calculation alone. What at first
+ seemed a simple problem became more complex the longer we studied it. With
+ the machine moving forward, the air flying backward, the propellers
+ turning sidewise, and nothing standing still, it seemed impossible to find
+ a starting point from which to trace the various simultaneous reactions.
+ Contemplation of it was confusing. After long arguments we often found
+ ourselves in the ludicrous position of each having been converted to the
+ other's side, with no more agreement than when the discussion began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was not till several months had passed, and every phase of the problem
+ had been thrashed over and over, that the various reactions began to
+ untangle themselves. When once a clear understanding had been obtained
+ there was no difficulty in designing a suitable propeller, with proper
+ diameter, pitch, and area of blade, to meet the requirements of the flier.
+ High efficiency in a screw-propeller is not dependent upon any particular
+ or peculiar shape, and there is no such thing as a "best" screw. A
+ propeller giving a high dynamic efficiency when used upon one machine may
+ be almost worthless when used upon another. The propeller should in every
+ case be designed to meet the particular conditions of the machine to which
+ it is to be applied. Our first propellers, built entirely from
+ calculation, gave in useful work 66 per cent of the power expended. This
+ was about one-third more than had been secured by Maxim or Langley.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Langley had made his last attempt with the 'aerodrome,' and his splendid
+ failure but a few days before the brothers made their first attempt at
+ power-driven aeroplane flight. On December 17th, 1903, the machine was
+ taken out; in addition to Wilbur and Orville Wright, there were present
+ five spectators: Mr A. D. Etheridge, of the Kill Devil life-saving
+ station; Mr W. S.Dough, Mr W. C. Brinkley, of Manteo; Mr John Ward, of
+ Naghead, and Mr John T. Daniels.[*] A general invitation had been given to
+ practically all the residents in the vicinity, but the Kill Devil district
+ is a cold area in December, and history had recorded so many experiments
+ in which machines had failed to leave the ground that between temperature
+ and scepticism only these five risked a waste of their time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] This list is as given by Wilbur Wright himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And these five were in at the greatest conquest man had made since James
+ Watt evolved the steam engine&mdash;perhaps even a greater conquest than
+ that of Watt. Four flights in all were made; the first lasted only twelve
+ seconds, 'the first in the history of the world in which a machine
+ carrying a man had raised itself into the air by its own power in free
+ flight, had sailed forward on a level course without reduction of speed,
+ and had finally landed without being wrecked,' said Wilbur Wright
+ concerning the achievement.[*] The next two flights were slightly longer,
+ and the fourth and last of the day was one second short of the complete
+ minute; it was made into the teeth of a 20 mile an hour wind, and the
+ distance travelled was 852 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Century Magazine, September, 1908.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This bald statement of the day's doings is as Wilbur Wright himself has
+ given it, and there is in truth nothing more to say; no amount of
+ statement could add to the importance of the achievement, and no more than
+ the bare record is necessary. The faith that had inspired the long roll of
+ pioneers, from da Vinci onward, was justified at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having made their conquest, the brothers took the machine back to camp,
+ and, as they thought, placed it in safety. Talking with the little group
+ of spectators about the flights, they forgot about the machine, and then a
+ sudden gust of wind struck it. Seeing that it was being overturned, all
+ made a rush toward it to save it, and Mr Daniels, a man of large
+ proportions, was in some way lifted off his feet, falling between the
+ planes. The machine overturned fully, and Daniels was shaken like a die in
+ a cup as the wind rolled the machine over and over&mdash;he came out at
+ the end of his experience with a series of bad bruises, and no more, but
+ the damage done to the machine by the accident was sufficient to render it
+ useless for further experiment that season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new machine, stronger and heavier, was constructed by the brothers, and
+ in the spring of 1904 they began experiments again at Sims Station, eight
+ miles to the east of Dayton, their home town. Press representatives were
+ invited for the first trial, and about a dozen came&mdash;the whole
+ gathering did not number more than fifty people. 'When preparations had
+ been concluded,' Wilbur Wright wrote of this trial, 'a wind of only three
+ or four miles an hour was blowing&mdash;insufficient for starting on so
+ short a track&mdash;but since many had come a long way to see the machine
+ in action, an attempt was made. To add to the other difficulty, the engine
+ refused to work properly. The machine, after running the length of the
+ track, slid off the end without rising into the air at all. Several of the
+ newspaper men returned next day but were again disappointed. The engine
+ performed badly, and after a glide of only sixty feet the machine again
+ came to the ground. Further trial was postponed till the motor could be
+ put in better running condition. The reporters had now, no doubt, lost
+ confidence in the machine, though their reports, in kindness, concealed
+ it. Later, when they heard that we were making flights of several minutes'
+ duration, knowing that longer flights had been made with airships, and not
+ knowing any essential difference between airships and flying machines,
+ they were but little interested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We had not been flying long in 1904 before we found that the problem of
+ equilibrium had not as yet been entirely solved. Sometimes, in making a
+ circle, the machine would turn over sidewise despite anything the operator
+ could do, although, under the same conditions in ordinary straight flight
+ it could have been righted in an instant. In one flight, in 1905, while
+ circling round a honey locust-tree at a height of about 50 feet, the
+ machine suddenly began to turn up on one wing, and took a course toward
+ the tree. The operator, not relishing the idea of landing in a thorn tree,
+ attempted to reach the ground. The left wing, however, struck the tree at
+ a height of 10 or 12 feet from the ground and carried away several
+ branches; but the flight, which had already covered a distance of six
+ miles, was continued to the starting point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The causes of these troubles&mdash;too technical for explanation here&mdash;were
+ not entirely overcome till the end of September, 1905. The flights then
+ rapidly increased in length, till experiments were discontinued after
+ October 5 on account of the number of people attracted to the field.
+ Although made on a ground open on every side, and bordered on two sides by
+ much-travelled thoroughfares, with electric cars passing every hour, and
+ seen by all the people living in the neighbourhood for miles around, and
+ by several hundred others, yet these flights have been made by some
+ newspapers the subject of a great "mystery."'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viewing their work from the financial side, the two brothers incurred but
+ little expense in the earlier gliding experiments, and, indeed, viewed
+ these only as recreation, limiting their expenditure to that which two men
+ might spend on any hobby. When they had once achieved successful
+ power-driven flight, they saw the possibilities of their work, and
+ abandoned such other business as had engaged their energies, sinking all
+ their capital in the development of a practical flying machine. Having, in
+ 1905, improved their designs to such an extent that they could consider
+ their machine a practical aeroplane, they devoted the years 1906 and 1907
+ to business negotiations and to the construction of new machines, resuming
+ flying experiments in May of 1908 in order to test the ability of their
+ machine to meet the requirements of a contract they had made with the
+ United States Government, which required an aeroplane capable of carrying
+ two men, together with sufficient fuel supplies for a flight of 125 miles
+ at 40 miles per hour. Practically similar to the machine used in the
+ experiments of 1905, the contract aeroplane was fitted with a larger
+ motor, and provision was made for seating a passenger and also for
+ allowing of the operator assuming a sitting position, instead of lying
+ prone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving the work of the brothers to consider contemporary events,
+ it may be noted that they claimed&mdash;with justice&mdash;that they were
+ first to construct wings adjustable to different angles of incidence on
+ the right and left side in order to control the balance of an aeroplane;
+ the first to attain lateral balance by adjusting wing-tips to respectively
+ different angles of incidence on the right and left sides, and the first
+ to use a vertical vane in combination with wing-tips, adjustable to
+ respectively different angles of incidence, in balancing and steering an
+ aeroplane. They were first, too, to use a movable vertical tail, in
+ combination with wings adjustable to different angles of incidence, in
+ controlling the balance and direction of an aeroplane.[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*]Aeronautical Journal, No. 79.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain Henry M. Weaver, who went to see the work of the brothers,
+ writing in a letter which was subsequently read before the Aero Club de
+ France records that he had a talk in 1905 with the farmer who rented the
+ field in which the Wrights made their flights.' On October 5th (1905) he
+ was cutting corn in the next field east, which is higher ground. When he
+ noticed the aeroplane had started on its flight he remarked to his helper:
+ "Well, the boys are at it again," and kept on cutting corn, at the same
+ time keeping an eye on the great white form rushing about its course. "I
+ just kept on shocking corn," he continued, "until I got down to the fence,
+ and the durned thing was still going round. I thought it would never
+ stop."'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was right. The brothers started it, and it will never stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr Weaver also notes briefly the construction of the 1905 Wright flier.
+ 'The frame was made of larch wood-from tip to tip of the wings the
+ dimension was 40 feet. The gasoline motor&mdash;a special construction
+ made by them&mdash;much the same, though, as the motor on the Pope-Toledo
+ automobile&mdash;was of from 12 to 15 horse-power. The motor weighed 240
+ lbs. The frame was covered with ordinary muslin of good quality. No
+ attempt was made to lighten the machine; they simply built it strong
+ enough to stand the shocks. The structure stood on skids or runners, like
+ a sleigh. These held the frame high enough from the ground in alighting to
+ protect the blades of the propeller. Complete with motor, the machine
+ weighed 925 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. THE FIRST YEARS OF CONQUEST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is no derogation of the work accomplished by the Wright Brothers to say
+ that they won the honour of the first power-propelled flights in a
+ heavier-than-air machine only by a short period. In Europe, and especially
+ in France, independent experiment was being conducted by Ferber, by
+ Santos-Dumont, and others, while in England Cody was not far behind the
+ other giants of those days. The history of the early years of controlled
+ power flights is a tangle of half-records; there were no chroniclers, only
+ workers, and much of what was done goes unrecorded perforce, since it was
+ not set down at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before passing to survey of those early years, let it be set down that in
+ 1907, when the Wright Brothers had proved the practicability of their
+ machines, negotiations were entered into between the brothers and the
+ British War office. On April 12th 1907, the apostle of military
+ stagnation, Haldane, then War Minister, put an end to the negotiations by
+ declaring that 'the War office is not disposed to enter into relations at
+ present with any manufacturer of aeroplanes' The state of the British air
+ service in 1914 at the outbreak of hostilities, is eloquent regarding the
+ pursuance of the policy which Haldane initiated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If I talked a lot,' said Wilbur Wright once, 'I should be like the
+ parrot, which is the bird that speaks most and flies least.' That attitude
+ is emblematic of the majority of the early fliers, and because of it the
+ record of their achievements is incomplete to-day. Ferber, for instance,
+ has left little from which to state what he did, and that little is
+ scattered through various periodicals, scrappily enough. A French army
+ officer, Captain Ferber was experimenting with monoplane and biplane
+ gliders at the beginning of the century-his work was contemporary with
+ that of the Wrights. He corresponded both with Chanute and with the
+ Wrights, and in the end he was commissioned by the French Ministry of War
+ to undertake the journey to America in order to negotiate with the Wright
+ Brothers concerning French rights in the patents they had acquired, and to
+ study their work at first hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferber's experiments in gliding began in 1899 at the Military School at
+ Fountainebleau, with a canvas glider of some 80 square feet supporting
+ surface, and weighing 65 lbs. Two years later he constructed a larger and
+ more satisfactory machine, with which he made numerous excellent glides.
+ Later, he constructed an apparatus which suspended a plane from a long arm
+ which swung on a tower, in order that experiments might be carried out
+ without risk to the experimenter, and it was not until 1905 that he
+ attempted power-driven free flight. He took up the Voisin design of
+ biplane for his power-driven flights, and virtually devoted all his
+ energies to the study of aeronautics. His book, Aviation, its Dawn and
+ Development, is a work of scientific value&mdash;unlike many of his
+ contemporaries, Ferber brought to the study of the problems of flight a
+ trained mind, and he was concerned equally with the theoretical problems
+ of aeronautics and the practical aspects of the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Bleriot's successful cross-Channel flight, it was proposed to offer
+ a prize of L1,000 for the feat which C. S. Rolls subsequently accomplished
+ (starting from the English side of the Channel), a flight from Boulogne to
+ Dover and back; in place of this, however, an aviation week at Boulogne
+ was organised, but, although numerous aviators were invited to compete,
+ the condition of the flying grounds was such that no competitions took
+ place. Ferber was virtually the only one to do any flying at Boulogne, and
+ at the outset he had his first accident; after what was for those days a
+ good flight, he made a series of circles with his machine, when it
+ suddenly struck the ground, being partially wrecked. Repairs were carried
+ out, and Ferber resumed his exhibition flights, carrying on up to
+ Wednesday, September 22nd, 1909. On that day he remained in the air for
+ half an hour, and, as he was about to land, the machine struck a mound of
+ earth and overturned, pinning Ferber under the weight of the motor. After
+ being extricated, Ferber seemed to show little concern at the accident,
+ but in a few minutes he complained of great pain, when he was conveyed to
+ the ambulance shed on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was foolish,' he told those who were with him there. 'I was flying too
+ low. It was my own fault and it will be a severe lesson to me. I wanted to
+ turn round, and was only five metres from the ground.' A little after
+ this, he got up from the couch on which he had been placed, and almost
+ immediately collapsed, dying five minutes later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferber's chief contemporaries in France were Santos-Dumont, of airship
+ fame, Henri and Maurice Farman, Hubert Latham, Ernest Archdeacon, and
+ Delagrange. These are names that come at once to mind, as does that of
+ Bleriot, who accomplished the second great feat of power-driven flight,
+ but as a matter of fact the years 1903-10 are filled with a little host of
+ investigators and experimenters, many of whom, although their names do not
+ survive to any extent, are but a very little way behind those mentioned
+ here in enthusiasm and devotion. Archdeacon and Gabriel Voisin, the former
+ of whom took to heart the success achieved by the Wright Brothers,
+ co-operated in experiments in gliding. Archdeacon constructed a glider in
+ box-kite fashion, and Voisin experimented with it on the Seine, the glider
+ being towed by a motorboat to attain the necessary speed. It was
+ Archdeacon who offered a cup for the first straight flight of 200 metres,
+ which was won by Santos-Dumont, and he also combined with Henri Deutsch de
+ la Meurthe in giving the prize for the first circular flight of a mile,
+ which was won by Henry Farman on January 13th, 1908.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A history of the development of aviation in France in these, the strenuous
+ years, would fill volumes in itself. Bleriot was carrying out experiments
+ with a biplane glider on the Seine, and Robert Esnault-Pelterie was
+ working on the lines of the Wright Brothers, bringing American practice to
+ France. In America others besides the Wrights had wakened to the
+ possibilities of heavier-than-air flight; Glenn Curtiss, in company with
+ Dr Alexander Graham Bell, with J. A. D. McCurdy, and with F. W. Baldwin, a
+ Canadian engineer, formed the Aerial Experiment Company, which built a
+ number of aeroplanes, most famous of which were the 'June Bug,' the 'Red
+ Wing,' and the 'White Wing.' In 1908 the 'June Bug 'won a cup presented by
+ the Scientific American&mdash;it was the first prize offered in America in
+ connection with aeroplane flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the little group of French experimenters in these first years of
+ practical flight, Santos-Dumont takes high rank. He built his 'No. 14 bis'
+ aeroplane in biplane form, with two superposed main plane surfaces, and
+ fitted it with an eight-cylinder Antoinette motor driving a two-bladed
+ aluminium propeller, of which the blades were 6 feet only from tip to tip.
+ The total lift surface of 860 square feet was given with a wing-span of a
+ little under 40 feet, and the weight of the complete machine was 353 lbs.,
+ of which the engine weighed 158 lbs. In July of 1906 Santos-Dumont flew a
+ distance of a few yards in this machine, but damaged it in striking the
+ ground; on October 23rd of the same year he made a flight of nearly 200
+ feet&mdash;which might have been longer, but that he feared a crowd in
+ front of the aeroplane and cut off his ignition. This may be regarded as
+ the first effective flight in Europe, and by it Santos-Dumont takes his
+ place as one of the chief&mdash;if not the chief&mdash;of the pioneers of
+ the first years of practical flight, so far as Europe is concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the Voisin Brothers, who in 1904 made cellular kites for
+ Archdeacon to test by towing on the Seine from a motor launch, obtained
+ data for the construction of the aeroplane which Delagrange and Henry
+ Farman were to use later. The Voisin was a biplane, constructed with due
+ regard to the designs of Langley, Lilienthal, and other earlier
+ experimenters&mdash;both the Voisins and M. Colliex, their engineer,
+ studied Lilienthal pretty exhaustively in getting out their design, though
+ their own researches were very thorough as well. The weight of this Voisin
+ biplane was about 1,450 lbs., and its maximum speed was some 38 to 40
+ miles per hour, the total supporting surface being about 535 square feet.
+ It differed from the Wright design in the possession of a tail-piece, a
+ characteristic which marked all the French school of early design as in
+ opposition to the American. The Wright machine got its longitudinal
+ stability by means of the main planes and the elevating planes, while the
+ Voisin type added a third factor of stability in its sailplanes. Further,
+ the Voisins fitted their biplane with a wheeled undercarriage, while the
+ Wright machine, being fitted only with runners, demanded a launching rail
+ for starting. Whether a machine should be tailless or tailed was for some
+ long time matter for acute controversy, which in the end was settled by
+ the fitting of a tail to the Wright machines-France won the dispute by the
+ concession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry Farman, who began his flying career with a Voisin machine, evolved
+ from it the aeroplane which bore his name, following the main lines of the
+ Voisin type fairly closely, but making alterations in the controls, and in
+ the design of the undercarriage, which was somewhat elaborated, even to
+ the inclusion of shock absorbers. The seven-cylinder 50 horse-power Gnome
+ rotary engine was fitted to the Farman machine&mdash;the Voisins had
+ fitted an eight-cylinder Antoinette, giving 50 horse-power at 1,100
+ revolutions per minute, with direct drive to the propeller. Farman reduced
+ the weight of the machine from the 1,450 lbs. of the Voisins to some 1,010
+ lbs. or thereabouts, and the supporting area to 450 square feet. This
+ machine won its chief fame with Paulhan as pilot in the famous London to
+ Manchester flight&mdash;it is to be remarked, too, that Farman himself was
+ the first man in Europe to accomplish a flight of a mile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other notable designs of these early days were the 'R.E.P.', Esnault
+ Pelterie's machine, and the Curtiss-Herring biplane. Of these Esnault
+ Pelterie's was a monoplane, designed in that form since Esnault Pelterie
+ had found by experiment that the wire used in bracing offers far more
+ resistance to the air than its dimensions would seem to warrant. He built
+ the wings of sufficient strength to stand the strain of flight without
+ bracing wires, and dependent only for their support on the points of
+ attachment to the body of the machine; for the rest, it carried its
+ propeller in front of the planes, and both horizontal and vertical rudders
+ at the stern&mdash;a distinct departure from the Wright and similar types.
+ One wheel only was fixed under the body where the undercarriage exists on
+ a normal design, but light wheels were fixed, one at the extremity of each
+ wing, and there was also a wheel under the tail portion of the machine. A
+ single lever actuated all the controls for steering. With a supporting
+ surface of 150 square feet the machine weighed 946 lbs., about 6.4 lbs.
+ per square foot of lifting surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Curtiss biplane, as flown by Glenn Curtiss at the Rheims meeting, was
+ built with a bamboo framework, stayed by means of very fine steel-stranded
+ cables. A&mdash;then&mdash;novel feature of the machine was the moving of
+ the ailerons by the pilot leaning to one side or the other in his seat, a
+ light, tubular arm-rest being pressed by his body when he leaned to one
+ side or the other, and thus operating the movement of the ailerons
+ employed for tilting the plane when turning. A steering-wheel fitted
+ immediately in front of the pilot's seat served to operate a rear
+ steering-rudder when the wheel was turned in either direction, while
+ pulling back the wheel altered the inclination of the front elevating
+ planes, and so gave lifting or depressing control of the plane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This machine ran on three wheels before leaving the ground, a central
+ undercarriage wheel being fitted in front, with two more in line with a
+ right angle line drawn through the centre of the engine crank at the rear
+ end of the crank-case. The engine was a 35 horsepower Vee design, water
+ cooled, with overhead inlet and exhaust valves, and Bosch high-tension
+ magneto ignition. The total weight of the plane in flying order was about
+ 700 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As great a figure in the early days as either Ferber or Santos-Dumont was
+ Louis Bleriot, who, as early as 1900 built a flapping-wing model, this
+ before ever he came to experimenting with the Voisin biplane type of
+ glider on the Seine. Up to 1906 he had built four biplanes of his own
+ design, and in March of 1907 he built his first monoplane, to wreck it
+ only a few days after completion in an accident from which he had a
+ fortunate escape. His next machine was a double monoplane, designed after
+ Langley's precept, to a certain extent, and this was totally wrecked in
+ September of 1907. His seventh machine, a monoplane, was built within a
+ month of this accident, and with this he had a number of mishaps, also
+ achieving some good flights, including one in which he made a turn. It was
+ wrecked in December of 1907, whereupon he built another monoplane on
+ which, on July 6th, 1908, Bleriot made a flight lasting eight and a half
+ minutes. In October of that year he flew the machine from Toury to Artenay
+ and returned on it&mdash;this was just a day after Farman's first
+ cross-country flight&mdash;but, trying to repeat the success five days
+ later, Bleriot collided with a tree in a fog and wrecked the machine past
+ repair. Thereupon he set about building his eleventh machine, with which
+ he was to achieve the first flight across the English channel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry Farman, to whom reference has already been made, was engaged with
+ his two brothers, Maurice and Richard, in the motor-car business, and
+ turned to active interest in flying in 1907, when the Voisin firm built
+ his first biplane on the box-kite principle. In July of 1908 he won a
+ prize of L400 for a flight of thirteen miles, previously having completed
+ the first kilometre flown in Europe with a passenger, the said passenger
+ being Ernest Archdeaon. In September of 1908 Farman put up a speed record
+ of forty miles an hour in a flight lasting forty minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Santos-Dumont produced the famous 'Demoiselle' monoplane early in 1909, a
+ tiny machine in which the pilot had his seat in a sort of miniature cage
+ under the main plane. It was a very fast, light little machine but was
+ difficult to fly, and owing to its small wingspread was unable to glide at
+ a reasonably safe angle. There has probably never been a cheaper flying
+ machine to build than the 'Demoiselle,' which could be so upset as to seem
+ completely wrecked, and then repaired ready for further flight by a couple
+ of hours' work. Santos-Dumont retained no patent in the design, but gave
+ it out freely to any one who chose to build 'Demoiselles'; the vogue of
+ the pattern was brief, owing to the difficulty of piloting the machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were the years of records, broken almost as soon as made. There was
+ Farman's mile, there was the flight of the Comte de Lambert over the
+ Eiffel Tower, Latham's flight at Blackpool in a high wind, the Rheims
+ records, and then Henry Farman's flight of four hours later in 1909,
+ Orville Wright's height record of 1,640 feet, and Delagrange's speed
+ record of 49.9 miles per hour. The coming to fame of the Gnome rotary
+ engine helped in the making of these records to a very great extent, for
+ in this engine was a prime mover which gave the reliability that aeroplane
+ builders and pilots had been searching for, but vainly. The Wrights and
+ Glenn Curtiss, of course, had their own designs of engine, but the Gnome,
+ in spite of its lack of economy in fuel and oil, and its high cost, soon
+ came to be regarded as the best power plant for flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delagrange, one of the very good pilots of the early days, provided a
+ curious insight to the way in which flying was regarded, at the opening of
+ the Juvisy aero aerodrome in May of 1909. A huge crowd had gathered for
+ the first day's flying, and nine machines were announced to appear, but
+ only three were brought out. Delagrange made what was considered an
+ indifferent little flight, and another pilot, one De Bischoff, attempted
+ to rise, but could not get his machine off the ground. Thereupon the crowd
+ of 30,000 people lost their tempers, broke down the barriers surrounding
+ the flying course, and hissed the officials, who were quite unable to
+ maintain order. Delagrange, however, saved the situation by making a
+ circuit of the course at a height of thirty feet from the ground, which
+ won him rounds of cheering and restored the crowd to good humour. Possibly
+ the smash achieved by Rougier, the famous racing motorist, who crashed his
+ Voisin biplane after Delagrange had made his circuit, completed the
+ enjoyment of the spectators. Delagrange, flying at Argentan in June of
+ 1909, made a flight of four kilometres at a height of sixty feet; for
+ those days this was a noteworthy performance. Contemporary with this was
+ Hubert Latham's flight of an hour and seven minutes on an Antoinette
+ monoplane; this won the adjective 'magnificent' from contemporary
+ recorders of aviation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viewing the work of the little group of French experimenters, it is, at
+ this length of time from their exploits, difficult to see why they carried
+ the art as far as they did. There was in it little of satisfaction, a
+ certain measure of fame, and practically no profit&mdash;the giants of
+ those days got very little for their pains. Delagrange's experience at the
+ opening of the Juvisy ground was symptomatic of the way in which flight
+ was regarded by the great mass of people&mdash;it was a sport, and nothing
+ more, but a sport without the dividends attaching to professional football
+ or horse-racing. For a brief period, after the Rheims meeting, there was a
+ golden harvest to be reaped by the best of the pilots. Henry Farman asked
+ L2,000 for a week's exhibition flying in England, and Paulhan asked half
+ that sum, but a rapid increase in the number of capable pilots, together
+ with the fact that most flying meetings were financial failures, owing to
+ great expense in organisation and the doubtful factor of the weather,
+ killed this goose before many golden eggs had been gathered in by the star
+ aviators. Besides, as height and distance records were broken one after
+ another, it became less and less necessary to pay for entrance to an
+ aerodrome in order to see a flight&mdash;the thing grew too big for a mere
+ sports ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long before Rheims and the meeting there, aviation had grown too big for
+ the chronicling of every individual effort. In that period of the first
+ days of conquest of the air, so much was done by so many whose names are
+ now half-forgotten that it is possible only to pick out the great figures
+ and make brief reference to their achievements and the machines with which
+ they accomplished so much, pausing to note such epoch-making events as the
+ London-Manchester flight, Bleriot's Channel crossing, and the Rheims
+ meeting itself, and then passing on beyond the days of individual records
+ to the time when the machine began to dominate the man. This latter
+ because, in the early days, it was heroism to trust life to the planes
+ that were turned out&mdash;the 'Demoiselle' and the Antoinette machine
+ that Latham used in his attempt to fly the Channel are good examples of
+ the flimsiness of early types&mdash;while in the later period, that of the
+ war and subsequently, the heroism turned itself in a different&mdash;and
+ nobler-direction. Design became standardised, though not perfected. The
+ domination of the machine may best be expressed by contrasting the way in
+ which machines came to be regarded as compared with the men who flew them:
+ up to 1909, flying enthusiasts talked of Farman, of Bleriot, of Paulhan,
+ Curtiss, and of other men; later, they began to talk of the Voisin, the
+ Deperdussin, and even to the Fokker, the Avro, and the Bristol type. With
+ the standardising of the machine, the days of the giants came to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. FIRST FLIERS IN ENGLAND
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Certain experiments made in England by Mr Phillips seem to have come near
+ robbing the Wright Brothers of the honour of the first flight; notes made
+ by Colonel J. D. Fullerton on the Phillips flying machine show that in
+ 1893 the first machine was built with a length of 25 feet, breadth of 22
+ feet, and height of 11 feet, the total weight, including a 72 lb. load,
+ being 420 lbs. The machine was fitted with some fifty wood slats, in place
+ of the single supporting surface of the monoplane or two superposed
+ surfaces of the biplane, these slats being fixed in a steel frame so that
+ the whole machine rather resembled a Venetian blind. A steam engine giving
+ about 9 horse-power provided the motive power for the six-foot diameter
+ propeller which drove the machine. As it was not possible to put a
+ passenger in control as pilot, the machine was attached to a central post
+ by wire guys and run round a circle 100 feet in diameter, the track
+ consisting of wooden planking 4 feet wide. Pressure of air under the slats
+ caused the machine to rise some two or three feet above the track when
+ sufficient velocity had been attained, and the best trials were made on
+ June 19th 1893, when at a speed of 40 miles an hour, with a total load of
+ 385 lbs., all the wheels were off the ground for a distance of 2,000 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1904 a full-sized machine was constructed by Mr Phillips, with a total
+ weight, including that of the pilot, of 600 lbs. The machine was designed
+ to lift when it had attained a velocity of 50 feet per second, the motor
+ fitted giving 22 horse-power. On trial, however, the longitudinal
+ equilibrium was found to be defective, and a further design was got out,
+ the third machine being completed in 1907. In this the wood slats were
+ held in four parallel container frames, the weight of the machine,
+ excluding the pilot, being 500 lbs. A motor similar to that used in the
+ 1904 machine was fitted, and the machine was designed to lift at a
+ velocity of about 30 miles an hour, a seven-foot propeller doing the
+ driving. Mr Phillips tried out this machine in a field about 400 yards
+ across. 'The machine was started close to the hedge, and rose from the
+ ground when about 200 yards had been covered. When the machine touched the
+ ground again, about which there could be no doubt, owing to the terrific
+ jolting, it did not run many yards. When it came to rest I was about ten
+ yards from the boundary. Of course, I stopped the engine before I
+ commenced to descend.'[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Aeronautical Journal, July, 1908.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S. F. Cody, an American by birth, aroused the attention not only of the
+ British public, but of the War office and Admiralty as well, as early as
+ 1905 with his man-lifting kites. In that year a height of 1,600 feet was
+ reached by one of these box-kites, carrying a man, and later in the same
+ year one Sapper Moreton, of the Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers
+ (the parent of the Royal Flying Corps) remained for an hour at an altitude
+ of 2,600 feet. Following on the success of these kites, Cody constructed
+ an aeroplane which he designated a 'power kite,' which was in reality a
+ biplane that made the first flight in Great Britain. Speaking before the
+ Aeronautical Society in 1908, Cody said that 'I have accomplished one
+ thing that I hoped for very much, that is, to be the first man to fly in
+ Great Britain.... I made a machine that left the ground the first time
+ out; not high, possibly five or six inches only. I might have gone higher
+ if I wished. I made some five flights in all, and the last flight came to
+ grief.... On the morning of the accident I went out after adjusting my
+ propellers at 8 feet pitch running at 600 (revolutions per minute). I
+ think that I flew at about twenty-eight miles per hour. I had 50
+ horsepower motor power in the engine. A bunch of trees, a flat common
+ above these trees, and from this flat there is a slope goes down... to
+ another clump of trees. Now, these clumps of trees are a quarter of a mile
+ apart or thereabouts.... I was accused of doing nothing but jumping with
+ my machine, so I got a bit agitated and went to fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I went out this morning with an easterly wind, and left the ground at the
+ bottom of the hill and struck the ground at the top, a distance of 74
+ yards. That proved beyond a doubt that the machine would fly&mdash;it flew
+ uphill. That was the most talented flight the machine did, in my opinion.
+ Now, I turned round at the top and started the machine and left the ground&mdash;remember,
+ a ten mile wind was blowing at the time. Then, 60 yards from where the men
+ let go, the machine went off in this direction (demonstrating)&mdash;I
+ make a line now where I hoped to land&mdash;to cut these trees off at that
+ side and land right off in here. I got here somewhat excited, and started
+ down and saw these trees right in front of me. I did not want to smash my
+ head rudder to pieces, so I raised it again and went up. I got one wing
+ direct over that clump of trees, the right wing over the trees, the left
+ wing free; the wind, blowing with me, had to lift over these trees. So I
+ consequently got a false lift on the right side and no lift on the left
+ side. Being only about 8 feet from the tree tops, that turned my machine
+ up like that (demonstrating). This end struck the ground shortly after I
+ had passed the trees. I pulled the steering handle over as far as I could.
+ Then I faced another bunch of trees right in front of me. Trying to avoid
+ this second bunch of trees I turned the rudder, and turned it rather
+ sharp. That side of the machine struck, and it crumpled up like so much
+ tissue paper, and the machine spun round and struck the ground that way
+ on, and the framework was considerably wrecked. Now, I want to advise all
+ aviators not to try to fly with the wind and to cross over any big clump
+ of earth or any obstacle of any description unless they go square over the
+ top of it, because the lift is enormous crossing over anything like that,
+ and in coming the other way against the wind it would be the same thing
+ when you arrive at the windward side of the obstacle. That is a point I
+ did not think of, and had I thought of it I would have been more
+ cautious.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Cody machine was a biplane with about 40 foot span, the wings being
+ about 7 feet in depth with about 8 feet between upper and lower wing
+ surfaces. 'Attached to the extremities of the lower planes are two small
+ horizontal planes or rudders, while a third small vertical plane is fixed
+ over the centre of the upper plane.' The tail-piece and principal rudder
+ were fitted behind the main body of the machine, and a horizontal rudder
+ plane was rigged out in front, on two supporting arms extending from the
+ centre of the machine. The small end-planes and the vertical plane were
+ used in conjunction with the main rudder when turning to right or left,
+ the inner plane being depressed on the turn, and the outer one
+ correspondingly raised, while the vertical plane, working in conjunction,
+ assisted in preserving stability. Two two-bladed propellers were driven by
+ an eight-cylinder 50 horse-power Antoinette motor. With this machine Cody
+ made his first flights over Laffan's plain, being then definitely attached
+ to the Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers as military aviation
+ specialist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were many months of experiment and trial, after the accident which
+ Cody detailed in the statement given above, and then, on May 14th, 1909,
+ Cody took the air and made a flight of 1,200 yards with entire success.
+ Meanwhile A. V. Roe was experimenting at Lea Marshes with a triplane of
+ rather curious design the pilot having his seat between two sets of three
+ superposed planes, of which the front planes could be tilted and twisted
+ while the machine was in motion. He comes but a little way after Cody in
+ the chronology of early British experimenters, but Cody, a born inventor,
+ must be regarded as the pioneer of the present century so far as Britain
+ is concerned. He was neither engineer nor trained mathematician, but he
+ was a good rule-of-thumb mechanic and a man of pluck and perseverance; he
+ never strove to fly on an imperfect machine, but made alteration after
+ alteration in order to find out what was improvement and what was not, in
+ consequence of which it was said of him that he was 'always satisfied with
+ his alterations.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By July of 1909 he had fitted an 80 horse-power motor to his biplane, and
+ with this he made a flight of over four miles over Laffan's Plain on July
+ 21st. By August he was carrying passengers, the first being Colonel Capper
+ of the R.E. Balloon Section, who flew with Cody for over two miles, and on
+ September 8th, 1909, he made a world's record cross-country flight of over
+ forty miles in sixty-six minutes, taking a course from Laffan's Plain over
+ Farnborough, Rushmoor, and Fleet, and back to Laffan's Plain. He was one
+ of the competitors in the 1909 Doncaster Aviation Meeting, and in 1910 he
+ competed at Wolverhampton, Bournemouth, and Lanark. It was on June 7th,
+ 1910, that he qualified for his brevet, No. 9, on the Cody biplane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He built a machine which embodied all the improvements for which he had
+ gained experience, in 1911, a biplane with a length of 35 feet and span of
+ 43 feet, known as the 'Cody cathedral' on account of its rather cumbrous
+ appearance. With this, in 1911, he won the two Michelin trophies presented
+ in England, completed the Daily Mail circuit of Britain, won the Michelin
+ cross-country prize in 1912 and altogether, by the end of 1912, had
+ covered more than 7,000 miles with the machine. It was fitted with a 120
+ horse-power Austro-Daimler engine, and was characterised by an
+ exceptionally wide range of speed&mdash;the great wingspread gave a slow
+ landing speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few of his records may be given: in 1910, flying at Laffan's Plain in
+ his biplane, fitted with a 50-60 horsepower Green engine, on December
+ 31st, he broke the records for distance and time by flying 185 miles, 787
+ yards, in 4 hours 37 minutes. On October 31st, 1911, he beat this record
+ by flying for 5 hours 15 minutes, in which period he covered 261 miles 810
+ yards with a 60 horse-power Green engine fitted to his biplane. In 1912,
+ competing in the British War office tests of military aeroplanes, he won
+ the L5,000 offered by the War Office. This was in competition with no less
+ than twenty-five other machines, among which were the since-famous
+ Deperdussin, Bristol, Flanders, and Avro types, as well as the Maurice
+ Farman and Bleriot makes of machine. Cody's remarkable speed range was
+ demonstrated in these trials, the speeds of his machine varying between
+ 72.4 and 48.5 miles per hour. The machine was the only one delivered for
+ the trials by air, and during the three hours' test imposed on all
+ competitors a maximum height of 5,000 feet was reached, the first thousand
+ feet being achieved in three and a half minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the summer of 1913 Cody put his energies into the production of a
+ large hydro-biplane, with which he intended to win the L5,000 prize
+ offered by the Daily Mail to the first aviator to fly round Britain on a
+ waterplane. This machine was fitted with landing gear for its tests, and,
+ while flying it over Laffan's Plain on August 7th, 1913, with Mr W. H. B.
+ Evans as passenger, Cody met with the accident that cost both him and his
+ passenger their lives. Aviation lost a great figure by his death, for his
+ plodding, experimenting, and dogged courage not only won him the fame that
+ came to a few of the pilots of those days, but also advanced the cause of
+ flying very considerably and contributed not a little to the sum of
+ knowledge in regard to design and construction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another figure of the early days was A. V. Roe, who came from marine
+ engineering to the motor industry and aviation in 1905. In 1906 he went
+ out to Colorado, getting out drawings for the Davidson helicopter, and in
+ 1907 having returned to England, he obtained highest award out of 200
+ entries in a model aeroplane flying competition. From the design of this
+ model he built a full-sized machine, and made a first flight on it, fitted
+ with a 24 horse-power Antoinette engine, in June of 1908 Later, he fitted
+ a 9 horsepower motor-cycle engine to a triplane of his own design, and
+ with this made a number of short flights; he got his flying brevet on a
+ triplane with a motor of 35 horse-power, which, together with a second
+ triplane, was entered for the Blackpool aviation meeting of 1910 but was
+ burnt in transport to the meeting. He was responsible for the building of
+ the first seaplane to rise from English waters, and may be counted the
+ pioneer of the tractor type of biplane. In 1913 he built a two-seater
+ tractor biplane with 80 horse-power engine, a machine which for some
+ considerable time ranked as a leader of design. Together with E. V. Roe
+ and H. V. Roe, 'A. V.' controlled the Avro works, which produced some of
+ the most famous training machines of the war period in a modification of
+ the original 80 horse-power tractor. The first of the series of Avro
+ tractors to be adopted by the military authorities was the 1912 biplane, a
+ two-seater fitted with 50 horsepower engine. It was the first tractor
+ biplane with a closed fuselage to be used for military work, and became
+ standard for the type. The Avro seaplane, of I 100 horse-power (a
+ fourteen-cylinder Gnome engine was used) was taken up by the British
+ Admiralty in 1913. It had a length of 34 feet and a wing-span of 50 feet,
+ and was of the twin-float type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey de Havilland, though of later rank, counts high among designers
+ of British machines. He qualified for his brevet as late as February,
+ 1911, on a biplane of his own construction, and became responsible for the
+ design of the BE2, the first successful British Government biplane. On
+ this he made a British height record of 10,500 feet over Salisbury Plain,
+ in August of 1912, when he took up Major Sykes as passenger. In the war
+ period he was one of the principal designers of fighting and
+ reconnaissance machines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ F. Handley Page, who started in business as an aeroplane builder in 1908,
+ having works at Barking, was one of the principal exponents of the
+ inherently stable machine, to which he devoted practically all his
+ experimental work up to the outbreak of war. The experiments were made
+ with various machines, both of monoplane and biplane type, and of these
+ one of the best was a two-seater monoplane built in 1911, while a second
+ was a larger machine, a biplane, built in 1913 and fitted with a 110
+ horse-power Anzani engine. The war period brought out the giant biplane
+ with which the name of Handley Page is most associated, the twin-engined
+ night-bomber being a familiar feature of the later days of the war; the
+ four-engined bomber had hardly had a chance of proving itself under
+ service conditions when the war came to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another notable figure of the early period was 'Tommy' Sopwith, who took
+ his flying brevet at Brooklands in November of 1910, and within four days
+ made the British duration record of 108 miles in 3 hours 12 minutes. On
+ December 18th, 1910, he won the Baron de Forrest prize of L4,000 for the
+ longest flight from England to the Continent, flying from Eastchurch to
+ Tirlemont, Belgium, in three hours, a distance of 161 miles. After two
+ years of touring in America, he returned to England and established a
+ flying school. In 1912 he won the first aerial Derby, and in 1913 a
+ machine of his design, a tractor biplane, raised the British height record
+ to 13,000 feet (June 16th, at Brooklands). First as aviator, and then as
+ designer, Sopwith has done much useful work in aviation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are but a few, out of a host who contributed to the development of
+ flying in this country, for, although France may be said to have set the
+ pace as regards development, Britain was not far behind. French
+ experimenters received far more Government aid than did the early British
+ aviators and designers&mdash;in the early days the two were practically
+ synonymous, and there are many stories of the very early days at
+ Brooklands, where, when funds ran low, the ardent spirits patched their
+ trousers with aeroplane fabric and went on with their work with Bohemian
+ cheeriness. Cody, altering and experimenting on Laffan's Plain, is the
+ greatest figure of them all, but others rank, too, as giants of the early
+ days, before the war brought full recognition of the aeroplane's
+ potentialities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the first men actually to fly in England, Mr J. C. T.
+ Moore-Brabazon, was a famous figure in the days of exhibition flying, and
+ won his reputation mainly through being first to fly a circular mile on a
+ machine designed and built in Great Britain and piloted by a British
+ subject. Moore-Brabazon's earliest flights were made in France on a Voisin
+ biplane in 1908, and he brought this machine over to England, to the Aero
+ Club grounds at Shellness, but soon decided that he would pilot a British
+ machine instead. An order was placed for a Short machine, and this, fitted
+ with a 50-60 horse-power Green engine, was used for the circular mile,
+ which won a prize of L1,000 offered by the Daily Mail, the feat being
+ accomplished on October 30th, 1909. Five days later, Moore-Brabazon
+ achieved the longest flight up to that time accomplished on a
+ British-built machine, covering three and a half miles. In connection with
+ early flying in England, it is claimed that A. V. Roe, flying 'Avro B,','
+ on June 8th, 1908, was actually the first man to leave the ground, this
+ being at Brooklands, but in point of fact Cody antedated him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No record of early British fliers could be made without the name of C. S.
+ Rolls, a son of Lord Llangattock, on June 2nd, 1910, he flew across the
+ English Channel to France, until he was duly observed over French
+ territory, when he returned to England without alighting. The trip was
+ made on a Wright biplane, and was the third Channel crossing by air,
+ Bleriot having made the first, and Jacques de Lesseps the second. Rolls
+ was first to make the return journey in one trip. He was eventually killed
+ through the breaking of the tail-plane of his machine in descending at a
+ flying meeting at Bournemouth. The machine was a Wright biplane, but the
+ design of the tail-plane&mdash;which, by the way, was an addition to the
+ machine, and was not even sanctioned by the Wrights&mdash;appears to have
+ been carelessly executed, and the plane itself was faulty in construction.
+ The breakage caused the machine to overturn, killing Rolls, who was
+ piloting it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. RHEIMS, AND AFTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The foregoing brief&mdash;and necessarily incomplete&mdash;survey of the
+ early British group of fliers has taken us far beyond some of the great
+ events of the early days of successful flight, and it is necessary to go
+ back to certain landmarks in the history of aviation, first of which is
+ the great meeting at Rheims in 1909. Wilbur Wright had come to Europe,
+ and, flying at Le Mans and Pau&mdash;it was on August 8th, 1908, that
+ Wilbur Wright made the first of his ascents in Europe&mdash;had stimulated
+ public interest in flying in France to a very great degree. Meanwhile,
+ Orville Wright, flying at Fort Meyer, U.S.A., with Lieutenant Selfridge as
+ a passenger, sustained an accident which very nearly cost him his life
+ through the transmission gear of the motor breaking. Selfridge was killed
+ and Orville Wright was severely injured&mdash;it was the first fatal
+ accident with a Wright machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orville Wright made a flight of over an hour on September 9th, 1908, and
+ on December 31st of that year Wilbur flew for 2 hours 19 minutes. Thus,
+ when the Rheims meeting was organised&mdash;more notable because it was
+ the first of its kind, there were already records waiting to be broken.
+ The great week opened on August 22nd, there being thirty entrants,
+ including all the most famous men among the early fliers in France.
+ Bleriot, fresh from his Channel conquest, was there, together with Henry
+ Farman, Paulhan, Curtiss, Latham, and the Comte de Lambert, first pupil of
+ the Wright machine in Europe to achieve a reputation as an aviator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'To say that this week marks an epoch in the history of the world is to
+ state a platitude. Nevertheless, it is worth stating, and for us who are
+ lucky enough to be at Rheims during this week there is a solid
+ satisfaction in the idea that we are present at the making of history. In
+ perhaps only a few years to come the competitions of this week may look
+ pathetically small and the distances and speeds may appear paltry.
+ Nevertheless, they are the first of their kind, and that is sufficient.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So wrote a newspaper correspondent who was present at the famous meeting,
+ and his words may stand, being more than mere journalism; for the great
+ flying week which opened on August 22nd, 1909, ranks as one of the great
+ landmarks in the history of heavier-than-air flight. The day before the
+ opening of the meeting a downpour of rain spoilt the flying ground; Sunday
+ opened with a fairly high wind, and in a lull M. Guffroy turned out on a
+ crimson R.E.P. monoplane, but the wheels of his undercarriage stuck in the
+ mud and prevented him from rising in the quarter of an hour allowed to
+ competitors to get off the ground. Bleriot, following, succeeded in
+ covering one side of the triangular course, but then came down through
+ grit in the carburettor. Latham, following him with thirteen as the number
+ of his machine, experienced his usual bad luck and came to earth through
+ engine trouble after a very short flight. Captain Ferber, who, owing to
+ military regulations, always flew under the name of De Rue, came out next
+ with his Voisin biplane, but failed to get off the ground; he was followed
+ by Lefebvre on a Wright biplane, who achieved the success of the morning
+ by rounding the course&mdash;a distance of six and a quarter miles&mdash;in
+ nine minutes with a twenty mile an hour wind blowing. His flight finished
+ the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wind and rain kept competitors out of the air until the evening, when
+ Latham went up, to be followed almost immediately by the Comte de Lambert.
+ Sommer, Cockburn (the only English competitor), Delagrange, Fournier,
+ Lefebvre, Bleriot, Bunau-Varilla, Tissandier, Paulhan, and Ferber turned
+ out after the first two, and the excitement of the spectators at seeing so
+ many machines in the air at one time provoked wild cheering. The only
+ accident of the day came when Bleriot damaged his propeller in colliding
+ with a haycock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main results of the day were that the Comte de Lambert flew 30
+ kilometres in 29 minutes 2 seconds; Lefebvre made the ten-kilometre circle
+ of the track in just a second under 9 minutes, while Tissandier did it in
+ 9 1/4 minutes, and Paulhan reached a height of 230 feet. Small as these
+ results seem to us now, and ridiculous as may seem enthusiasm at the sight
+ of a few machines in the air at the same time, the Rheims Meeting remains
+ a great event, since it proved definitely to the whole world that the
+ conquest of the air had been achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout the week record after record was made and broken. Thus on the
+ Monday, Lefebvre put up a record for rounding the course and Bleriot beat
+ it, to be beaten in turn by Glenn Curtiss on his Curtiss-Herring biplane.
+ On that day, too, Paulhan covered 34 3/4 miles in 1 hour 6 minutes. On the
+ next day, Paulhan on his Voisin biplane took the air with Latham, and
+ Fournier followed, only to smash up his machine by striking an eddy of
+ wind which turned him over several times. On the Thursday, one of the
+ chief events was Latham's 43 miles accomplished in 1 hour 2 minutes in the
+ morning and his 96.5 miles in 2 hours 13 minutes in the afternoon, the
+ latter flight only terminated by running out of petrol. On the Friday, the
+ Colonel Renard French airship, which had flown over the ground under the
+ pilotage of M. Kapfarer, paid Rheims a second visit; Latham manoeuvred
+ round the airship on his Antoinette and finally left it far behind. Henry
+ Farman won the Grand Prix de Champagne on this day, covering 112 miles in
+ 3 hours, 4 minutes, 56 seconds, Latham being second with his 96.5 miles
+ flight, and Paulhan third.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Saturday, Glenn Curtiss came to his own, winning the Gordon-Bennett
+ Cup by covering 20 kilometres in 15 minutes 50.6 seconds. Bleriot made a
+ good second with 15 minutes 56.2 seconds as his time, and Latham and
+ Lefebvre were third and fourth. Farman carried off the passenger prize by
+ carrying two passengers a distance of 6 miles in 10 minutes 39 seconds. On
+ the last day Delagrange narrowly escaped serious accident through the
+ bursting of his propeller while in the air, Curtiss made a new speed
+ record by travelling at the rate of over 50 miles an hour, and Latham,
+ rising to 500 feet, won the altitude prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the cold statistics of the meeting; at this length of time it is
+ difficult to convey any idea of the enthusiasm of the crowds over the
+ achievements of the various competitors, while the incidents of the week,
+ comic and otherwise, are nearly forgotten now even by those present in
+ this making of history. Latham's great flight on the Thursday was rendered
+ a breathless episode by a downpour of rain when he had covered all but a
+ kilometre of the record distance previously achieved by Paulhan, and there
+ was wild enthusiasm when Latham flew on through the rain until he had put
+ up a new record and his petrol had run out. Again, on the Friday
+ afternoon, the Colonel Renard took the air together with a little French
+ dirigible, Zodiac III; Latham was already in the air directly over Farman,
+ who was also flying, and three crows which turned out as rivals to the
+ human aviators received as much cheering for their appearance as had been
+ accorded to the machines, which doubtless they could not understand.
+ Frightened by the cheering, the crows tried to escape from the course, but
+ as they came near the stands, the crowd rose to cheer again and the crows
+ wheeled away to make a second charge towards safety, with the same result;
+ the crowd rose and cheered at them a third and fourth time; between ten
+ and fifteen thousand people stood on chairs and tables and waved hats and
+ handkerchiefs at three ordinary, everyday crows. One thoughtful spectator,
+ having thoroughly enjoyed the funny side of the incident, remarked that
+ the ultimate mastery of the air lies with the machine that comes nearest
+ to natural flight. This still remains for the future to settle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farman's world record, which won the Grand Prix de Champagne, was done
+ with a Gnome Rotary Motor which had only been run on the test bench and
+ was fitted to his machine four hours before he started on the great
+ flight. His propeller had never been tested, having only been completed
+ the night before. The closing laps of that flight, extending as they did
+ into the growing of the dusk, made a breathlessly eerie experience for
+ such of the spectators as stayed on to watch&mdash;and these were many.
+ Night came on steadily and Farman covered lap after lap just as steadily,
+ a buzzing, circling mechanism with something relentless in its isolated
+ persistency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The final day of the meeting provided a further record in the quarter
+ million spectators who turned up to witness the close of the great week.
+ Bleriot, turning out in the morning, made a landing in some such fashion
+ as flooded the carburettor and caused it to catch fire. Bleriot himself
+ was badly burned, since the petrol tank burst and, in the end, only the
+ metal parts of the machine were left. Glenn Curtis tried to beat Bleriot's
+ time for a lap of the course, but failed. In the evening, Farman and
+ Latham went out and up in great circles, Farman cleaving his way upward in
+ what at the time counted for a huge machine, on circles of about a mile
+ diameter. His first round took him level with the top of the stands, and,
+ in his second, he circled the captive balloon anchored in the middle of
+ the grounds. After another circle, he came down on a long glide, when
+ Latham's lean Antoinette monoplane went up in circles more graceful than
+ those of Farman. 'Swiftly it rose and swept round close to the balloon,
+ veered round to the hangars, and out over to the Rheims road. Back it came
+ high over the stands, the people craning their necks as the shrill cry of
+ the engine drew nearer and nearer behind the stands. Then of a sudden, the
+ little form appeared away up in the deep twilight blue vault of the sky,
+ heading straight as an arrow for the anchored balloon. Over it, and high,
+ high above it went the Antoinette, seemingly higher by many feet than the
+ Farman machine. Then, wheeling in a long sweep to the left, Latham steered
+ his machine round past the stands, where the people, their nerve-tension
+ released on seeing the machine descending from its perilous height of 500
+ feet, shouted their frenzied acclamations to the hero of the meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'For certainly "Le Tham," as the French call him, was the popular hero. He
+ always flew high, he always flew well, and his machine was a joy to the
+ eye, either afar off or at close quarters. The public feeling for Bleriot
+ is different. Bleriot, in the popular estimation, is the man who fights
+ against odds, who meets the adverse fates calmly and with good courage,
+ and to whom good luck comes once in a while as a reward for much labour
+ and anguish, bodily and mental. Latham is the darling of the Gods, to whom
+ Fate has only been unkind in the matter of the Channel flight, and only
+ then because the honour belonged to Bleriot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Next to these two, the public loved most Lefebvre, the joyous, the
+ gymnastic. Lefebvre was the comedian of the meeting. When things began to
+ flag, the gay little Lefebvre would trot out to his starting rail, out at
+ the back of the judge's enclosure opposite the stands, and after a little
+ twisting of propellers his Wright machine would bounce off the end of its
+ starting rail and proceed to do the most marvellous tricks for the benefit
+ of the crowd, wheeling to right and left, darting up and down, now flying
+ over a troop of the cavalry who kept the plain clear of people and sending
+ their horses into hysterics, anon making straight for an unfortunate
+ photographer who would throw himself and his precious camera flat on the
+ ground to escape annihilation as Lefebvre swept over him 6 or 7 feet off
+ the ground. Lefebvre was great fun, and when he had once found that his
+ machine was not fast enough to compete for speed with the Bleriots,
+ Antoinettes, and Curtiss, he kept to his metier of amusing people. The
+ promoters of the meeting owe Lefebvre a debt of gratitude, for he provided
+ just the necessary comic relief.'&mdash;(The Aero, September 7th, 1909.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be noted, in connection with the fact that Cockburn was the only
+ English competitor at the meeting, that the Rheims Meeting did more than
+ anything which had preceded it to waken British interest in aviation.
+ Previously, heavier-than-air flight in England had been regarded as a
+ freak business by the great majority, and the very few pioneers who
+ persevered toward winning England a share in the conquest of the air came
+ in for as much derision as acclamation. Rheims altered this; it taught the
+ world in general, and England in particular, that a serious rival to the
+ dirigible balloon had come to being, and it awakened the thinking portion
+ of the British public to the fact that the aeroplane had a future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The success of this great meeting brought about a host of imitations of
+ which only a few deserve bare mention since, unlike the first, they taught
+ nothing and achieved little. There was the meeting at Boulogne late in
+ September of 1909, of which the only noteworthy event was Ferber's death.
+ There was a meeting at Brescia where Curtiss again took first prize for
+ speed and Rougier put up a world's height record of 645 feet. The
+ Blackpool meeting followed between 18th and 23rd of October, 1909,
+ forming, with the exception of Doncaster, the first British Flying
+ Meeting. Chief among the competitors were Henry Farman, who took the
+ distance prize, Rougier, Paulhan, and Latham, who, by a flight in a high
+ wind, convinced the British public that the theory that flying was only
+ possible in a calm was a fallacy. A meeting at Doncaster was practically
+ simultaneous with the Blackpool week; Delagrange, Le Blon, Sommer, and
+ Cody were the principal figures in this event. It should be added that 130
+ miles was recorded as the total flown at Doncaster, while at Blackpool
+ only 115 miles were flown. Then there were Juvisy, the first Parisian
+ meeting, Wolverhampton, and the Comte de Lambert's flight round the Eiffel
+ Tower at a height estimated at between 1,200 and 1,300 feet. This may be
+ included in the record of these aerial theatricals, since it was nothing
+ more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably wakened to realisation of the possibilities of the aeroplane by
+ the Rheims Meeting, Germany turned out its first plane late in 1909. It
+ was known as the Grade monoplane, and was a blend of the Bleriot and
+ Santos-Dumont machines, with a tail suggestive of the Antoinette type. The
+ main frame took the form of a single steel tube, at the forward end of
+ which was rigged a triangular arrangement carrying the pilot's seat and
+ the landing wheels underneath, with the wing warping wires and stays
+ above. The sweep of the wings was rather similar to the later Taube
+ design, though the sweep back was not so pronounced, and the machine was
+ driven by a four-cylinder, 20 horse-power, air-cooled engine which drove a
+ two-bladed tractor propeller. In spite of Lilienthal's pioneer work years
+ before, this was the first power-driven German plane which actually flew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eleven months after the Rheims meeting came what may be reckoned the only
+ really notable aviation meeting on English soil, in the form of the
+ Bournemouth week, July 10th to 16th, 1910. This gathering is noteworthy
+ mainly in view of the amazing advance which it registered on the Rheims
+ performances. Thus, in the matter of altitude, Morane reached 4,107 feet
+ and Drexel came second with 2,490 feet. Audemars on a Demoiselle monoplane
+ made a flight of 17 miles 1,480 yards in 27 minutes 17.2 seconds, a great
+ flight for the little Demoiselle. Morane achieved a speed of 56.64 miles
+ per hour, and Grahame White climbed to 1,000 feet altitude in 6 minutes
+ 36.8 seconds. Machines carrying the Gnome engine as power unit took the
+ great bulk of the prizes, and British-built engines were far behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bournemouth Meeting will always be remembered with regret for the
+ tragedy of C. S. Rolls's death, which took place on the Tuesday, the
+ second day of the meeting. The first competition of the day was that for
+ the landing prize; Grahame White, Audemars, and Captain Dickson had landed
+ with varying luck, and Rolls, following on a Wright machine with a
+ tail-plane which ought never to have been fitted and was not part of the
+ Wright design, came down wind after a left-hand turn and turned left again
+ over the top of the stands in order to land up wind. He began to dive when
+ just clear of the stands, and had dropped to a height of 40 feet when he
+ came over the heads of the people against the barriers. Finding his
+ descent too steep, he pulled back his elevator lever to bring the nose of
+ the machine up, tipping down the front end of the tail to present an
+ almost flat surface to the wind. Had all gone well, the nose of the
+ machine would have been forced up, but the strain on the tail and its four
+ light supports was too great; the tail collapsed, the wind pressed down
+ the biplane elevator, and the machine dived vertically for the remaining
+ 20 feet of the descent, hitting the ground vertically and crumpling up.
+ Major Kennedy, first to reach the debris, found Rolls lying with his head
+ doubled under him on the overturned upper main plane; the lower plane had
+ been flung some few feet away with the engine and tanks under it. Rolls
+ was instantaneously killed by concussion of the brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Antithesis to the tragedy was Audemars on his Demoiselle, which was named
+ 'The Infuriated Grasshopper.' Concerning this, it was recorded at the time
+ that 'Nothing so excruciatingly funny as the action of this machine has
+ ever been seen at any aviation ground. The little two-cylinder engine pops
+ away with a sound like the frantic drawing of ginger beer corks; the
+ machine scutters along the ground with its tail well up; then down comes
+ the tail suddenly and seems to slap the ground while the front jumps up,
+ and all the spectators rock with laughter. The whole attitude and the
+ jerky action of the machine suggest a grasshopper in a furious rage, and
+ the impression is intensified when it comes down, as it did twice on
+ Wednesday, in long grass, burying its head in the ground in its temper.'&mdash;(The
+ Aero, July, 1910.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lanark Meeting followed in August of the same year, and with the bare
+ mention of this, the subject of flying meetings may he left alone, since
+ they became mere matters of show until there came military competitions
+ such as the Berlin Meeting at the end of August, 1910, and the British War
+ office Trials on Salisbury Plain, when Cody won his greatest triumphs. The
+ Berlin meeting proved that, from the time of the construction of the first
+ successful German machine mentioned above, to the date of the meeting, a
+ good number of German aviators had qualified for flight, but principally
+ on Wright and Antoinette machines, though by that time the Aviatik and
+ Dorner German makes had taken the air. The British War office Trials
+ deserve separate and longer mention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1910 in spite of official discouragement, Captain Dickson proved the
+ value of the aeroplane for scouting purposes by observing movements of
+ troops during the Military Manoeuvres on Salisbury Plain. Lieut. Lancelot
+ Gibbs and Robert Loraine, the actor-aviator, also made flights over the
+ manoeuvre area, locating troops and in a way anticipating the formation
+ and work of the Royal Flying Corps by a usefulness which could not be
+ officially recognised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. THE CHANNEL CROSSING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It may be said that Louis Bleriot was responsible for the second great
+ landmark in the history of successful flight. The day when the brothers
+ Wright succeeded in accomplishing power-driven flight ranks as the first
+ of these landmarks. Ader may or may not have left the ground, but the
+ wreckage of his 'Avion' at the end of his experiment places his doubtful
+ success in a different category from that of the brothers Wright and
+ leaves them the first definite conquerors, just as Bleriot ranks as first
+ definite conqueror of the English Channel by air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a way, Louis Bleriot ranks before Farman in point of time; his first
+ flapping-wing model was built as early as 1900, and Voisin flew a biplane
+ glider of his on the Seine in the very early experimental days. Bleriot's
+ first four machines were biplanes, and his fifth, a monoplane, was wrecked
+ almost immediately after its construction. Bleriot had studied Langley's
+ work to a certain extent, and his sixth construction was a double
+ monoplane based on the Langley principle. A month after he had wrecked
+ this without damaging himself&mdash;for Bleriot had as many miraculous
+ escapes as any of the other fliers-he brought out number seven, a fairly
+ average monoplane. It was in December of 1907 after a series of flights
+ that he wrecked this machine, and on its successor, in July of 1908, he
+ made a flight of over 8 minutes. Sundry flights, more or less successful,
+ including the first cross-country flight from Toury to Artenay, kept him
+ busy up to the beginning of November, 1908, when the wreckage in a fog of
+ the machine he was flying sent him to the building of 'number eleven,' the
+ famous cross-channel aeroplane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Number eleven was shown at the French Aero Show in the Grand Palais and
+ was given its first trials on the 18th January, 1909. It was first fitted
+ with a R.E.P. motor and had a lifting area of 120 square feet, which was
+ later increased to 150 square feet. The framework was of oak and poplar
+ spliced and reinforced with piano wire; the weight of the machine was 47
+ lbs. and the undercarriage weight a further 60 lbs., this consisting of
+ rubber cord shock absorbers mounted on two wheels. The R.E.P. motor was
+ found unsatisfactory, and a three-cylinder Anzani of 105 mm. bore and 120
+ mm. stroke replaced it. An accident seriously damaged the machine on June
+ 2nd, but Bleriot repaired it and tested it at Issy, where between June
+ 19th and June 23rd he accomplished flights of 8, 12, 15, 16, and 36
+ minutes. On July 4th he made a 50-minute flight and on the 13th flew from
+ Etampes to Chevilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few further details of construction may be given: the wings themselves
+ and an elevator at the tail controlled the rate of ascent and descent,
+ while a rudder was also fitted at the tail. The steering lever, working on
+ a universally jointed shaft&mdash;forerunner of the modern joystick&mdash;controlled
+ both the rudder and the wings, while a pedal actuated the elevator. The
+ engine drove a two-bladed tractor screw of 6 feet 7 inches diameter, and
+ the angle of incidence of the wings was 20 degrees. Timed at Issy, the
+ speed of the machine was given as 36 miles an hour, and as Bleriot
+ accomplished the Channel flight of 20 miles in 37 minutes, he probably had
+ a slight following wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Daily Mail had offered a prize of L1,000 for the first Cross-Channel
+ flight, and Hubert Latham set his mind on winning it. He put up a shelter
+ on the French coast at Sangatte, half-way between Calais and Cape Blanc
+ Nez. From here he made his first attempt to fly to England on Monday the
+ 19th of July. He soared to a fair height, circling, and reached an
+ estimated height of about 900 feet as he came over the water with every
+ appearance of capturing the Cross-Channel prize. The luck which dogged his
+ career throughout was against him, for, after he had covered some 8 miles,
+ his engine stopped and he came down to the water in a series of long
+ glides. It was discovered afterward that a small piece of wire had worked
+ its way into a vital part of the engine to rob Latham of the honour he
+ coveted. The tug that came to his rescue found him seated on the fuselage
+ of his Antoinette, smoking a cigarette and waiting for a boat to take him
+ to the tug. It may be remarked that Latham merely assumed his Antoinette
+ would float in case he failed to make the English coast; he had no actual
+ proof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bleriot immediately entered his machine for the prize and took up his
+ quarters at Barraques. On Sunday, July 25th, 1909, shortly after 4 a.m.,
+ Bleriot had his machine taken out from its shelter and prepared for
+ flight. He had been recently injured in a petrol explosion and hobbled out
+ on crutches to make his cross-Channel attempt; he made two great circles
+ in the air to try the machine, and then alighted. 'In ten minutes I start
+ for England,' he declared, and at 4.35 the motor was started up. After a
+ run of 100 yards, the machine rose in the air and got a height of about
+ 100 feet over the land, then wheeling sharply seaward and heading for
+ Dover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bleriot had no means of telling direction, and any change of wind might
+ have driven him out over the North Sea, to be lost, as were Cecil Grace
+ and Hamel later on. Luck was with him, however, and at 5.12 a.m. of that
+ July Sunday, he made his landing in the North Fall meadow, just behind
+ Dover Castle. Twenty minutes out from the French coast, he lost sight of
+ the destroyer which was patrolling the Channel, and at the same time he
+ was out of sight of land without compass or any other means of
+ ascertaining his direction. Sighting the English coast, he found that he
+ had gone too far to the east, for the wind increased in strength
+ throughout the flight, this to such an extent as almost to turn the
+ machine round when he came over English soil. Profiting by Latham's
+ experience, Bleriot had fitted an inflated rubber cylinder a foot in
+ diameter by 5 feet in length along the middle of his fuselage, to render
+ floating a certainty in case he had to alight on the water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Latham in his camp at Sangatte had been allowed to sleep through the calm
+ of the early morning through a mistake on the part of a friend, and when
+ his machine was turned out&mdash;in order that he might emulate Bleriot,
+ although he no longer hoped to make the first flight, it took so long to
+ get the machine ready and dragged up to its starting-point that there was
+ a 25 mile an hour wind by the time everything was in readiness. Latham was
+ anxious to make the start in spite of the wind, but the Directors of the
+ Antoinette Company refused permission. It was not until two days later
+ that the weather again became favourable, and then with a fresh machine,
+ since the one on which he made his first attempt had been very badly
+ damaged in being towed ashore, he made a circular trial flight of about 5
+ miles. In landing from this, a side gust of wind drove the nose of the
+ machine against a small hillock, damaging both propeller blades and
+ chassis, and it was not until evening that the damage was repaired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French torpedo boats were set to mark the route, and Latham set out on his
+ second attempt at six o'clock. Flying at a height of 200 feet, he headed
+ over the torpedo boats for Dover and seemed certain of making the English
+ coast, but a mile and a half out from Dover his engine failed him again,
+ and he dropped to the water to be picked up by the steam pinnace of an
+ English warship and put aboard the French destroyer Escopette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is little to choose between the two aviators for courage in
+ attempting what would have been considered a foolhardy feat a year or two
+ before. Bleriot's state, with an abscess in the burnt foot which had to
+ control the elevator of his machine, renders his success all the more
+ remarkable. His machine was exhibited in London for a time, and was
+ afterwards placed in the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, while a
+ memorial in stone, copying his monoplane in form, was let into the turf at
+ the point where he landed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second Channel crossing was not made until 1910, a year of new
+ records. The altitude record had been lifted to over 10,000 feet, the
+ duration record to 8 hours 12 minutes, and the distance for a single
+ flight to 365 miles, while a speed of over 65 miles an hour had been
+ achieved, when Jacques de Lesseps, son of the famous engineer of Suez
+ Canal and Panama fame, crossed from France to England on a Bleriot
+ monoplane. By this time flying had dropped so far from the marvellous that
+ this second conquest of the Channel aroused but slight public interest in
+ comparison with Bleriot's feat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The total weight of Bleriot's machine in Cross Channel trim was 660 lbs.,
+ including the pilot and sufficient petrol for a three hours' run; at a
+ speed of 37 miles an hour, it was capable of carrying about 5 lbs. per
+ square foot of lifting surface. It was the three-cylinder 25 horse-power
+ Anzani motor which drove the machine for the flight. Shortly after the
+ flight had been accomplished, it was announced that the Bleriot firm would
+ construct similar machines for sale at L400 apiece&mdash;a good commentary
+ on the prices of those days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On June the 2nd, 1910, the third Channel crossing was made by C. S. Rolls,
+ who flew from Dover, got himself officially observed over French soil at
+ Barraques, and then flew back without landing. He was the first to cross
+ from the British side of the Channel and also was the first aviator who
+ made the double journey. By that time, however, distance flights had so
+ far increased as to reduce the value of the feat, and thenceforth the
+ Channel crossing was no exceptional matter. The honour, second only to
+ that of the Wright Brothers, remains with Bleriot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI. LONDON TO MANCHESTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The last of the great contests to arouse public enthusiasm was the London
+ to Manchester Flight of 1910. As far back as 1906, the Daily Mail had
+ offered a prize of L10,000 to the first aviator who should accomplish this
+ journey, and, for a long time, the offer was regarded as a perfectly safe
+ one for any person or paper to make&mdash;it brought forth far more
+ ridicule than belief. Punch offered a similar sum to the first man who
+ should swim the Atlantic and also for the first flight to Mars and back
+ within a week, but in the spring of 1910 Claude Grahame White and Paulhan,
+ the famous French pilot, entered for the 183 mile run on which the prize
+ depended. Both these competitors flew the Farman biplane with the 50
+ horse-power Gnome motor as propulsive power. Grahame White surveyed the
+ ground along the route, and the L. &amp; N. W. Railway Company, at his
+ request, whitewashed the sleepers for 100 yards on the north side of all
+ junctions to give him his direction on the course. The machine was run out
+ on to the starting ground at Park Royal and set going at 5.19 a.m. on
+ April 23rd. After a run of 100 yards, the machine went up over Wormwood
+ Scrubs on its journey to Normandy, near Hillmorten, which was the first
+ arranged stopping place en route; Grahame White landed here in good trim
+ at 7.20 a.m., having covered 75 miles and made a world's record cross
+ country flight. At 8.15 he set off again to come down at Whittington, four
+ miles short of Lichfield, at about 9.20, with his machine in good order
+ except for a cracked landing skid. Twice, on this second stage of the
+ journey, he had been caught by gusts of wind which turned the machine
+ fully round toward London, and, when over a wood near Tamworth, the engine
+ stopped through a defect in the balance springs of two exhaust valves;
+ although it started up again after a 100 foot glide, it did not give
+ enough power to give him safety in the gale he was facing. The rising wind
+ kept him on the ground throughout the day, and, though he hoped for better
+ weather, the gale kept up until the Sunday evening. The men in charge of
+ the machine during its halt had attempted to hold the machine down instead
+ of anchoring it with stakes and ropes, and, in consequence of this, the
+ wind blew the machine over on its back, breaking the upper planes and the
+ tail. Grahame White had to return to London, while the damaged machine was
+ prepared for a second flight. The conditions of the competition enacted
+ that the full journey should be completed within 24 hours, which made
+ return to the starting ground inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis Paulhan, who had just arrived with his Farman machine, immediately
+ got it unpacked and put together in order to be ready to make his attempt
+ for the prize as soon as the weather conditions should admit. At 5.31
+ p.m., on April 27th, he went up from Hendon and had travelled 50 miles
+ when Grahame White, informed of his rival's start, set out to overtake
+ him. Before nightfall Paulhan landed at Lichfield, 117 miles from London,
+ while Grahame White had to come down at Roden, only 60 miles out. The
+ English aviator's chance was not so small as it seemed, for, as Latham had
+ found in his cross-Channel attempts, engine failure was more the rule than
+ the exception, and a very little thing might reverse the relative
+ positions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A special train accompanied Paulhan along the North-Western route,
+ conveying Madame Paulhan, Henry Farman, and the mechanics who fitted the
+ Farman biplane together. Paulhan himself, who had flown at a height of
+ 1,000 feet, spent the night at Lichfield, starting again at 4.9 a.m. On
+ the 28th, passing Stafford at 4.45, Crewe at 5.20, and landing at Burnage,
+ near Didsbury, at 5.32, having had a clean run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Grahame White had made a most heroic attempt to beat his rival.
+ An hour before dawn on the 28th, he went to the small field in which his
+ machine had landed, and in the darkness managed to make an ascent from
+ ground which made starting difficult even in daylight. Purely by instinct
+ and his recollection of the aspect of things the night before, he had to
+ clear telegraph wires and a railway bridge, neither of which he could
+ possibly see at that hour. His engine, too, was faltering, and it was
+ obvious to those who witnessed his start that its note was far from
+ perfect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At 3.50 he was over Nuneaton and making good progress; between Atherstone
+ and Lichfield the wind caught him and the engine failed more and more,
+ until at 4.13 in the morning he was forced to come to earth, having
+ covered 6 miles less distance than in his first attempt. It was purely a
+ case of engine failure, for, with full power, he would have passed over
+ Paulhan just as the latter was preparing for the restart. Taking into
+ consideration the two machines, there is little doubt that Grahame White
+ showed the greater flying skill, although he lost the prize. After landing
+ and hearing of Paulhan's victory, on which he wired congratulations, he
+ made up his mind to fly to Manchester within the 24 hours. He started at 5
+ o'clock in the afternoon from Polesworth, his landing place, but was
+ forced to land at 5.30 at Whittington, where he had landed on the previous
+ Saturday. The wind, which had forced his descent, fell again and permitted
+ of starting once more; on this third stage he reached Lichfield, only to
+ make his final landing at 7.15 p.m., near the Trent Valley station. The
+ defective running of the Gnome engine prevented his completing the course,
+ and his Farman machine had to be brought back to London by rail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The presentation of the prize to Paulhan was made the occasion for the
+ announcement of a further competition, consisting of a 1,000 mile flight
+ round a part of Great Britain. In this, nineteen competitors started, and
+ only four finished; the end of the race was a great fight between Beaumont
+ and Vedrines, both of whom scorned weather conditions in their
+ determination to win. Beaumont made the distance in a flying time of 22
+ hours 28 minutes 19 seconds, and Vedrines covered the journey in a little
+ over 23 1/2 hours. Valentine came third on a Deperdussin monoplane and S.
+ F. Cody on his Cathedral biplane was fourth. This was in 1911, and by that
+ time heavier-than-air flight had so far advanced that some pilots had had
+ war experience in the Italian campaign in Tripoli, while long
+ cross-country flights were an everyday event, and bad weather no longer
+ counted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII. A SUMMARY, TO 1911
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is so much overlapping in the crowded story of the first years of
+ successful power-driven flight that at this point it is advisable to make
+ a concise chronological survey of the chief events of the period of early
+ development, although much of this is of necessity recapitulation. The
+ story begins, of course, with Orville Wright's first flight of 852 feet at
+ Kitty Hawk on December 19th, 1903. The next event of note was Wright's
+ flight of 11.12 miles in 18 minutes 9 seconds at Dayton, Ohio, on
+ September 26th, 1905, this being the first officially recorded flight. On
+ October 4th of the same year, Wright flew 20.75 miles in 33 minutes 17
+ seconds, this being the first flight of over 20 miles ever made. Then on
+ September 14th 1906, Alberto Santos-Dumont made a flight of eight seconds
+ on the second heavier-than-air machine he had constructed. It was a big
+ box-kite-like machine; this was the second power-driven aeroplane in
+ Europe to fly, for although Santos-Dumont's first machine produced in 1905
+ was reckoned an unsuccessful design, it had actually got off the ground
+ for brief periods. Louis Bleriot came into the ring on April 5th, 1907,
+ with a first flight of 6 seconds on a Bleriot monoplane, his eighth but
+ first successful construction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry Farman made his first appearance in the history of aviation with a
+ flight of 935 feet on a Voisin biplane on October 15th 1907. On October
+ 25th, in a flight of 2,530 feet, he made the first recorded turn in the
+ air, and on March 29th, 1908, carrying Leon Delagrange on a Voisin
+ biplane, he made the first passenger flight. On April 10th of this year,
+ Delagrange, in flying 1 1/2 miles, made the first flight in Europe
+ exceeding a mile in distance. He improved on this by flying 10 1/2 miles
+ at Milan on June 22nd, while on July 8th, at Turin, he took up Madame
+ Peltier, the first woman to make an aeroplane flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilbur Wright, coming over to Europe, made his first appearance on the
+ Continent with a flight of 1 3/4 minutes at Hunaudieres, France, on August
+ 8th, 1908. On September 6th, at Chalons, he flew for 1 hour 4 minutes 26
+ seconds with a passenger, this being the first flight in which an hour in
+ the air was exceeded with a passenger on board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On September 12th 1908, Orville Wright, flying at Fort Meyer, U.S.A., with
+ Lieut. Selfridge as passenger, crashed his machine, suffering severe
+ injuries, while Selfridge was killed. This was the first aeroplane
+ fatality. On October 30th, 1908, Farman made the first cross-country
+ flight, covering the distance of 17 miles between Bouy and Rheims. The
+ next day, Louis Bleriot, in flying from Toury to Artenay, made two
+ landings en route, this being the first cross-country flight with
+ landings. On the last day of the year, Wilbur Wright won the Michelin Cup
+ at Auvours with a flight of 90 miles, which, lasting 2 hours 20 minutes 23
+ seconds, exceeded 2 hours in the air for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On January 2nd, 1909, S. F. Cody opened the New Year by making the first
+ observed flight at Farnborough on a British Army aeroplane. It was not
+ until July 18th of 1909 that the first European height record deserving of
+ mention was put up by Paulhan, who achieved a height of 450 feet on a
+ Voisin biplane. This preceded Latham's first attempt to fly the Channel by
+ two days, and five days later, on the 25th of the month, Bleriot made the
+ first Channel crossing. The Rheims Meeting followed on August 22nd, and it
+ was a great day for aviation when nine machines were seen in the air at
+ once. It was here that Farman, with a 118 mile flight, first exceeded the
+ hundred miles, and Latham raised the height record officially to 500 feet,
+ though actually he claimed to have reached 1,200 feet. On September 8th,
+ Cody, flying from Aldershot, made a 40 mile journey, setting up a new
+ cross-country record. On October 19th the Comte de Lambert flew from
+ Juvisy to Paris, rounded the Eiffel Tower and flew back. J. T. C.
+ Moore-Brabazon made the first circular mile flight by a British aviator on
+ an all-British machine in Great Britain, on October 30th, flying a Short
+ biplane with a Green engine. Paulhan, flying at Brooklands on November
+ 2nd, accomplished 96 miles in 2 hours 48 minutes, creating a British
+ distance record; on the following day, Henry Farman made a flight of 150
+ miles in 4 hours 22 minutes at Mourmelon, and on the 5th of the month,
+ Paulhan, flying a Farman biplane, made a world's height record of 977
+ feet. This, however, was not to stand long, for Latham got up to 1,560
+ feet on an Antoinette at Mourmelon on December 1st. December 31st
+ witnessed the first flight in Ireland, made by H. Ferguson on a monoplane
+ which he himself had constructed at Downshire Park, Lisburn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These, thus briefly summarised, are the principal events up to the end of
+ 1909. 1910 opened with tragedy, for on January 4th Leon Delagrange, one of
+ the greatest pilots of his time, was killed while flying at Pau. The
+ machine was the Bleriot XI which Delagrange had used at the Doncaster
+ meeting, and to which Delagrange had fitted a 50 horse-power Gnome engine,
+ increasing the speed of the machine from its original 30 to 45 miles per
+ hour. With the Rotary Gnome engine there was of necessity a certain
+ gyroscopic effect, the strain of which proved too much for the machine.
+ Delagrange had come to assist in the inauguration of the Croix d'Hins
+ aerodrome, and had twice lapped the course at a height of about 60 feet.
+ At the beginning of the third lap, the strain of the Gnome engine became
+ too great for the machine; one wing collapsed as if the stay wires had
+ broken, and the whole machine turned over and fell, killing Delagrange.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On January 7th Latham, flying at Mourmelon, first made the vertical
+ kilometre and dedicated the record to Delagrange, this being the day of
+ his friend's funeral. The record was thoroughly authenticated by a large
+ registering barometer which Latham carried, certified by the officials of
+ the French Aero Club. Three days later Paulhan, who was at Los Angeles,
+ California, raised the height record to 4,146 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On January 25th the Brussels Exhibition opened, when the Antoinette
+ monoplane, the Gaffaux and Hanriot monoplanes, together with the d'Hespel
+ aeroplane, were shown; there were also the dirigible Belgica and a number
+ of interesting aero engines, including a German airship engine and a
+ four-cylinder 50 horse-power Miesse, this last air-cooled by means of 22
+ fans driving a current of air through air jackets surrounding fluted
+ cylinders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On April 2nd Hubert Le Blon, flying a Bleriot with an Anzani engine, was
+ killed while flying over the water. His machine was flying quite steadily,
+ when it suddenly heeled over and came down sideways into the sea; the
+ motor continued running for some seconds and the whole machine was drawn
+ under water. When boats reached the spot, Le Blon was found lying back in
+ the driving seat floating just below the surface. He had done good flying
+ at Doncaster, and at Heliopolis had broken the world's speed records for 5
+ and 10 kilometres. The accident was attributed to fracture of one of the
+ wing stay wires when running into a gust of wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next notable event was Paulhan's London-Manchester flight, of which
+ full details have already been given. In May Captain Bertram Dickson,
+ flying at the Tours meeting, beat all the Continental fliers whom he
+ encountered, including Chavez, the Peruvian, who later made the first
+ crossing of the Alps. Dickson was the first British winner of
+ international aviation prizes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ C. S. Rolls, of whom full details have already been given, was killed at
+ Bournemouth on July 12th, being the first British aviator of note to be
+ killed in an aeroplane accident. His return trip across the Channel had
+ taken place on June 2nd. Chavez, who was rapidly leaping into fame, as a
+ pilot, raised the British height record to 5,750 feet while flying at
+ Blackpool on August 3rd. On the 11th of that month, Armstrong Drexel,
+ flying a Bleriot, made a world's height record of 6,745 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1910 that the British War office first began fully to realise
+ that there might be military possibilities in heavier-than-air flying. C.
+ S. Rolls had placed a Wright biplane at the disposal of the military
+ authorities, and Cody, as already recorded, had been experimenting with a
+ biplane type of his own for some long period. Such development as was
+ achieved was mainly due to the enterprise and energy of Colonel J. E.
+ Capper, C.B., appointed to the superintendency of the Balloon Factory and
+ Balloon School at Farnborough in 1906. Colonel Capper's retirement in 1910
+ brought (then) Mr Mervyn O'Gorman to command, and by that time the series
+ of successes of the Cody biplane, together with the proved efficiency of
+ the aeroplane in various civilian meetings, had convinced the British
+ military authorities that the mastery of the air did not lie altogether
+ with dirigible airships, and it may be said that in 1910 the British War
+ office first began seriously to consider the possibilities of the
+ aeroplane, though two years more were to elapse before the formation of
+ the Royal Flying Corps marked full realisation of its value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A triumph and a tragedy were combined in September of 1910. On the 23rd of
+ the month, Georges Chavez set out to fly across the Alps on a Bleriot
+ monoplane. Prizes had been offered by the Milan Aviation Committee for a
+ flight from Brigue in Switzerland over the Simplon Pass to Milan, a
+ distance of 94 miles with a minimum height of 6,600 feet above sea level.
+ Chavez started at 1.30 p.m. On the 23rd, and 41 minutes later he reached
+ Domodossola, 25 miles distant. Here he descended, numbed with the cold of
+ the journey; it was said that the wings of his machine collapsed when
+ about 30 feet from the ground, but however this may have been, he smashed
+ the machine on landing, and broke both legs, in addition to sustaining
+ other serious injuries. He lay in hospital until the 27th September, when
+ he died, having given his life to the conquest of the Alps. His death in
+ the moment of success was as great a tragedy as were those of Pilcher and
+ Lilienthal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day after Chavez's death, Maurice Tabuteau flew across the Pyrenees,
+ landing in the square at Biarritz. On December 30th, Tabuteau made a
+ flight of 365 miles in 7 hours 48 minutes. Farman, on December 18th, had
+ flown for over 8 hours, but his total distance was only 282 miles. The
+ autumn of this year was also noteworthy for the fact that aeroplanes were
+ first successfully used in the French Military Manoeuvres. The British War
+ Office, by the end of the year, had bought two machines, a military type
+ Farman and a Paulhan, ignoring British experimenters and aeroplane
+ builders of proved reliability. These machines, added to an old Bleriot
+ two-seater, appear to have constituted the British aeroplane fleet of the
+ period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were by this time three main centres of aviation in England, apart
+ from Cody, alone on Laffan's Plain. These three were Brooklands, Hendon,
+ and the Isle of Sheppey, and of the three Brooklands was chief. Here such
+ men as Graham Gilmour, Rippen, Leake, Wickham, and Thomas persistently
+ experimented. Hendon had its own little group, and Shellbeach, Isle of
+ Sheppey, held such giants of those days as C. S. Rolls and Moore Brabazon,
+ together with Cecil Grace and Rawlinson. One or other, and sometimes all
+ of these were deserted on the occasion of some meeting or other, but they
+ were the points where the spade work was done, Brooklands taking chief
+ place. 'If you want the early history of flying in England, it is there,'
+ one of the early school remarked, pointing over toward Brooklands course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1911 inaugurated a new series of records of varying character. On the 17th
+ January, E. B. Ely, an American, flew from the shore of San Francisco to
+ the U.S. cruiser Pennsylvania, landing on the cruiser, and then flew back
+ to the shore. The British military designing of aeroplanes had been taken
+ up at Farnborough by G. H. de Havilland, who by the end of January was
+ flying a machine of his own design, when he narrowly escaped becoming a
+ casualty through collision with an obstacle on the ground, which swept the
+ undercarriage from his machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A list of certified pilots of the countries of the world was issued early
+ in 1911, showing certificates granted up to the end of 1910. France led
+ the way easily with 353 pilots; England came next with 57, and Germany
+ next with 46; Italy owned 32, Belgium 27, America 26, and Austria 19;
+ Holland and Switzerland had 6 aviators apiece, while Denmark followed with
+ 3, Spain with 2, and Sweden with 1. The first certificate in England was
+ that of J. T. C. Moore-Brabazon, while Louis Bleriot was first on the
+ French list and Glenn Curtiss, first holder of an American certificate,
+ also held the second French brevet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 7th March, Eugene Renaux won the Michelin Grand Prize by flying
+ from the French Aero Club ground at St Cloud and landing on the Puy de
+ Dome. The landing, which was one of the conditions of the prize, was one
+ of the most dangerous conditions ever attached to a competition; it
+ involved dropping on to a little plateau 150 yards square, with a
+ possibility of either smashing the machine against the face of the
+ mountain, or diving over the edge of the plateau into the gulf beneath.
+ The length of the journey was slightly over 200 miles and the height of
+ the landing point 1,465 metres, or roughly 4,500 feet above sea-level.
+ Renaux carried a passenger, Doctor Senoucque, a member of Charcot's South
+ Polar Expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 1911 Aero Exhibition held at Olympia bore witness to the enormous
+ strides made in construction, more especially by British designers,
+ between 1908 and the opening of the Show. The Bristol Firm showed three
+ machines, including a military biplane, and the first British built
+ biplane with tractor screw. The Cody biplane, with its enormous size
+ rendering it a prominent feature of the show, was exhibited. Its designer
+ anticipated later engines by expressing his desire for a motor of 150
+ horse-power, which in his opinion was necessary to get the best results
+ from the machine. The then famous Dunne monoplane was exhibited at this
+ show, its planes being V-shaped in plan, with apex leading. It embodied
+ the results of very lengthy experiments carried out both with gliders and
+ power-driven machines by Colonel Capper, Lieut. Gibbs, and Lieut. Dunne,
+ and constituted the longest step so far taken in the direction of inherent
+ stability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such forerunners of the notable planes of the war period as the Martin
+ Handasyde, the Nieuport, Sopwith, Bristol, and Farman machines, were
+ features of the show; the Handley-Page monoplane, with a span of 32 feet
+ over all, a length of 22 feet, and a weight of 422 lbs., bore no relation
+ at all to the twin-engined giant which later made this firm famous. In the
+ matter of engines, the principal survivals to the present day, of which
+ this show held specimens, were the Gnome, Green, Renault air-cooled,
+ Mercedes four-cylinder dirigible engine of 115 horse-power, and 120
+ horsepower Wolseley of eight cylinders for use with dirigibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On April 12th, of 1911, Paprier, instructor at the Bleriot school at
+ Hendon, made the first non-stop flight between London and Paris. He left
+ the aerodrome at 1.37 p.m., and arrived at Issy-les-Moulineaux at 5.33
+ p.m., thus travelling 250 miles in a little under 4 hours. He followed the
+ railway route practically throughout, crossing from Dover to nearly
+ opposite Calais, keeping along the coast to Boulogne, and then following
+ the Nord Railway to Amiens, Beauvais, and finally Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In May, the Paris-Madrid race took place; Vedrines, flying a Morane
+ biplane, carried off the prize by first completing the distance of 732
+ miles. The Paris-Rome race of 916 miles was won in the same month by
+ Beaumont, flying a Bleriot monoplane. In July, Koenig won the German
+ National Circuit race of 1,168 miles on an Albatross biplane. This was
+ practically simultaneous with the Circuit of Britain won by Beaumont, who
+ covered 1,010 miles on a Bleriot monoplane, having already won the
+ Paris-Brussels-London-Paris Circuit of 1,080 miles, this also on a
+ Bleriot. It was in August that a new world's height record of 11,152 feet
+ was set up by Captain Felix at Etampes, while on the 7th of the month
+ Renaux flew nearly 600 miles on a Maurice Farman machine in 12 hours. Cody
+ and Valentine were keeping interest alive in the Circuit of Britain race,
+ although this had long been won, by determinedly plodding on at finishing
+ the course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On September 9th, the first aerial post was tried between Hendon and
+ Windsor, as an experiment in sending mails by aeroplane. Gustave Hamel
+ flew from Hendon to Windsor and back in a strong wind. A few days later,
+ Hamel went on strike, refusing to carry further mails unless the promoters
+ of the Aerial Postal Service agreed to pay compensation to Hubert, who
+ fractured both his legs on the 11th of the month while engaged in aero
+ postal work. The strike ended on September 25th, when Hamel resumed
+ mail-carrying in consequence of the capitulation of the
+ Postmaster-General, who agreed to set aside L500 as compensation to
+ Hubert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ September also witnessed the completion in America of a flight across the
+ Continent, a distance of 2,600 miles. The only competitor who completed
+ the full distance was C. P. Rogers, who was disqualified through failing
+ to comply with the time limit. Rogers needed so many replacements to his
+ machine on the journey that, expressing it in American fashion, he arrived
+ with practically a dfferent aeroplane from that with which he started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the aerial postal service, analysis of the matter carried
+ and the cost of the service seemed to show that with a special charge of
+ one shilling for letters and sixpence for post cards, the revenue just
+ balanced the expenditure. It was not possible to keep to the time-table
+ as, although the trials were made in the most favourable season of the
+ year, aviation was not sufficiently advanced to admit of facing all
+ weathers and complying with time-table regulations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French military aeroplane trials took place at Rheims in October, the
+ noteworthy machines being Antoinette, Farman, Nieuport, and Deperdussin.
+ The tests showed the Nieuport monoplane with Gnome motor as first in
+ position; the Breguet biplane was second, and the Deperdussin monoplanes
+ third. The first five machines in order of merit were all engined with the
+ Gnome motor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The records quoted for 1911 form the best evidence that can be given of
+ advance in design and performance during the year. It will be seen that
+ the days of the giants were over; design was becoming more and more
+ standardised and aviation not so much a matter of individual courage and
+ even daring, as of the reliability of the machine and its engine. This was
+ the first year in which the twin-engined aeroplane made its appearance,
+ and it was the year, too, in which flying may be said to have grown so
+ common that the 'meetings' which began with Rheims were hardly worth
+ holding, owing to the fact that increase in height and distance flown
+ rendered it no longer necessary for a would-be spectator of a flight to
+ pay half a crown and enter an enclosure. Henceforth, flying as a spectacle
+ was very little to be considered; its commercial aspects were talked of,
+ and to a very slight degree exploited, but, more and more, the fact that
+ the aeroplane was primarily an engine of war, and the growing German
+ menace against the peace of the world combined to point the way of
+ speediest development, and the arrangements for the British Military
+ Trials to be held in August, 1912, showed that even the British War office
+ was waking up to the potentialities of this new engine of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII. A SUMMARY, TO 1914
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Consideration of the events in the years immediately preceding the War
+ must be limited to as brief a summary as possible, this not only because
+ the full history of flying achievements is beyond the compass of any
+ single book, but also because, viewing the matter in perspective, the
+ years 1903-1911 show up as far more important as regards both design and
+ performance. From 1912 to August of 1914, the development of aeronautics
+ was hindered by the fact that it had not progressed far enough to form a
+ real commercial asset in any country. The meetings which drew vast
+ concourses of people to such places as Rheims and Bournemouth may have
+ been financial successes at first, but, as flying grew more common and
+ distances and heights extended, a great many people found it other than
+ worth while to pay for admission to an aerodrome. The business of taking
+ up passengers for pleasure flights was not financially successful, and,
+ although schemes for commercial routes were talked of, the aeroplane was
+ not sufficiently advanced to warrant the investment of hard cash in any of
+ these projects. There was a deadlock; further development was necessary in
+ order to secure financial aid, and at the same time financial aid was
+ necessary in order to secure further development. Consequently, neither
+ was forthcoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is viewing the matter in a broad and general sense; there were firms,
+ especially in France, but also in England and America, which looked
+ confidently for the great days of flying to arrive, and regarded their
+ sunk capital as investment which would eventually bring its due return.
+ But when one looks back on those years, the firms in question stand out as
+ exceptions to the general run of people, who regarded aeronautics as
+ something extremely scientific, exceedingly dangerous, and very expensive.
+ The very fame that was attained by such pilots as became casualties
+ conduced to the advertisement of every death, and the dangers attendant on
+ the use of heavier-than-air machines became greatly exaggerated;
+ considering the matter as one of number of miles flown, even in the early
+ days, flying exacted no more toll in human life than did railways or road
+ motors in the early stages of their development. But to take one instance,
+ when C. S. Rolls was killed at Bournemouth by reason of a faulty
+ tail-plane, the fact was shouted to the whole world with almost as much
+ vehemence as characterised the announcement of the Titanic sinking in
+ mid-Atlantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in 1911 the deadlock was apparent; meetings were falling off in
+ attendance, and consequently in financial benefit to the promoters; there
+ remained, however, the knowledge&mdash;for it was proved past question&mdash;that
+ the aeroplane in its then stage of development was a necessity to every
+ army of the world. France had shown this by the more than interest taken
+ by the French Government in what had developed into an Air Section of the
+ French army; Germany, of course, was hypnotised by Count Zeppelin and his
+ dirigibles, to say nothing of the Parsevals which had been proved useful
+ military accessories; in spite of this, it was realised in Germany that
+ the aeroplane also had its place in military affairs. England came into
+ the field with the military aeroplane trials of August 1st to 15th, 1912,
+ barely two months after the founding of the Royal Flying Corps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the R.F.C. was founded&mdash;and in fact up to two years after its
+ founding&mdash;in no country were the full military potentialities of the
+ aeroplane realised; it was regarded as an accessory to cavalry for
+ scouting more than as an independent arm; the possibilities of bombing
+ were very vaguely considered, and the fact that it might be possible to
+ shoot from an aeroplane was hardly considered at all. The conditions of
+ the British Military Trials of 1912 gave to the War office the option of
+ purchasing for L1,000 any machine that might be awarded a prize. Machines
+ were required, among other things, to carry a useful load of 350 lbs. in
+ addition to equipment, with fuel and oil for 4 1/2-hours; thus loaded,
+ they were required to fly for 3 hours, attaining an altitude of 4,500
+ feet, maintaining a height of 1,500 feet for 1 hour, and climbing 1,000
+ feet from the ground at a rate of 200 feet per minute, 'although 300 feet
+ per minute is desirable.' They had to attain a speed of not less than 55
+ miles per hour in a calm, and be able to plane down to the ground in a
+ calm from not more than 1,000 feet with engine stopped, traversing 6,000
+ feet horizontal distance. For those days, the landing demands were rather
+ exacting; the machine should be able to rise without damage from long
+ grass, clover, or harrowed land, in 100 yards in a calm, and should be
+ able to land without damage on any cultivated ground, including rough
+ ploughed land, and, when landing on smooth turf in a calm, be able to pull
+ up within 75 yards of the point of first touching the ground. It was
+ required that pilot and observer should have as open a view as possible to
+ front and flanks, and they should be so shielded from the wind as to be
+ able to communicate with each other. These are the main provisions out of
+ the set of conditions laid down for competitors, but a considerable amount
+ of leniency was shown by the authorities in the competition, who obviously
+ wished to try out every machine entered and see what were its
+ capabilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beginning of the competition consisted in assembling the machines
+ against time from road trim to flying trim. Cody's machine, which was the
+ only one to be delivered by air, took 1 hour and 35 minutes to assemble;
+ the best assembling time was that of the Avro, which was got into flying
+ trim in 14 minutes 30 seconds. This machine came to grief with Lieut.
+ Parke as pilot, on the 7th, through landing at very high speed on very bad
+ ground; a securing wire of the under-carriage broke in the landing,
+ throwing the machine forward on to its nose and then over on its back.
+ Parke was uninjured, fortunately; the damaged machine was sent off to
+ Manchester for repair and was back again on the 16th of August.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is to be noted that by this time the Royal Aircraft Factory was
+ building aeroplanes of the B.E. and F.E. types, but at the same time it is
+ also to be noted that British military interest in engines was not
+ sufficient to bring them up to the high level attained by the planes, and
+ it is notorious that even the outbreak of war found England incapable of
+ providing a really satisfactory aero engine. In the 1912 Trials, the only
+ machines which actually completed all their tests were the Cody biplane,
+ the French Deperdussin, the Hanriot, two Bleriots and a Maurice Farman.
+ The first prize of L4,000, open to all the world, went to F. S. Cody's
+ British-built biplane, which complied with all the conditions of the
+ competition and well earned its official acknowledgment of supremacy. The
+ machine climbed at 280 feet per minute and reached a height of 5,000 feet,
+ while in the landing test, in spite of its great weight and bulk, it
+ pulled up on grass in 56 yards. The total weight was 2,690 lbs. when fully
+ loaded, and the total area of supporting surface was 500 square feet; the
+ motive power was supplied by a six-cylinder 120 horsepower Austro-Daimler
+ engine. The second prize was taken by A. Deperdussin for the French-built
+ Deperdussin monoplane. Cody carried off the only prize awarded for a
+ British-built plane, this being the sum of L1,000, and consolation prizes
+ of L500 each were awarded to the British Deperdussin Company and The
+ British and Colonial Aeroplane Company, this latter soon to become famous
+ as makers of the Bristol aeroplane, of which the war honours are still
+ fresh in men's minds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these trials were in progress Audemars accomplished the first flight
+ between Paris and Berlin, setting out from Issy early in the morning of
+ August 18th, landing at Rheims to refill his tanks within an hour and a
+ half, and then coming into bad weather which forced him to land
+ successively at Mezieres, Laroche, Bochum, and finally nearly
+ Gersenkirchen, where, owing to a leaky petrol tank, the attempt to win the
+ prize offered for the first flight between the two capitals had to be
+ abandoned after 300 miles had been covered, as the time limit was
+ definitely exceeded. Audemars determined to get through to Berlin, and set
+ off at 5 in the morning of the 19th, only to be brought down by fog;
+ starting off again at 9.15 he landed at Hanover, was off again at 1.35,
+ and reached the Johannisthal aerodrome in the suburbs of Berlin at 6.48
+ that evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1910 the British Government possessed some ten aeroplanes, and
+ in 1911 the force developed into the Army Air Battalion, with the
+ aeroplanes under the control of Major J. H. Fulton, R.F.A. Toward the end
+ of 1911 the Air Battalion was handed over to (then) Brig.-Gen. D.
+ Henderson, Director of Military Training. On June 6th, 1912, the Royal
+ Flying Corps was established with a military wing under Major F. H. Sykes
+ and a naval wing under Commander C. R. Samson. A joint Naval and Military
+ Flying School was established at Upavon with Captain Godfrey M. Paine,
+ R.N., as Commandant and Major Hugh Trenchard as Assistant Commandant. The
+ Royal Aircraft Factory brought out the B.E. and F.E. types of biplane,
+ admittedly superior to any other British design of the period, and an
+ Aircraft Inspection Department was formed under Major J. H. Fulton. The
+ military wing of the R.F.C. was equipped almost entirely with machines of
+ Royal Aircraft Factory design, but the Navy preferred to develop British
+ private enterprise by buying machines from private firms. On July 1st,
+ 1914 the establishment of the Royal Naval Air Service marked the definite
+ separation of the military and naval sides of British aviation, but the
+ Central Flying School at Upavon continued to train pilots for both
+ services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult at this length of time, so far as the military wing was
+ concerned, to do full justice to the spade work done by Major-General Sir
+ David Henderson in the early days. Just before war broke out, British
+ military air strength consisted officially of eight squadrons, each of 12
+ machines and 13 in reserve, with the necessary complement of road
+ transport. As a matter of fact, there were three complete squadrons and a
+ part of a fourth which constituted the force sent to France at the
+ outbreak of war. The value of General Henderson's work lies in the fact
+ that, in spite of official stinginess and meagre supplies of every kind,
+ he built up a skeleton organisation so elastic and so well thought out
+ that it conformed to war requirements as well as even the German plans
+ fitted in with their aerial needs. On the 4th of August, 1914, the nominal
+ British air strength of the military wing was 179 machines. Of these, 82
+ machines proceeded to France, landing at Amiens and flying to Maubeuge to
+ play their part in the great retreat with the British Expeditionary Force,
+ in which they suffered heavy casualties both in personnel and machines.
+ The history of their exploits, however, belongs to the War period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The development of the aeroplane between 1912 and 1914 can be judged by
+ comparison of the requirements of the British War Office in 1912 with
+ those laid down in an official memorandum issued by the War Office in
+ February, 1914. This latter called for a light scout aeroplane, a
+ single-seater, with fuel capacity to admit of 300 miles range and a speed
+ range of from 50 to 85 miles per hour. It had to be able to climb 3,500
+ feet in five minutes, and the engine had to be so constructed that the
+ pilot could start it without assistance. At the same time, a heavier type
+ of machine for reconnaissance work was called for, carrying fuel for a 200
+ mile flight with a speed range of between 35 and 60 miles per hour,
+ carrying both pilot and observer. It was to be equipped with a wireless
+ telegraphy set, and be capable of landing over a 30 foot vertical obstacle
+ and coming to rest within a hundred yards' distance from the obstacle in a
+ wind of not more than 15 miles per hour. A third requirement was a heavy
+ type of fighting aeroplane accommodating pilot and gunner with machine gun
+ and ammunition, having a speed range of between 45 and 75 miles per hour
+ and capable of climbing 3,500 feet in 8 minutes. It was required to carry
+ fuel for a 300 mile flight and to give the gunner a clear field of fire in
+ every direction up to 30 degrees on each side of the line of flight.
+ Comparison of these specifications with those of the 1912 trials will show
+ that although fighting, scouting, and reconnaissance types had been
+ defined, the development of performance compared with the marvellous
+ development of the earlier years of achieved flight was small.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the records of those years show that here and there an outstanding
+ design was capable of great things. On the 9th September, 1912, Vedrines,
+ flying a Deperdussin monoplane at Chicago, attained a speed of 105 miles
+ an hour. On August 12th, G. de Havilland took a passenger to a height of
+ 10,560 feet over Salisbury Plain, flying a B.E. biplane with a 70
+ horse-power Renault engine. The work of de Havilland may be said to have
+ been the principal influence in British military aeroplane design, and
+ there is no doubt that his genius was in great measure responsible for the
+ excellence of the early B.E. and F.E. types.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 31st May, 1913, H. G. Hawker, flying at Brooklands, reached a
+ height of 11,450 feet on a Sopwith biplane engined with an 80 horse-power
+ Gnome engine. On June 16th, with the same type of machine and engine, he
+ achieved 12,900 feet. On the 2nd October, in the same year, a Grahame
+ White biplane with 120 horse-power Austro-Daimler engine, piloted by Louis
+ Noel, made a flight of just under 20 minutes carrying 9 passengers. In
+ France a Nieuport monoplane piloted by G. Legagneaux attained a height of
+ 6,120 metres, or just over 20,070 feet, this being the world's height
+ record. It is worthy of note that of the world's aviation records as
+ passed by the International Aeronautical Federation up to June 30th, 1914,
+ only one, that of Noel, is credited to Great Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as records were made abroad, with one exception, so were the really
+ efficient engines. In England there was the Green engine, but the outbreak
+ of war found the Royal Flying Corps with 80 horse-power Gnomes, 70
+ horse-power Renaults, and one or two Antoinette motors, but not one
+ British, while the Royal Naval Air Service had got 20 machines with
+ engines of similar origin, mainly land planes in which the wheeled
+ undercarriages had been replaced by floats. France led in development, and
+ there is no doubt that at the outbreak of war, the French military
+ aeroplane service was the best in the world. It was mainly composed of
+ Maurice Farman two-seater biplanes and Bleriot monoplanes&mdash;the latter
+ type banned for a period on account of a number of serious accidents that
+ took place in 1912.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ America had its Army Aviation School, and employed Burgess-Wright and
+ Curtiss machines for the most part. In the pre-war years, once the Wright
+ Brothers had accomplished their task, America's chief accomplishment
+ consisted in the development of the 'Flying Boat,' alternatively named
+ with characteristic American clumsiness, 'The Hydro-Aeroplane.' In
+ February of 1911, Glenn Curtiss attached a float to a machine similar to
+ that with which he won the first Gordon-Bennett Air Contest and made his
+ first flying boat experiment. From this beginning he developed the boat
+ form of body which obviated the use and troubles of floats&mdash;his
+ hydroplane became its own float.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mainly owing to greater engine reliability the duration records steadily
+ increased. By September of 1912 Fourny, on a Maurice Farman biplane, was
+ able to accomplish a distance of 628 miles without a landing, remaining in
+ the air for 13 hours 17 minutes and just over 57 seconds. By 1914 this was
+ raised by the German aviator, Landemann, to 21 hours 48 3/4 seconds. The
+ nature of this last record shows that the factors in such a record had
+ become mere engine endurance, fuel capacity, and capacity of the pilot to
+ withstand air conditions for a prolonged period, rather than any
+ exceptional flying skill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let these years be judged by the records they produced, and even then they
+ are rather dull. The glory of achievement such as characterised the work
+ of the Wright Brothers, of Bleriot, and of the giants of the early days,
+ had passed; the splendid courage, the patriotism and devotion of the
+ pilots of the War period had not yet come to being. There was progress,
+ past question, but it was mechanical, hardly ever inspired. The study of
+ climatic conditions was definitely begun and aeronautical meteorology came
+ to being, while another development already noted was the fitting of
+ wireless telegraphy to heavier-than-air machines, as instanced in the
+ British War office specification of February, 1914. These, however, were
+ inevitable; it remained for the War to force development beyond the
+ inevitable, producing in five years that which under normal circumstances
+ might easily have occupied fifty&mdash;the aeroplane of to-day; for, as
+ already remarked, there was a deadlock, and any survey that may be made of
+ the years 1912-1914, no matter how superficial, must take it into account
+ with a view to retaining correct perspective in regard to the development
+ of the aeroplane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one story of 1914 that must be included, however briefly, in any
+ record of aeronautical achievement, since it demonstrates past question
+ that to Professor Langley really belongs the honour of having achieved a
+ design which would ensure actual flight, although the series of accidents
+ which attended his experiments gave to the Wright Brothers the honour of
+ first leaving the earth and descending without accident in a power-driven
+ heavier-than-air machine. In March, 1914, Glenn Curtiss was invited to
+ send a flying boat to Washington for the celebration of 'Langley Day,'
+ when he remarked, 'I would like to put the Langley aeroplane itself in the
+ air.' In consequence of this remark, Secretary Walcot of the Smithsonian
+ Institution authorised Curtiss to re-canvas the original Langley aeroplane
+ and launch it either under its own power or with a more recent engine and
+ propeller. Curtiss completed this, and had the machine ready on the shores
+ of Lake Keuka, Hammondsport, N.Y., by May. The main object of these
+ renewed trials was to show whether the original Langley machine was
+ capable of sustained free flight with a pilot, and a secondary object was
+ to determine more fully the advantages of the tandem monoplane type; thus
+ the aeroplane was first flown as nearly as possible in its original
+ condition, and then with such modifications as seemed desirable. The only
+ difference made for the first trials consisted in fitting floats with
+ connecting trusses; the steel main frame, wings, rudders, engine, and
+ propellers were substantially as they had been in 1903. The pilot had the
+ same seat under the main frame and the same general system of control. He
+ could raise or lower the craft by moving the rear rudder up and down; he
+ could steer right or left by moving the vertical rudder. He had no
+ ailerons nor wing-warping mechanism, but for lateral balance depended on
+ the dihedral angle of the wings and upon suitable movements of his weight
+ or of the vertical rudder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the adjustments for actual flight had been made in the Curtiss
+ factory, according to the minute descriptions contained in the Langley
+ Memoir on Mechanical Flight, the aeroplane was taken to the shore of Lake
+ Keuka, beside the Curtiss hangars, and assembled for launching. On a clear
+ morning (May 28th) and in a mild breeze, the craft was lifted on to the
+ water by a dozen men and set going, with Mr Curtiss at the steering wheel,
+ esconced in the little boat-shaped car under the forward part of the
+ frame. The four-winged craft, pointed somewhat across the wind, went
+ skimming over the waveless, then automatically headed into the wind, rose
+ in level poise, soared gracefully for 150 feet, and landed softly on the
+ water near the shore. Mr Curtiss asserted that he could have flown
+ farther, but, being unused to the machine, imagined that the left wings
+ had more resistance than the right. The truth is that the aeroplane was
+ perfectly balanced in wing resistance, but turned on the water like a
+ weather vane, owing to the lateral pressure on its big rear rudder. Hence
+ in future experiments this rudder was made turnable about a vertical axis,
+ as well as about the horizontal axis used by Langley. Henceforth the
+ little vertical rudder under the frame was kept fixed and inactive.[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Langley aeroplane was subsequently fitted with an 80 horse-power
+ Curtiss engine and successfully flown is of little interest in such a
+ record as this, except for the fact that with the weight nearly doubled by
+ the new engine and accessories the machine flew successfully, and
+ demonstrated the perfection of Langley's design by standing the strain.
+ The point that is of most importance is that the design itself proved a
+ success and fully vindicated Langley's work. At the same time, it would be
+ unjust to pass by the fact of the flight without according to Curtiss due
+ recognition of the way in which he paid tribute to the genius of the
+ pioneer by these experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Smithsonian Publications No. 2329.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX. THE WAR PERIOD&mdash;I
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Full record of aeronautical progress and of the accomplishments of pilots
+ in the years of the War would demand not merely a volume, but a complete
+ library, and even then it would be barely possible to pay full tribute to
+ the heroism of pilots of the war period. There are names connected with
+ that period of which the glory will not fade, names such as Bishop,
+ Guynemer, Boelcke, Ball, Fonck, Immelmann, and many others that spring to
+ mind as one recalls the 'Aces' of the period. In addition to the pilots,
+ there is the stupendous development of the machines&mdash;stupendous when
+ the length of the period in which it was achieved is considered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that Germany was best prepared in the matter of heavier-than-air
+ service machines in spite of the German faith in the dirigible is one more
+ item of evidence as to who forced hostilities. The Germans came into the
+ field with well over 600 aeroplanes, mainly two-seaters of standardised
+ design, and with factories back in the Fatherland turning out sufficient
+ new machines to make good the losses. There were a few single-seater
+ scouts built for speed, and the two-seater machines were all fitted with
+ cameras and bomb-dropping gear. Manoeuvres had determined in the German
+ mind what should be the uses of the air fleet; there was photography of
+ fortifications and field works; signalling by Very lights; spotting for
+ the guns, and scouting for news of enemy movements. The methodical German
+ mind had arranged all this beforehand, but had not allowed for the fact
+ that opponents might take counter-measures which would upset the
+ over-perfect mechanism of the air service just as effectually as the great
+ march on Paris was countered by the genius of Joffre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French Air Force at the beginning of the War consisted of upwards of
+ 600 machines. These, unlike the Germans, were not standardised, but were
+ of many and diverse types. In order to get replacements quickly enough,
+ the factories had to work on the designs they had, and thus for a long
+ time after the outbreak of hostilities standardisation was an
+ impossibility. The versatility of a Latin race in a measure compensated
+ for this; from the outset, the Germans tried to overwhelm the French Air
+ Force, but failed, since they had not the numerical superiority, nor&mdash;this
+ equally a determining factor&mdash;the versatility and resource of the
+ French pilots. They calculated on a 50 per cent superiority to ensure
+ success; they needed more nearly 400 per cent, for the German fought to
+ rule, avoiding risks whenever possible, and definitely instructed to save
+ both machines and pilots wherever possible. French pilots, on the other
+ hand, ran all the risks there were, got news of German movements, bombed
+ the enemy, and rapidly worked up a very respectable antiaircraft force
+ which, whatever it may have accomplished in the way of hitting German
+ planes, got on the German pilots' nerves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has already been detailed how Britain sent over 82 planes as its
+ contribution to the military aerial force of 1914. These consisted of
+ Farman, Caudron, and Short biplanes, together with Bleriot, Deperdussin
+ and Nieuport monoplanes, certain R.A.F. types, and other machines of which
+ even the name barely survives&mdash;the resourceful Yankee entitles them
+ 'orphans.' It is on record that the work of providing spares might have
+ been rather complicated but for the fact that there were none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no doubt that the Germans had made study of aerial military needs
+ just as thoroughly as they had perfected their ground organisation. Thus
+ there were 21 illuminated aircraft stations in Germany before the War, the
+ most powerful being at Weimar, where a revolving electric flash of over 27
+ million candle-power was located. Practically all German aeroplane tests
+ in the period immediately preceding the War were of a military nature, and
+ quite a number of reliability tests were carried out just on the other
+ side of the French frontier. Night flying and landing were standardised
+ items in the German pilot's course of instruction while they were still
+ experimental in other countries, and a system of signals was arranged
+ which rendered the instructional course as perfect as might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Belgian contribution consisted of about twenty machines fit for active
+ service and another twenty which were more or less useful as training
+ machines. The material was mainly French, and the Belgian pilots used it
+ to good account until German numbers swamped them. France, and to a small
+ extent England, kept Belgian aviators supplied with machines throughout
+ the War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Italian Air Fleet was small, and consisted of French machines together
+ with a percentage of planes of Italian origin, of which the design was
+ very much a copy of French types. It was not until the War was nearing its
+ end that the military and naval services relied more on the home product
+ than on imports. This does not apply to engines, however, for the F.I.A.T.
+ and S.C.A.T. were equal to practically any engine of Allied make, both in
+ design and construction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russia spent vast sums in the provision of machines: the giant Sikorsky
+ biplane, carrying four 100 horsepower Argus motors, was designed by a
+ young Russian engineer in the latter part of 1913, and in its early trials
+ it created a world's record by carrying seven passengers for 1 hour 54
+ minutes. Sikorsky also designed several smaller machines, tractor biplanes
+ on the lines of the British B.E. type, which were very successful. These
+ were the only home productions, and the imports consisted mainly of French
+ aeroplanes by the hundred, which got as far as the docks and railway
+ sidings and stayed there, while German influence and the corruption that
+ ruined the Russian Army helped to lose the War. A few Russian aircraft
+ factories were got into operation as hostilities proceeded, but their
+ products were negligible, and it is not on record that Russia ever learned
+ to manufacture a magneto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The United States paid tribute to British efficiency by adopting the
+ British system of training for its pilots; 500 American cadets were
+ trained at the School of Military Aeronautics at oxford, in order to form
+ a nucleus for the American aviation schools which were subsequently set up
+ in the United States and in France. As regards production of craft, the
+ designing of the Liberty engine and building of over 20,000 aeroplanes
+ within a year proves that America is a manufacturing country, even under
+ the strain of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were three years of struggle for aerial supremacy, the combatants
+ being England and France against Germany, and the contest was neck and
+ neck all the way. Germany led at the outset with the standardised
+ two-seater biplanes manned by pilots and observers, whose training was
+ superior to that afforded by any other nation, while the machines
+ themselves were better equipped and fitted with accessories. All the early
+ German aeroplanes were designated Taube by the uninitiated, and were
+ formed with swept-back, curved wings very much resembling the wings of a
+ bird. These had obvious disadvantages, but the standardisation of design
+ and mass production of the German factories kept them in the field for a
+ considerable period, and they flew side by side with tractor biplanes of
+ improved design. For a little time, the Fokker monoplane became a definite
+ threat both to French and British machines. It was an improvement on the
+ Morane French monoplane, and with a high-powered engine it climbed quickly
+ and flew fast, doing a good deal of damage for a brief period of 1915.
+ Allied design got ahead of it and finally drove it out of the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ German equipment at the outset, which put the Allies at a disadvantage,
+ included a hand-operated magneto engine-starter and a small independent
+ screw which, mounted on one of the main planes, drove the dynamo used for
+ the wireless set. Cameras were fitted on practically every machine;
+ equipment included accurate compasses and pressure petrol gauges, speed
+ and height recording instruments, bomb-dropping fittings and sectional
+ radiators which facilitated repairs and gave maximum engine efficiency in
+ spite of variations of temperature. As counter to these, the Allied pilots
+ had resource amounting to impudence. In the early days they carried rifles
+ and hand grenades and automatic pistols. They loaded their machines down,
+ often at their own expense, with accessories and fittings until their
+ aeroplanes earned their title of Christmas trees. They played with death
+ in a way that shocked the average German pilot of the War's early stages,
+ declining to fight according to rule and indulging in the individual duels
+ of the air which the German hated. As Sir John French put it in one of his
+ reports, they established a personal ascendancy over the enemy, and in
+ this way compensated for their inferior material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French diversity of design fitted in well with the initiative and resource
+ displayed by the French pilots. The big Caudron type was the ideal bomber
+ of the early days; Farman machines were excellent for reconnaissance and
+ artillery spotting; the Bleriots proved excellent as fighting scouts and
+ for aerial photography; the Nieuports made good fighters, as did the
+ Spads, both being very fast craft, as were the Morane-Saulnier monoplanes,
+ while the big Voisin biplanes rivalled the Caudron machines as bombers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day of the Fokker ended when the British B.E.2.C. aeroplane came to
+ France in good quantities, and the F.E. type, together with the De
+ Havilland machines, rendered British aerial superiority a certainty.
+ Germany's best reply&mdash;this was about 1916&mdash;was the Albatross
+ biplane, which was used by Captain Baron von Richthofen for his famous
+ travelling circus, manned by German star pilots and sent to various parts
+ of the line to hearten up German troops and aviators after any specially
+ bad strafe. Then there were the Aviatik biplane and the Halberstadt
+ fighting scout, a cleanly built and very fast machine with a powerful
+ engine with which Germany tried to win back superiority in the third year
+ of the War, but Allied design kept about three months ahead of that of the
+ enemy, once the Fokker had been mastered, and the race went on. Spads and
+ Bristol fighters, Sopwith scouts and F.E.'s played their part in the race,
+ and design was still advancing when peace came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The giant twin-engined Handley-Page bomber was tried out, proved
+ efficient, and justly considered better than anything of its kind that had
+ previously taken the field. Immediately after the conclusion of its
+ trials, a specimen of the type was delivered intact at Lille for the
+ Germans to copy, the innocent pilot responsible for the delivery doing
+ some great disservice to his own cause. The Gotha Wagon-Fabrik Firm
+ immediately set to work and copied the Handley-Page design, producing the
+ great Gotha bombing machine which was used in all the later raids on
+ England as well as for night work over the Allied lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the War advanced design may be judged by comparison of the military
+ requirements given for the British Military Trials of 1912, with
+ performances of 1916 and 1917, when the speed of the faster machines had
+ increased to over 150 miles an hour and Allied machines engaged enemy
+ aircraft at heights ranging up to 22,000 feet. All pre-war records of
+ endurance, speed, and climb went by the board, as the race for aerial
+ superiority went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bombing brought to being a number of crude devices in the first year of
+ the War. Allied pilots of the very early days carried up bombs packed in a
+ small box and threw them over by hand, while, a little later, the bombs
+ were strung like apples on wings and undercarriage, so that the pilot who
+ did not get rid of his load before landing risked an explosion. Then came
+ a properly designed carrying apparatus, crude but fairly efficient, and
+ with 1916 development had proceeded as far as the proper bomb-racks with
+ releasing gear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reconnaissance work developed, so that fighting machines went as escort to
+ observing squadrons and scouting operations were undertaken up to 100
+ miles behind the enemy lines; out of this grew the art of camouflage, when
+ ammunition dumps were painted to resemble herds of cows, guns were
+ screened by foliage or painted to merge into a ground scheme, and many
+ other schemes were devised to prevent aerial observation. Troops were
+ moved by night for the most part, owing to the keen eyes of the air pilots
+ and the danger of bombs, though occasionally the aviator had his chance.
+ There is one story concerning a British pilot who, on returning from a
+ reconnaissance flight, observed a German Staff car on the road under him;
+ he descended and bombed and machine&mdash;gunned the car until the German
+ General and his chauffeur abandoned it, took to their heels, and ran like
+ rabbits. Later still, when Allied air superiority was assured, there came
+ the phase of machine-gunning bodies of enemy troops from the air.
+ Disregarding all antiaircraft measures, machines would sweep down and
+ throw battalions into panic or upset the military traffic along a road,
+ demoralising a battery or a transport train and causing as much damage
+ through congestion of traffic as with their actual machine-gun fire.
+ Aerial photography, too, became a fine art; the ordinary long focus
+ cameras were used at the outset with automatic plate changers, but later
+ on photographing aeroplanes had cameras of wide angle lens type built into
+ the fuselage. These were very simply operated, one lever registering the
+ exposure and changing the plate. In many cases, aerial photographs gave
+ information which the human eye had missed, and it is noteworthy that
+ photographs of ground showed when troops had marched over it, while the
+ aerial observer was quite unable to detect the marks left by their
+ passing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some small mention must be made of seaplane activities, which, round the
+ European coasts involved in the War, never ceased. The submarine campaign
+ found in the spotting seaplane its greatest deterrent, and it is old news
+ now how even the deeply submerged submarines were easily picked out for
+ destruction from a height and the news wirelessed from seaplane to
+ destroyer, while in more than one place the seaplane itself finished the
+ task by bomb dropping. It was a seaplane that gave Admiral Beatty the news
+ that the whole German Fleet was out before the Jutland Battle, news which
+ led to a change of plans that very nearly brought about the destruction of
+ Germany's naval power. For the most part, the seaplanes of the War period
+ were heavier than the land machines and, in the opinion of the land
+ pilots, were slow and clumsy things to fly. This was inevitable, for their
+ work demanded more solid building and greater reliability. To put the
+ matter into Hibernian phrase, a forced landing at sea is a much more
+ serious matter than on the ground. Thus there was need for greater engine
+ power, bigger wingspread to support the floats, and fuel tanks of greater
+ capacity. The flying boats of the later War period carried considerable
+ crews, were heavily armed, capable of withstanding very heavy weather, and
+ carried good loads of bombs on long cruises. Their work was not all
+ essentially seaplane work, for the R.N.A.S. was as well known as hated
+ over the German airship sheds in Belgium and along the Flanders coast. As
+ regards other theatres of War, they rendered valuable service from the
+ Dardanelles to the Rufiji River, at this latter place forming a principal
+ factor in the destruction of the cruiser Konigsberg. Their spotting work
+ at the Dardanelles for the battleships was responsible for direct hits
+ from 15 in. guns on invisible targets at ranges of over 12,000 yards.
+ Seaplane pilots were bombing specialists, including among their targets
+ army headquarters, ammunition dumps, railway stations, submarines and
+ their bases, docks, shipping in German harbours, and the German Fleet at
+ Wilhelmshaven. Dunkirk, a British seaplane base, was a sharp thorn in the
+ German side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning from consideration of the various services to the exploits of the
+ men composing them, it is difficult to particularise. A certain inevitable
+ prejudice even at this length of time leads one to discount the valour of
+ pilots in the German Air Service, but the names of Boelcke, von
+ Richthofen, and Immelmann recur as proof of the courage that was not
+ wanting in the enemy ranks, while, however much we may decry the Gotha
+ raids over the English coast and on London, there is no doubt that the men
+ who undertook these raids were not deficient in the form of bravery that
+ is of more value than the unthinking valour of a minute which, observed
+ from the right quarter, wins a military decoration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the fact that the Allied airmen kept the air at all in the early days
+ proved on which side personal superiority lay, for they were outnumbered,
+ out-manoeuvred, and faced by better material than any that they themselves
+ possessed; yet they won their fights or died. The stories of their deeds
+ are endless; Bishop, flying alone and meeting seven German machines and
+ crashing four; the battle of May 5th, 1915, when five heroes fought and
+ conquered twenty-seven German machines, ranging in altitude between 12,000
+ and 3,000 feet, and continuing the extraordinary struggle from five until
+ six in the evening. Captain Aizlewood, attacking five enemy machines with
+ such reckless speed that he rammed one and still reached his aerodrome
+ safely&mdash;these are items in a long list of feats of which the
+ character can only be realised when it is fully comprehended that the
+ British Air Service accounted for some 8,000 enemy machines in the course
+ of the War. Among the French there was Captain Guynemer, who at the time
+ of his death had brought down fifty-four enemy machines, in addition to
+ many others of which the destruction could not be officially confirmed.
+ There was Fonck, who brought down six machines in one day, four of them
+ within two minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are incredible stories, true as incredible, of shattered men
+ carrying on with their work in absolute disregard of physical injury.
+ Major Brabazon Rees, V.C., engaged a big German battle-plane in September
+ of 1915 and, single-handed, forced his enemy out of action. Later in his
+ career, with a serious wound in the thigh from which blood was pouring, he
+ kept up a fight with an enemy formation until he had not a round of
+ ammunition left, and then returned to his aerodrome to get his wound
+ dressed. Lieutenants Otley and Dunning, flying in the Balkans, engaged a
+ couple of enemy machines and drove them off, but not until their petrol
+ tank had got a hole in it and Dunning was dangerously wounded in the leg.
+ Otley improvised a tourniquet, passed it to Dunning, and, when the latter
+ had bandaged himself, changed from the observer's to the pilot's seat,
+ plugged the bullet hole in the tank with his thumb and steered the machine
+ home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are incidents; the full list has not been, and can never be
+ recorded, but it goes to show that in the pilot of the War period there
+ came to being a new type of humanity, a product of evolution which fitted
+ a certain need. Of such was Captain West, who, engaging hostile troops,
+ was attacked by seven machines. Early in the engagement, one of his legs
+ was partially severed by an explosive bullet and fell powerless into the
+ controls, rendering the machine for the time unmanageable. Lifting his
+ disabled leg, he regained control of the machine, and although wounded in
+ the other leg, he manoeuvred his machine so skilfully that his observer
+ was able to get several good bursts into the enemy machines, driving them
+ away. Then, desperately wounded as he was, Captain West brought the
+ machine over to his own lines and landed safely. He fainted from loss of
+ blood and exhaustion, but on regaining consciousness, insisted on writing
+ his report. Equal to this was the exploit of Captain Barker, who, in
+ aerial combat, was wounded in the right and left thigh and had his left
+ arm shattered, subsequently bringing down an enemy machine in flames, and
+ then breaking through another hostile formation and reaching the British
+ lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In recalling such exploits as these, one is tempted on and on, for it
+ seems that the pilots rivalled each other in their devotion to duty, this
+ not confined to British aviators, but common practically to all services.
+ Sufficient instances have been given to show the nature of the work and
+ the character of the men who did it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rapid growth of aerial effort rendered it necessary in January of 1915
+ to organise the Royal Flying Corps into separate wings, and in October of
+ the same year it was constituted in Brigades. In 1916 the Air Board was
+ formed, mainly with the object of co-ordinating effort and ensuring both
+ to the R.N.A.S. and to the R.F.C. adequate supplies of material as far as
+ construction admitted. Under the presidency of Lord Cowdray, the Air Board
+ brought about certain reforms early in 1917, and in November of that year
+ a separate Air Ministry was constituted, separating the Air Force from
+ both Navy and Army, and rendering it an independent force. On April 1st,
+ 1918, the Royal Air Force came into existence, and unkind critics in the
+ Royal Flying Corps remarked on the appropriateness of the date. At the end
+ of the War, the personnel of the Royal Air Force amounted to 27,906
+ officers, and 263,842 other ranks. Contrast of these figures with the
+ number of officers and men who took the field in 1914 is indicative of the
+ magnitude of British aerial effort in the War period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX. THE WAR PERIOD&mdash;II
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was when War broke out no realisation on the part of the British
+ Government of the need for encouraging the enterprise of private builders,
+ who carried out their work entirely at their-own cost. The importance of a
+ supply of British-built engines was realised before the War, it is true,
+ and a competition was held in which a prize of L5,000 was offered for the
+ best British engine, but this awakening was so late that the R.F.C. took
+ the field without a single British power plant. Although Germany woke up
+ equally late to the need for home produced aeroplane engines, the
+ experience gained in building engines for dirigibles sufficed for the
+ production of aeroplane power plants. The Mercedes filled all requirements
+ together with the Benz and the Maybach. There was a 225 horsepower Benz
+ which was very popular, as were the 100 horse-power and 170 horse-power
+ Mercedes, the last mentioned fitted to the Aviatik biplane of 1917. The
+ Uberursel was a copy of the Gnome and supplied the need for rotary
+ engines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Great Britain there were a number of aeroplane constructing firms that
+ had managed to emerge from the lean years 1912-1913 with sufficient
+ manufacturing plant to give a hand in making up the leeway of construction
+ when War broke out. Gradually the motor-car firms came in, turning their
+ body-building departments to plane and fuselage construction, which
+ enabled them to turn out the complete planes engined and ready for the
+ field. The coach-building trade soon joined in and came in handy as
+ propeller makers; big upholstering and furniture firms and scores of
+ concerns that had never dreamed of engaging in aeroplane construction were
+ busy on supplying the R.F.C. By 1915 hundreds of different firms were
+ building aeroplanes and parts; by 1917 the number had increased to over
+ 1,000, and a capital of over a million pounds for a firm that at the
+ outbreak of War had employed a score or so of hands was by no means
+ uncommon. Women and girls came into the work, more especially in plane
+ construction and covering and doping, though they took their place in the
+ engine shops and proved successful at acetylene welding and work at the
+ lathes. It was some time before Britain was able to provide its own
+ magnetos, for this key industry had been left in the hands of the Germans
+ up to the outbreak of War, and the 'Bosch' was admittedly supreme&mdash;even
+ now it has never been beaten, and can only be equalled, being as near
+ perfection as is possible for a magneto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the great inventions of the War was the synchronisation of
+ engine-timing and machine gun, which rendered it possible to fire through
+ the blades of a propeller without damaging them, though the growing
+ efficiency of the aeroplane as a whole and of its armament is a thing to
+ marvel at on looking back and considering what was actually accomplished.
+ As the efficiency of the aeroplane increased, so anti-aircraft guns and
+ range-finding were improved. Before the War an aeroplane travelling at
+ full speed was reckoned perfectly safe at 4,000 feet, but, by the first
+ month of 1915, the safe height had gone up to 9,000 feet, 7,000 feet being
+ the limit of rifle and machine gun bullet trajectory; the heavier guns
+ were not sufficiently mobile to tackle aircraft. At that time, it was
+ reckoned that effective aerial photography ceased at 6,000 feet, while
+ bomb-dropping from 7,000-8,000 feet was reckoned uncertain except in the
+ case of a very large target. The improvement in anti-aircraft devices went
+ on, and by May of 1916, an aeroplane was not safe under 15,000 feet, while
+ anti-aircraft shells had fuses capable of being set to over 20,000 feet,
+ and bombing from 15,000 and 16,000 feet was common. It was not till later
+ that Allied pilots demonstrated the safety that lies in flying very near
+ the ground, this owing to the fact that, when flying swiftly at a very low
+ altitude, the machine is out of sight almost before it can be aimed at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Battle of the Somme and the clearing of the air preliminary to that
+ operation brought the fighting aeroplane pure and simple with them.
+ Formations of fighting planes preceded reconnaissance craft in order to
+ clear German machines and observation balloons out of the sky and to watch
+ and keep down any further enemy formations that might attempt to interfere
+ with Allied observation work. The German reply to this consisted in the
+ formation of the Flying Circus, of which Captain Baron von Richthofen's
+ was a good example. Each circus consisted of a large formation of speedy
+ machines, built specially for fighting and manned by the best of the
+ German pilots. These were sent to attack at any point along the line where
+ the Allies had got a decided superiority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trick flying of pre-war days soon became an everyday matter; Pegoud
+ astonished the aviation world before the War by first looping the loop,
+ but, before three years of hostilities had elapsed, looping was part of
+ the training of practically every pilot, while the spinning nose dive,
+ originally considered fatal, was mastered, and the tail slide, which
+ consisted of a machine rising nose upward in the air and falling back on
+ its tail, became one of the easiest 'stunts' in the pilot's repertoire.
+ Inherent stability was gradually improved, and, from 1916 onward,
+ practically every pilot could carry on with his machine-gun or camera and
+ trust to his machine to fly itself until he was free to attend to it.
+ There was more than one story of a machine coming safely to earth and
+ making good landing on its own account with the pilot dead in his
+ cock-pit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward the end of the War, the Independent Air Force was formed as a
+ branch of the R.A.F. with a view to bombing German bases and devoting its
+ attention exclusively to work behind the enemy lines. Bombing operations
+ were undertaken by the R.N.A.S. as early as 1914-1915 against Cuxhaven,
+ Dusseldorf, and Friedrichshavn, but the supply of material was not
+ sufficient to render these raids continuous. A separate Brigade, the 8th,
+ was formed in 1917 to harass the German chemical and iron industries, the
+ base being in the Nancy area, and this policy was found so fruitful that
+ the Independent Force was constituted on the 8th June, 1918. The value of
+ the work accomplished by this force is demonstrated by the fact that the
+ German High Command recalled twenty fighting squadrons from the Western
+ front to counter its activities, and, in addition, took troops away from
+ the fighting line in large numbers for manning anti-aircraft batteries and
+ searchlights. The German press of the last year of the War is eloquent of
+ the damage done in manufacturing areas by the Independent Force, which,
+ had hostilities continued a little longer, would have included Berlin in
+ its activities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formation flying was first developed by the Germans, who made use of it in
+ the daylight raids against England in 1917. Its value was very soon
+ realised, and the V formation of wild geese was adopted, the leader taking
+ the point of the V and his squadron following on either side at different
+ heights. The air currents set up by the leading machines were thus avoided
+ by those in the rear, while each pilot had a good view of the leader's
+ bombs, and were able to correct their own aim by the bursts, while the
+ different heights at which they flew rendered anti-aircraft gun practice
+ less effective. Further, machines were able to afford mutual protection to
+ each other and any attacker would be met by machine-gun fire from three or
+ four machines firing on him from different angles and heights. In the
+ later formations single-seater fighters flew above the bombers for the
+ purpose of driving off hostile craft. Formation flying was not fully
+ developed when the end of the War brought stagnation in place of the rapid
+ advance in the strategy and tactics of military air work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI. RECONSTRUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The end of the War brought a pause in which the multitude of aircraft
+ constructors found themselves faced with the possible complete stagnation
+ of the industry, since military activities no longer demanded their
+ services and the prospects of commercial flying were virtually nil. That
+ great factor in commercial success, cost of plant and upkeep, had received
+ no consideration whatever in the War period, for armies do not count cost.
+ The types of machines that had evolved from the War were very fast, very
+ efficient, and very expensive, although the bombers showed promise of
+ adaptation to commercial needs, and, so far as other machines were
+ concerned, America had already proved the possibilities of mail-carrying
+ by maintaining a mail service even during the War period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A civil aviation department of the Air Ministry was formed in February of
+ 1919 with a Controller General of Civil Aviation at the head. This was
+ organised into four branches, one dealing with the survey and preparation
+ of air routes for the British Empire, one organising meteorological and
+ wireless telegraphy services, one dealing with the licensing of
+ aerodromes, machines for passenger or goods carrying and civilian pilots,
+ and one dealing with publicity and transmission of information generally.
+ A special Act of Parliament 264 entitled 'The Air Navigation Acts,
+ 1911-1919,' was passed on February 27th, and commercial flying was
+ officially permitted from May 1st, 1919.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the great event of 1919, the crossing of the Atlantic by air,
+ was gradually ripening to performance. In addition to the rigid airship,
+ R.34, eight machines entered for this flight, these being a Short
+ seaplane, Handley-Page, Martinsyde, Vickers-Vimy, and Sopwith aeroplanes,
+ and three American flying boats, N.C.1, N.C.3, and N.C.4. The Short
+ seaplane was the only one of the eight which proposed to make the journey
+ westward; in flying from England to Ireland, before starting on the long
+ trip to Newfoundland, it fell into the sea off the coast of Anglesey, and
+ so far as it was concerned the attempt was abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first machines to start from the Western end were the three American
+ seaplanes, which on the morning of May 6th left Trepassy, Newfoundland, on
+ the 1,380 mile stage to Horta in the Azores. N.C.1 and N.C.3 gave up the
+ attempt very early, but N.C.4, piloted by Lieut.-Commander Read, U.S.N.,
+ made Horta on May 17th and made a three days' halt. On the 20th the second
+ stage of the journey to Ponta Delgada, a further 190 miles, was completed
+ and a second halt of a week was made. On the 27th, the machine left for
+ Lisbon, 900 miles distant, and completed the journey in a day. On the 30th
+ a further stage of 340 miles took N.C.4 on to Ferrol, and the next day the
+ last stage of 420 miles to Plymouth was accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, H. G. Hawker, pilot of the Sopwith biplane, together with
+ Commander Mackenzie Grieve, R.N., his navigator, found the weather
+ sufficiently auspicious to set out at 6.48 p.m. On Sunday, May 18th, in
+ the hope of completing the trip by the direct route before N.C.4 could
+ reach Plymouth. They set out from Mount Pearl aerodrome, St John's,
+ Newfoundland, and vanished into space, being given up as lost, as Hamel
+ was lost immediately before the War in attempting to fly the North Sea.
+ There was a week of dead silence regarding their fate, but on the
+ following Sunday morning there was world-wide relief at the news that the
+ plucky attempt had not ended in disaster, but both aviators had been
+ picked up by the steamer Mary at 9.30 a.m. on the morning of the 19th,
+ while still about 750 miles short of the conclusion of their journey.
+ Engine failure brought them down, and they planed down to the sea close to
+ the Mary to be picked up; as the vessel was not fitted with wireless, the
+ news of their rescue could not be communicated until land was reached. An
+ equivalent of half the L10,000 prize offered by the Daily Mail for the
+ non-stop flight was presented by the paper in recognition of the very
+ gallant attempt, and the King conferred the Air Force Cross on both pilot
+ and navigator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raynham, pilot of the Martinsyde competing machine, had the bad luck to
+ crash his craft twice in attempting to start before he got outside the
+ boundary of the aerodrome. The Handley-Page machine was withdrawn from the
+ competition, and, attempting to fly to America, was crashed on the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first non-stop crossing was made on June 14th-15th in 16 hours 27
+ minutes, the speed being just over 117 miles per hour. The machine was a
+ Vickers-Vimy bomber, engined with two Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII's, piloted by
+ Captain John Alcock, D.S.C., with Lieut. Arthur Whitten-Brown as
+ navigator. The journey was reported to be very rough, so much so at times
+ that Captain Alcock stated that they were flying upside down, and for the
+ greater part of the time they were out of sight of the sea. Both pilot and
+ navigator had the honour of knighthood conferred on them at the conclusion
+ of the journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, commercial flying opened on May 8th (the official date was May
+ 1st) with a joy-ride service from Hounslow of Avro training machines. The
+ enterprise caught on remarkably, and the company extended their activities
+ to coastal resorts for the holiday season&mdash;at Blackpool alone they
+ took up 10,000 passengers before the service was two months old. Hendon,
+ beginning passenger flights on the same date, went in for exhibition and
+ passenger flying, and on June 21st the aerial Derby was won by Captain
+ Gathergood on an Airco 4R machine with a Napier 450 horse-power 'Lion'
+ engine; incidentally the speed of 129.3 miles per hour was officially
+ recognised as constituting the world's record for speed within a closed
+ circuit. On July 17th a Fiat B.R. biplane with a 700 horse-power engine
+ landed at Kenley aerodrome after having made a non-stop flight of 1,100
+ miles. The maximum speed of this machine was 160 miles per hour, and it
+ was claimed to be the fastest machine in existence. On August 25th a daily
+ service between London and Paris was inaugurated by the Aircraft
+ Manufacturing Company, Limited, who ran a machine each way each day,
+ starting at 12.30 and due to arrive at 2.45 p.m. The Handley-Page Company
+ began a similar service in September of 1919, but ran it on alternate days
+ with machines capable of accommodating ten passengers. The single fare in
+ each case was fixed at 15 guineas and the parcel rate at 7s. 6d. per
+ pound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, in Germany, a number of passenger services had been in
+ operation from the early part of the year; the Berlin-Weimar service was
+ established on February 5th and Berlin-Hamburg on March 1st, both for mail
+ and passenger carrying. Berlin-Breslau was soon added, but the first route
+ opened remained most popular, 538 flights being made between its opening
+ and the end of April, while for March and April combined, the
+ Hamburg-Berlin route recorded only 262 flights. All three routes were
+ operated by a combine of German aeronautical firms entitled the Deutsch
+ Luft Rederie. The single fare between Hamburg and Berlin was 450 marks,
+ between Berlin and Breslau 500 marks, and between Berlin and Weimar 450
+ marks. Luggage was carried free of charge, but varied according to the
+ weight of the passenger, since the combined weight of both passenger and
+ luggage was not allowed to exceed a certain limit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In America commercial flying had begun in May of 1918 with the mail
+ service between Washington, Philadelphia, and New York, which proved that
+ mail carrying is a commercial possibility, and also demonstrated the
+ remarkable reliability of the modern aeroplane by making 102 complete
+ flights out of a possible total of 104 in November, 1918, at a cost of
+ 0.777 of a dollar per mile. By March of 1919 the cost per mile had gone up
+ to 1.28 dollars; the first annual report issued at the end of May showed
+ an efficiency of 95.6 per cent and the original six aeroplanes and engines
+ with which the service began were still in regular use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In June of 1919 an American commercial firm chartered an aeroplane for
+ emergency service owing to a New York harbour strike and found it so
+ useful that they made it a regular service. The Travellers Company
+ inaugurated a passenger flying boat service between New York and Atlantic
+ City on July 25th, the fare, inclusive of 35 lbs. of luggage, being fixed
+ at L25 each way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five flights on the American continent up to the end of 1919 are worthy of
+ note. On December 13th, 1918, Lieut. D. Godoy of the Chilian army left
+ Santiago, Chili, crossed the Andes at a height of 19,700 feet and landed
+ at Mendoza, the capital of the wine-growing province of Argentina. On
+ April 19th, 1919, Captain E. F. White made the first non-stop flight
+ between New York and Chicago in 6 hours 50 minutes on a D.H.4 machine
+ driven by a twelve-cylinder Liberty engine. Early in August Major
+ Schroeder, piloting a French Lepere machine flying at a height of 18,400
+ feet, reached a speed of 137 miles per hour with a Liberty motor fitted
+ with a super-charger. Toward the end of August, Rex Marshall, on a
+ Thomas-Morse biplane, starting from a height of 17,000 feet, made a glide
+ of 35 miles with his engine cut off, restarting it when at a height of 600
+ feet above the ground. About a month later R. Rohlfe, piloting a Curtiss
+ triplane, broke the height record by reaching 34,610 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII. 1919-20
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Into the later months of 1919 comes the flight by Captain Ross-Smith from
+ England to Australia and the attempt to make the Cape to Cairo voyage by
+ air. The Australian Government had offered a prize of L10,000 for the
+ first flight from England to Australia in a British machine, the flight to
+ be accomplished in 720 consecutive hours. Ross-Smith, with his brother,
+ Lieut. Keith Macpherson Smith, and two mechanics, left Hounslow in a
+ Vickers-Vimy bomber with Rolls-Royce engine on November 12th and arrived
+ at Port Darwin, North Australia, on the 10th December, having completed
+ the flight in 27 days 20 hours 20 minutes, thus having 51 hours 40 minutes
+ to spare out of the 720 allotted hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in 1920 came a series of attempts at completing the journey by air
+ between Cairo and the Cape. Out of four competitors Colonel Van Ryneveld
+ came nearest to making the journey successfully, leaving England on a
+ standard Vickers-Vimy bomber with Rolls-Royce engines, identical in design
+ with the machine used by Captain Ross-Smith on the England to Australia
+ flight. A second Vickers-Vimy was financed by the Times newspaper and a
+ third flight was undertaken with a Handley-Page machine under the auspices
+ of the Daily Telegraph. The Air Ministry had already prepared the route by
+ means of three survey parties which cleared the aerodromes and landing
+ grounds, dividing their journey into stages of 200 miles or less. Not one
+ of the competitors completed the course, but in both this and Ross-Smith's
+ flight valuable data was gained in respect of reliability of machines and
+ engines, together with a mass of meteorological information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Handley-Page Company announced in the early months of 1920 that they
+ had perfected a new design of wing which brought about a twenty to forty
+ per cent improvement in lift rate in the year. When the nature of the
+ design was made public, it was seen to consist of a division of the wing
+ into small sections, each with its separate lift. A few days later,
+ Fokker, the Dutch inventor, announced the construction of a machine in
+ which all external bracing wires are obviated, the wings being of a very
+ deep section and self-supporting. The value of these two inventions
+ remains to be seen so far as commercial flying is concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The value of air work in war, especially so far as the Colonial campaigns
+ in which British troops are constantly being engaged is in question, was
+ very thoroughly demonstrated in a report issued early in 1920 with
+ reference to the successful termination of the Somaliland campaign through
+ the intervention of the Royal Air Force, which between January 21st and
+ the 31st practically destroyed the Dervish force under the Mullah, which
+ had been a thorn in the side of Britain since 1907. Bombs and machine-guns
+ did the work, destroying fortifications and bringing about the surrender
+ of all the Mullah's following, with the exception of about seventy who
+ made their escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain records both in construction and performance had characterised the
+ post-war years, though as design advances and comes nearer to perfection,
+ it is obvious that records must get fewer and farther between. The record
+ aeroplane as regards size at the time of its construction was the Tarrant
+ triplane, which made its first&mdash;and last&mdash;flight on May 28th,
+ 1919. The total loaded weight was 30 tons, and the machine was fitted with
+ six 400 horse-power engines; almost immediately after the trial flight
+ began, the machine pitched forward on its nose and was wrecked, causing
+ fatal injuries to Captains Dunn and Rawlings, who were aboard the machine.
+ A second accident of similar character was that which befell the giant
+ seaplane known as the Felixstowe Fury, in a trial flight. This latter
+ machine was intended to be flown to Australia, but was crashed over the
+ water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On May 4th, 1920, a British record for flight duration and useful load was
+ established by a commercial type Handley-Page biplane, which, carrying a
+ load of 3,690 lbs., rose to a height of 13,999 feet and remained in the
+ air for 1 hour 20 minutes. On May 27th the French pilot, Fronval, flying
+ at Villacoublay in a Morane-Saulnier type of biplane with Le Rhone motor,
+ put up an extraordinary type of record by looping the loop 962 times in 3
+ hours 52 minutes 10 seconds. Another record of the year of similar nature
+ was that of two French fliers, Boussotrot and Bernard, who achieved a
+ continuous flight of 24 hours 19 minutes 7 seconds, beating the pre-war
+ record of 21 hours 48 3/4 seconds set up by the German pilot, Landemann.
+ Both these records are likely to stand, being in the nature of freaks,
+ which demonstrate little beyond the reliability of the machine and the
+ capacity for endurance on the part of its pilots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, on February 14th, Lieuts. Masiero and Ferrarin left Rome on
+ S.V.A. Ansaldo V. machines fitted with 220 horse-power S.V.A. motors. On
+ May 30th they arrived at Tokio, having flown by way of Bagdad, Karachi,
+ Canton, Pekin, and Osaka. Several other competitors started, two of whom
+ were shot down by Arabs in Mesopotamia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considered in a general way, the first two years after the termination of
+ the Great European War form a period of transition in which the commercial
+ type of aeroplane was gradually evolved from the fighting machine which
+ was perfected in the four preceding years. There was about this period no
+ sense of finality, but it was as experimental, in its own way, as were the
+ years of progressing design which preceded the war period. Such commercial
+ schemes as were inaugurated call for no more note than has been given
+ here; they have been experimental, and, with the possible exception of the
+ United States Government mail service, have not been planned and executed
+ on a sufficiently large scale to furnish reliable data on which to
+ forecast the prospects of commercial aviation. And there is a school
+ rapidly growing up which asserts that the day of aeroplanes is nearly
+ over. The construction of the giant airships of to-day and the successful
+ return flight of R34 across the Atlantic seem to point to the eventual
+ triumph, in spite of its disadvantages, of the dirigible airship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a hard saying for such of the aeroplane industry as survived the
+ War period and consolidated itself, and it is but the saying of a section
+ which bases its belief on the fact that, as was noted in the very early
+ years of the century, the aeroplane is primarily a war machine. Moreover,
+ the experience of the War period tended to discredit the dirigible, since,
+ before the introduction of helium gas, the inflammability of its buoyant
+ factor placed it at an immense disadvantage beside the machine dependent
+ on the atmosphere itself for its lift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As life runs to-day, it is a long time since Kipling wrote his story of
+ the airways of a future world and thrust out a prophecy that the bulk of
+ the world's air traffic would be carried by gas-bag vessels. If the school
+ which inclines to belief in the dirigible is right in its belief, as it
+ well may be, then the foresight was uncannily correct, not only in the
+ matter of the main assumption, but in the detail with which the writer
+ embroidered it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the constructional side, the history of the aeroplane is still so much
+ in the making that any attempt at a critical history would be unwise, and
+ it is possible only to record fact, leaving it to the future for judgment
+ to be passed. But, in a general way, criticism may be advanced with regard
+ to the place that aeronautics takes in civilisation. In the past hundred
+ years, the world has made miraculously rapid strides materially, but moral
+ development has not kept abreast. Conception of the responsibilities of
+ humanity remains virtually in a position of a hundred years ago; given a
+ higher conception of life and its responsibilities, the aeroplane becomes
+ the crowning achievement of that long series which James Watt inaugurated,
+ the last step in intercommunication, the chain with which all nations are
+ bound in a growing prosperity, surely based on moral wellbeing. Without
+ such conception of the duties as well as the rights of life, this last
+ achievement of science may yet prove the weapon that shall end
+ civilisation as men know it to-day, and bring this ultra-material age to a
+ phase of ruin on which saner people can build a world more reasonable and
+ less given to groping after purely material advancement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART2" id="link2H_PART2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART II. 1903-1920: PROGRESS IN DESIGN
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ By Lieut.-Col. W. Lockwood Marsh
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE BEGINNINGS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although the first actual flight of an aeroplane was made by the Wrights
+ on December 17th 1903, it is necessary, in considering the progress of
+ design between that period and the present day, to go back to the earlier
+ days of their experiments with 'gliders,' which show the alterations in
+ design made by them in their step-bystep progress to a flying machine
+ proper, and give a clear idea of the stage at which they had arrived in
+ the art of aeroplane design at the time of their first flights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They started by carefully surveying the work of previous experimenters,
+ such as Lilienthal and Chanute, and from the lesson of some of the
+ failures of these pioneers evolved certain new principles which were
+ embodied in their first glider, built in 1900. In the first place, instead
+ of relying upon the shifting of the operator's body to obtain balance,
+ which had proved too slow to be reliable, they fitted in front of the main
+ supporting surfaces what we now call an 'elevator,' which could be flexed,
+ to control the longitudinal balance, from where the operator lay prone
+ upon the main supporting surfaces. The second main innovation which they
+ incorporated in this first glider, and the principle of which is still
+ used in every aeroplane in existence, was the attainment of lateral
+ balance by warping the extremities of the main planes. The effect of
+ warping or pulling down the extremity of the wing on one side was to
+ increase its lift and so cause that side to rise. In the first two gliders
+ this control was also used for steering to right and left. Both these
+ methods of control were novel for other than model work, as previous
+ experimenters, such as Lilienthal and Pilcher, had relied entirely upon
+ moving the legs or shifting the position of the body to control the
+ longitudinal and lateral motions of their gliders. For the main supporting
+ surfaces of the glider the biplane system of Chanute's gliders was adopted
+ with certain modifications, while the curve of the wings was founded upon
+ the calculations of Lilienthal as to wind pressure and consequent lift of
+ the plane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This first glider was tested on the Kill Devil Hill sand-hills in North
+ Carolina in the summer of 1900 and proved at any rate the correctness of
+ the principles of the front elevator and warping wings, though its
+ designers were puzzled by the fact that the lift was less than they
+ expected; whilst the 'drag'(as we call it), or resistance, was also
+ considerably lower than their predictions. The 1901 machine was, in
+ consequence, nearly doubled in area&mdash;the lifting surface being
+ increased from 165 to 308 square feet&mdash;the first trial taking place
+ on July 27th, 1901, again at Kill Devil Hill. It immediately appeared that
+ something was wrong, as the machine dived straight to the ground, and it
+ was only after the operator's position had been moved nearly a foot back
+ from what had been calculated as the correct position that the machine
+ would glide&mdash;and even then the elevator had to be used far more
+ strongly than in the previous year's glider. After a good deal of thought
+ the apparent solution of the trouble was finally found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This consisted in the fact that with curved surfaces, while at large
+ angles the centre of pressure moves forward as the angle decreases, when a
+ certain limit of angle is reached it travels suddenly backwards and causes
+ the machine to dive. The Wrights had known of this tendency from
+ Lilienthal's researches, but had imagined that the phenomenon would
+ disappear if they used a fairly lightly cambered&mdash;or curved&mdash;surface
+ with a very abrupt curve at the front. Having discovered what appeared to
+ be the cause they surmounted the difficulty by 'trussing down' the camber
+ of the wings, with the result that they at once got back to the old
+ conditions of the previous year and could control the machine readily with
+ small movements of the elevator, even being able to follow undulations in
+ the ground. They still found, however, that the lift was not as great as
+ it should have been; while the drag remained, as in the previous glider,
+ surprisingly small. This threw doubt on previous figures as to wind
+ resistance and pressure on curved surfaces; but at the same time confirmed
+ (and this was a most important result) Lilienthal's previously questioned
+ theory that at small angles the pressure on a curved surface instead of
+ being normal, or at right angles to, the chord is in fact inclined in
+ front of the perpendicular. The result of this is that the pressure
+ actually tends to draw the machine forward into the wind&mdash;hence the
+ small amount of drag, which had puzzled Wilbur and Orville Wright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another lesson which was learnt from these first two years of experiment,
+ was that where, as in a biplane, two surfaces are superposed one above the
+ other, each of them has somewhat less lift than it would have if used
+ alone. The experimenters were also still in doubt as to the efficiency of
+ the warping method of controlling the lateral balance as it gave rise to
+ certain phenomena which puzzled them, the machine turning towards the wing
+ having the greater angle, which seemed also to touch the ground first,
+ contrary to their expectations. Accordingly, on returning to Dayton
+ towards the end of 1901, they set themselves to solve the various problems
+ which had appeared and started on a lengthy series of experiments to check
+ the previous figures as to wind resistance and lift of curved surfaces,
+ besides setting themselves to grapple with the difficulty of lateral
+ control. They accordingly constructed for themselves at their home in
+ Dayton a wind tunnel 16 inches square by 6 feet long in which they
+ measured the lift and 'drag' of more than two hundred miniature wings. In
+ the course of these tests they for the first time produced comparative
+ results of the lift of oblong and square surfaces, with the result that
+ they re-discovered the importance of 'aspect ratio'&mdash;the ratio of
+ length to breadth of planes. As a result, in the next year's glider the
+ aspect ration of the wings was increased from the three to one of the
+ earliest model to about six to one, which is approximately the same as
+ that used in the machines of to-day. Further than that, they discussed the
+ question of lateral stability, and came to the conclusion that the cause
+ of the trouble was that the effect of warping down one wing was to
+ increase the resistance of, and consequently slow down, that wing to such
+ an extent that its lift was reduced sufficiently to wipe out the
+ anticipated increase in lift resulting from the warping. From this they
+ deduced that if the speed of the warped wing could be controlled the
+ advantage of increasing the angle by warping could be utilised as they
+ originally intended. They therefore decided to fit a vertical fin at the
+ rear which, if the machine attempted to turn, would be exposed more and
+ more to the wind and so stop the turning motion by offering increased
+ resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result of this laboratory research work the third Wright glider,
+ which was taken to Kill Devil Hill in September, 1902, was far more
+ efficient aerodynamically than either of its two predecessors, and was
+ fitted with a fixed vertical fin at the rear in addition to the movable
+ elevator in front. According to Mr Griffith Brewer,[*] this third glider
+ contained 305 square feet of surface; though there may possibly be a
+ mistake here, as he states[**] the surface of the previous year's glider
+ to have been only 290 square feet, whereas Wilbur Wright himself[***]
+ states it to have been 308 square feet. The matter is not, perhaps, save
+ historically, of much importance, except that the gliders are believed to
+ have been progressively larger, and therefore if we accept Wilbur Wright's
+ own figure of the surface of the second glider, the third must have had a
+ greater area than that given by Mr Griffith Brewer. Unfortunately, no
+ evidence of the Wright Brothers themselves on this point is available.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Fourth Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, Aeronautical Journal, Vol. XX,
+ No. 79, page 75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [**] Ibid. page 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [***] Ibid. pp. 91 and 102.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first glide of the 1902, season was made on September 17th of that
+ year, and the new machine at once showed itself an improvement on its
+ predecessors, though subsequent trials showed that the difficulty of
+ lateral balance had not been entirely overcome. It was decided, therefore,
+ to turn the vertical fin at the rear into a rudder by making it movable.
+ At the same time it was realised that there was a definite relation
+ between lateral balance and directional control, and the rudder controls
+ and wing-warping wires were accordingly connected This ended the pioneer
+ gliding experiments of Wilbur and Orville Wright&mdash;though further
+ glides were made in subsequent years&mdash;as the following year, 1903,
+ saw the first power-driven machine leave the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To recapitulate&mdash;in the course of these original experiments the
+ Wrights confirmed Lilienthal's theory of the reversal of the centre of
+ pressure on cambered surfaces at small angles of incidence: they confirmed
+ the importance of high aspect ratio in respect to lift: they had evolved
+ new and more accurate tables of lift and pressure on cambered surfaces:
+ they were the first to use a movable horizontal elevator for controlling
+ height: they were the first to adjust the wings to different angles of
+ incidence to maintain lateral balance: and they were the first to use the
+ movable rudder and adjustable wings in combination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They now considered that they had gone far enough to justify them in
+ building a power-driven 'flier,' as they called their first aeroplane.
+ They could find no suitable engine and so proceeded to build for
+ themselves an internal combustion engine, which was designed to give 8
+ horse-power, but when completed actually developed about 12-15 horse-power
+ and weighed 240 lbs. The complete machine weighed about 750 lbs. Further
+ details of the first Wright aeroplane are difficult to obtain, and even
+ those here given should be received with some caution. The first flight
+ was made on December 17th 1903, and lasted 12 seconds. Others followed
+ immediately, and the fourth lasted 59 seconds, a distance of 852 feet
+ being covered against a 20-mile wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following year they transferred operations to a field outside Dayton,
+ Ohio (their home), and there they flew a somewhat larger and heavier
+ machine with which on September 20th 1904, they completed the first circle
+ in the air. In this machine for the first time the pilot had a seat; all
+ the previous experiments having been carried out with the operator lying
+ prone on the lower wing. This was followed next year by another still
+ larger machine, and on it they carried out many flights. During the course
+ of these flights they satisfied themselves as to the cause of a phenomenon
+ which had puzzled them during the previous year and caused them to fear
+ that they had not solved the problem of lateral control. They found that
+ on occasions&mdash;always when on a turn&mdash;the machine began to slide
+ down towards the ground and that no amount of warping could stop it.
+ Finally it was found that if the nose of the machine was tilted down a
+ recovery could be effected; from which they concluded that what actually
+ happened was that the machine, 'owing to the increased load caused by
+ centrifugal force,' had insufficient power to maintain itself in the air
+ and therefore lost speed until a point was reached at which the controls
+ became inoperative. In other words, this was the first experience of
+ 'stalling on a turn,' which is a danger against which all embryo pilots
+ have to guard in the early stages of their training.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 1905 machine was, like its predecessors, a biplane with a biplane
+ elevator in front and a double vertical rudder in rear. The span was 40
+ feet, the chord of the wings being 6 feet and the gap between them about
+ the same. The total area was about 600 square feet which supported a total
+ weight of 925 lbs.; while the motor was 12 to 15 horse-power driving two
+ propellers on each side behind the main planes through chains and giving
+ the machine a speed of about 30 m.p.h. one of these chains was crossed so
+ that the propellers revolved in opposite directions to avoid the torque
+ which it was feared would be set up if they both revolved the same way.
+ The machine was not fitted with a wheeled undercarriage but was carried on
+ two skids, which also acted as outriggers to carry the elevator.
+ Consequently, a mechanical method of launching had to be evolved and the
+ machine received initial velocity from a rail, along which it was drawn by
+ the impetus provided by the falling of a weight from a wooden tower or
+ 'pylon.' As a result of this the Wright aeroplane in its original form had
+ to be taken back to its starting rail after each flight, and could not
+ restart from the point of alighting. Perhaps, in comparison with French
+ machines of more or less contemporary date (evolved on independent lines
+ in ignorance of the Americans' work), the chief feature of the Wright
+ biplane of 1905 was that it relied entirely upon the skill of the operator
+ for its stability; whereas in France some attempt was being made, although
+ perhaps not very successfully, to make the machine automatically stable
+ laterally. The performance of the Wrights in carrying a loading of some 60
+ lbs. per horse-power is one which should not be overlooked. The wing
+ loading was about 1 1/2 lbs. per square foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the same time that the Wrights were carrying out their power-driven
+ experiments, a band of pioneers was quite independently beginning to
+ approach success in France. In practically every case, however, they
+ started from a somewhat different standpoint and took as their basic idea
+ the cellular (or box) kite. This form of kite, consisting of two
+ superposed surfaces connected at each end by a vertical panel or curtain
+ of fabric, had proved extremely successful for man-carrying purposes, and,
+ therefore, it was little wonder that several minds conceived the idea of
+ attempting to fly by fitting a series of box-kites with an engine. The
+ first to achieve success was M. Santos-Dumont, the famous Brazilian
+ pioneer-designer of airships, who, on November 12th, 1906, made several
+ flights, the last of which covered a little over 700 feet. Santos-Dumont's
+ machine consisted essentially of two box-kites, forming the main wings,
+ one on each side of the body, in which the pilot stood, and at the front
+ extremity of which was another movable box-kite to act as elevator and
+ rudder. The curtains at the ends were intended to give lateral stability,
+ which was further ensured by setting the wings slightly inclined upwards
+ from the centre, so that when seen from the front they formed a wide V.
+ This feature is still to be found in many aeroplanes to-day and has come
+ to be known as the 'dihedral.' The motor was at first of 24 horse-power,
+ for which later a 50 horse-power Antoinette engine was substituted; whilst
+ a three-wheeled undercarriage was provided, so that the machine could
+ start without external mechanical aid. The machine was constructed of
+ bamboo and steel, the weight being as low as 352 lbs. The span was 40
+ feet, the length being 33 feet, with a total surface of main planes of 860
+ square feet. It will thus be seen&mdash;for comparison with the Wright
+ machine&mdash;that the weight per horse-power (with the 50 horse-power
+ engine) was only 7 lbs., while the wing loading was equally low at 1/2 lb.
+ per square foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main features of the Santos-Dumont machine were the box-kite form of
+ construction, with a dihedral angle on the main planes, and the forward
+ elevator which could be moved in any direction and therefore acted in the
+ same way as the rudder at the rear of the Wright biplane. It had a single
+ propeller revolving in the centre behind the wings and was fitted with an
+ undercarriage incorporated in the machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other chief French experimenters at this period were the Voisin
+ Freres, whose first two machines&mdash;identical in form&mdash;were sold
+ to Delagrange and H. Farman, which has sometimes caused confusion, the two
+ purchasers being credited with the design they bought. The Voisins, like
+ the Wrights, based their designs largely on the experimental work of
+ Lilienthal, Langley, Chanute, and others, though they also carried out
+ tests on the lifting properties of aerofoils in a wind tunnel of their
+ own. Their first machines, like those of Santos-Dumont, showed the effects
+ of experimenting with box-kites, some of which they had built for M.
+ Ernest Archdeacon in 1904. In their case the machine, which was again a
+ biplane, had, like both the others previously mentioned, an elevator in
+ front&mdash;though in this case of monoplane form&mdash;and, as in the
+ Wright, a rudder was fitted in rear of the main planes. The Voisins,
+ however, fitted a fixed biplane horizontal 'tail'&mdash;in an effort to
+ obtain a measure of automatic longitudinal stability&mdash;between the two
+ surfaces of which the single rudder worked. For lateral stability they
+ depended entirely on end curtains between the upper and lower surfaces of
+ both the main planes and biplane tail surfaces. They, like Santos-Dumont,
+ fitted a wheeled undercarriage, so that the machine was self-contained.
+ The Voisin machine, then, was intended to be automatically stable in both
+ senses; whereas the Wrights deliberately produced a machine which was
+ entirely dependent upon the pilot's skill for its stability. The
+ dimensions of the Voisin may be given for comparative purposes, and were
+ as follows: Span 33 feet with a chord (width from back to front) of main
+ planes of 6 1/2 feet, giving a total area of 430 square feet. The 50
+ horse-power Antoinette engine, which was enclosed in the body (or 'nacelle
+ ') in the front of which the pilot sat, drove a propeller behind,
+ revolving between the outriggers carrying the tail. The total weight,
+ including Farman as pilot, is given as 1,540 lbs., so that the machine was
+ much heavier than either of the others; the weight per horse-power being
+ midway between the Santos-Dumont and the Wright at 31 lbs. per square
+ foot, while the wing loading was considerably greater than either at 3 1/2
+ lbs. per square foot. The Voisin machine was experimented with by Farman
+ and Delagrange from about June 1907 onwards, and was in the subsequent
+ years developed by Farman; and right up to the commencement of the War
+ upheld the principles of the box-kite method of construction for training
+ purposes. The chief modification of the original design was the addition
+ of flaps (or ailerons) at the rear extremities of the main planes to give
+ lateral control, in a manner analogous to the wing-warping method invented
+ by the Wrights, as a result of which the end curtains between the planes
+ were abolished. An additional elevator was fitted at the rear of the fixed
+ biplane tail, which eventually led to the discarding of the front elevator
+ altogether. During the same period the Wright machine came into line with
+ the others by the fitting of a wheeled undercarriage integral with the
+ machine. A fixed horizontal tail was also added to the rear rudder, to
+ which a movable elevator was later attached; and, finally, the front
+ elevator was done away with. It will thus be seen that having started from
+ the very different standpoints of automatic stability and complete control
+ by the pilot, the Voisin (as developed in the Farman) and Wright machines,
+ through gradual evolution finally resulted in aeroplanes of similar
+ characteristics embodying a modicum of both features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before proceeding to the next stage of progress mention should be made of
+ the experimental work of Captain Ferber in France. This officer carried
+ out a large number of experiments with gliders contemporarily with the
+ Wrights, adopting&mdash;like them&mdash;the Chanute biplane principle. He
+ adopted the front elevator from the Wrights, but immediately went a step
+ farther by also fitting a fixed tail in rear, which did not become a
+ feature of the Wright machine until some seven or eight years later. He
+ built and appeared to have flown a machine fitted with a motor in 1905,
+ and was commissioned to go to America by the French War Office on a secret
+ mission to the Wrights. Unfortunately, no complete account of his
+ experiments appears to exist, though it can be said that his work was at
+ least as important as that of any of the other pioneers mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. MULTIPLICITY OF IDEAS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In a review of progress such as this, it is obviously impossible, when a
+ certain stage of development has been reached, owing to the very
+ multiplicity of experimenters, to continue dealing in anything approaching
+ detail with all the different types of machines; and it is proposed,
+ therefore, from this point to deal only with tendencies, and to mention
+ individuals merely as examples of a class of thought rather than as
+ personalities, as it is often difficult fairly to allocate the
+ responsibility for any particular innovation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During 1907 and 1908 a new type of machine, in the monoplane, began to
+ appear from the workshops of Louis Bleriot, Robert Esnault-Pelterie, and
+ others, which was destined to give rise to long and bitter controversies
+ on the relative advantages of the two types, into which it is not proposed
+ to enter here; though the rumblings of the conflict are still to be heard
+ by discerning ears. Bleriot's early monoplanes had certain new features,
+ such as the location of the pilot, and in some cases the engine, below the
+ wing; but in general his monoplanes, particularly the famous No. XI on
+ which the first Channel crossing was made on July 25th, 1909, embodied the
+ main principles of the Wright and Voisin types, except that the propeller
+ was in front of instead of behind the supporting surfaces, and was,
+ therefore, what is called a 'tractor' in place of the then more
+ conventional 'pusher.' Bleriot aimed at lateral balance by having the tip
+ of each wing pivoted, though he soon fell into line with the Wrights and
+ adopted the warping system. The main features of the design of
+ Esnault-Pelterie's monoplane was the inverted dihedral (or kathedral as
+ this was called in Mr S. F. Cody's British Army Biplane of 1907) on the
+ wings, whereby the tips were considerably lower than the roots at the
+ body. This was designed to give automatic lateral stability, but, here
+ again, conventional practice was soon adopted and the R.E.P. monoplanes,
+ which became well-known in this country through their adoption in the
+ early days by Messrs Vickers, were of the ordinary monoplane design,
+ consisting of a tractor propeller with wire-stayed wings, the pilot being
+ in an enclosed fuselage containing the engine in front and carrying at its
+ rear extremity fixed horizontal and vertical surfaces combined with
+ movable elevators and rudder. Constructionally, the R.E.P. monoplane was
+ of extreme interest as the body was constructed of steel. The Antoinette
+ monoplane, so ably flown by Latham, was another very famous machine of the
+ 1909-1910 period, though its performance were frequently marred by engine
+ failure; which was indeed the bugbear of all these early experimenters,
+ and it is difficult to say, after this lapse of time, how far in many
+ cases the failures which occurred, both in performances and even in the
+ actual ability to rise from the ground, were due to defects in design or
+ merely faults in the primitive engines available. The Antoinette aroused
+ admiration chiefly through its graceful, birdlike lines, which have
+ probably never been equalled; but its chief interest for our present
+ purpose lies in the novel method of wing-staying which was employed.
+ Contemporary monoplanes practically all had their wings stayed by wires to
+ a post in the centre above the fuselage, and, usually, to the
+ undercarriage below. In the Antoinette, however, a king post was
+ introduced half-way along the wing, from which wires were carried to the
+ ends of the wings and the body. This was intended to give increased
+ strength and permitted of a greater wing-spread and consequently improved
+ aspect ratio. The same system of construction was adopted in the British
+ Martinsyde monoplanes of two or three years later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This period also saw the production of the first triplane, which was built
+ by A. V. Roe in England and was fitted with a J.A.P. engine of only 9
+ horse-power&mdash;an amazing performance which remains to this day
+ unequalled. Mr Roe's triplane was chiefly interesting otherwise for the
+ method of maintaining longitudinal control, which was achieved by pivoting
+ the whole of the three main planes so that their angle of incidence could
+ be altered. This was the direct converse of the universal practice of
+ elevating by means of a subsidiary surface either in front or rear of the
+ main planes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recollection of the various flying meetings and exhibitions which one
+ attended during the years from 1909 to 1911, or even 1912 are chiefly
+ notable for the fact that the first thought on seeing any new type of
+ machine was not as to what its 'performance'&mdash;in speed, lift, or what
+ not&mdash;would be; but speculation as to whether it would leave the
+ ground at all when eventually tried. This is perhaps the best indication
+ of the outstanding characteristic of that interim period between the time
+ of the first actual flights and the later period, commencing about 1912,
+ when ideas had become settled and it was at last becoming possible to
+ forecast on the drawing-board the performance of the completed machine in
+ the air. Without going into details, for which there is no space here, it
+ is difficult to convey the correct impression of the chaotic state which
+ existed as to even the elementary principles of aeroplane design. All the
+ exhibitions contained large numbers&mdash;one had almost written a
+ majority&mdash;of machines which embodied the most unusual features and
+ which never could, and in practice never did, leave the ground. At the
+ same time, there were few who were sufficiently hardy to say certainly
+ that this or that innovation was wrong; and consequently dozens of
+ inventors in every country were conducting isolated experiments on both
+ good and bad lines. All kinds of devices, mechanical and otherwise, were
+ claimed as the solution of the problem of stability, and there was even
+ controversy as to whether any measure of stability was not undesirable;
+ one school maintaining that the only safety lay in the pilot having the
+ sole say in the attitude of the machine at any given moment, and fearing
+ danger from the machine having any mind of its own, so to speak. There
+ was, as in most controversies, some right on both sides, and when we come
+ to consider the more settled period from 1912 to the outbreak of the War
+ in 1914 we shall find how a compromise was gradually effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time, however, though it was at the time difficult to pick
+ out, there was very real progress being made, and, though a number of
+ 'freak' machines fell out by the wayside, the pioneer designers of those
+ days learnt by a process of trial and error the right principles to follow
+ and gradually succeeded in getting their ideas crystallised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In connection with stability mention must be made of a machine which was
+ evolved in the utmost secrecy by Mr J. W. Dunne in a remote part of
+ Scotland under subsidy from the War office. This type, which was
+ constructed in both monoplane and biplane form, showed that it was in fact
+ possible in 1910 and 1911 to design an aeroplane which could definitely be
+ left to fly itself in the air. One of the Dunne machines was, for example
+ flown from Farnborough to Salisbury Plain without any control other than
+ the rudder being touched; and on another occasion it flew a complete
+ circle with all controls locked automatically assuming the correct bank
+ for the radius of turn. The peculiar form of wing used, the camber of
+ which varied from the root to the tip, gave rise however, to a certain
+ loss in efficiency, and there was also a difficulty in the pilot assuming
+ adequate control when desired. Other machines designed to be stable&mdash;such
+ as the German Etrich and the British Weiss gliders and Handley-Page
+ monoplanes&mdash;were based on the analogy of a wing attached to a certain
+ seed found in Nature (the 'Zanonia' leaf), on the righting effect of
+ back-sloped wings combined with upturned (or 'negative') tips. Generally
+ speaking, however, the machines of the 1909-1912 period relied for what
+ automatic stability they had on the principle of the dihedral angle, or
+ flat V, both longitudinally and laterally. Longitudinally this was
+ obtained by setting the tail at a slightly smaller angle than the main
+ planes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question of reducing the resistance by adopting 'stream-line' forms,
+ along which the air could flow uninterruptedly without the formation of
+ eddies, was not at first properly realised, though credit should be given
+ to Edouard Nieuport, who in 1909 produced a monoplane with a very large
+ body which almost completely enclosed the pilot and made the machine very
+ fast, for those days, with low horse-power. On one of these machines C. T.
+ Weyman won the Gordon-Bennett Cup for America in 1911 and another put up a
+ fine performance in the same race with only a 30 horse-power engine. The
+ subject, was however, early taken up by the British Advisory Committee for
+ Aeronautics, which was established by the Government in 1909, and
+ designers began to realise the importance of streamline struts and
+ fuselages towards the end of this transition period. These efforts were at
+ first not always successful and showed at times a lack of understanding of
+ the problems involved, but there was a very marked improvement during the
+ year 1912. At the Paris Aero Salon held early in that year there was a
+ notable variety of ideas on the subject; whereas by the time of the one
+ held in October designs had considerably settled down, more than one
+ exhibitor showing what were called 'monocoque' fuselages completely
+ circular in shape and having very low resistance, while the same show saw
+ the introduction of rotating cowls over the propeller bosses, or
+ 'spinners,' as they came to be called during the War. A particularly fine
+ example of stream-lining was to be found in the Deperdussin monoplane on
+ which Vedrines won back the Gordon-Bennett Aviation Cup from America at a
+ speed of 105.5 m.p.h.&mdash;a considerable improvement on the 78 m.p.h. of
+ the preceding year, which was by no means accounted for by the mere
+ increase in engine power from 100 horse-power to 140 horse-power. This
+ machine was the first in which the refinement of 'stream-lining' the
+ pilot's head, which became a feature of subsequent racing machines, was
+ introduced. This consisted of a circular padded excresence above the
+ cockpit immediately behind the pilot's head, which gradually tapered off
+ into the top surface of the fuselage. The object was to give the air an
+ uninterrupted flow instead of allowing it to be broken up into eddies
+ behind the head of the pilot, and it also provided a support against the
+ enormous wind-pressure encountered. This true stream-line form of fuselage
+ owed its introduction to the Paulhan-Tatin 'Torpille' monoplane of the
+ Paris Salon of early 1917. Altogether the end of the year 1912 began to
+ see the disappearance of 'freak' machines with all sorts of original ideas
+ for the increase of stability and performance. Designs had by then
+ gradually become to a considerable extent standardised, and it had become
+ unusual to find a machine built which would fail to fly. The Gnome engine
+ held the field owing to its advantages, as the first of the rotary type,
+ in lightness and ease of fitting into the nose of a fuselage. The majority
+ of machines were tractors (propeller in front) although a preference,
+ which died down subsequently, was still shown for the monoplane over the
+ biplane. This year also saw a great increase in the number of seaplanes,
+ although the 'flying boat' type had only appeared at intervals and the
+ vast majority were of the ordinary aeroplane type fitted with floats in
+ place of the land undercarriage; which type was at that time commonly
+ called 'hydro-aeroplane.' The usual horse power was 50&mdash;that of the
+ smallest Gnome engine&mdash;although engines of 100 to 140 horse-power
+ were also fitted occasionally. The average weight per horse-power varied
+ from 18 to 25 lbs., while the wing-loading was usually in the
+ neighbourhood of 5 to 6 lbs. per square foot. The average speed ranged
+ from 65-75 miles per hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. PROGRESS ON STANDARDISED LINES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the last section an attempt has been made to show how, during what was
+ from the design standpoint perhaps the most critical period, order
+ gradually became evident out of chaos, ill-considered ideas dropped out
+ through failure to make good, and, though there was still plenty of room
+ for improvement in details, the bulk of the aeroplanes showed a general
+ similarity in form and conception. There was still a great deal to be
+ learnt in finding the best form of wing section, and performances were
+ still low; but it had become definitely possible to say that flying had
+ emerged from the chrysalis stage and had become a science. The period
+ which now began was one of scientific development and improvement&mdash;in
+ performance, manoeuvrability, and general airworthiness and stability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British Military Aeroplane Competition held in the summer of 1912 had
+ done much to show the requirements in design by giving possibly the first
+ opportunity for a definite comparison of the performance of different
+ machines as measured by impartial observers on standard lines&mdash;albeit
+ the methods of measuring were crude. These showed that a high speed&mdash;for
+ those days&mdash;of 75 miles an hour or so was attended by disadvantages
+ in the form of an equally fast low speed, of 50 miles per hour or more,
+ and generally may be said to have given designers an idea what to aim for
+ and in what direction improvements were required. In fact, the most
+ noticeable point perhaps of the machines of this time was the marked
+ manner in which a machine that was good in one respect would be found to
+ be wanting in others. It had not yet been possible to combine several
+ desirable attributes in one machine. The nearest approach to this was
+ perhaps to be found in the much discussed Government B.E.2 machine, which
+ was produced from the Royal Aircraft Factory at Farnborough, in the summer
+ of 1912. Though considerably criticized from many points of view it was
+ perhaps the nearest approach to a machine of all-round efficiency that had
+ up to that date appeared. The climbing rate, which subsequently proved so
+ important for military purposes, was still low, seldom, if ever, exceeding
+ 400 feet per minute; while gliding angles (ratio of descent to forward
+ travel over the ground with engine stopped) little exceeded 1 in 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year 1912 and 1913 saw the subsequently all-conquering tractor biplane
+ begin to come into its own. This type, which probably originated in
+ England, and at any rate attained to its greatest excellence prior to the
+ War from the drawing offices of the Avro Bristol and Sopwith firms, dealt
+ a blow at the monoplane from which the latter never recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two-seater tractor biplane produced by Sopwith and piloted by H. G.
+ Hawker, showed that it was possible to produce a biplane with at least
+ equal speed to the best monoplanes, whilst having the advantage of greater
+ strength and lower landing speeds. The Sopwith machine had a top speed of
+ over 80 miles an hour while landing as slowly as little more than 30 miles
+ an hour; and also proved that it was possible to carry 3 passengers with
+ fuel for 4 hours' flight with a motive power of only 80 horse-power. This
+ increase in efficiency was due to careful attention to detail in every
+ part, improved wing sections, clean fuselage-lines, and simplified
+ undercarriages. At the same time, in the early part of 1913 a tendency
+ manifested itself towards the four-wheeled undercarriage, a pair of
+ smaller wheels being added in front of the main wheels to prevent
+ overturning while running on the ground; and several designs of
+ oleo-pneumatic and steel-spring undercarriages were produced in place of
+ the rubber shock-absorber type which had up till then been almost
+ universal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two statements as to undercarriage designs may appear to be
+ contradictory, but in reality they do not conflict as they both showed a
+ greater attention to the importance of good springing, combined with a
+ desire to avoid complication and a mass of struts and wires which
+ increased head resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Olympia Aero Show of March, 1913, also produced a machine which,
+ although the type was not destined to prove the best for the purpose for
+ which it was designed, was of interest as being the first to be designed
+ specially for war purposes. This was the Vickers 'Gun-bus,' a 'pusher'
+ machine, with the propeller revolving behind the main planes between the
+ outriggers carrying the tail, with a seat right in front for a gunner who
+ was provided with a machine gun on a swivelling mount which had a free
+ field of fire in every direction forward. The device which proved the
+ death-blow for this type of aircraft during the war will be dealt with in
+ the appropriate place later, but the machine should not go unrecorded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result of a number of accidents to monoplanes the Government
+ appointed a Committee at the end of 1912 to inquire into the causes of
+ these. The report which was presented in March, 1913, exonerated the
+ monoplane by coming to the conclusion that the accidents were not caused
+ by conditions peculiar to monoplanes, but pointed out certain desiderata
+ in aeroplane design generally which are worth recording. They recommended
+ that the wings of aeroplanes should be so internally braced as to have
+ sufficient strength in themselves not to collapse if the external bracing
+ wires should give way. The practice, more common in monoplanes than
+ biplanes, of carrying important bracing wires from the wings to the
+ undercarriage was condemned owing to the liability of damage from frequent
+ landings. They also pointed out the desirability of duplicating all main
+ wires and their attachments, and of using stranded cable for control
+ wires. Owing to the suspicion that one accident at least had been caused
+ through the tearing of the fabric away from the wing, it was recommended
+ that fabric should be more securely fastened to the ribs of the wings, and
+ that devices for preventing the spreading of tears should be considered.
+ In the last connection it is interesting to note that the French
+ Deperdussin firm produced a fabric wing-covering with extra strong threads
+ run at right-angles through the fabric at intervals in order to limit the
+ tearing to a defined area.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite, however, of the whitewashing of the monoplane by the Government
+ Committee just mentioned, considerable stir was occasioned later in the
+ year by the decision of the War office not to order any more monoplanes;
+ and from this time forward until the War period the British Army was
+ provided exclusively with biplanes. Even prior to this the popularity of
+ the monoplane had begun to wane. At the Olympia Aero Show in March, 1913,
+ biplanes for the first time outnumbered the 'single-deckers'(as the
+ Germans call monoplanes); which had the effect of reducing the
+ wing-loading. In the case of the biplanes exhibited this averaged about 4
+ 1/2 lbs. per square foot, while in the case of the monoplanes in the same
+ exhibition the lowest was 5 1/2 lbs., and the highest over 8 1/2 lbs. per
+ square foot of area. It may here be mentioned that it was not until the
+ War period that the importance of loading per horse-power was recognised
+ as the true criterion of aeroplane efficiency, far greater interest being
+ displayed in the amount of weight borne per unit area of wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An idea of the state of development arrived at about this time may be
+ gained from the fact that the Commandant of the Military Wing of the Royal
+ Flying Corps in a lecture before the Royal Aeronautical Society read in
+ February, 1913, asked for single-seater scout aeroplanes with a speed of
+ 90 miles an hour and a landing speed of 45 miles an hour&mdash;a
+ performance which even two years later would have been considered modest
+ in the extreme. It serves to show that, although higher performances were
+ put up by individual machines on occasion, the general development had not
+ yet reached the stage when such performances could be obtained in machines
+ suitable for military purposes. So far as seaplanes were concerned, up to
+ the beginning of 1913 little attempt had been made to study the novel
+ problems involved, and the bulk of the machines at the Monaco Meeting in
+ April, 1913, for instance, consisted of land machines fitted with floats,
+ in many cases of a most primitive nature, without other alterations. Most
+ of those which succeeded in leaving the water did so through sheer pull of
+ engine power; while practically all were incapable of getting off except
+ in a fair sea, which enabled the pilot to jump the machine into the air
+ across the trough between two waves. Stability problems had not yet been
+ considered, and in only one or two cases was fin area added at the rear
+ high up, to counterbalance the effect of the floats low down in front.
+ Both twin and single-float machines were used, while the flying boat was
+ only just beginning to come into being from the workshops of Sopwith in
+ Great Britain, Borel-Denhaut in France, and Curtiss in America. In view of
+ the approaching importance of amphibious seaplanes, mention should be made
+ of the flying boat (or 'bat boat' as it was called, following Rudyard
+ Kipling) which was built by Sopwith in 1913 with a wheeled
+ landing-carriage which could be wound up above the bottom surface of the
+ boat so as to be out of the way when alighting on water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During 1913 the (at one time almost universal) practice originated by the
+ Wright Brothers, of warping the wings for lateral stability, began to die
+ out and the bulk of aeroplanes began to be fitted with flaps (or
+ 'ailerons') instead. This was a distinct change for the better, as
+ continually warping the wings by bending down the extremities of the rear
+ spars was bound in time to produce 'fatigue' in that member and lead to
+ breakage; and the practice became completely obsolete during the next two
+ or three years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Gordon-Bennett race of September, 1913, was again won by a Deperdussin
+ machine, somewhat similar to that of the previous year, but with
+ exceedingly small wings, only 107 square feet in area. The shape of these
+ wings was instructive as showing how what, from the general utility point
+ of view, may be disadvantageous can, for a special purpose, be turned to
+ account. With a span of 21 feet, the chord was 5 feet, giving the
+ inefficient 'aspect ratio' of slightly over 4 to 1 only. The object of
+ this was to reduce the lift, and therefore the resistance, to as low a
+ point as possible. The total weight was 1,500 lbs., giving a wing-loading
+ of 14 lbs. per square foot&mdash;a hitherto undreamt-of figure. The result
+ was that the machine took an enormously long run before starting; and
+ after touching the ground on landing ran for nearly a mile before
+ stopping; but she beat all records by attaining a speed of 126 miles per
+ hour. Where this performance is mainly interesting is in contrast to the
+ machines of 1920, which with an even higher speed capacity would yet be
+ able to land at not more than 40 or 50 miles per hour, and would be
+ thoroughly efficient flying machines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rheims Aviation Meeting, at which the Gordon-Bennett race was flown,
+ also saw the first appearance of the Morane 'Parasol' monoplane. The
+ Morane monoplane had been for some time an interesting machine as being
+ the only type which had no fixed surface in rear to give automatic
+ stability, the movable elevator being balanced through being hinged about
+ one-third of the way back from the front edge. This made the machine
+ difficult to fly except in the hands of experts, but it was very quick and
+ handy on the controls and therefore useful for racing purposes. In the
+ 'Parasol' the modification was introduced of raising the wing above the
+ body, the pilot looking out beneath it, in order to give as good a view as
+ possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before passing to the year 1914 mention should be made of the feat
+ performed by Nesteroff, a Russian, and Pegoud, a French pilot, who were
+ the first to demonstrate the possibilities of flying upside-down and
+ looping the loop. Though perhaps not coming strictly within the purview of
+ a chapter on design (though certain alterations were made to the top
+ wing-bracing of the machine for this purpose) this performance was of
+ extreme importance to the development of aviation by showing the
+ possibility of recovering, given reasonable height, from any position in
+ the air; which led designers to consider the extra stresses to which an
+ aeroplane might be subjected and to take steps to provide for them by
+ increasing strength where necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the year 1914 opened a speed of 126 miles per hour had been attained
+ and a height of 19,600 feet had been reached. The Sopwith and Avro (the
+ forerunner of the famous training machine of the War period) were probably
+ the two leading tractor biplanes of the world, both two-seaters with a
+ speed variation from 40 miles per hour up to some 90 miles per hour with
+ 80 horse-power engines. The French were still pinning their faith mainly
+ to monoplanes, while the Germans were beginning to come into prominence
+ with both monoplanes and biplanes of the 'Taube' type. These had wings
+ swept backward and also upturned at the wing-tips which, though it gave a
+ certain measure of automatic stability, rendered the machine somewhat
+ clumsy in the air, and their performances were not on the whole as high as
+ those of either France or Great Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in 1914 it became known that the experimental work of Edward Busk&mdash;who
+ was so lamentably killed during an experimental flight later in the year&mdash;following
+ upon the researches of Bairstow and others had resulted in the production
+ at the Royal Aircraft Factory at Farnborough of a truly automatically
+ stable aeroplane. This was the 'R.E.' (Reconnaissance Experimental), a
+ development of the B.E. which has already been referred to. The remarkable
+ feature of this design was that there was no particular device to which
+ one could point out as the cause of the stability. The stable result was
+ attained simply by detailed design of each part of the aeroplane, with due
+ regard to its relation to, and effect on, other parts in the air. Weights
+ and areas were so nicely arranged that under practically any conditions
+ the machine tended to right itself. It did not, therefore, claim to be a
+ machine which it was impossible to upset, but one which if left to itself
+ would tend to right itself from whatever direction a gust might come. When
+ the principles were extended to the 'B.E. 2c' type (largely used at the
+ outbreak of the War) the latter machine, if the engine were switched of f
+ at a height of not less than 1,000 feet above the ground, would after a
+ few moments assume its correct gliding angle and glide down to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Paris Aero Salon of December, 1913, had been remarkable chiefly for
+ the large number of machines of which the chassis and bodywork had been
+ constructed of steel-tubing; for the excess of monoplanes over biplanes;
+ and (in the latter) predominance of 'pusher' machines (with propeller in
+ rear of the main planes) compared with the growing British preference for
+ 'tractors' (with air screw in front). Incidentally, the Maurice Farman,
+ the last relic of the old type box-kite with elevator in front appeared
+ shorn of this prefix, and became known as the 'short-horn' in
+ contradistinction to its front-elevatored predecessor which, owing to its
+ general reliability and easy flying capabilities, had long been
+ affectionately called the 'mechanical cow.' The 1913 Salon also saw some
+ lingering attempts at attaining automatic stability by pendulum and other
+ freak devices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from the appearance of 'R.E.1,' perhaps the most notable development
+ towards the end of 1913 was the appearance of the Sopwith 'Tabloid
+ 'tractor biplane. This single-seater machine, evolved from the two-seater
+ previously referred to, fitted with a Gnome engine of 80 horse-power, had
+ the, for those days, remarkable speed of 92 miles an hour; while a still
+ more notable feature was that it could remain in level flight at not more
+ than 37 miles per hour. This machine is of particular importance because
+ it was the prototype and forerunner of the successive designs of
+ single-seater scout fighting machines which were used so extensively from
+ 1914 to 1918. It was also probably the first machine to be capable of
+ reaching a height of 1,000 feet within one minute. It was closely followed
+ by the 'Bristol Bullet,' which was exhibited at the Olympia Aero Show of
+ March, 1914. This last pre-war show was mainly remarkable for the good
+ workmanship displayed&mdash;rather than for any distinct advance in
+ design. In fact, there was a notable diversity in the types displayed, but
+ in detailed design considerable improvements were to be seen, such as the
+ general adoption of stranded steel cable in place of piano wire for the
+ mail bracing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE WAR PERIOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Up to this point an attempt has been made to give some idea of the
+ progress that was made during the eleven years that had elapsed since the
+ days of the Wrights' first flights. Much advance had been made and
+ aeroplanes had settled down, superficially at any rate, into more or less
+ standardised forms in three main types&mdash;tractor monoplanes, tractor
+ biplanes, and pusher biplanes. Through the application of the results of
+ experiments with models in wind tunnels to full-scale machines,
+ considerable improvements had been made in the design of wing sections,
+ which had greatly increased the efficiency of aeroplanes by raising the
+ amount of 'lift' obtained from the wing compared with the 'drag' (or
+ resistance to forward motion) which the same wing would cause. In the same
+ way the shape of bodies, interplane struts, etc., had been improved to be
+ of better stream-line shape, for the further reduction of resistance;
+ while the problems of stability were beginning to be tolerably well
+ understood. Records (for what they are worth) stood at 21,000 feet as far
+ as height was concerned, 126 miles per hour for speed, and 24 hours
+ duration. That there was considerable room for development is, however,
+ evidenced by a statement made by the late B. C. Hucks (the famous pilot)
+ in the course of an address delivered before the Royal Aeronautical
+ Society in July, 1914. 'I consider,' he said, 'that the present day
+ standard of flying is due far more to the improvement in piloting than to
+ the improvement in machines.... I consider those (early 1914) machines are
+ only slight improvements on the machines of three years ago, and yet they
+ are put through evolutions which, at that time, were not even dreamed of.
+ I can take a good example of the way improvement in piloting has
+ outdistanced improvement in machines&mdash;in the case of myself, my
+ 'looping' Bleriot. Most of you know that there is very little difference
+ between that machine and the 50 horse-power Bleriot of three years ago.'
+ This statement was, of course, to some extent an exaggeration and was by
+ no means agreed with by designers, but there was at the same time a germ
+ of truth in it. There is at any rate little doubt that the theory and
+ practice of aeroplane design made far greater strides towards becoming an
+ exact science during the four years of War than it had done during the six
+ or seven years preceding it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible in the space at disposal to treat of this development
+ even with the meagre amount of detail that has been possible while
+ covering the 'settling down' period from 1911 to 1914, and it is proposed,
+ therefore, to indicate the improvements by sketching briefly the more
+ noticeable difference in various respects between the average machine of
+ 1914 and a similar machine of 1918.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place, it was soon found that it was possible to obtain
+ greater efficiency and, in particular, higher speeds, from tractor
+ machines than from pusher machines with the air screw behind the main
+ planes. This was for a variety of reasons connected with the efficiency of
+ propellers and the possibility of reducing resistance to a greater extent
+ in tractor machines by using a 'stream-line' fuselage (or body) to connect
+ the main planes with the tail. Full advantage of this could not be taken,
+ however, owing to the difficulty of fixing a machine-gun in a forward
+ direction owing to the presence of the propeller. This was finally
+ overcome by an ingenious device (known as an 'Interrupter gear') which
+ allowed the gun to fire only when none of the propeller blades was passing
+ in front of the muzzle. The monoplane gradually fell into desuetude,
+ mainly owing to the difficulty of making that type adequately strong
+ without it becoming prohibitively heavy, and also because of its high
+ landing speed and general lack of manoeuvrability. The triplane was also
+ little used except in one or two instances, and, practically speaking,
+ every machine was of the biplane tractor type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A careful consideration of the salient features leading to maximum
+ efficiency in aeroplanes&mdash;particularly in regard to speed and climb,
+ which were the two most important military requirements&mdash;showed that
+ a vital feature was the reduction in the amount of weight lifted per
+ horse-power employed; which in 1914 averaged from 20 to 25 lbs. This was
+ effected both by gradual increase in the power and size of the engines
+ used and by great improvement in their detailed design (by increasing
+ compression ratio and saving weight whenever possible); with the result
+ that the motive power of single-seater aeroplanes rose from 80 and 100
+ horse-power in 1914 to an average of 200 to 300 horse-power, while the
+ actual weight of the engine fell from 3 1/2-4 lbs. per horse-power to an
+ average of 2 1/2 lbs. per horse-power. This meant that while a pre-war
+ engine of 100 horse-power would weigh some 400 lbs., the 1918 engine
+ developing three times the power would have less than double the weight.
+ The result of this improvement was that a scout aeroplane at the time of
+ the Armistice would have 1 horse-power for every 8 lbs. of weight lifted,
+ compared with the 20 or 25 lbs. of its 1914 predecessors. This produced a
+ considerable increase in the rate of climb, a good postwar machine being
+ able to reach 10,000 feet in about 5 minutes and 20,000 feet in under half
+ an hour. The loading per square foot was also considerably increased; this
+ being rendered possible both by improvement in the design of wing sections
+ and by more scientific construction giving increased strength. It will be
+ remembered that in the machine of the very early period each square foot
+ of surface had only to lift a weight of some 1 1/2 to 2 lbs., which by
+ 1914 had been increased to about 4 lbs. By 1918 aeroplanes habitually had
+ a loading of 8 lbs. or more per square foot of area; which resulted in
+ great increase in speed. Although a speed of 126 miles per hour had been
+ attained by a specially designed racing machine over a short distance in
+ 1914, the average at that period little exceeded, if at all, 100 miles per
+ hour; whereas in 1918 speeds of 130 miles per hour had become a
+ commonplace, and shortly afterwards a speed of over 166 miles an hour was
+ achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another direction, also, that of size, great developments were made.
+ Before the War a few machines fitted with more than one engine had been
+ built (the first being a triple Gnome-engined biplane built by Messrs
+ Short Bros. at Eastchurch in 1913), but none of large size had been
+ successfully produced, the total weight probably in no case exceeding
+ about 2 tons. In 1916, however, the twin engine Handley-Page biplane was
+ produced, to be followed by others both in this country and abroad, which
+ represented a very great increase in size and, consequently, load-carrying
+ capacity. By the end of the War period several types were in existence
+ weighing a total of 10 tons when fully loaded, of which some 4 tons or
+ more represented 'useful load' available for crew, fuel, and bombs or
+ passengers. This was attained through very careful attention to detailed
+ design, which showed that the material could be employed more efficiently
+ as size increased, and was also due to the fact that a large machine was
+ not liable to be put through the same evolutions as a small machine, and
+ therefore could safely be built with a lower factor of safety. Owing to
+ the fact that a wing section which is adopted for carrying heavy loads
+ usually has also a somewhat low lift to drag ratio, and is not therefore
+ productive of high speed, these machines are not as fast as light scouts;
+ but, nevertheless, they proved themselves capable of achieving speeds of
+ 100 miles an hour or more in some cases; which was faster than the average
+ small machine of 1914.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one respect the development during the War may perhaps have proved to
+ be somewhat disappointing, as it might have been expected that great
+ improvements would be effected in metal construction, leading almost to
+ the abolition of wooden structures. Although, however, a good deal of
+ experimental work was done which resulted in overcoming at any rate the
+ worst of the difficulties, metal-built machines were little used (except
+ to a certain extent in Germany) chiefly on account of the need for rapid
+ production and the danger of delay resulting from switching over from
+ known and tried methods to experimental types of construction. The Germans
+ constructed some large machines, such as the giant Siemens-Schukhert
+ machine, entirely of metal except for the wing covering, while the Fokker
+ and Junker firms about the time of the Armistice in 1918 both produced
+ monoplanes with very deep all-metal wings (including the covering) which
+ were entirely unstayed externally, depending for their strength on
+ internal bracing. In Great Britain cable bracing gave place to a great
+ extent to 'stream-line wires,' which are steel rods rolled to a more or
+ less oval section, while tie-rods were also extensively used for the
+ internal bracing of the wings. Great developments in the economical use of
+ material were also made in the direction of using built-up main spars for
+ the wings and interplane struts; spars composed of a series of layers (or
+ 'laminations') of different pieces of wood also being used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from the metallic construction of aeroplanes an enormous amount of
+ work was done in the testing of different steels and light alloys for use
+ in engines, and by the end of the War period a number of aircraft engines
+ were in use of which the pistons and other parts were of such alloys; the
+ chief difficulty having been not so much in the design as in the
+ successful heat-treatment and casting of the metal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An important development in connection with the inspection and testing of
+ aircraft parts, particularly in the case of metal, was the experimental
+ application of X-ray photography, which showed up latent defects, both in
+ the material and in manufacture, which would otherwise have passed
+ unnoticed. This method was also used to test the penetration of glue into
+ the wood on each side of joints, so giving a measure of the strength; and
+ for the effect of 'doping' the wings, dope being a film (of cellulose
+ acetate dissolved in acetone with other chemicals) applied to the covering
+ of wings and bodies to render the linen taut and weatherproof, besides
+ giving it a smooth surface for the lessening of 'skin friction' when
+ passing rapidly through the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An important result of this experimental work was that it in many cases
+ enabled designers to produce aeroplane parts from less costly material
+ than had previously been considered necessary, without impairing the
+ strength. It may be mentioned that it was found undesirable to use welded
+ joints on aircraft in any part where the material is subjectto a tensile
+ or bending load, owing to the danger resulting from bad workmanship
+ causing the material to become brittle&mdash;an effect which cannot be
+ discovered except by cutting through the weld, which, of course, involves
+ a test to destruction. Written, as it has been, in August, 1920, it is
+ impossible in this chapter to give any conception of how the developments
+ of War will be applied to commercial aeroplanes, as few truly commercial
+ machines have yet been designed, and even those still show distinct traces
+ of the survival of war mentality. When, however, the inevitable recasting
+ of ideas arrives, it will become evident, whatever the apparent
+ modification in the relative importance of different aspects of design,
+ that enormous advances were made under the impetus of War which have left
+ an indelible mark on progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have, during the seventeen years since aeroplanes first took the air,
+ seen them grow from tentative experimental structures of unknown and
+ unknowable performance to highly scientific products, of which not only
+ the performances (in speed, load-carrying capacity, and climb) are known,
+ but of which the precise strength and degree of stability can be forecast
+ with some accuracy on the drawing board. For the rest, with the future
+ lies&mdash;apart from some revolutionary change in fundamental design&mdash;the
+ steady development of a now well-tried and well-found engineering
+ structure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART3" id="link2H_PART3">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART III. AEROSTATICS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. BEGINNINGS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Francesco Lana, with his 'aerial ship,' stands as one of the first great
+ exponents of aerostatics; up to the time of the Montgolfier and Charles
+ balloon experiments, aerostatic and aerodynamic research are so
+ inextricably intermingled that it has been thought well to treat of them
+ as one, and thus the work of Lana, Veranzio and his parachute, Guzman's
+ frauds, and the like, have already been sketched. In connection with
+ Guzman, Hildebrandt states in his Airships Past and Present, a fairly
+ exhaustive treatise on the subject up to 1906, the year of its
+ publication, that there were two inventors&mdash;or charlatans&mdash;Lorenzo
+ de Guzman and a monk Bartolemeo Laurenzo, the former of whom constructed
+ an unsuccessful airship out of a wooden basket covered with paper, while
+ the latter made certain experiments with a machine of which no description
+ remains. A third de Guzman, some twenty-five years later, announced that
+ he had constructed a flying machine, with which he proposed to fly from a
+ tower to prove his success to the public. The lack of record of any fatal
+ accident overtaking him about that time seems to show that the experiment
+ was not carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galien, a French monk, published a book L'art de naviguer dans l'air in
+ 1757, in which it was conjectured that the air at high levels was lighter
+ than that immediately over the surface of the earth. Galien proposed to
+ bring down the upper layers of air and with them fill a vessel, which by
+ Archimidean principle would rise through the heavier atmosphere. If one
+ went high enough, said Galien, the air would be two thousand times as
+ light as water, and it would be possible to construct an airship, with
+ this light air as lifting factor, which should be as large as the town of
+ Avignon, and carry four million passengers with their baggage. How this
+ high air was to be obtained is matter for conjecture&mdash;Galien seems to
+ have thought in a vicious circle, in which the vessel that must rise to
+ obtain the light air must first be filled with it in order to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cavendish's discovery of hydrogen in 1776 set men thinking, and soon a
+ certain Doctor Black was suggesting that vessels might be filled with
+ hydrogen, in order that they might rise in the air. Black, however, did
+ not get beyond suggestion; it was Leo Cavallo who first made experiments
+ with hydrogen, beginning with filling soap bubbles, and passing on to
+ bladders and special paper bags. In these latter the gas escaped, and
+ Cavallo was about to try goldbeaters' skin at the time that the
+ Montgolfiers came into the field with their hot air balloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph and Stephen Montgolfier, sons of a wealthy French paper
+ manufacturer, carried out many experiments in physics, and Joseph
+ interested himself in the study of aeronautics some time before the first
+ balloon was constructed by the brothers&mdash;he is said to have made a
+ parachute descent from the roof of his house as early as 1771, but of this
+ there is no proof. Galien's idea, together with study of the movement of
+ clouds, gave Joseph some hope of achieving aerostation through Galien's
+ schemes, and the first experiments were made by passing steam into a
+ receiver, which, of course, tended to rise&mdash;but the rapid
+ condensation of the steam prevented the receiver from more than
+ threatening ascent. The experiments were continued with smoke, which
+ produced only a slightly better effect, and, moreover, the paper bag into
+ which the smoke was induced permitted of escape through its pores; finding
+ this method a failure the brothers desisted until Priestley's work became
+ known to them, and they conceived the use of hydrogen as a lifting factor.
+ Trying this with paper bags, they found that the hydrogen escaped through
+ the pores of the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their first balloon, made of paper, reverted to the hot-air principle;
+ they lighted a fire of wool and wet straw under the balloon&mdash;and as a
+ matter of course the balloon took fire after very little experiment;
+ thereupon they constructed a second, having a capacity of 700 cubic feet,
+ and this rose to a height of over 1,000 feet. Such a success gave them
+ confidence, and they gave their first public exhibition on June 5th, 1783,
+ with a balloon constructed of paper and of a circumference of 112 feet. A
+ fire was lighted under this balloon, which, after rising to a height of
+ 1,000 feet, descended through the cooling of the air inside a matter of
+ ten minutes. At this the Academie des Sciences invited the brothers to
+ conduct experiments in Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Montgolfiers were undoubtedly first to send up balloons, but other
+ experimenters were not far behind them, and before they could get to Paris
+ in response to their invitation, Charles, a prominent physicist of those
+ days, had constructed a balloon of silk, which he proofed against escape
+ of gas with rubber&mdash;the Roberts had just succeeded in dissolving this
+ substance to permit of making a suitable coating for the silk. With a
+ quarter of a ton of sulphuric acid, and half a ton of iron filings and
+ turnings, sufficient hydrogen was generated in four days to fill Charles's
+ balloon, which went up on August 28th, 1783. Although the day was wet,
+ Paris turned out to the number of over 300,000 in the Champs de Mars, and
+ cannon were fired to announce the ascent of the balloon. This, rising very
+ rapidly, disappeared amid the rain clouds, but, probably bursting through
+ no outlet being provided to compensate for the escape of gas, fell soon in
+ the neighbourhood of Paris. Here peasants, ascribing evil supernatural
+ influence to the fall of such a thing from nowhere, went at it with the
+ implements of their craft&mdash;forks, hoes, and the like&mdash;and
+ maltreated it severely, finally attaching it to a horse's tail and
+ dragging it about until it was mere rag and scrap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Joseph Montgolfier, having come to Paris, set about the
+ construction of a balloon out of linen; this was in three diverse
+ sections, the top being a cone 30 feet in depth, the middle a cylinder 42
+ feet in diameter by 26 feet in depth, and the bottom another cone 20 feet
+ in depth from junction with the cylindrical portion to its point. The
+ balloon was both lined and covered with paper, decorated in blue and gold.
+ Before ever an ascent could be attempted this ambitious balloon was caught
+ in a heavy rainstorm which reduced its paper covering to pulp and tore the
+ linen at its seams, so that a supervening strong wind tore the whole thing
+ to shreds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Montgolfier's next balloon was spherical, having a capacity of 52,000
+ cubic feet. It was made from waterproofed linen, and on September 19th,
+ 1783, it made an ascent for the palace courtyard at Versailles, taking up
+ as passengers a cock, a sheep, and a duck. A rent at the top of the
+ balloon caused it to descend within eight minutes, and the duck and sheep
+ were found none the worse for being the first living things to leave the
+ earth in a balloon, but the cock, evidently suffering, was thought to have
+ been affected by the rarefaction of the atmosphere at the tremendous
+ height reached&mdash;for at that time the general opinion was that the
+ atmosphere did not extend more than four or five miles above the earth's
+ surface. It transpired later that the sheep had trampled on the cock,
+ causing more solid injury than any that might be inflicted by rarefied air
+ in an eight-minute ascent and descent of a balloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For achieving this flight Joseph Montgolfier received from the King of
+ France a pension of of L40, while Stephen was given the order of St
+ Michael, and a patent of nobility was granted to their father. They were
+ made members of the Legion d'Honneur, and a scientific deputation, of
+ which Faujas de Saint-Fond, who had raised the funds with which Charles's
+ hydrogen balloon was constructed, presented to Stephen Montgolfier a gold
+ medal struck in honour of his aerial conquest. Since Joseph appears to
+ have had quite as much share in the success as Stephen, the presentation
+ of the medal to one brother only was in questionable taste, unless it was
+ intended to balance Joseph's pension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once aerostation had been proved possible, many people began the
+ construction of small balloons&mdash;the wholehole thing was regarded as a
+ matter of spectacles and a form of amusement by the great majority. A
+ certain Baron de Beaumanoir made the first balloon of goldbeaters' skin,
+ this being eighteen inches in diameter, and using hydrogen as a lifting
+ factor. Few people saw any possibilities in aerostation, in spite of the
+ adventures of the duck and sheep and cock; voyages to the moon were talked
+ and written, and there was more of levity than seriousness over ballooning
+ as a rule. The classic retort of Benjamin Franklin stands as an exception
+ to the general rule: asked what was the use of ballooning&mdash;'What's
+ the use of a baby?' he countered, and the spirit of that reply brought
+ both the dirigible and the aeroplane to being, later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next noteworthy balloon was one by Stephen Montgolfier, designed to
+ take up passengers, and therefore of rather large dimensions, as these
+ things went then. The capacity was 100,000 cubic feet, the depth being 85
+ feet, and the exterior was very gaily decorated. A short, cylindrical
+ opening was made at the lower extremity, and under this a fire-pan was
+ suspended, above the passenger car of the balloon. On October 15th, 1783,
+ Pilatre de Rozier made the first balloon ascent&mdash;but the balloon was
+ held captive, and only allowed to rise to a height of 80 feet. But, a
+ little later in 1783, Rozier secured the honour of making the first ascent
+ in a free balloon, taking up with him the Marquis d'Arlandes. It had been
+ originally intended that two criminals, condemned to death, should risk
+ their lives in the perilous venture, with the prospect of a free pardon if
+ they made a safe descent, but d'Arlandes got the royal consent to
+ accompany Rozier, and the criminals lost their chance. Rozier and
+ d'Arlandes made a voyage lasting for twenty-five minutes, and, on landing,
+ the balloon collapsed with such rapidity as almost to suffocate Rozier,
+ who, however, was dragged out to safety by d'Arlandes. This first
+ aerostatic journey took place on November 21st, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some seven months later, on June 4th, 1784, a Madame Thible ascended in a
+ free balloon, reaching a height of 9,000 feet, and making a journey which
+ lasted for forty-five minutes&mdash;the great King Gustavus of Sweden
+ witnessed this ascent. France grew used to balloon ascents in the course
+ of a few months, in spite of the brewing of such a storm as might have
+ been calculated to wipe out all but purely political interests. Meanwhile,
+ interest in the new discovery spread across the Channel, and on September
+ 15th, 1784, one Vincent Lunardi made the first balloon voyage in England,
+ starting from the Artillery Ground at Chelsea, with a cat and dog as
+ passengers, and landing in a field in the parish of Standon, near Ware.
+ There is a rather rare book which gives a very detailed account of this
+ first ascent in England, one copy of which is in the library of the Royal
+ Aeronautical Society; the venturesome Lunardi won a greater measure of
+ fame through his exploit than did Cody for his infinitely more courageous
+ and&mdash;from a scientific point of view&mdash;valuable first aeroplane
+ ascent in this country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Montgolfier type of balloon, depending on hot air for its lifting
+ power, was soon realised as having dangerous limitations. There was always
+ a possibility of the balloon catching fire while it was being filled, and
+ on landing there was further danger from the hot pan which kept up the
+ supply of hot air on the voyage&mdash;the collapsing balloon fell on the
+ pan, inevitably. The scientist Saussure, observing the filling of the
+ balloons very carefully, ascertained that it was rarefaction of the air
+ which was responsible for the lifting power, and not the heat in itself,
+ and, owing to the rarefaction of the air at normal temperature at great
+ heights above the earth, the limit of ascent for a balloon of the
+ Montgolfier type was estimated by him at under 9,000 feet. Moreover, since
+ the amount of fuel that could be carried for maintaining the heat of the
+ balloon after inflation was subject to definite limits, prescribed by the
+ carrying capacity of the balloon, the duration of the journey was
+ necessarily limited just as strictly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These considerations tended to turn the minds of those interested in
+ aerostation to consideration of the hydrogen balloon evolved by Professor
+ Charles. Certain improvements had been made by Charles since his first
+ construction; he employed rubber-coated silk in the construction of a
+ balloon of 30 feet diameter, and provided a net for distributing the
+ pressure uniformly over the surface of the envelope; this net covered the
+ top half of the balloon, and from its lower edge dependent ropes hung to
+ join on a wooden ring, from which the car of the balloon was suspended&mdash;apart
+ from the extension of the net so as to cover in the whole of the envelope,
+ the spherical balloon of to-day is virtually identical with that of
+ Charles in its method of construction. He introduced the valve at the top
+ of the balloon, by which escape of gas could be controlled, operating his
+ valve by means of ropes which depended to the car of the balloon, and he
+ also inserted a tube, of about 7 inches diameter, at the bottom of the
+ balloon, not only for purposes of inflation, but also to provide a means
+ of escape for gas in case of expansion due to atmospheric conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sulphuric acid and iron filings were used by Charles for filling his
+ balloon, which required three days and three nights for the generation of
+ its 14,000 cubic feet of hydrogen gas. The inflation was completed on
+ December 1st, 1783, and the fittings carried included a barometer and a
+ grapnel form of anchor. In addition to this, Charles provided the first
+ 'ballon sonde' in the form of a small pilot balloon which he handed to
+ Montgolfier to launch before his own ascent, in order to determine the
+ direction and velocity of the wind. It was a graceful compliment to his
+ rival, and indicated that, although they were both working to the one end,
+ their rivalry was not a matter of bitterness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ascending on December 1st, 1783, Charles took with him one of the brothers
+ Robert, and with him made the record journey up to that date, covering a
+ period of three and three-quarter hours, in which time they journeyed some
+ forty miles. Robert then landed, and Charles ascended again alone,
+ reaching such a height as to feel the effects of the rarefaction of the
+ air, this very largely due to the rapidity of his ascent. Opening the
+ valve at the top of the balloon, he descended thirty-five minutes after
+ leaving Robert behind, and came to earth a few miles from the point of the
+ first descent. His discomfort over the rapid ascent was mainly due to the
+ fact that, when Robert landed, he forgot to compensate for the reduction
+ of weight by taking in further ballast, but the ascent proved the value of
+ the tube at the bottom of the balloon envelope, for the gas escaped very
+ rapidly in that second ascent, and, but for the tube, the balloon must
+ inevitably have burst in the air, with fatal results for Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in the case of aeroplane flight, as soon as the balloon was proved
+ practicable the flight across the English Channel was talked of, and
+ Rozier, who had the honour of the first flight, announced his intention of
+ being first to cross. But Blanchard, who had an idea for a 'flying car,'
+ anticipated him, and made a start from Dover on January 7th, 1785, taking
+ with him an American doctor named Jeffries. Blanchard fitted out his craft
+ for the journey very thoroughly, taking provisions, oars, and even wings,
+ for propulsion in case of need. He took so much, in fact, that as soon as
+ the balloon lifted clear of the ground the whole of the ballast had to be
+ jettisoned, lest the balloon should drop into the sea. Half-way across the
+ Channel the sinking of the balloon warned Blanchard that he had to part
+ with more than ballast to accomplish the journey, and all the equipment
+ went, together with certain books and papers that were on board the car.
+ The balloon looked perilously like collapsing, and both Blanchard and
+ Jeffries began to undress in order further to lighten their craft&mdash;Jeffries
+ even proposed a heroic dive to save the situation, but suddenly the
+ balloon rose sufficiently to clear the French coast, and the two voyagers
+ landed at a point near Calais in the Forest of Gaines, where a marble
+ column was subsequently erected to commemorate the great feat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rozier, although not first across, determined to be second, and for that
+ purpose he constructed a balloon which was to owe its buoyancy to a
+ combination of the hydrogen and hot air principles. There was a spherical
+ hydrogen balloon above, and beneath it a cylindrical container which could
+ be filled with hot air, thus compensating for the leakage of gas from the
+ hydrogen portion of the balloon&mdash;regulating the heat of his fire, he
+ thought, would give him perfect control in the matter of ascending and
+ descending.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On July 6th, 1785, a favourable breeze gave Rozier his opportunity of
+ starting from the French coast, and with a passenger aboard he cast off in
+ his balloon, which he had named the 'Aero-Montgolfiere.' There was a rapid
+ rise at first, and then for a time the balloon remained stationary over
+ the land, after which a cloud suddenly appeared round the balloon,
+ denoting that an explosion had taken place. Both Rozier and his companion
+ were killed in the fall, so that he, first to leave the earth by balloon,
+ was also first victim to the art of aerostation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There followed, naturally, a lull in the enthusiasm with which ballooning
+ had been taken up, so far as France was concerned. In Italy, however,
+ Count Zambeccari took up hot-air ballooning, using a spirit lamp to give
+ him buoyancy, and on the first occasion when the balloon car was set on
+ fire Zambeccari let down his passenger by means of the anchor rope, and
+ managed to extinguish the fire while in the air. This reduced the buoyancy
+ of the balloon to such an extent that it fell into the Adriatic and was
+ totally wrecked, Zambeccari being rescued by fishermen. He continued to
+ experiment up to 1812, when he attempted to ascend at Bologna; the spirit
+ in his lamp was upset by the collision of the car with a tree, and the car
+ was again set on fire. Zambeccari jumped from the car when it was over
+ fifty feet above level ground, and was killed. With him the Rozier type of
+ balloon, combining the hydrogen and hot air principles, disappeared; the
+ combination was obviously too dangerous to be practical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brothers Robert were first to note how the heat of the sun acted on
+ the gases within a balloon envelope, and it has since been ascertained
+ that sun rays will heat the gas in a balloon to as much as 80 degrees
+ Fahrenheit greater temperature than the surrounding atmosphere; hydrogen,
+ being less affected by change of temperature than coal gas, is the most
+ suitable filling element, and coal gas comes next as the medium of
+ buoyancy. This for the free and non-navigable balloon, though for the
+ airship, carrying means of combustion, and in military work liable to
+ ignition by explosives, the gas helium seems likely to replace hydrogen,
+ being non-combustible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the development of the dirigible airship, there remains work
+ for the free, spherical type of balloon in the scientific field.
+ Blanchard's companion on the first Channel crossing by balloon, Dr
+ Jeffries, was the first balloonist to ascend for purely scientific
+ purposes; as early as 1784 he made an ascent to a height of 9,000 feet,
+ and observed a fall in temperature of from degrees&mdash;at the level of
+ London, where he began his ascent&mdash;to 29 degrees at the maximum
+ height reached. He took up an electrometer, a hydrometer, a compass, a
+ thermometer, and a Toricelli barometer, together with bottles of water, in
+ order to collect samples of the air at different heights. In 1785 he made
+ a second ascent, when trigonometrical observations of the height of the
+ balloon were made from the French coast, giving an altitude of 4,800 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matter was taken up on its scientific side very early in America,
+ experiments in Philadelphia being almost simultaneous with those of the
+ Montgolfiers in France. The flight of Rozier and d'Arlandes inspired two
+ members of the Philadelphia Philosophical Academy to construct a balloon
+ or series of balloons of their own design; they made a machine which
+ consisted of no less than 47 small hydrogen balloons attached to a wicker
+ car, and made certain preliminary trials, using animals as passengers.
+ This was followed by a captive ascent with a man as passenger, and
+ eventually by the first free ascent in America, which was undertaken by
+ one James Wilcox, a carpenter, on December 28th, 1783. Wilcox, fearful of
+ falling into a river, attempted to regulate his landing by cutting slits
+ in some of the supporting balloons, which was the method adopted for
+ regulating ascent or descent in this machine. He first cut three, and
+ then, finding that the effect produced was not sufficient, cut three more,
+ and then another five&mdash;eleven out of the forty-seven. The result was
+ so swift a descent that he dislocated his wrist on landing.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A NOTE ON BALLONETS OR AIR BAGS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meusnier, toward the end of the eighteenth century, was first to conceive
+ the idea of compensating for the loss of gas due to expansion by fitting
+ to the interior of a free balloon a ballonet, or air bag, which could be
+ pumped full of air so as to retain the shape and rigidity of the envelope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ballonet became particularly valuable as soon as airship construction
+ became general, and it was in the course of advance in Astra Torres design
+ that the project was introduced of using the ballonets in order to give
+ inclination from the horizontal. In the earlier Astra Torres, trimming was
+ accomplished by moving the car fore and aft&mdash;this in itself was an
+ advance on the separate 'sliding weigh' principle&mdash;and this was the
+ method followed in the Astra Torres bought by the British Government from
+ France in 1912 for training airship pilots. Subsequently, the two
+ ballonets fitted inside the envelope were made to serve for trimming by
+ the extent of their inflation, and this method of securing inclination
+ proved the best until exterior rudders, and greater engine power,
+ supplanted it, as in the Zeppelin and, in fact, all rigid types.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the kite balloon, the ballonet serves the purpose of a rudder, filling
+ itself through the opening being kept pointed toward the wind&mdash;there
+ is an ingenious type of air scoop with non-return valve which assures
+ perfect inflation. In the S.S. type of airship, two ballonets are
+ provided, the supply of air being taken from the propeller draught by a
+ slanting aluminium tube to the underside of the envelope, where it meets a
+ longitudinal fabric hose which connects the two ballonet air inlets. In
+ this hose the non-return air valves, known as 'crab-pots,' are fitted, on
+ either side of the junction with the air-scoop. Two automatic air valves,
+ one for each ballonet, are fitted in the underside of the envelope, and,
+ as the air pressure tends to open these instead of keeping them shut, the
+ spring of the valve is set inside the envelope. Each spring is set to open
+ at a pressure of 25 to 28 mm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. THE FIRST DIRIGIBLES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Having got off the earth, the very early balloonists set about the task of
+ finding a means of navigating the air but, lacking steam or other
+ accessory power to human muscle, they failed to solve the problem. Joseph
+ Montgolfier speedily exploded the idea of propelling a balloon either by
+ means of oars or sails, pointing out that even in a dead calm a speed of
+ five miles an hour would be the limit achieved. Still, sailing balloons
+ were constructed, even up to the time of Andree, the explorer, who
+ proposed to retard the speed of the balloon by ropes dragging on the
+ ground, and then to spread a sail which should catch the wind and permit
+ of deviation of the course. It has been proved that slight divergences
+ from the course of the wind can be obtained by this means, but no real
+ navigation of the air could be thus accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Wellner, of Brunn, brought up the idea of a sailing balloon in
+ more practical fashion in 1883. He observed that surfaces inclined to the
+ horizontal have a slight lateral motion in rising and falling, and deduced
+ that by alternate lowering and raising of such surfaces he would be able
+ to navigate the air, regulating ascent and descent by increasing or
+ decreasing the temperature of his buoyant medium in the balloon. He
+ calculated that a balloon, 50 feet in diameter and 150 feet in length,
+ with a vertical surface in front and a horizontal surface behind, might be
+ navigated at a speed of ten miles per hour, and in actual tests at Brunn
+ he proved that a single rise and fall moved the balloon three miles
+ against the wind. His ideas were further developed by Lebaudy in the
+ construction of the early French dirigibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Hildebrandt,[*] the first sailing balloon was built in 1784
+ by Guyot, who made his balloon egg-shaped, with the smaller end at the
+ back and the longer axis horizontal; oars were intended to propel the
+ craft, and naturally it was a failure. Carra proposed the use of paddle
+ wheels, a step in the right direction, by mounting them on the sides of
+ the car, but the improvement was only slight. Guyton de Morveau, entrusted
+ by the Academy of Dijon with the building of a sailing balloon, first used
+ a vertical rudder at the rear end of his construction&mdash;it survives in
+ the modern dirigible. His construction included sails and oars, but,
+ lacking steam or other than human propulsive power, the airship was a
+ failure equally with Guyot's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Airships Past and Present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two priests, Miollan and Janinet, proposed to drive balloons through the
+ air by the forcible expulsion of the hot air in the envelope from the rear
+ of the balloon. An opening was made about half-way up the envelope,
+ through which the hot air was to escape, buoyancy being maintained by a
+ pan of combustibles in the car. Unfortunately, this development of the
+ Montgolfier type never got a trial, for those who were to be spectators of
+ the first flight grew exasperated at successive delays, and in the end,
+ thinking that the balloon would never rise, they destroyed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meusnier, a French general, first conceived the idea of compensating for
+ loss of gas by carrying an air bag inside the balloon, in order to
+ maintain the full expansion of the envelope. The brothers Robert
+ constructed the first balloon in which this was tried and placed the air
+ bag near the neck of the balloon which was intended to be driven by oars,
+ and steered by a rudder. A violent swirl of wind which was encountered on
+ the first ascent tore away the oars and rudder and broke the ropes which
+ held the air bag in position; the bag fell into the opening of the neck
+ and stopped it up, preventing the escape of gas under expansion. The Duc
+ de Chartres, who was aboard, realised the extreme danger of the envelope
+ bursting as the balloon ascended, and at 16,000 feet he thrust a staff
+ through the envelope&mdash;another account says that he slit it with his
+ sword&mdash;and thus prevented disaster. The descent after this rip in the
+ fabric was swift, but the passengers got off without injury in the
+ landing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meusnier, experimenting in various ways, experimented with regard to the
+ resistance offered by various shapes to the air, and found that an
+ elliptical shape was best; he proposed to make the car boat&mdash;shaped,
+ in order further to decrease the resistance, and he advocated an entirely
+ rigid connection between the car and the body of the balloon, as
+ indispensable to a dirigible.[*] He suggested using three propellers,
+ which were to be driven by hand by means of pulleys, and calculated that a
+ crew of eighty would be required to furnish sufficient motive power.
+ Horizontal fins were to be used to assure stability, and Meusnier
+ thoroughly investigated the pressures exerted by gases, in order to
+ ascertain the stresses to which the envelope would be subjected. More
+ important still, he went into detail with regard to the use of air bags,
+ in order to retain the shape of the balloon under varying pressures of gas
+ due to expansion and consequent losses; he proposed two separate
+ envelopes, the inner one containing gas, and the space between it and the
+ outer one being filled with air. Further, by compressing the air inside
+ the air bag, the rate of ascent or descent could be regulated. Lebaudy,
+ acting on this principle, found it possible to pump air at the rate of 35
+ cubic feet per second, thus making good loss of ballast which had to be
+ thrown overboard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Hildebrandt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meusnier's balloon, of course, was never constructed, but his ideas have
+ been of value to aerostation up to the present time. His career ended in
+ the revolutionary army in 1793, when he was killed in the fighting before
+ Mayence, and the King of Prussia ordered all firing to cease until
+ Meusnier had been buried. No other genius came forward to carry on his
+ work, and it was realised that human muscle could not drive a balloon with
+ certainty through the air; experiment in this direction was abandoned for
+ nearly sixty years, until in 1852 Giffard brought the first practicable
+ power-driven dirigible to being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Giffard, inventor of the steam injector, had already made balloon ascents
+ when he turned to aeronautical propulsion, and constructed a steam engine
+ of 5 horsepower with a weight of only 100 lbs.&mdash;a great achievement
+ for his day. Having got his engine, he set about making the balloon which
+ it was to drive; this he built with the aid of two other enthusiasts,
+ diverging from Meusnier's ideas by making the ends pointed, and keeping
+ the body narrowed from Meusnier's ellipse to a shape more resembling a
+ rather fat cigar. The length was 144 feet, and the greatest diameter only
+ 40 feet, while the capacity was 88,000 cubic feet. A net which covered the
+ envelope of the balloon supported a spar, 66 feet in length, at the end of
+ which a triangular sail was placed vertically to act as rudder. The car,
+ slung 20 feet below the spar, carried the engine and propeller. Engine and
+ boiler together weighed 350 lbs., and drove the 11 foot propeller at 110
+ revolutions per minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As precaution against explosion, Giffard arranged wire gauze in front of
+ the stoke-hole of his boiler, and provided an exhaust pipe which
+ discharged the waste gases from the engine in a downward direction. With
+ this first dirigible he attained to a speed of between 6 and 8 feet per
+ second, thus proving that the propulsion of a balloon was a possibility,
+ now that steam had come to supplement human effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three years later he built a second dirigible, reducing the diameter and
+ increasing the length of the gas envelope, with a view to reducing air
+ resistance. The length of this was 230 feet, the diameter only 33 feet,
+ and the capacity was 113,000 cubic feet, while the upper part of the
+ envelope, to which the covering net was attached, was specially covered to
+ ensure a stiffening effect. The car of this dirigible was dropped rather
+ lower than that of the first machine, in order to provide more thoroughly
+ against the danger of explosions. Giffard, with a companion named Yon as
+ passenger, took a trial trip on this vessel, and made a journey against
+ the wind, though slowly. In commencing to descend, the nose of the
+ envelope tilted upwards, and the weight of the car and its contents caused
+ the net to slip, so that just before the dirigible reached the ground, the
+ envelope burst. Both Giffard and his companion escaped with very slight
+ injuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plans were immediately made for the construction of a third dirigible,
+ which was to be 1,970 feet in length, 98 feet in extreme diameter, and to
+ have a capacity of 7,800,000 cubic feet of gas. The engine of this giant
+ was to have weighed 30 tons, and with it Giffard expected to attain a
+ speed of 40 miles per hour. Cost prevented the scheme being carried out,
+ and Giffard went on designing small steam engines until his invention of
+ the steam injector gave him the funds to turn to dirigibles again. He
+ built a captive balloon for the great exhibition in London in 1868, at a
+ cost of nearly L30,000, and designed a dirigible balloon which was to have
+ held a million and three quarters cubic feet of gas, carry two boilers,
+ and cost about L40,000. The plans were thoroughly worked out, down to the
+ last detail, but the dirigible was never constructed. Giffard went blind,
+ and died in 1882&mdash;he stands as the great pioneer of dirigible
+ construction, more on the strength of the two vessels which he actually
+ built than on that of the ambitious later conceptions of his brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1872 Dupuy de Lome, commissioned by the French government, built a
+ dirigible which he proposed to drive by man-power&mdash;it was anticipated
+ that the vessel would be of use in the siege of Paris, but it was not
+ actually tested till after the conclusion of the war. The length of this
+ vessel was 118 feet, its greatest diameter 49 feet, the ends being
+ pointed, and the motive power was by a propeller which was revolved by the
+ efforts of eight men. The vessel attained to about the same speed as
+ Giffard's steam-driven airship; it was capable of carrying fourteen men,
+ who, apart from these engaged in driving the propeller, had to manipulate
+ the pumps which controlled the air bags inside the gas envelope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same year Paul Haenlein, working in Vienna, produced an airship
+ which was a direct forerunner of the Lebaudy type, 164 feet in length, 30
+ feet greatest diameter, and with a cubic capacity of 85,000 feet.
+ Semi-rigidity was attained by placing the car as close to the envelope as
+ possible, suspending it by crossed ropes, and the motive power was a gas
+ engine of the Lenoir type, having four horizontal cylinders, and giving
+ about 5 horse-power with a consumption of about 250 cubic feet of gas per
+ hour. This gas was sucked from the envelope of the balloon, which was kept
+ fully inflated by pumping in compensating air to the air bags inside the
+ main envelope. A propeller, 15 feet in diameter, was driven by the Lenoir
+ engine at 40 revolutions per minute. This was the first instance of the
+ use of an internal combustion engine in connection with aeronautical
+ experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envelope of this dirigible was rendered airtight by means of internal
+ rubber coating, with a thinner film on the outside. Coal gas, used for
+ inflation, formed a suitable fuel for the engine, but limited the height
+ to which the dirigible could ascend. Such trials as were made were carried
+ out with the dirigible held captive, and a speed of I 5 feet per second
+ was attained. Full experiment was prevented through funds running low, but
+ Haenlein's work constituted a distinct advance on all that had been done
+ previously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two brothers, Albert and Gaston Tissandier, were next to enter the field
+ of dirigible construction; they had experimented with balloons during the
+ Franc-Prussian War, and had attempted to get into Paris by balloon during
+ the siege, but it was not until 1882 that they produced their dirigible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was 92 feet in length and 32 feet in greatest diameter, with a cubic
+ capacity of 37,500 feet, and the fabric used was varnished cambric. The
+ car was made of bamboo rods, and in addition to its crew of three, it
+ carried a Siemens dynamo, with 24 bichromate cells, each of which weighed
+ 17 lbs. The motor gave out 1 1/2 horse-power, which was sufficient to
+ drive the vessel at a speed of up to 10 feet per second. This was not so
+ good as Haenlein's previous attempt and, after L2,000 had been spent, the
+ Tissandier abandoned their experiments, since a 5-mile breeze was
+ sufficient to nullify the power of the motor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Renard, a French officer who had studied the problem of dirigible
+ construction since 1878, associated himself first with a brother officer
+ named La Haye, and subsequently with another officer, Krebs, in the
+ construction of the second dirigible to be electrically-propelled. La Haye
+ first approached Colonel Laussedat, in charge of the Engineers of the
+ French Army, with a view to obtaining funds, but was refused, in
+ consequence of the practical failure of all experiments since 1870.
+ Renard, with whom Krebs had now associated himself, thereupon went to
+ Gambetta, and succeeded in getting a promise of a grant of L8,000 for the
+ work; with this promise Renard and Krebs set to work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They built their airship in torpedo shape, 165 feet in length, and of just
+ over 27 feet greatest diameter&mdash;the greatest diameter was at the
+ front, and the cubic capacity was 66,000 feet. The car itself was 108 feet
+ in length, and 4 1/2 feet broad, covered with silk over the bamboo
+ framework. The 23 foot diameter propeller was of wood, and was driven by
+ an electric motor connected to an accumulator, and yielding 8.5
+ horsepower. The sweep of the propeller, which might have brought it in
+ contact with the ground in landing, was counteracted by rendering it
+ possible to raise the axis on which the blades were mounted, and a guide
+ rope was used to obviate damage altogether, in case of rapid descent.
+ There was also a 'sliding weight' which was movable to any required
+ position to shift the centre of gravity as desired. Altogether, with
+ passengers and ballast aboard, the craft weighed two tons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon of August 8th, 1884, Renard and Krebs ascended in the
+ dirigible&mdash;which they had named 'La France,' from the military
+ ballooning ground at Chalais-Meudon, making a circular flight of about
+ five miles, the latter part of which was in the face of a slight wind.
+ They found that the vessel answered well to her rudder, and the five-mile
+ flight was made successfully in a period of 23 minutes. Subsequent
+ experimental flights determined that the air speed of the dirigible was no
+ less than 14 1/2 miles per hour, by far the best that had so far been
+ accomplished in dirigible flight. Seven flights in all were made, and of
+ these five were completely successful, the dirigible returning to its
+ starting point with no difficulty. On the other two flights it had to be
+ towed back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Renard attempted to repeat his construction on a larger scale, but funds
+ would not permit, and the type was abandoned; the motive power was not
+ sufficient to permit of more than short flights, and even to the present
+ time electric motors, with their necessary accumulators, are far too
+ cumbrous to compete with the self-contained internal combustion engine.
+ France had to wait for the Lebaudy brothers, just as Germany had to wait
+ for Zeppelin and Parseval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two German experimenters, Baumgarten and Wolfert, fitted a Daimler motor
+ to a dirigible balloon which made its first ascent at Leipzig in 1880.
+ This vessel had three cars, and placing a passenger in one of the outer
+ cars[*] distributed the load unevenly, so that the whole vessel tilted
+ over and crashed to the earth, the occupants luckily escaping without
+ injury. After Baumgarten's death, Wolfert determined to carry on with his
+ experiments, and, having achieved a certain measure of success, he
+ announced an ascent to take place on the Tempelhofer Field, near Berlin,
+ on June 12th, 1897. The vessel, travelling with the wind, reached a height
+ of 600 feet, when the exhaust of the motor communicated flame to the
+ envelope of the balloon, and Wolfert, together with a passenger he
+ carried, was either killed by the fall or burnt to death on the ground.
+ Giffard had taken special precautions to avoid an accident of this nature,
+ and Wolfert, failing to observe equal care, paid the full penalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Hildebrandt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Platz, a German soldier, attempting an ascent on the Tempelhofer Field in
+ the Schwartz airship in 1897, merely proved the dirigible a failure. The
+ vessel was of aluminium, 0.008 inch in thickness, strengthened by an
+ aluminium lattice work; the motor was two-cylindered petrol-driven; at the
+ first trial the metal developed such leaks that the vessel came to the
+ ground within four miles of its starting point. Platz, who was aboard
+ alone as crew, succeeded in escaping by jumping clear before the car
+ touched earth, but the shock of alighting broke up the balloon, and a
+ following high wind completed the work of full destruction. A second
+ account says that Platz, finding the propellers insufficient to drive the
+ vessel against the wind, opened the valve and descended too rapidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envelope of this dirigible was 156 feet in length, and the method of
+ filling was that of pushing in bags, fill them with gas, and then pulling
+ them to pieces and tearing them out of the body of the balloon. A second
+ contemplated method of filling was by placing a linen envelope inside the
+ aluminium casing, blowing it out with air, and then admitting the gas
+ between the linen and the aluminium outer casing. This would compress the
+ air out of the linen envelope, which was to be withdrawn when the
+ aluminium casing had been completely filled with gas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, however, assumes that the Schwartz type&mdash;the first rigid
+ dirigible, by the way&mdash;would prove successful. As it proved a failure
+ on the first trial, the problem of filling it did not arise again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time Zeppelin, retired from the German army, had begun to devote
+ himself to the study of dirigible construction, and, a year after Schwartz
+ had made his experiment and had failed, he got together sufficient funds
+ for the formation of a limitedliability company, and started on the
+ construction of the first of his series of airships. The age of tentative
+ experiment was over, and, forerunner of the success of the
+ heavier-than-air type of flying machine, successful dirigible flight was
+ accomplished by Zeppelin in Germany, and by Santos-Dumont in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. SANTOS-DUMONT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A Brazilian by birth, Santos-Dumont began in Paris in the year 1898 to
+ make history, which he subsequently wrote. His book, My Airships, is a
+ record of his eight years of work on lighter-than-air machines, a period
+ in which he constructed no less than fourteen dirigible balloons,
+ beginning with a cubic capacity of 6,350 feet, and an engine of 3
+ horse-power, and rising to a cubic capacity of 71,000 feet on the tenth
+ dirigible he constructed, and an engine of 60 horse-power, which was
+ fitted to the seventh machine in order of construction, the one which he
+ built after winning the Deutsch Prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The student of dirigible construction is recommended to Santos-Dumont's
+ own book not only as a full record of his work, but also as one of the
+ best stories of aerial navigation that has ever been written. Throughout
+ all his experiments, he adhered to the non-rigid type; his first dirigible
+ made its first flight on September 18th, 1898, starting from the Jardin
+ d'Acclimatation to the west of Paris; he calculated that his 3 horse-power
+ engine would yield sufficient power to enable him to steer clear of the
+ trees with which the starting-point was surrounded, but, yielding to the
+ advice of professional aeronauts who were present, with regard to the
+ placing of the dirigible for his start, he tore the envelope against the
+ trees. Two days later, having repaired the balloon, he made an ascent of
+ 1,300 feet. In descending, the hydrogen left in the balloon contracted,
+ and Santos-Dumont narrowly escaped a serious accident in coming to the
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His second machine, built in the early spring of 1899, held over 7,000
+ cubic feet of gas and gave a further 44 lbs. of ascensional force. The
+ balloon envelope was very long and very narrow; the first attempt at
+ flight was made in wind and rain, and the weather caused sufficient
+ contraction of the hydrogen for a wind gust to double the machine up and
+ toss it into the trees near its starting-point. The inventor immediately
+ set about the construction of 'Santos-Dumont No. 3,' on which he made a
+ number of successful flights, beginning on November 13th, 1899. On the
+ last of his flights, he lost the rudder of the machine and made a
+ fortunate landing at Ivry. He did not repair the balloon, considering it
+ too clumsy in form and its motor too small. Consequently No. 4 was
+ constructed, being finished on the 1st, August, 1900. It had a cubic
+ capacity of 14,800 feet, a length of 129 feet and greatest diameter of
+ 16.7 feet, the power plant being a 7 horse-power Buchet motor.
+ Santos-Dumont sat on a bicycle saddle fixed to the long bar suspended
+ under the machine, which also supported motor propeller, ballast; and
+ fuel. The experiment of placing the propeller at the stem instead of at
+ the stern was tried, and the motor gave it a speed of 100 revolutions per
+ minute. Professor Langley witnessed the trials of the machine, which
+ proved before the members of the International Congress of Aeronautics, on
+ September 19th, that it was capable of holding its own against a strong
+ wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding that the cords with which his dirigible balloon cars were
+ suspended offered almost as much resistance to the air as did the balloon
+ itself, Santos-Dumont substituted piano wire and found that the alteration
+ constituted greater progress than many a more showy device. He altered the
+ shape and size of his No. 4 to a certain extent and fitted a motor of 12
+ horse-power. Gravity was controlled by shifting weights worked by a cord;
+ rudder and propeller were both placed at the stern. In Santos-Dumont's
+ book there is a certain amount of confusion between the No. 4 and No. 5
+ airships, until he explains that 'No. 5' is the reconstructed 'No. 4.' It
+ was with No. 5 that he won the Encouragement Prize presented by the
+ Scientific Commission of the Paris Aero Club. This he devoted to the first
+ aeronaut who between May and October of 1900 should start from St Cloud,
+ round the Eiffel Tower, and return. If not won in that year, the prize was
+ to remain open the following year from May 1st to October 1st, and so on
+ annually until won. This was a simplification of the conditions of the
+ Deutsch Prize itself, the winning of which involved a journey of 11
+ kilometres in 30 minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Santos-Dumont No. 5, which was in reality the modified No. 4 with new
+ keel, motor, and propeller, did the course of the Deutsch Prize, but with
+ it Santos-Dumont made no attempt to win the prize until July of 1901, when
+ he completed the course in 40 minutes, but tore his balloon in landing. On
+ the 8th August, with his balloon leaking, he made a second attempt, and
+ narrowly escaped disaster, the airship being entirely wrecked. Thereupon
+ he built No. 6 with a cubic capacity of 22,239 feet and a lifting power of
+ 1,518 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this machine he won the Deutsch Prize on October 19th, 1901, starting
+ with the disadvantage of a side wind of 20 feet per second. He reached the
+ Eiffel Tower in 9 minutes and, through miscalculating his turn, only just
+ missed colliding with it. He got No. 6 under control again and succeeded
+ in getting back to his starting-point in 29 1/2 minutes, thus winning the
+ 125,000 francs which constituted the Deutsch Prize, together with a
+ similar sum granted to him by the Brazilian Government for the exploit.
+ The greater part of this money was given by Santos-Dumont to charities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went on building after this until he had made fourteen non-rigid
+ dirigibles; of these No. 12 was placed at the disposal of the military
+ authorities, while the rest, except for one that was sold to an American
+ and made only one trip, were matters of experiment for their maker. His
+ conclusions from his experiments may be gathered from his own work:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'On Friday, 31st July, 1903, Commandant Hirschauer and Lieutenant-Colonel
+ Bourdeaux spent the afternoon with me at my airship station at Neuilly St
+ James, where I had my three newest airships&mdash;the racing 'No. 7,' the
+ omnibus 'No. 10,' and the runabout 'No. 9'&mdash;ready for their study.
+ Briefly, I may say that the opinions expressed by the representatives of
+ the Minister of War were so unreservedly favourable that a practical test
+ of a novel character was decided to be made. Should the airship chosen
+ pass successfully through it the result will be conclusive of its military
+ value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now that these particular experiments are leaving my exclusively private
+ control I will say no more of them than what has been already published in
+ the French press. The test will probably consist of an attempt to enter
+ one of the French frontier towns, such as Belfort or Nancy, on the same
+ day that the airship leaves Paris. It will not, of course, be necessary to
+ make the whole journey in the airship. A military railway wagon may be
+ assigned to carry it, with its balloon uninflated, with tubes of hydrogen
+ to fill it, and with all the necessary machinery and instruments arranged
+ beside it. At some station a short distance from the town to be entered
+ the wagon may be uncoupled from the train, and a sufficient number of
+ soldiers accompanying the officers will unload the airship and its
+ appliances, transport the whole to the nearest open space, and at once
+ begin inflating the balloon. Within two hours from quitting the train the
+ airship may be ready for its flight to the interior of the
+ technically-besieged town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Such may be the outline of the task&mdash;a task presented imperiously to
+ French balloonists by the events of 1870-1, and which all the devotion and
+ science of the Tissandier brothers failed to accomplish. To-day the
+ problem may be set with better hope of success. All the essential
+ difficulties may be revived by the marking out of a hostile zone around
+ the town that must be entered; from beyond the outer edge of this zone,
+ then, the airship will rise and take its flight&mdash;across it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Will the airship be able to rise out of rifle range? I have always been
+ the first to insist that the normal place of the airship is in low
+ altitudes, and I shall have written this book to little purpose if I have
+ not shown the reader the real dangers attending any brusque vertical
+ mounting to considerable heights. For this we have the terrible Severo
+ accident before our eyes. In particular, I have expressed astonishment at
+ hearing of experimenters rising to these altitudes without adequate
+ purpose in their early stages of experience with dirigible balloons. All
+ this is very different, however, from a reasoned, cautious mounting, whose
+ necessity has been foreseen and prepared for.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably owing to the fact that his engines were not of sufficient power,
+ Santos-Dumont cannot be said to have solved the problem of the military
+ airship, although the French Government bought one of his vessels. At the
+ same time, he accomplished much in furthering and inciting experiment with
+ dirigible airships, and he will always rank high among the pioneers of
+ aerostation. His experiments might have gone further had not the Wright
+ brothers' success in America and French interest in the problem of the
+ heavier-than-air machine turned him from the study of dirigibles to that
+ of the aeroplane, in which also he takes high rank among the pioneers,
+ leaving the construction of a successful military dirigible to such men as
+ the Lebaudy brothers, Major Parseval, and Zeppelin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE MILITARY DIRIGIBLE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although French and German experiment in connection with the production of
+ an airship which should be suitable for military purposes proceeded side
+ by side, it is necessary to outline the development in the two countries
+ separately, owing to the differing character of the work carried out. So
+ far as France is concerned, experiment began with the Lebaudy brothers,
+ originally sugar refiners, who turned their energies to airship
+ construction in 1899. Three years of work went to the production of their
+ first vessel, which was launched in 1902, having been constructed by them
+ together with a balloon manufacturer named Surcouf and an engineer,
+ Julliot. The Lebaudy airships were what is known as semi-rigids, having a
+ spar which ran practically the full length of the gas bag to which it was
+ attached in such a way as to distribute the load evenly. The car was
+ suspended from the spar, at the rear end of which both horizontal and
+ vertical rudders were fixed, whilst stabilising fins were provided at the
+ stern of the gas envelope itself. The first of the Lebaudy vessels was
+ named the 'Jaune'; its length was 183 feet and its maximum diameter 30
+ feet, while the cubic capacity was 80,000 feet. The power unit was a 40
+ horse-power Daimler motor, driving two propellers and giving a maximum
+ speed of 26 miles per hour. This vessel made 29 trips, the last of which
+ took place in November, 1902, when the airship was wrecked through
+ collision with a tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second airship of Lebaudy construction was 7 feet longer than the
+ first, and had a capacity of 94,000 cubic feet of gas with a triple air
+ bag of 17,500 cubic feet to compensate for loss of gas; this latter was
+ kept inflated by a rotary fan. The vessel was eventually taken over by the
+ French Government and may be counted the first dirigible airship
+ considered fit on its tests for military service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later vessels of the Lebaudy type were the 'Patrie' and 'Republique,' in
+ which both size and method of construction surpassed those of the two
+ first attempts. The 'Patrie' was fitted with a 60 horse-power engine which
+ gave a speed of 28 miles an hour, while the vessel had a radius of 280
+ miles, carrying a crew of nine. In the winter of 1907 the 'Patrie' was
+ anchored at Verdun, and encountered a gale which broke her hold on her
+ mooring-ropes. She drifted derelict westward across France, the Channel,
+ and the British Isles, and was lost in the Atlantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 'Republique' had an 80 horse-power motor, which, however, only gave
+ her the same speed as the 'Patrie.' She was launched in July, 1908, and
+ within three months came to an end which constituted a tragedy for France.
+ A propeller burst while the vessel was in the air, and one blade, flying
+ toward the envelope, tore in it a great gash; the airship crashed to
+ earth, and the two officers and two non-commissioned officers who were in
+ the car were instantaneously killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Clement Bayard, and subsequently the Astra-Torres, non-rigids,
+ followed on the early Lebaudys and carried French dirigible construction
+ up to 1912. The Clement Bayard was a simple non-rigid having four lobes at
+ the stern end to assist stability. These were found to retard the speed of
+ the airship, which in the second and more successful construction was
+ driven by a Clement Bayard motor of 100 horse-power at a speed of 30 miles
+ an hour. On August 23rd, 1909, while being tried for acceptance by the
+ military authorities, this vessel achieved a record by flying at a height
+ of 5,000 feet for two hours. The Astra-Torres non-rigids were designed by
+ a Spaniard, Senor Torres, and built by the Astra Company. The envelope was
+ of trefoil shape, this being due to the interior rigging from the
+ suspension band; the exterior appearance is that of two lobes side by
+ side, overlaid by a third. The interior rigging, which was adopted with a
+ view to decreasing air resistance, supports a low-hung car from the centre
+ of the envelope; steering is accomplished by means of horizontal planes
+ fixed on the envelope at the stern, and vertical planes depending beneath
+ the envelope, also at the stern end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most successful of French pre-war dirigibles was a Clement
+ Bayard built in 1912. In this twin propellers were placed at the front and
+ horizontal and vertical rudders in a sort of box formation under the
+ envelope at the stern. The envelope was stream-lined, while the car of the
+ machine was placed well forward with horizontal controlling planes above
+ it and immediately behind the propellers. This airship, which was named
+ 'Dupuy de Lome,' may be ranked as about the most successful non-rigid
+ dirigible constructed prior to the War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Experiments with non-rigids in Germany was mainly carried on by Major
+ Parseval, who produced his first vessel in 1906. The main feature of this
+ airship consisted in variation in length of the suspension cables at the
+ will of the operator, so that the envelope could be given an upward tilt
+ while the car remained horizontal in order to give the vessel greater
+ efficiency in climbing. In this machine, the propeller was placed above
+ and forward of the car, and the controlling planes were fixed directly to
+ the envelope near the forward end. A second vessel differed from the first
+ mainly in the matter of its larger size, variable suspension being again
+ employed, together with a similar method of control. The vessel was
+ moderately successful, and under Major Parseval's direction a third was
+ constructed for passenger carrying, with two engines of 120 horsepower,
+ each driving propellers of 13 feet diameter. This was the most successful
+ of the early German dirigibles; it made a number of voyages with a dozen
+ passengers in addition to its crew, as well as proving its value for
+ military purposes by use as a scout machine in manoeuvres. Later Parsevals
+ were constructed of stream-line form, about 300 feet in length, and with
+ engines sufficiently powerful to give them speeds up to 50 miles an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Von Gross, commander of a Balloon Battalion, produced semi-rigid
+ dirigibles from 1907 onward. The second of these, driven by two 75
+ horse-power Daimler motors, was capable of a speed of 27 miles an hour; in
+ September of 1908 she made a trip from and back to Berlin which lasted 13
+ hours, in which period she covered 176 miles with four passengers and
+ reached a height of 4,000 feet. Her successor, launched in April of 1909,
+ carried a wireless installation, and the next to this, driven by four
+ motors of 75 horse-power each, reached a speed of 45 miles an hour. As
+ this vessel was constructed for military purposes, very few details either
+ of its speed or method of construction were made public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Practically all these vessels were discounted by the work of Ferdinand von
+ Zeppelin, who set out from the first with the idea of constructing a rigid
+ dirigible. Beginning in 1898, he built a balloon on an aluminium framework
+ covered with linen and silk, and divided into interior compartments
+ holding linen bags which were capable of containing nearly 400,000 cubic
+ feet of hydrogen. The total length of this first Zeppelin airship was 420
+ feet and the diameter 38 feet. Two cars were rigidly attached to the
+ envelope, each carrying a 16 horse-power motor, driving propellers which
+ were rigidly connected to the aluminium framework of the balloon. Vertical
+ and horizontal screws were used for lifting and forward driving and a
+ sliding weight was used to raise or lower the stem of the vessel out of
+ the horizontal in order to rise or descend without altering the load by
+ loss of ballast or the lift by loss of gas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first trial of this vessel was made in July of 1900, and was
+ singularly unfortunate. The winch by which the sliding weight was operated
+ broke, and the balloon was so bent that the working of the propellers was
+ interfered with, as was the steering. A speed of 13 feet per second was
+ attained, but on descending, the airship ran against some piles and was
+ further damaged. Repairs were completed by the end of September, 1900, and
+ on a second trial flight made on October 21st a speed of 30 feet per
+ second was reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zeppelin was far from satisfied with the performance of this vessel, and
+ he therefore set about collecting funds for the construction of a second,
+ which was completed in 1905. By this time the internal combustion engine
+ had been greatly improved, and without any increase of weight, Zeppelin
+ was able to instal two motors of 85 horse-power each. The total capacity
+ was 367,000 cubic feet of hydrogen, carried in 16 gas bags inside the
+ framework, and the weight of the whole construction was 9 tons&mdash;a ton
+ less than that of the first Zeppelin airship. Three vertical planes at
+ front and rear controlled horizontal steering, while rise and fall was
+ controlled by horizontal planes arranged in box form. Accident attended
+ the first trial of this second airship, which took place over the Bodensee
+ on November 30th, 1905, 'It had been intended to tow the raft, to which it
+ was anchored, further from the shore against the wind. But the water was
+ too low to allow the use of the raft. The balloon was therefore mounted on
+ pontoons, pulled out into the lake, and taken in tow by a motor-boat. It
+ was caught by a strong wind which was blowing from the shore, and driven
+ ahead at such a rate that it overtook the motor-boat. The tow rope was
+ therefore at once cut, but it unexpectedly formed into knots and became
+ entangled with the airship, pulling the front end down into the water. The
+ balloon was then caught by the wind and lifted into the air, when the
+ propellers were set in motion. The front end was at this instant pointing
+ in a downward direction, and consequently it shot into the water, where it
+ was found necessary to open the valves.'[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Hildebrandt, Airships Past and Present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The damage done was repaired within six weeks, and the second trial was
+ made on January 17th, 1906. The lifting force was too great for the
+ weight, and the dirigible jumped immediately to 1,500 feet. The propellers
+ were started, and the dirigible brought to a lower level, when it was
+ found possible to drive against the wind. The steering arrangements were
+ found too sensitive, and the motors were stopped, when the vessel was
+ carried by the wind until it was over land&mdash;it had been intended that
+ the trial should be completed over water. A descent was successfully
+ accomplished and the dirigible was anchored for the night, but a gale
+ caused it so much damage that it had to be broken up. It had achieved a
+ speed of 30 feet per second with the motors developing only 36 horse-power
+ and, gathering from this what speed might have been accomplished with the
+ full 170 horse-power, Zeppelin set about the construction of No. 3, with
+ which a number of successful voyages were made, proving the value of the
+ type for military purposes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No. 4 was the most notable of the early Zeppelins, as much on account of
+ its disastrous end as by reason of any superior merit in comparison with
+ No. 3. The main innovation consisted in attaching a triangular keel to the
+ under side of the envelope, with two gaps beneath which the cars were
+ suspended. Two Daimler Mercedes motors of 110 horse-power each were placed
+ one in each car, and the vessel carried sufficient fuel for a 60-hour
+ cruise with the motors running at full speed. Each motor drove a pair of
+ three-bladed metal propellers rigidly attached to the framework of the
+ envelope and about 15 feet in diameter. There was a vertical rudder at the
+ stern of the envelope and horizontal controlling planes were fixed on the
+ sides of the envelope. The best performances and the end of this dirigible
+ were summarised as follows by Major Squier:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Its best performances were two long trips performed during the summer of
+ 1908. The first, on July 4th, lasted exactly 12 hours, during which time
+ it covered a distance of 235 miles, crossing the mountains to Lucerne and
+ Zurich, and returning to the balloon-house near Friedrichshafen, on Lake
+ Constance. The average speed on this trip was 32 miles per hour. On August
+ 4th, this airship attempted a 24-hour flight, which was one of the
+ requirements made for its acceptance by the Government. It left
+ Friedrichshafen in the morning with the intention of following the Rhine
+ as far as Mainz, and then returning to its starting-point, straight across
+ the country. A stop of 3 hours 30 minutes was made in the afternoon of the
+ first day on the Rhine, to repair the engine. On the return, a second stop
+ was found necessary near Stuttgart, due to difficulties with the motors,
+ and some loss of gas. While anchored to the ground, a storm arose which
+ broke loose the anchorage, and, as the balloon rose in the air, it
+ exploded and took fire (due to causes which have never been actually
+ determined and published) and fell to the ground, where it was completely
+ destroyed. On this journey, which lasted in all 31 hours 15 minutes, the
+ airship was in the air 20 hours 45 minutes, and covered a total distance
+ of 378 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The patriotism of the German nation was aroused. Subscriptions were
+ immediately started, and in a short space of time a quarter of a million
+ pounds had been raised. A Zeppelin Society was formed to direct the
+ expenditure of this fund. Seventeen thousand pounds has been expended in
+ purchasing land near Friedrichshafen; workshops were erected, and it was
+ announced that within one year the construction of eight airships of the
+ Zeppelin type would be completed. Since the disaster to 'Zeppelin IV.' the
+ Crown Prince of Germany made a trip in 'Zeppelin No. 3,' which had been
+ called back into service, and within a very few days the German Emperor
+ visited Friedrichshafen for the purpose of seeing the airship in flight.
+ He decorated Count Zeppelin with the order of the Black Eagle. German
+ patriotism and enthusiasm has gone further, and the "German Association
+ for an Aerial Fleet" has been organised in sections throughout the
+ country. It announces its intention of building 50 garages (hangars) for
+ housing airships.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By January of 1909, with well over a quarter of a million in hand for the
+ construction of Zeppelin airships, No. 3 was again brought out, probably
+ in order to maintain public enthusiasm in respect of the possible new
+ engine of war. In March of that year No. 3 made a voyage which lasted for
+ 4 hours over and in the vicinity of Lake Constance; it carried 26
+ passengers for a distance of nearly 150 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the end of March, Count Zeppelin determined to voyage from
+ Friedrichshafen to Munich, together with the crew of the airship and four
+ military officers. Starting at four in the morning and ascertaining their
+ route from the lights of railway stations and the ringing of bells in the
+ towns passed over, the journey was completed by nine o'clock, but a strong
+ south-west gale prevented the intended landing. The airship was driven
+ before the wind until three o'clock in the afternoon, when it landed
+ safely near Dingolfing; by the next morning the wind had fallen
+ considerably and the airship returned to Munich and landed on the parade
+ ground as originally intended. At about 3.30 in the afternoon, the
+ homeward journey was begun, Friedrichshafen being reached at about 7.30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These trials demonstrated that sufficient progress had been made to
+ justify the construction of Zeppelin airships for use with the German
+ army. No. 3 had been manoeuvred safely if not successfully in half a gale
+ of wind, and henceforth it was known as 'SMS. Zeppelin I.,' at the bidding
+ of the German Emperor, while the construction of 'SMS. Zeppelin II.' was
+ rapidly proceeded with. The fifth construction of Count Zeppelin's was 446
+ feet in length, 42 1/2 feet in diameter, and contained 530,000 cubic feet
+ of hydrogen gas in 17 separate compartments. Trial flights were made on
+ the 26th May, 1909, and a week later she made a record voyage of 940
+ miles, the route being from Lake Constance over Ulm, Nuremberg, Leipzig,
+ Bitterfeld, Weimar, Heilbronn, and Stuttgart, descending near Goppingen;
+ the time occupied in the flight was upwards of 38 hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In landing, the airship collided with a pear-tree, which damaged the bows
+ and tore open two sections of the envelope, but repairs on the spot
+ enabled the return journey to Friedrichshafen to be begun 24 hours later.
+ In spite of the mishap the Zeppelin had once more proved itself as a
+ possible engine of war, and thenceforth Germany pinned its faith to the
+ dirigible, only developing the aeroplane to such an extent as to keep
+ abreast of other nations. By the outbreak of war, nearly 30 Zeppelins had
+ been constructed; considerably more than half of these were destroyed in
+ various ways, but the experiments carried on with each example of the type
+ permitted of improvements being made. The first fatality occurred in
+ September, 1913, when the fourteenth Zeppelin to be constructed, known as
+ Naval Zeppelin L.1, was wrecked in the North Sea by a sudden storm and her
+ crew of thirteen were drowned. About three weeks after this, Naval
+ Zeppelin L.2, the eighteenth in order of building, exploded in mid-air
+ while manoeuvring over Johannisthal. She was carrying a crew of 25, who
+ were all killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By 1912 the success of the Zeppelin type brought imitators. Chief among
+ them was the Schutte-Lanz, a Mannheim firm, which produced a rigid
+ dirigible with a wooden framework, wire braced. This was not a cylinder
+ like the Zeppelin, but reverted to the cigar shape and contained about the
+ same amount of gas as the Zeppelin type. The Schutte-Lanz was made with
+ two gondolas rigidly attached to the envelope in which the gas bags were
+ placed. The method of construction involved greater weight than was the
+ case with the Zeppelin, but the second of these vessels, built with three
+ gondolas containing engines, and a navigating cabin built into the hull of
+ the airship itself, proved quite successful as a naval scout until wrecked
+ on the islands off the coast of Denmark late in 1914. The last
+ Schutte-Lanz to be constructed was used by the Germans for raiding
+ England, and was eventually brought down in flames at Cowley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. BRITISH AIRSHIP DESIGN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As was the case with the aeroplane, Great Britain left France and Germany
+ to make the running in the early days of airship construction; the balloon
+ section of the Royal Engineers was compelled to confine its energies to
+ work with balloons pure and simple until well after the twentieth century
+ had dawned, and such experiments as were made in England were done by
+ private initiative. As far back as 1900 Doctor Barton built an airship at
+ the Alexandra Palace and voyaged across London in it. Four years later Mr
+ E. T. Willows of Cardiff produced the first successful British dirigible,
+ a semi-rigid 74 feet in length and 18 feet in diameter, engined with a 7
+ horse-power Peugot twin-cylindered motor. This drove a two-bladed
+ propeller at the stern for propulsion, and also actuated a pair of
+ auxiliary propellers at the front which could be varied in their direction
+ so as to control the right and left movements of the airship. This device
+ was patented and the patent was taken over by the British Government,
+ which by 1908 found Mr Willow's work of sufficient interest to regard it
+ as furnishing data for experiment at the balloon factory at Farnborough.
+ In 1909, Willows steered one of his dirigibles to London from Cardiff in a
+ little less than ten hours, making an average speed of over 14 miles an
+ hour. The best speed accomplished was probably considerably greater than
+ this, for at intervals of a few miles, Willows descended near the earth to
+ ascertain his whereabouts with the help of a megaphone. It must be added
+ that he carried a compass in addition to his megaphone. He set out for
+ Paris in November of 1910, reached the French coast, and landed near
+ Douai. Some damage was sustained in this landing, but, after repair, the
+ trip to Paris was completed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the Government balloon factory at Farnborough began airship
+ construction in 1907; Colonel Capper, R.E., and S. F. Cody were jointly
+ concerned in the production of a semi-rigid. Fifteen thicknesses of
+ goldbeaters' skin&mdash;about the most expensive covering obtainable&mdash;were
+ used for the envelope, which was 25 feet in diameter. A slight shower of
+ rain in which the airship was caught led to its wreckage, owing to the
+ absorbent quality of the goldbeaters' skin, whereupon Capper and Cody set
+ to work to reproduce the airship and its defects on a larger scale. The
+ first had been named 'Nulli Secundus' and the second was named 'Nulli
+ Secundus II.' Punch very appropriately suggested that the first vessel
+ ought to have been named 'Nulli Primus,' while a possible third should be
+ christened 'Nulli Tertius.' 'Nulli Secundus II.' was fitted with a 100
+ horse-power engine and had an envelope of 42 feet in diameter, the
+ goldbeaters' skin being covered in fabric and the car being suspended by
+ four bands which encircled the balloon envelope. In October of 1907,
+ 'Nulli Secundus II.' made a trial flight from Farnborough to London and
+ was anchored at the Crystal Palace. The wind sprung up and took the vessel
+ away from its mooring ropes, wrecking it after the one flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stagnation followed until early in 1909, when a small airship fitted with
+ two 12 horse-power motors and named the 'Baby' was turned out from the
+ balloon factory. This was almost egg-shaped, the blunt end being forward,
+ and three inflated fins being placed at the tail as control members. A
+ long car with rudder and elevator at its rear-end carried the engines and
+ crew; the 'Baby' made some fairly successful flights and gave a good deal
+ of useful data for the construction of later vessels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to this was 'Army Airship 2A 'launched early in 1910 and larger,
+ longer, and narrower in design than the Baby. The engine was an 80
+ horse-power Green motor which drove two pairs of propellers; small
+ inflated control members were fitted at the stern end of the envelope,
+ which was 154 feet in length. The suspended car was 84 feet long, carrying
+ both engines and crew, and the Willows idea of swivelling propellers for
+ governing the direction was used in this vessel. In June of that year a
+ new, small-type dirigible, the 'Beta,' was produced, driven by a 30
+ horse-power Green engine with which she flew over 3,000 miles. She was the
+ most successful British dirigible constructed up to that time, and her
+ successor, the 'Gamma,' was built on similar lines. The 'Gamma' was a
+ larger vessel, however, produced in 1912, with flat, controlling fins and
+ rudder at the rear end of the envelope, and with the conventional long car
+ suspended at some distance beneath the gas bag. By this time, the mooring
+ mast, carrying a cap of which the concave side fitted over the convex nose
+ of the airship, had been originated. The cap was swivelled, and, when
+ attached to it, an airship was held nose on to the wind, thus reducing by
+ more than half the dangers attendant on mooring dirigibles in the open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Private subscription under the auspices of the Morning Post got together
+ sufficient funds in 1910 for the purchase of a Lebaudy airship, which was
+ built in France, flown across the Channel, and presented to the Army
+ Airship Fleet. This dirigible was 337 feet long, and was driven by two 135
+ horse-power Panhard motors, each of which actuated two propellers. The
+ journey from Moisson to Aldershot was completed at a speed of 36 miles an
+ hour, but the airship was damaged while being towed into its shed. On May
+ of the following year, the Lebaudy was brought out for a flight, but, in
+ landing, the guide rope fouled in trees and sheds and brought the airship
+ broadside on to the wind; she was driven into some trees and wrecked to
+ such an exteent that rebuilding was considered an impossibility. A Clement
+ Bayard, bought by the army airship section, became scrap after even less
+ flying than had been accomplished by the Lebaudy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In April of 1910, the Admiralty determined on a naval air service, and set
+ about the production of rigid airships which should be able to compete
+ with Zeppelins as naval scouts. The construction was entrusted to Vickers,
+ Ltd., who set about the task at their Barrow works and built something
+ which, when tested after a year's work, was found incapable of lifting its
+ own weight. This defect was remedied by a series of alterations, and
+ meanwhile the unofficial title of 'Mayfly' was given to the vessel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taken over by the Admiralty before she had passed any flying tests, the
+ 'Mayfly' was brought out on September 24th, 1911, for a trial trip, being
+ towed out from her shed by a tug. When half out from the shed, the
+ envelope was caught by a light cross-wind, and, in spite of the pull from
+ the tug, the great fabric broke in half, nearly drowning the crew, who had
+ to dive in order to get clear of the wreckage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was considerable similarity in form, though not in performance,
+ between the Mayfly and the prewar Zeppelin. The former was 510 feet in
+ length, cylindrical in form, with a diameter of 48 feet, and divided into
+ 19 gas-bag compartments. The motive power consisted of two 200 horse-power
+ Wolseley engines. After its failure, the Naval Air Service bought an
+ Astra-Torres airship from France and a Parseval from Germany, both of
+ which proved very useful in the early days of the War, doing patrol work
+ over the Channel before the Blimps came into being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in 1915 the 'Blimp' or 'S.S.' type of coastal airship was evolved in
+ response to the demand for a vessel which could be turned out quickly and
+ in quantities. There was urgent demand, voiced by Lord Fisher, for a type
+ of vessel capable of maintaining anti-submarine patrol off the British
+ coasts, and the first S.S. airships were made by combining a gasbag with
+ the most available type of aeroplane fuselage and engine, and fitting
+ steering gear. The 'Blimp' consisted of a B.E. fuselage with engine and
+ geared-down propeller, and seating for pilot and observer, attached to an
+ envelope about 150 feet in length. With a speed of between 35 and 40 miles
+ an hour, the 'Blimp' had a cruising capacity of about ten hours; it was
+ fitted with wireless set, camera, machine-gun, and bombs, and for
+ submarine spotting and patrol work generally it proved invaluable, though
+ owing to low engine power and comparatively small size, its uses were
+ restricted to reasonably fair weather. For work farther out at sea and in
+ all weathers, airships known as the coast patrol type, and more commonly
+ as 'coastals,' were built, and later the 'N.S.' or North Sea type, still
+ larger and more weather-worthy, followed. By the time the last year of the
+ War came, Britain led the world in the design of non-rigid and semi-rigid
+ dirigibles. The 'S.S.' or 'Blimp' had been improved to a speed of 50 miles
+ an hour, carrying a crew of three, and the endurance record for the type
+ was 18 1/2 hours, while one of them had reached a height of 10,000 feet.
+ The North Sea type of non-rigid was capable of travelling over 20 hours at
+ full speed, or forty hours at cruising speed, and the number of non-rigids
+ belonging to the British Navy exceeded that of any other country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was owing to the incapacity&mdash;apparent or real&mdash;of the British
+ military or naval designers to produce a satisfactory rigid airship that
+ the 'N.S.' airship was evolved. The first of this type was produced in
+ 1916, and on her trials she was voted an unqualified success, in
+ consequence of which the building of several more was pushed on. The
+ envelope, of 360,000 cubic feet capacity, was made on the Astra-Torres
+ principle of three lobes, giving a trefoil section. The ship carried four
+ fins, to three of which the elevator and rudder flaps were attached;
+ petrol tanks were placed inside the envelope, under which was rigged a
+ long covered-in car, built up of a light steel tubular framework 35 feet
+ in length. The forward portion was covered with duralumin sheeting, an
+ aluminium alloy which, unlike aluminium itself, is not affected by the
+ action of sea air and water, and the remainder with fabric laced to the
+ framework. Windows and port-holes were provided to give light to the crew,
+ and the controls and navigating instruments were placed forward, with the
+ sleeping accommodation aft. The engines were mounted in a power unit
+ structure, separate from the car and connected by wooden gang ways
+ supported by wire cables. A complete electrical installation of two
+ dynamos and batteries for lights, signalling lamps, wireless, telephones,
+ etc., was carried, and the motive power consisted of either two 250
+ horse-power Rolls-Royce engines or two 240 horse-power Fiat engines. The
+ principal dimensions of this type are length 262 feet, horizontal diameter
+ 56 feet 9 inches, vertical diameter 69 feet 3 inches. The gross lift is
+ 24,300 lbs. and the disposable lift without crew, petrol, oil, and ballast
+ 8,500 lbs. The normal crew carried for patrol work was ten officers and
+ men. This type holds the record of 101 hours continuous flight on patrol
+ duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the matter of rigid design it was not until 1913 that the British
+ Admiralty got over the fact that the 'Mayfly' would not, and decided on a
+ further attempt at the construction of a rigid dirigible. The contract for
+ this was signed in March of 1914; work was suspended in the following
+ February and begun again in July, 1915, but it was not until January of
+ 1917 that the ship was finished, while her trials were not completed until
+ March of 1917, when she was taken over by the Admiralty. The details of
+ the construction and trial of this vessel, known as 'No. 9,' go to show
+ that she did not quite fill the contract requirements in respect of
+ disposable lift until a number of alterations had been made. The contract
+ specified that a speed of at least 45 miles per hour was to be attained at
+ full engine power, while a minimum disposable lift of 5 tons was to be
+ available for movable weights, and the airship was to be capable of rising
+ to a height of 2,000 feet. Driven by four Wolseley Maybach engines of 180
+ horse-power each, the lift of the vessel was not sufficient, so it was
+ decided to remove the two engines in the after car and replace them by a
+ single engine of 250 horsepower. With this the vessel reached the contract
+ speed of 45 miles per hour with a cruising radius of 18 hours, equivalent
+ to 800 miles when the engines were running at full speed. The vessel
+ served admirably as a training airship, for, by the time she was
+ completed, the No. 23 class of rigid airship had come to being, and thus
+ No. 9 was already out of date.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three of the 23 class were completed by the end of 1917; it was stipulated
+ that they should be built with a speed of at least 55 miles per hour, a
+ minimum disposable lift of 8 tons, and a capability of rising at an
+ average rate of not less than 1,000 feet per minute to a height of 3,000
+ feet. The motive power consisted of four 250 horse-power Rolls-Royce
+ engines, one in each of the forward and after cars and two in a centre
+ car. Four-bladed propellers were used throughout the ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A 23X type followed on the 23 class, but by the time two ships had been
+ completed, this was practically obsolete. The No. 31 class followed the
+ 23X; it was built on Schutte-Lanz lines, 615 feet in length, 66 feet
+ diameter, and a million and a half cubic feet capacity. The hull was
+ similar to the later types of Zeppelin in shape, with a tapering stern and
+ a bluff, rounded bow. Five cars each carrying a 250 horse-power
+ Rolls-Royce engine, driving a single fixed propeller, were fitted, and on
+ her trials R.31 performed well, especially in the matter of speed. But the
+ experiment of constructing in wood in the Schutte-Lanz way adopted with
+ this vessel resulted in failure eventually, and the type was abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Germany had been pushing forward Zeppelin design and straining
+ every nerve in the improvement of rigid dirigible construction, until L.33
+ was evolved; she was generally known as a super-Zeppelin, and on September
+ 24th, 1916, six weeks after her launching, she was damaged by gun-fire in
+ a raid over London, being eventually compelled to come to earth at Little
+ Wigborough in Essex. The crew gave themselves up after having set fire to
+ the ship, and though the fabric was totally destroyed, the structure of
+ the hull remained intact, so that just as Germany was able to evolve the
+ Gotha bomber from the Handley-Page delivered at Lille, British naval
+ constructors were able to evolve the R.33 type of airship from the
+ Zeppelin framework delivered at Little Wigborough. Two vessels, R.33 and
+ R.34, were laid down for completion; three others were also put down for
+ construction, but, while R.33 and R.34 were built almost entirely from the
+ data gathered from the wrecked L.33, the three later vessels embody more
+ modern design, including a number of improvements, and more especially
+ greater disposable lift. It has been commented that while the British
+ authorities were building R.33 and R.34, Germany constructed 30 Zeppelins
+ on 4 slips, for which reason it may be reckoned a matter for
+ congratulation that the rigid airship did not decide the fate of the War.
+ The following particulars of construction of the R.33 and R.34 types are
+ as given by Major Whale in his survey of British Airships:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In all its main features the hull structure of R.33 and R.34 follows the
+ design of the wrecked German Zeppelin airship L.33. 'The hull follows more
+ nearly a true stream-line shape than in the previous ships constructed of
+ duralumin, in which a greater proportion of the greater length was
+ parallel-sided. The Germans adopted this new shape from the Schutte-Lanz
+ design and have not departed from this practice. This consists of a short,
+ parallel body with a long, rounded bow and a long tapering stem
+ culminating in a point. The overall length of the ship is 643 feet with a
+ diameter of 79 feet and an extreme height of 92 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The type of girders in this class has been much altered from those in
+ previous ships. The hull is fitted with an internal triangular keel
+ throughout practically the entire length. This forms the main corridor of
+ the ship, and is fitted with a footway down the centre for its entire
+ length. It contains water ballast and petrol tanks, bomb storage and crew
+ accommodation, and the various control wires, petrol pipes, and electric
+ leads are carried along the lower part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Throughout this internal corridor runs a bridge girder, from which the
+ petrol and water ballast tanks are supported. These tanks are so arranged
+ that they can be dropped clear of the ship. Amidships is the cabin space
+ with sufficient room for a crew of twenty-five. Hammocks can be swung from
+ the bridge girder before mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In accordance with the latest Zeppelin practice, monoplane rudders and
+ elevators are fitted to the horizontal and vertical fins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The ship is supported in the air by nineteen gas bags, which give a total
+ capacity of approximately two million cubic feet of gas. The gross lift
+ works out at approximately 59 1/2 tons, of which the total fixed weight is
+ 33 tons, giving a disposable lift of 26 1/2 tons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The arrangement of cars is as follows: At the forward end the control car
+ is slung, which contains all navigating instruments and the various
+ controls. Adjoining this is the wireless cabin, which is also fitted for
+ wireless telephony. Immediately aft of this is the forward power car
+ containing one engine, which gives the appearance that the whole is one
+ large car.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Amidships are two wing cars, each containing a single engine. These are
+ small and just accommodate the engines with sufficient room for mechanics
+ to attend to them. Further aft is another larger car which contains an
+ auxiliary control position and two engines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It will thus be seen that five engines are installed in the ship; these
+ are all of the same type and horsepower, namely, 250 horse-power Sunbeam.
+ R.33 was constructed by Messrs Armstrong, Whitworth, Ltd.; while her
+ sister ship R.34 was built by Messrs Beardmore on the Clyde.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the two vessels, R.34 appeared rather more airworthy than her sister
+ ship; the lift of the ship justified the carrying of a greater quantity of
+ fuel than had been provided for, and, as she was considered suitable for
+ making a Transatlantic crossing, extra petrol tanks were fitted in the
+ hull and a new type of outer cover was fitted with a view to her making
+ the Atlantic crossing. She made a 21-hour cruise over the North of England
+ and the South of Scotland at the end of May, 1919, and subsequently went
+ for a longer cruise over Denmark, the Baltic, and the north coast of
+ Germany, remaining in the air for 56 hours in spite of very bad weather
+ conditions. Finally, July 2nd was selected as the starting date for the
+ cross Atlantic flight; the vessel was commanded by Major G. H. Scott,
+ A.F.C., with Captain G. S. Greenland as first officer, Second-Lieut. H. F.
+ Luck as second officer, and Lieut. J. D. Shotter as engineer officer.
+ There were also on board Brig.-Gen. E. P. Maitland, representing the Air
+ Ministry, Major J. E. M. Pritchard, representing the Admiralty, and
+ Lieut.-Col. W. H. Hemsley of the Army Aviation Department. In addition to
+ eight tons of petrol, R.34 carried a total number of 30 persons from East
+ Fortune to Long Island, N.Y.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There being no shed in America capable of accommodating the airship, she
+ had to be moored in the open for refilling with fuel and gas, and to make
+ the return journey almost immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brig.-Gen. Maitland's account of the flight, in itself a record as
+ interesting as valuable, divides the outward journey into two main stages,
+ the first from East Fortune to Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, a distance of
+ 2,050 sea miles, and the second and more difficult stage to Mineola Field,
+ Long Island, 1,080 sea miles. An easy journey was experienced until
+ Newfoundland was reached, but then storms and electrical disturbances
+ rendered it necessary to alter the course, in consequence of which petrol
+ began to run short. Head winds rendered the shortage still more acute, and
+ on Saturday, July 5th, a wireless signal was sent out asking for
+ destroyers to stand by to tow. However, after an anxious night, R.33
+ landed safely at Mineola Field at 9.55 a.m. on July 6th, having
+ accomplished the journey in 108 hours 12 minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She remained at Mineola until midnight of July 9th, when, although it had
+ been intended that a start should be made by daylight for the benefit of
+ New York spectators, an approaching storm caused preparations to be
+ advanced for immediate departure. She set out at 5.57 a.m. by British
+ summer time, and flew over New York in the full glare of hundreds of
+ searchlights before heading out over the Atlantic. A following wind
+ assisted the return voyage, and on July 13th, at 7.57 a.m., R.34 anchored
+ at Pulham, Norfolk, having made the return journey in 75 hours 3 minutes,
+ and proved the suitability of the dirigible for Transatlantic commercial
+ work. R.80, launched on July 19th, 1920, afforded further proof, if this
+ were needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is to be noted that nearly all the disasters to airships have been
+ caused by launching and landing&mdash;the type is safe enough in the air,
+ under its own power, but its bulk renders it unwieldy for ground handling.
+ The German system of handling Zeppelins in and out of their sheds is, so
+ far, the best devised: this consists of heavy trucks running on rails
+ through the sheds and out at either end; on descending, the trucks are run
+ out, and the airship is securely attached to them outside the shed; the
+ trucks are then run back into the shed, taking the airship with them, and
+ preventing any possibility of the wind driving the envelope against the
+ side of the shed before it is safely housed; the reverse process is
+ adopted in launching, which is thus rendered as simple as it is safe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. THE AIRSHIP COMMERCIALLY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Prior to the war period, between the years 1910 and 1914, a German
+ undertaking called the Deutsche Luftfahrt Actien Gesellschaft conducted a
+ commercial Zeppelin service in which four airships known as the Sachsan,
+ Hansa, Victoria Louise, and Schwaben were used. During the four years of
+ its work, the company carried over 17,000 passengers, and over 100,000
+ miles were flown without incurring one fatality and with only minor and
+ unavoidable accidents to the vessels composing the service. Although a
+ number of English notabilities made voyages in these airships, the success
+ of this only experiment in commercial aerostation seems to have been
+ forgotten since the war. There was beyond doubt a military aim in this
+ apparently peaceful use of Zeppelin airships; it is past question now that
+ all Germany's mechanical development in respect of land sea, and air
+ transport in the years immediately preceding the war, was accomplished
+ with the ulterior aim of military conquest, but, at the same time, the
+ running of this service afforded proof of the possibility of establishing
+ a dirigible service for peaceful ends, and afforded proof too, of the
+ value of the dirigible as a vessel of purely commercial utility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In considering the possibility of a commercial dirigible service, it is
+ necessary always to bear in mind the disadvantages of first cost and
+ upkeep as compared with the aeroplane. The building of a modern rigid is
+ an exceedingly costly undertaking, and the provision of an efficient
+ supply of hydrogen gas to keep its compartments filled is a very large
+ item in upkeep of which the heavier-than-air machine goes free. Yet the
+ future of commercial aeronautics so far would seem to lie with the
+ dirigible where very long voyages are in question. No matter how the
+ aeroplane may be improved, the possibility of engine failure always
+ remains as a danger for work over water. In seaplane or flying boat form,
+ the danger is still present in a rough sea, though in the American
+ Transatlantic flight, N.C.3, taxi-ing 300 miles to the Azores after having
+ fallen to the water, proved that this danger is not so acute as is
+ generally assumed. Yet the multiple-engined rigid, as R.34 showed on her
+ return voyage, may have part of her power plant put out of action
+ altogether and still complete her voyage very successfully, which, in the
+ case of mail carrying and services run strictly to time, gives her an
+ enormous advantage over the heavier-than-air machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'For commercial purposes,' General Sykes has remarked, 'the airship is
+ eminently adapted for long distance journeys involving non-stop flights.
+ It has this inherent advantage over the aeroplane, that while there
+ appears to be a limit to the range of the aeroplane as at present
+ constructed, there is practically no limit whatever to that of the
+ airship, as this can be overcome by merely increasing the size. It thus
+ appears that for such journeys as crossing the Atlantic, or crossing the
+ Pacific from the west coast of America to Australia or Japan, the airship
+ will be peculiarly suitable. It having been conceded that the scope of the
+ airship is long distance travel, the only type which need be considered
+ for this purpose is the rigid. The rigid airship is still in an embryonic
+ state, but sufficient has already been accomplished in this country, and
+ more particularly in Germany, to show that with increased capacity there
+ is no reason why, within a few years' time, airships should not be built
+ capable of completing the circuit of the globe and of conveying sufficient
+ passengers and merchandise to render such an undertaking a paying
+ proposition.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British R.38 class, embodying the latest improvements in airship
+ design outside Germany, gives a gross lift per airship of 85 tons and a
+ net lift of about 45 tons. The capacity of the gas bags is about two and
+ three-quarter million cubic feet, and, travelling at the rate of 45 miles
+ per hour, the cruising range of the vessel is estimated at 8.8 days. Six
+ engines, each of 350 horse-power, admit of an extreme speed of 70 miles
+ per hour if necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last word in German design is exemplified in the rigids L.70 and L.71,
+ together with the commercial airship 'Bodensee.' Previous to the
+ construction of these, the L.65 type is noteworthy as being the first
+ Zeppelin in which direct drive of the propeller was introduced, together
+ with an improved and lighter type of car. L.70 built in 1918 and destroyed
+ by the British naval forces, had a speed of about 75 miles per hour; L.71
+ had a maximum speed of 72 miles per hour, a gas bag capacity of 2,420,000
+ cubic feet, and a length of 743 feet, while the total lift was 73 tons.
+ Progress in design is best shown by the progress in useful load; in the
+ L.70 and L.71 class, this has been increased to 58.3 per cent, while in
+ the Bodensee it was ever higher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As was shown in R.34's American flight, the main problem in connection
+ with the commercial use of dirigibles is that of mooring in the open. The
+ nearest to a solution of this problem, so far, consists in the mast
+ carrying a swivelling cap; this has been tried in the British service with
+ a non-rigid airship, which was attached to a mast in open country in a
+ gale of 52 miles an hour without the slightest damage to the airship. In
+ its commercial form, the mast would probably take the form of a tower, at
+ the top of which the cap would revolve so that the airship should always
+ face the wind, the tower being used for embarkation and disembarkation of
+ passengers and the provision of fuel and gas. Such a system would render
+ sheds unnecessary except in case of repairs, and would enormously decrease
+ the establishment charges of any commercial airship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, however, is hypothetical. Remains the airship of to-day,
+ developed far beyond the promise of five years ago, capable, as has been
+ proved by its achievements both in Britain and in Germany, of undertaking
+ practically any given voyage with success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. KITE BALLOONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As far back as the period of the Napoleonic wars, the balloon was given a
+ place in warfare, but up to the Franco-Prussian Prussian War of 1870-71
+ its use was intermittent. The Federal forces made use of balloons to a
+ small extent in the American Civil War; they came to great prominence in
+ the siege of Paris, carrying out upwards of three million letters and
+ sundry carrier pigeons which took back messages into the besieged city.
+ Meanwhile, as captive balloons, the German and other armies used them for
+ observation and the direction of artillery fire. In this work the ordinary
+ spherical balloon was at a grave disadvantage; if a gust of wind struck
+ it, the balloon was blown downward and down wind, generally twirling in
+ the air and upsetting any calculations and estimates that might be made by
+ the observers, while in a wind of 25 miles an hour it could not rise at
+ all. The rotatory movement caused by wind was stopped by an experimenter
+ in the Russo-Japanese war, who fixed to the captive observation balloons a
+ fin which acted as a rudder. This did not stop the balloon from being
+ blown downward and away from its mooring station, but this tendency was
+ overcome by a modification designed in Germany by the Parseval-Siegsfield
+ Company, which originated what has since become familiar as the 'Sausage'
+ or kite balloon. This is so arranged that the forward end is tilted up
+ into the wind, and the underside of the gas bag, acting as a plane, gives
+ the balloon a lifting tendency in a wind, thus counteracting the tendency
+ of the wind to blow it downward and away from its mooring station. Smaller
+ bags are fitted at the lower and rear end of the balloon with openings
+ that face into the wind; these are thus kept inflated, and they serve the
+ purpose of a rudder, keeping the kite balloon steady in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Various types of kite balloon have been introduced; the original German
+ Parseval-Siegsfield had a single air bag at the stern end, which was
+ modified to two, three, or more lobes in later varieties, while an
+ American experimental design attempted to do away with the attached lobes
+ altogether by stringing out a series of small air bags, kite fashion, in
+ rear of the main envelope. At the beginning of the War, Germany alone had
+ kite balloons, for the authorities of the Allied armies con-sidered that
+ the bulk of such a vessel rendered it too conspicuous a mark to permit of
+ its being serviceable. The Belgian arm alone possessed two which, on being
+ put into service, were found extremely useful. The French followed by
+ constructing kite balloons at Chalais Meudon, and then, after some months
+ of hostilities and with the example of the Royal Naval Air Service to
+ encourage them, the British military authorities finally took up the
+ construction and use of kite balloons for artillery-spotting and general
+ observation purposes. Although many were brought down by gun-fire, their
+ uses far outweighed their disadvantages, and toward the end of the War,
+ hardly a mile of front was without its 'Sausage.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For naval work, kite balloons were carried in a specially constructed hold
+ in the forepart of certain vessels; when required for use, the covering of
+ the hold was removed, the kite balloon inflated and released to the
+ required height by means of winches as in the case of the land work. The
+ perfecting of the 'Coastal' and N.S. types of airship, together with the
+ extension of wireless telephony between airship and cruiser or other
+ warship, in all probability will render the use of the kite balloon
+ unnecessary in connection with naval scouting. But, during the War,
+ neither wireless telephony nor naval airships had developed sufficiently
+ to render the Navy independent of any means that might come to hand, and
+ the fitting of kite balloons in this fashion filled a need of the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A necessary accessory of the kite balloon is the parachute, which has a
+ long history. Da Vinci and Veranzio appear to have been the first
+ exponents, the first in the theory and the latter in the practice of
+ parachuting. Montgolfier experimented at Annonay before he constructed his
+ first hot air-balloon, and in 1783 a certain Lenormand dropped from a tree
+ in a parachute. Blanchard the balloonist made a spectacle of parachuting,
+ and made it a financial success; Cocking, in 1836, attempted to use an
+ inverted form of parachute; taken up to a height of 3,000 feet, he was cut
+ adrift, when the framework of the parachute collapsed and Cocking was
+ killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rate of fall is slow in parachuting to the ground. Frau Poitevin,
+ making a descent from a height of 6,000 feet, took 45 minutes to reach the
+ ground, and, when she alighted, her husband, who had taken her up, had
+ nearly got his balloon packed up. Robertson, another parachutist is said
+ to have descended from a height of 10,000 feet in 35 minutes, or at a rate
+ of nearly 5 feet per second. During the War Brigadier-General Maitland
+ made a parachute descent from a height of 10,000 feet, the time taken
+ being about 20 minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parachute was developed considerably during the War period, the main
+ requirement, that of certainty in opening, being considerably developed.
+ Considered a necessary accessory for kite balloons, the parachute was also
+ partially adopted for use with aeroplanes in the later War period, when it
+ was contended that if a machine were shot down in flames, its occupants
+ would be given a far better chance of escape if they had parachutes.
+ Various trials were made to demonstrate the extreme efficiency of the
+ parachute in modern form, one of them being a descent from the upper ways
+ of the Tower Bridge to the waters of the Thames, in which short distance
+ the 'Guardian Angel' type of parachute opened and cushioned the descent
+ for its user.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For dirigibles, balloons, and kite balloons the parachute is an essential.
+ It would seem to be equally essential in the case of heavier-than-air
+ machines, but this point is still debated. Certainly it affords the
+ occupant of a falling aeroplane a chance, no matter how slender, of
+ reaching the ground in safety, and, for that reason, it would seem to have
+ a place in aviation as well as in aerostation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART4" id="link2H_PART4">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART IV. ENGINE DEVELOPMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE VERTICAL TYPE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The balloon was but a year old when the brothers Robert, in 1784 attempted
+ propulsion of an aerial vehicle by hand-power, and succeeded, to a certain
+ extent, since they were able to make progress when there was only a slight
+ wind to counteract their work. But, as may be easily understood, the
+ manual power provided gave but a very slow speed, and in any wind it all
+ the would-be airship became an uncontrolled balloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henson and Stringfellow, with their light steam engines, were first to
+ attempt conquest of the problem of mechanical propulsion in the air; their
+ work in this direction is so fully linked up with their constructed models
+ that it has been outlined in the section dealing with the development of
+ the aeroplane. But, very shortly after these two began, there came into
+ the field a Monsieur Henri Giffard, who first achieved success in the
+ propulsion by mechanical means of dirigible balloons, for his was the
+ first airship to fly against the wind. He employed a small steam-engine
+ developing about 3 horse-power and weighing 350 lbs. with boiler, fitting
+ the whole in a car suspended from the gas-bag of his dirigible. The
+ propeller which this engine worked was 11 feet in diameter, and the
+ inventor, who made several flights, obtained a speed of 6 miles an hour
+ against a slight wind. The power was not sufficient to render the
+ invention practicable, as the dirigible could only be used in calm
+ weather, but Giffard was sufficiently encouraged by his results to get out
+ plans for immense dirigibles, which through lack of funds he was unable to
+ construct. When, later, his invention of the steam-injector gave him the
+ means he desired, he became blind, and in 1882 died, having built but the
+ one famous dirigible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This appears to have been the only instance of a steam engine being fitted
+ to a dirigible; the inherent disadvantage of this form of motive power is
+ that a boiler to generate the steam must be carried, and this, together
+ with the weight of water and fuel, renders the steam engine uneconomical
+ in relation to the lift either of plane or gas-bag. Again, even if the
+ weight could be brought down to a reasonable amount, the attention
+ required by steam plant renders it undesirable as a motive power for
+ aircraft when compared with the internal combustion engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maxim, in Artificial and Natural Flight, details the engine which he
+ constructed for use with his giant experimental flying machine, and his
+ description is worthy of reproduction since it is that of the only steam
+ engine besides Giffard's, and apart from those used for the propulsion of
+ models, designed for driving an aeroplane. 'In 1889,' Maxim says, 'I had
+ my attention drawn to some very thin, strong, and comparatively cheap
+ tubes which were being made in France, and it was only after I had seen
+ these tubes that I seriously considered the question of making a flying
+ machine. I obtained a large quantity of them and found that they were very
+ light, that they would stand enormously high pressures, and generate a
+ very large quantity of steam. Upon going into a mathematical calculation
+ of the whole subject, I found that it would be possible to make a machine
+ on the aeroplane system, driven by a steam engine, which would be
+ sufficiently strong to lift itself into the air. I first made drawings of
+ a steam engine, and a pair of these engines was afterwards made. These
+ engines are constructed, for the most part, of a very high grade of cast
+ steel, the cylinders being only 3/32 of an inch thick, the crank shafts
+ hollow, and every part as strong and light as possible. They are compound,
+ each having a high-pressure piston with an area of 20 square inches, a
+ low-pressure piston of 50.26 square inches, and a common stroke of 1 foot.
+ When first finished they were found to weigh 300 lbs. each; but after
+ putting on the oil cups, felting, painting, and making some slight
+ alterations, the weight was brought up to 320 lbs. each, or a total of 640
+ lbs. for the two engines, which have since developed 362 horsepower with a
+ steam pressure of 320 lbs. per square inch.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result is remarkable, being less than 2 lbs. weight per horse-power,
+ especially when one considers the state of development to which the steam
+ engine had attained at the time these experiments were made. The fining
+ down of the internal combustion engine, which has done so much to solve
+ the problems of power in relation to weight for use with aircraft, had not
+ then been begun, and Maxim had nothing to guide him, so far as work on the
+ part of his predecessors was concerned, save the experimental engines of
+ Stringfellow, which, being constructed on so small a scale in comparison
+ with his own, afforded little guidance. Concerning the factor of power, he
+ says: 'When first designing this engine, I did not know how much power I
+ might require from it. I thought that in some cases it might be necessary
+ to allow the high-pressure steam to enter the low-pressure cylinder
+ direct, but as this would involve a considerable loss, I constructed a
+ species of injector. This injector may be so adjusted that when the steam
+ in the boiler rises above a certain predetermined point, say 300 lbs., to
+ the square inch, it opens a valve and escapes past the high-pressure
+ cylinder instead of blowing off at the safety valve. In escaping through
+ this valve, a fall of about 200 lbs. pressure per square inch is made to
+ do work on the surrounding steam and drive it forward in the pipe,
+ producing a pressure on the low-pressure piston considerably higher than
+ the back-pressure on the high-pressure piston. In this way a portion of
+ the work which would otherwise be lost is utilised, and it is possible,
+ with an unlimited supply of steam, to cause the engines to develop an
+ enormous amount of power.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to boilers, Maxim writes,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The first boiler which I made was constructed something on the Herreshof
+ principle, but instead of having one simple pipe in one very long coil, I
+ used a series of very small and light pipes, connected in such a manner
+ that there was a rapid circulation through the whole&mdash;the tubes
+ increasing in size and number as the steam was generated. I intended that
+ there should be a pressure of about 100 lbs. more on the feed water end of
+ the series than on the steam end, and I believed that this difference in
+ pressure would be sufficient to ensure direct and positive circulation
+ through every tube in the series. The first boiler was exceedingly light,
+ but the workmanship, as far as putting the tubes together was concerned,
+ was very bad, and it was found impossible to so adjust the supply of water
+ as to make dry steam without overheating and destroying the tubes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Before making another boiler I obtained a quantity of copper tubes, about
+ 8 feet long, 3/8 inch external diameter, and 1/50 of an inch thick. I
+ subjected about 100 of these tubes to an internal pressure of 1 ton per
+ square inch of cold kerosene oil, and as none of them leaked I did not
+ test any more, but commenced my experiments by placing some of them in a
+ white-hot petroleum fire. I found that I could evaporate as much as 26 1/2
+ lbs. of water per square foot of heating surface per hour, and that with a
+ forced circulation, although the quantity of water passing was very small
+ but positive, there was no danger of overheating. I conducted many
+ experiments with a pressure of over 400 lbs. per square inch, but none of
+ the tubes failed. I then mounted a single tube in a white-hot furnace,
+ also with a water circulation, and found that it only burst under steam at
+ a pressure of 1,650 lbs. per square inch. A large boiler, having about 800
+ square feet of heating surface, including the feed-water heater, was then
+ constructed. This boiler is about 4 1/2 feet wide at the bottom, 8 feet
+ long and 6 feet high. It weighs, with the casing, the dome, and the smoke
+ stack and connections, a little less than 1,000 lbs. The water first
+ passes through a system of small tubes&mdash;1/4 inch in diameter and 1/60
+ inch thick&mdash;which were placed at the top of the boiler and
+ immediately over the large tubes.... This feed-water heater is found to be
+ very effective. It utilises the heat of the products of combustion after
+ they have passed through the boiler proper and greatly reduces their
+ temperature, while the feed-water enters the boiler at a temperature of
+ about 250 F. A forced circulation is maintained in the boiler, the
+ feed-water entering through a spring valve, the spring valve being
+ adjusted in such a manner that the pressure on the water is always 30 lbs.
+ per square inch in excess of the boiler pressure. This fall of 30 lbs. in
+ pressure acts upon the surrounding hot water which has already passed
+ through the tubes, and drives it down through a vertical outside tube,
+ thus ensuring a positive and rapid circulation through all the tubes. This
+ apparatus is found to act extremely well.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Maxim, who with this engine as power for his large aeroplane achieved
+ free flight once, as a matter of experiment, though for what distance or
+ time the machine was actually off the ground is matter for debate, since
+ it only got free by tearing up the rails which were to have held it down
+ in the experiment. Here, however, was a steam engine which was practicable
+ for use in the air, obviously, and only the rapid success of the internal
+ combustion engine prevented the steam-producing type from being developed
+ toward perfection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first designers of internal combustion engines, knowing nothing of the
+ petrol of these days, constructed their examples with a view to using gas
+ as fuel. As far back as 1872 Herr Paul Haenlein obtained a speed of about
+ 10 miles an hour with a balloon propelled by an internal combustion
+ engine, of which the fuel was gas obtained from the balloon itself. The
+ engine in this case was of the Lenoir type, developing some 6 horse-power,
+ and, obviously, Haenlein's flights were purely experimental and of short
+ duration, since he used the gas that sustained him and decreased the
+ lifting power of his balloon with every stroke of the piston of his
+ engine. No further progress appears to have been made with the
+ gas-consuming type of internal combustion engine for work with aircraft;
+ this type has the disadvantage of requiring either a gas-producer or a
+ large storage capacity for the gas, either of which makes the total weight
+ of the power plant much greater than that of a petrol engine. The latter
+ type also requires less attention when working, and the fuel is more
+ convenient both for carrying and in the matter of carburation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first airship propelled by the present-day type of internal combustion
+ engine was constructed by Baumgarten and Wolfert in 1879 at Leipzig, the
+ engine being made by Daimler with a view to working on benzine&mdash;petrol
+ as a fuel had not then come to its own. The construction of this engine is
+ interesting since it was one of the first of Daimler's make, and it was
+ the development brought about by the experimental series of which this
+ engine was one that led to the success of the motor-car in very few years,
+ incidentally leading to that fining down of the internal combustion engine
+ which has facilitated the development of the aeroplane with such
+ remarkable rapidity. Owing to the faulty construction of the airship no
+ useful information was obtained from Daimler's pioneer installation, as
+ the vessel got out of control immediately after it was first launched for
+ flight, and was wrecked. Subsequent attempts at mechanically-propelled
+ flight by Wolfert ended, in 1897, in the balloon being set on fire by an
+ explosion of benzine vapour, resulting in the death of both the aeronauts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daimler, from 1882 onward, devoted his attention to the perfecting of the
+ small, high-speed petrol engine for motor-car work, and owing to his
+ efforts, together with those of other pioneer engine-builders, the
+ motorcar was made a success. In a few years the weight of this type of
+ engine was reduced from near on a hundred pounds per horse-power to less
+ than a tenth of that weight, but considerable further improvement had to
+ be made before an engine suitable for use with aircraft was evolved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The increase in power of the engines fitted to airships has made steady
+ progress from the outset; Haenlein's engine developed about 6 horse-power;
+ the Santos-Dumont airship of 1898 was propelled by a motor of 4
+ horse-power; in 1902 the Lebaudy airship was fitted with an engine of 40
+ horse-power, while, in 1910, the Lebaudy brothers fitted an engine of
+ nearly 300 horsepower to the airship they were then constructing&mdash;1,400
+ horse-power was common in the airships of the War period, and the later
+ British rigids developed yet more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before passing on to consideration of the petrol-driven type of engine, it
+ is necessary to accord brief mention to the dirigible constructed in 1884
+ by Gaston and Albert Tissandier, who at Grenelle, France, achieved a
+ directed flight in a wind of 8 miles an hour, obtaining their power for
+ the propeller from 1 1/3 horse-power Siemens electric motor, which weighed
+ 121 lbs. and took its current from a bichromate battery weighing 496 lbs.
+ A two-bladed propeller, 9 feet in diameter, was used, and the horse-power
+ output was estimated to have run up to 1 1/2 as the dirigible successfully
+ described a semicircle in a wind of 8 miles an hour, subsequently making
+ headway transversely to a wind of 7 miles an hour. The dirigible with
+ which this motor was used was of the conventional pointed-end type, with a
+ length of 92 feet, diameter of 30 feet, and capacity of 37,440 cubic feet
+ of gas. Commandant Renard, of the French army balloon corps, followed up
+ Tissandier's attempt in the next year&mdash;1885&mdash;making a trip from
+ Chalais-Meudon to Paris and returning to the point of departure quite
+ successfully. In this case the motive power was derived from an electric
+ plant of the type used by the Tissandiers, weighing altogether 1,174 lbs.,
+ and developing 9 horsepower. A speed of 14 miles an hour was attained with
+ this dirigible, which had a length of 165 feet, diameter of 27 feet, and
+ capacity of 65,836 cubic feet of gas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverting to the petrol-fed type again, it is to be noted that
+ Santos-Dumont was practically the first to develop the use of the ordinary
+ automobile engine for air work&mdash;his work is of such importance that
+ it has been considered best to treat of it as one whole, and details of
+ the power plants are included in the account of his experiments. Coming to
+ the Lebaudy brothers and their work, their engine of 1902 was a 40
+ horse-power Daimler, four-cylindered; it was virtually a large edition of
+ the Daimler car engine, the arrangement of the various details being on
+ the lines usually adopted for the standard Daimler type of that period.
+ The cylinders were fully water-jacketed, and no special attempt toward
+ securing lightness for air work appears to have been made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fining down of detail that brought weight to such limits as would fit
+ the engine for work with heavier-than-air craft appears to have waited for
+ the brothers Wright. Toward the end of 1903 they fitted to their first
+ practicable flying machine the engine which made the historic first
+ aeroplane flight; this engine developed 30 horse-power, and weighed only
+ about 7 lbs. per horse-power developed, its design and workmanship being
+ far ahead of any previous design in this respect, with the exception of
+ the remarkable engine, designed by Manly, installed in Langley's ill-fated
+ aeroplane&mdash;or 'aerodrome,' as he preferred to call it&mdash;tried in
+ 1903.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The light weight of the Wright brothers' engine did not necessitate a high
+ number of revolutions per minute to get the requisite power; the speed was
+ only 1,300 revolutions per minute, which, with a piston stroke of 3.94
+ inches, was quite moderate. Four cylinders were used, the cylinder
+ diameter being 4.42 inches; the engine was of the vertical type, arranged
+ to drive two propellers at a rate of about 350 revolutions per minute,
+ gearing being accomplished by means of chain drive from crank-shaft end to
+ propeller spindle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The methods adopted by the Wrights for obtaining a light-weight engine
+ were of considerable interest, in view of the fact that the honour of
+ first achieving flight by means of the driven plane belongs to them&mdash;unless
+ Ader actually flew as he claimed. The cylinders of this first Wright
+ engine were separate castings of steel, and only the barrels were
+ jacketed, this being done by fixing loose, thin aluminium covers round the
+ outside of each cylinder. The combustion head and valve pockets were cast
+ together with the cylinder barrel, and were not water cooled. The inlet
+ valves were of the automatic type, arranged on the tops of the cylinders,
+ while the exhaust valves were also overhead, operated by rockers and
+ push-rods. The pistons and piston rings were of the ordinary type, made of
+ cast-iron, and the connecting rods were circular in form, with a hole
+ drilled down the middle of each to reduce the weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Necessity for increasing power and ever lighter weight in relation to the
+ power produced has led to the evolution of a number of different designs
+ of internal combustion engines. It was quickly realised that increasing
+ the number of cylinders on an engine was a better way of getting more
+ power than that of increasing the cylinder diameter, as the greater number
+ of cylinders gives better torque-even turning effect&mdash;as well as
+ keeping down the weight&mdash;this latter because the bigger cylinders
+ must be more stoutly constructed than the small sizes; this fact has led
+ to the construction of engines having as many as eighteen cylinders,
+ arranged in three parallel rows in order to keep the length of crankshaft
+ within reasonable limits. The aero engine of to-day may, roughly, be
+ divided into four classes: these are the V type, in which two rows of
+ cylinders are set parallel at a certain angle to each other; the radial
+ type, which consists of cylinders arranged radially and remaining
+ stationary while the crankshaft revolves; the rotary, where the cylinders
+ are disposed round a common centre and revolve round a stationary shaft,
+ and the vertical type, of four or six cylinders&mdash;seldom more than
+ this&mdash;arranged in one row. A modification of the V type is the
+ eighteen-cylindered engine&mdash;the Sunbeam is one of the best examples&mdash;in
+ which three rows of cylinders are set parallel to each other, working on a
+ common crankshaft. The development these four types started with that of
+ the vertical&mdash;the simplest of all; the V, radial, and rotary types
+ came after the vertical, in the order given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evolution of the motor-car led to the adoption of the vertical type of
+ internal combustion engine in preference to any other, and it followed
+ naturally that vertical engines should be first used for aeroplane
+ propulsion, as by taking an engine that had been developed to some extent,
+ and adapting it to its new work, the problem of mechanical flight was
+ rendered easier than if a totally new type had had to be evolved. It was
+ quickly realised&mdash;by the Wrights, in fact-that the minimum of weight
+ per horse-power was the prime requirement for the successful development
+ of heavier-than-air machines, and at the same time it was equally apparent
+ that the utmost reliability had to be obtained from the engine, while a
+ third requisite was economy, in order to reduce the weight of petrol
+ necessary for flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daimler, working steadily toward the improvement of the internal
+ combustion engine, had made considerable progress by the end of last
+ century. His two-cylinder engine of 1897 was approaching to the
+ present-day type, except as regards the method of ignition; the cylinders
+ had 3.55 inch diameter, with a 4.75 inch piston stroke, and the engine was
+ rated at 4.5 brake horse-power, though it probably developed more than
+ this in actual running at its rated speed of 800 revolutions per minute.
+ Power was limited by the inlet and exhaust passages, which, compared with
+ present-day practice, were very small. The heavy castings of which the
+ engine was made up are accounted for by the necessity for considering
+ foundry practice of the time, for in 1897 castings were far below the
+ present-day standard. The crank-case of this two-cylinder vertical Daimler
+ engine was the only part made of aluminium, and even with this no attempt
+ was made to attain lightness, for a circular flange was cast at the bottom
+ to form a stand for the engine during machining and erection. The general
+ design can be followed from the sectional views, and these will show, too,
+ that ignition was by means of a hot tube on the cylinder head, which had
+ to be heated with a blow-lamp before starting the engine. With all its
+ well known and hated troubles, at that time tube ignition had an advantage
+ over the magneto, and the coil and accumulator system, in reliability;
+ sparking plugs, too, were not so reliable then as they are now. Daimler
+ fitted a very simple type of carburettor to this engine, consisting only
+ of a float with a single jet placed in the air passage. It may be said
+ that this twin-cylindered vertical was the first of the series from which
+ has been evolved the Mercedes-Daimler car and airship engines, built in
+ sizes up to and even beyond 240 horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1901 the development of the petrol engine was still so slight that it
+ did not admit of the construction, by any European maker, of an engine
+ weighing less than 12 lbs. per horse-power. Manly, working at the instance
+ of Professor Langley, produced a five-cylindered radial type engine, in
+ which both the design and workmanship showed a remarkable advance in
+ construction. At 950 revolutions per minute it developed 52.4 horse-power,
+ weighing only 2.4 pounds per horse-power; it was a very remarkable
+ achievement in engine design, considering the power developed in relation
+ to the total weight, and it was, too, an interruption in the development
+ of the vertical type which showed that there were other equally great
+ possibilities in design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England, the first vertical aero-engine of note was that designed by
+ Green, the cylinder dimensions being 4.15 inch diameter by 4.75 stroke&mdash;a
+ fairly complete idea of this engine can be obtained from the accompanying
+ diagrams. At a speed of 1,160 revolutions per minute it developed 35 brake
+ horse-power, and by accelerating up to 1,220 revolutions per minute a
+ maximum of 40 brake horse-power could be obtained&mdash;the
+ first-mentioned was the rated working speed of the engine for continuous
+ runs. A flywheel, weighing 23.5 lbs., was fitted to the engine, and this,
+ together with the ignition system, brought the weight up to 188 lbs.,
+ giving 5.4 lbs. per horse-power. In comparison with the engine fitted to
+ the Wrights' aeroplane a greater power was obtained from approximately the
+ same cylinder volume, and an appreciable saving in weight had also been
+ effected. The illustration shows the arrangement of the vertical valves at
+ the top of the cylinder and the overhead cam shaft, while the position of
+ the carburettor and inlet pipes can be also seen. The water jackets were
+ formed by thin copper casings, each cylinder being separate and having its
+ independent jacket rigidly fastened to the cylinder at the top only, thus
+ allowing for free expansion of the casing; the joint at the bottom end was
+ formed by sliding the jacket over a rubber ring. Each cylinder was bolted
+ to the crank-case and set out of line with the crankshaft, so that the
+ crank has passed over the upper dead centre by the time that the piston is
+ at the top of its stroke when receiving the full force of fuel explosion.
+ The advantage of this desaxe setting is that the pressure in the cylinder
+ acts on the crank-pin with a more effective leverage during that part of
+ the stroke when that pressure is highest, and in addition the side
+ pressure of the piston on the cylinder wall, due to the thrust of the
+ connecting rod, is reduced. Possibly the charging of the cylinder is also
+ more complete by this arrangement, owing to the slower movement of the
+ piston at the bottom of its stroke allowing time for an increased charge
+ of mixture to enter the cylinder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A 60 horse-power engine was also made, having four vertical cylinders,
+ each with a diameter of 5.5 inches and stroke of 5.75 inches, developing
+ its rated power at 1,100 revolutions per minute. By accelerating up to
+ 1,200 revolutions per minute 70 brake horsepower could be obtained, and a
+ maximum of 80 brake horse-power was actually attained with the type. The
+ flywheel, fitted as with the original 35 horse-power engine, weighed 37
+ lbs.; with this and with the ignition system the total weight of the
+ engine was only 250 lbs., or 4.2 lbs. per horse-power at the normal
+ rating. In this design, however, low weight in relation to power was not
+ the ruling factor, for Green gave more attention to reliability and
+ economy of fuel consumption, which latter was approximately 0.6 pint of
+ petrol per brake horse-power per hour. Both the oil for lubricating the
+ bearings and the water for cooling the cylinders were circulated by pumps,
+ and all parts of the valve gear, etc., were completely enclosed for
+ protection from dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A later development of the Green engine was a six-cylindered vertical,
+ cylinder dimensions being 5.5 inch diameter by 6 inch stroke, developing
+ 120 brake horsepower when running at 1,250 revolutions per minute. The
+ total weight of the engine with ignition system 398 was 440 lbs., or 3.66
+ lbs. per horse-power. One of these engines was used on the machine which,
+ in 1909, won the prize of L1,000 for the first circular mile flight, and
+ it may be noted, too, that S. F. Cody, making the circuit of England in
+ 1911, used a four-cylinder Green engine. Again, it was a Green engine that
+ in 1914 won the L5,000 prize offered for the best aero engine in the Naval
+ and Military aeroplane engine competition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manufacture of the Green engines, in the period of the War, had
+ standardised to the production of three types. Two of these were
+ six-cylinder models, giving respectively 100 and 150 brake horse-power,
+ and the third was a twelve-cylindered model rated at 275 brake
+ horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1910 J. S. Critchley compiled a list showing the types of engine then
+ being manufactured; twenty-two out of a total of seventy-six were of the
+ four-cylindered vertical type, and in addition to these there were two
+ six-cylindered verticals. The sizes of the four-cylinder types ranged from
+ 26 up to 118 brake horse-power; fourteen of them developed less than 50
+ horse-power, and only two developed over 100 horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It became apparent, even in the early stages of heavier-than-air flying,
+ that four-cylinder engines did not produce the even torque that was
+ required for the rotation of the power shaft, even though a flywheel was
+ fitted to the engine. With this type of engine the breakage of air-screws
+ was of frequent occurrence, and an engine having a more regular rotation
+ was sought, both for this and to avoid the excessive vibration often
+ experienced with the four-cylinder type. Another, point that forced itself
+ on engine builders was that the increased power which was becoming
+ necessary for the propulsion of aircraft made an increase in the number of
+ cylinders essential, in order to obtain a light engine. An instance of the
+ weight reduction obtainable in using six cylinders instead of four is
+ shown in Critchley's list, for one of the four-cylinder engines developed
+ 118.5 brake horse-power and weighed 1,100 lbs., whereas a six-cylinder
+ engine by the same manufacturer developed 117.5 brake horse-power with a
+ weight of 880 lbs., the respective cylinder dimensions being 7.48 diameter
+ by 9.06 stroke for the four-cylinder engine, and 6.1 diameter by 7.28
+ stroke for the six-cylinder type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A list of aeroplane engines, prepared in 1912 by Graham Clark, showed
+ that, out of the total number of 112 engines then being manufactured,
+ forty-two were of the vertical type, and of this number twenty-four had
+ four-cylinders while sixteen were six-cylindered. The German aeroplane
+ engine trials were held a year later, and sixty-six engines entered the
+ competition, fourteen of these being made with air-cooled cylinders. All
+ of the ten engines that were chosen for the final trials were of the
+ water-cooled type, and the first place was won by a Benz four-cylinder
+ vertical engine which developed 102 brake horse-power at 1,288 revolutions
+ per minute. The cylinder dimensions of this engine were 5.1 inch diameter
+ by 7.1 inch stroke, and the weight of the engine worked out at 3.4 lbs.
+ per brake horse-power. During the trials the full-load petrol consumption
+ was 0.53 pint per horse-power per hour, and the amount of lubricating oil
+ used was 0.0385 pint per brake horse-power per hour. In general
+ construction this Benz engine was somewhat similar to the Green engine
+ already described; the overhead valves, fitted in the tops of the
+ cylinders, were similarly arranged, as was the cam-shaft; two springs were
+ fitted to each of the valves to guard against the possibility of the
+ engine being put out of action by breakage of one of the springs, and
+ ignition was obtained by two high-tension magnetos giving simultaneous
+ sparks in each cylinder by means of two sparking plugs&mdash;this dual
+ ignition reduced the possibility of ignition troubles. The cylinder
+ jackets were made of welded sheet steel so fitted around the cylinder that
+ the head was also water-cooled, and the jackets were corrugated in the
+ middle to admit of independent expansion. Even the lubrication system was
+ duplicated, two sets of pumps being used, one to circulate the main supply
+ of lubricating oil, and the other to give a continuous supply of fresh oil
+ to the bearings, so that if the supply from one pump failed the other
+ could still maintain effective lubrication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Development of the early Daimler type brought about the four-cylinder
+ vertical Mercedes-Daimler engine of 85 horse-power, with cylinders of 5.5
+ diameter with 5.9 inch stroke, the cylinders being cast in two pairs. The
+ overhead arrangement of valves was adopted, and in later designs push-rods
+ were eliminated, the overhead cam-shaft being adopted in their place. By
+ 1914 the four-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler had been partially displaced from
+ favour by a six-cylindered model, made in two sizes; the first of these
+ gave a nominal brake horse-power of 80, having cylinders of 4.1 inches
+ diameter by 5.5 inches stroke; the second type developed 100 horse-power
+ with cylinders 4.7 inches in diameter and 5.5 inches stroke, both types
+ being run at 1,200 revolutions per minute. The cylinders of both these
+ types were cast in pairs, and, instead of the water jackets forming part
+ of the casting, as in the design of the original four-cylinder
+ Mercedes-Daimler engine, they were made of steel welded to flanges on the
+ cylinders. Steel pistons, fitted with cast-iron rings, were used, and the
+ overhead arrangement of valves and cam-shaft was adopted. About 0.55 pint
+ per brake horse-power per hour was the usual fuel consumption necessary to
+ full load running, and the engine was also economical as regards the
+ consumption of lubricating oil, the lubricating system being 'forced' for
+ all parts, including the cam-shaft. The shape of these engines was very
+ well suited for work with aircraft, being narrow enough to admit of a
+ streamline form being obtained, while all the accessories could be so
+ mounted as to produce little or no wind resistance, and very little
+ obstruction to the pilot's view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eight-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler engine, used for airship propulsion
+ during the War, developed 240 brake horse-power at 1,100 revolutions per
+ minute; the cylinder dimensions were 6.88 diameter by 6.5 stroke&mdash;one
+ of the instances in which the short stroke in relation to bore was very
+ noticeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other instances of successful vertical design-the types already detailed
+ are fully sufficient to give particulars of the type generally&mdash;are
+ the Panhard, Chenu, Maybach, N.A.G., Argus, Mulag, and the well-known
+ Austro-Daimler, which by 1917 was being copied in every combatant country.
+ There are also the later Wright engines, and in America the Wisconsin
+ six-cylinder vertical, weighing well under 4 lbs. per horse-power, is
+ evidence of the progress made with this first type of aero engine to
+ develop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. THE VEE TYPE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An offshoot from the vertical type, doubling the power of this with only a
+ very slight&mdash;if any&mdash;increase in the length of crankshaft, the
+ Vee or diagonal type of aero engine leaped to success through the
+ insistent demand for greater power. Although the design came after that of
+ the vertical engine, by 1910, according to Critchley's list of aero
+ engines, there were more Vee type engines being made than any other type,
+ twenty-five sizes being given in the list, with an average rating of 57.4
+ brake horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrangement of the cylinders in Vee form over the crankshaft, enabling
+ the pistons of each pair of opposite cylinders to act upon the same crank
+ pin, permits of a very short, compact engine being built, and also permits
+ of reduction of the weight per horsepower, comparing this with that of the
+ vertical type of engine, with one row of cylinders. Further, at the
+ introduction of this type of engine it was seen that crankshaft vibration,
+ an evil of the early vertical engines, was practically eliminated, as was
+ the want of longitudinal stiffness that characterised the higher-powered
+ vertical engines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the Vee type engines shown in Critchley's list in 1910 nineteen
+ different sizes were constructed with eight cylinders, and with
+ horse-powers ranging from thirty to just over the hundred; the lightest of
+ these weighed 2.9 lbs. per horse-power&mdash;a considerable advance in
+ design on the average vertical engine, in this respect of weight per
+ horse-power. There were also two sixteen-cylinder engines of Vee design,
+ the larger of which developed 134 horse-power with a weight of only 2 lbs.
+ per brake horse-power. Subsequent developments have indicated that this
+ type, with the further development from it of the double-Vee, or engine
+ with three rows of cylinders, is likely to become the standard design of
+ aero engine where high powers are required. The construction permits of
+ placing every part so that it is easy of access, and the form of the
+ engine implies very little head resistance, while it can be placed on the
+ machine&mdash;supposing that machine to be of the single-engine type&mdash;in
+ such a way that the view of the pilot is very little obstructed while in
+ flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An even torque, or great uniformity of rotation, is transmitted to the
+ air-screw by these engines, while the design also permits of such good
+ balance of the engine itself that vibration is practically eliminated. The
+ angle between the two rows of cylinders is varied according to the number
+ of cylinders, in order to give working impulses at equal angles of
+ rotation and thus provide even torque; this angle is determined by
+ dividing the number of degrees in a circle by the number of cylinders in
+ either row of the engine. In an eight-cylindered Vee type engine, the
+ angle between the cylinders is 90 degrees; if it is a twelve-cylindered
+ engine, the angle drops to 60 degrees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the earliest of the British-built Vee type engines was an
+ eight-cylinder 50 horse-power by the Wolseley Company, constructed in 1908
+ with a cylinder bore of 3.75 inches and stroke of 5 inches, running at a
+ normal speed of 1,350 revolutions per minute. With this engine, a gearing
+ was introduced to enable the propeller to run at a lower speed than that
+ of the engine, the slight loss of efficiency caused by the friction of the
+ gearing being compensated by the slower speed of the air-screw, which had
+ higher efficiency than would have been the case if it had been run at the
+ engine speed. The ratio of the gearing&mdash;that is, the speed of the
+ air-screw relatively to that of the engine, could be chosen so as to suit
+ exactly the requirements of the air-screw, and the gearing itself, on this
+ engine, was accomplished on the half-speed shaft actuating the valves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very soon after this first design had been tried out, a second Vee type
+ engine was produced which, at 1,200 revolutions per minute, developed 60
+ horse-power; the size of this engine was practically identical with that
+ of its forerunner, the only exception being an increase of half an inch in
+ the cylinder stroke&mdash;a very long stroke of piston in relation to the
+ bore of the cylinder. In the first of these two engines, which was
+ designed for airship propulsion, the weight had been about 8 lbs. per
+ brake horse-power, no special attempt appearing to have been made to fine
+ down for extreme lightness; in this 60 horse-power design, the weight was
+ reduced to 6.1 lbs. per horse-power, counting the latter as normally
+ rated; the engine actually gave a maximum of 75 brake horse-power,
+ reducing the ratio of weight to power very considerably below the figure
+ given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The accompanying diagram illustrates a later Wolseley model, end
+ elevation, the eight-cylindered 120 horse-power Vee type aero engine of
+ the early war period. With this engine, each crank pin has two connecting
+ rods bearing on it, these being placed side by side and connected to the
+ pistons of opposite cylinders and the two cylinders of the pair are
+ staggered by an amount equal to the width of the connecting rod bearing,
+ to afford accommodation for the rods. The crankshaft was a nickel chrome
+ steel forging, machined hollow, with four crank pins set at 180 degrees to
+ each other, and carried in three bearings lined with anti-friction metal.
+ The connecting rods were made of tubular nickel chrome steel, and the
+ pistons of drawn steel, each being fitted with four piston rings. Of these
+ the two rings nearest to the piston head were of the ordinary cast-iron
+ type, while the others were of phosphor bronze, so arranged as to take the
+ side thrust of the piston. The cylinders were of steel, arranged in two
+ groups or rows of four, the angular distance between them being 90
+ degrees. In the space above the crankshaft, between the cylinder rows, was
+ placed the valve-operating mechanism, together with the carburettor and
+ ignition system, thus rendering this a very compact and accessible engine.
+ The combustion heads of the cylinders were made of cast-iron, screwed into
+ the steel cylinder barrels; the water-jacket was of spun aluminium, with
+ one end fitting over the combustion head and the other free to slide on
+ the cylinder; the water-joint at the lower end was made tight by a
+ Dermatine ring carried between small flanges formed on the cylinder
+ barrel. Overhead valves were adopted, and in order to make these as large
+ as possible the combustion chamber was made slightly larger in diameter
+ than the cylinder, and the valves set at an angle. Dual ignition was
+ fitted in each cylinder, coil and accumulator being used for starting and
+ as a reserve in case of failure of the high-tension magneto system fitted
+ for normal running. There was a double set of lubricating pumps, ensuring
+ continuity of the oil supply to all the bearings of the engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The feature most noteworthy in connection with the running of this type of
+ engine was its flexibility; the normal output of power was obtained with
+ 1,150 revolutions per minute of the crankshaft, but, by accelerating up to
+ 1,400 revolutions, a maximum of 147 brake horse-power could be obtained.
+ The weight was about 5 lbs. per horse-power, the cylinder dimensions being
+ 5 inches bore by 7 inches stroke. Economy in running was obtained, the
+ fuel consumption being 0.58 pint per brake horse-power per hour at full
+ load, with an expenditure of about 0.075 pint of lubricating oil per brake
+ horse-power per hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another Wolseley Vee type that was standardised was a 90 horse-power
+ eight-cylinder engine running at 1,800 revolutions per minute, with a
+ reducing gear introduced by fitting the air screw on the half-speed shaft.
+ First made semi-cooled&mdash;the exhaust valve was left air-cooled, and
+ then entirely water-jacketed&mdash;this engine demonstrated the advantage
+ of full water cooling, for under the latter condition the same power was
+ developed with cylinders a quarter of an inch less in diameter than in the
+ semi-cooled pattern; at the same time the weight was brought down to 4 1/2
+ lbs. per horsepower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A different but equally efficient type of Vee design was the Dorman
+ engine, of which an end elevation is shown; this developed 80 brake
+ horse-power at a speed of 1,300 revolutions per minute, with a cylinder
+ bore of 5 inches; each cylinder was made in cast-iron in one piece with
+ the combustion chamber, the barrel only being water-jacketed. Auxiliary
+ exhaust ports were adopted, the holes through the cylinder wall being
+ uncovered by the piston at the bottom of its stroke&mdash;the piston, 4.75
+ inches in length, was longer than its stroke, so that these ports were
+ covered when it was at the top of the cylinder. The exhaust discharged
+ through the ports into a belt surrounding the cylinder, the belts on the
+ cylinders being connected so that the exhaust gases were taken through a
+ single pipe. The air was drawn through the crank case, before reaching the
+ carburettor, this having the effect of cooling the oil in the crank case
+ as well as warming the air and thus assisting in vaporising the petrol for
+ each charge of the cylinders. The inlet and exhaust valves were of the
+ overhead type, as may be gathered from the diagram, and in spite of
+ cast-iron cylinders being employed a light design was obtained, the total
+ weight with radiator, piping, and water being only 5.5 lbs. per
+ horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was the antithesis of the Wolseley type in the matter of bore in
+ relation to stroke; from about 1907 up to the beginning of the war, and
+ even later, there was controversy as to which type&mdash;that in which the
+ bore exceeded the stroke, or vice versa&mdash;gave greater efficiency. The
+ short-stroke enthusiasts pointed to the high piston speed of the
+ long-stroke type, while those who favoured the latter design contended
+ that full power could not be obtained from each explosion in the
+ short-stroke type of cylinder. It is now generally conceded that the
+ long-stroke engine yields higher efficiency, and in addition to this, so
+ far as car engines are concerned, the method of rating horse-power in
+ relation to bore without taking stroke into account has given the
+ long-stroke engine an advantage, actual horse-power with a long stroke
+ engine being in excess of the nominal rating. This may have had some
+ influence on aero engine design, but, however this may have been, the
+ long-stroke engine has gradually come to favour, and its rival has taken
+ second place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time pride of place among British Vee type engines was held by
+ the Sunbeam Company, which, owing to the genius of Louis Coatalen,
+ together with the very high standard of construction maintained by the
+ firm, achieved records and fame in the middle and later periods of the
+ war. Their 225 horse-power twelve-cylinder engine ran at a normal speed of
+ 2,000 revolutions per minute; the air screw was driven through gearing at
+ half this speed, its shaft being separate from the timing gear and carried
+ in ball-bearings on the nose-piece of the engine. The cylinders were of
+ cast-iron, entirely water-cooled; a thin casing formed the water-jacket,
+ and a very light design was obtained, the weight being only 3.2 lbs. per
+ horse-power. The first engine of Sunbeam design had eight cylinders and
+ developed 150 horse-power at 2,000 revolutions per minute; the final type
+ of Vee design produced during the war was twelve-cylindered, and yielded
+ 310 horse-power with cylinders 4.3 inches bore by 6.4 inches stroke.
+ Evidence in favour of the long-stroke engine is afforded in this type as
+ regards economy of working; under full load, working at 2,000 revolutions
+ per minute, the consumption was 0.55 pints of fuel per brake horse-power
+ per hour, which seems to indicate that the long stroke permitted of full
+ use being made of the power resulting from each explosion, in spite of the
+ high rate of speed of the piston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Developing from the Vee type, the eighteen-cylinder 475 brake horse-power
+ engine, designed during the war, represented for a time the limit of power
+ obtainable from a single plant. It was water-cooled throughout, and the
+ ignition to each cylinder was duplicated; this engine proved fully
+ efficient, and economical in fuel consumption. It was largely used for
+ seaplane work, where reliability was fully as necessary as high power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abnormal needs of the war period brought many British firms into the
+ ranks of Vee-type engine-builders, and, apart from those mentioned, the
+ most notable types produced are the Rolls-Royce and the Napier. The first
+ mentioned of these firms, previous to 1914 had concentrated entirely on
+ car engines, and their very high standard of production in this department
+ of internal combustion engine work led, once they took up the making of
+ aero engines, to extreme efficiency both of design and workmanship. The
+ first experimental aero engine, of what became known as the 'Eagle' type,
+ was of Vee design&mdash;it was completed in March of 1915&mdash;and was so
+ successful that it was standardised for quantity production. How far the
+ original was from the perfection subsequently ascertained is shown by the
+ steady increase in developed horse-power of the type; originally designed
+ to develop 200 horse-power, it was developed and improved before its first
+ practical trial in October of 1915, when it developed 255 horsepower on a
+ brake test. Research and experiment produced still further improvements,
+ for, without any enlargement of the dimensions, or radical alteration in
+ design, the power of the engine was brought up to 266 horse-power by March
+ of 1916, the rate of revolutions of 1,800 per minute being maintained
+ throughout. July, 1916 gave 284 horse-power; by the cud of the year this
+ had been increased to 322 horse-power; by September of 1917 the increase
+ was to 350 horse-power, and by February of 1918 then 'Eagle' type of
+ engine was rated at 360 horse-power, at which standard it stayed. But
+ there is no more remarkable development in engine design than this, a 75
+ per cent increase of power in the same engine in a period of less than
+ three years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To meet the demand for a smaller type of engine for use on training
+ machines, the Rolls-Royce firm produced the 'Hawk' Vee-type engine of 100
+ horsepower, and, intermediately between this and the 'Eagle,' the 'Falcon'
+ engine came to being with an original rated horse-power of 205 at 1,800
+ revolutions per minute, in April of 1916. Here was another case of growth
+ of power in the same engine through research, almost similar to that of
+ the 'Eagle' type, for by July of 1918 the 'Falcon' was developing 285
+ horse-power with no radical alteration of design. Finally, in response to
+ the constant demand for increase of power in a single plant, the
+ Rolls-Royce company designed and produced the 'Condor' type of engine,
+ which yielded 600 horse-power on its first test in August of 1918. The
+ cessation of hostilities and consequent falling off in the demand for
+ extremely high-powered plants prevented the 'Condor' being developed to
+ its limit, as had been the 'Falcon' and 'Eagle' types.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 'Eagle 'engine was fitted to the two Handley-Page aeroplanes&mdash;which
+ made flights from England to India&mdash;it was virtually standard on the
+ Handley-Page bombers of the later War period, though to a certain extent
+ the American 'Liberty' engine was also used. Its chief record, however, is
+ that of being the type fitted to the Vickers-Vimy aeroplane which made the
+ first Atlantic flight, covering the distance of 1,880 miles at a speed
+ averaging 117 miles an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Napier Company specialised on one type of engine from the outset, a
+ power plant which became known as the 'Lion' engine, giving 450
+ horse-power with twelve cylinders arranged in three rows of four each.
+ Considering the engine as 'dry,' or without fuel and accessories, an
+ abnormally light weight per horse-power&mdash;only 1.89 lbs.&mdash;was
+ attained when running at the normal rate of revolution. The cylinders and
+ water-jackets are of steel, and there is fitted a detachable aluminium
+ cylinder head containing inlet and exhaust valves and valve actuating
+ mechanism; pistons are of aluminium alloy, and there are two inlet and two
+ exhaust valves to each cylinder, the whole of the valve mechanism being
+ enclosed in an oil-tight aluminium case. Connecting rods and crankshaft
+ are of steel, the latter being machined from a solid steel forging and
+ carried in five roller bearings and one plain bearing at the forward end.
+ The front end of the crank-case encloses reduction gear for the propeller
+ shaft, together with the shaft and bearings. There are two suction and one
+ pressure type oil pumps driven through gears at half-engine speed, and two
+ 12 spark magnetos, giving 2 sparks in each cylinder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cylinders are set with the central row vertical, and the two side rows
+ at angles of 60 degrees each; cylinder bore is 5 1/2 inches, and stroke 5
+ 1/8 inches; the normal rate of revolution is 1,350 per minute, and the
+ reducing gear gives one revolution of the propeller shaft to 1.52
+ revolutions of crankshaft. Fuel consumption is 0.48lbs. of fuel per brake
+ horse-power hour at full load, and oil consumption is 0.020 lbs. per brake
+ horsepower hour. The dry weight of the engine, complete with propeller
+ boss, carburettors, and induction pipes, is 850 lbs., and the gross weight
+ in running order, with fuel and oil for six hours working, is 2,671 lbs.,
+ exclusive of cooling water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this engine belongs an altitude record of 30,500 feet, made at
+ Martlesham, near Ipswich, on January 2nd, 1919, by Captain Lang, R.A.F.,
+ the climb being accomplished in 66 minutes 15 seconds. Previous to this,
+ the altitude record was held by an Italian pilot, who made 25,800 feet in
+ an hour and 57 minutes in 1916. Lang's climb was stopped through the
+ pressure of air, at the altitude he reached, being insufficient for
+ driving the small propellers on the machine which worked the petrol and
+ oil pumps, or he might have made the height said to have been attained by
+ Major Schroeder on February 27th, 1920, at Dayton, Ohio. Schroeder is said
+ to have reached an altitude of 36,020 feet on a Napier biplane, and, owing
+ to failure of the oxygen supply, to have lost consciousness, fallen five
+ miles, righted his machine when 2,000 feet in the air, and alighted
+ successfully. Major Schroeder is an American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning back a little, and considering other than British design of Vee
+ and double-Vee or 'Broad arrow' type of engine, the Renault firm from the
+ earliest days devoted considerable attention to the development of this
+ type, their air-cooled engines having been notable examples from the
+ earliest days of heavier-than-air machines. In 1910 they were making three
+ sizes of eight-cylindered Vee-type engines, and by 1915 they had increased
+ to the manufacture of five sizes, ranging from 25 to 100 brake
+ horse-power, the largest of the five sizes having twelve cylinders but
+ still retaining the air-cooled principle. The De Dion firm, also, made
+ Vee-type engines in 1914, being represented by an 80 horse-power
+ eight-cylindered engine, air-cooled, and a 150 horse-power, also of eight
+ cylinders, water-cooled, running at a normal rate of 1,600 revolutions per
+ minute. Another notable example of French construction was the Panhard and
+ Levassor 100 horse-power eight-cylinder Vee engine, developing its rated
+ power at 1,500 revolutions per minute, and having the&mdash;for that time&mdash;low
+ weight of 4.4 lbs. per horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ American Vee design has followed the British fairly cclosely; the Curtiss
+ Company produced originally a 75 horse-power eight-cylinder Vee type
+ running at 1,200 revolutions per minute, supplementing this with a 170
+ horse-power engine running at 1,600 revolutions per minute, and later with
+ a twelve-cylinder model Vee type, developing 300 horse-power at 1,500
+ revolutions per minute, with cylinder bore of 5 inches and stroke of 7
+ inches. An exceptional type of American design was the Kemp Vee engine of
+ 80 horse-power in which the cylinders were cooled by a current of air
+ obtained from a fan at the forward end of the engine. With cylinders of
+ 4.25 inches bore and 4.75 inches stroke, the rater power was developed at
+ 1,150 revolutions per minute, and with the engine complete the weight was
+ only 4.75 lbs. per horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. THE RADIAL TYPE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The very first successful design of internal combustion aero engine made
+ was that of Charles Manly, who built a five-cylinder radial engine in 1901
+ for use with Langley's 'aerodrome,' as the latter inventor decided to call
+ what has since become known as the aeroplane. Manly made a number of
+ experiments, and finally decided on radial design, in which the cylinders
+ are so rayed round a central crank-pin that the pistons act successively
+ upon it; by this arrangement a very short and compact engine is obtained,
+ with a minimum of weight, and a regular crankshaft rotation and perfect
+ balance of inertia forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Manly designed his radial engine, high speed internal combustion
+ engines were in their infancy, and the difficulties in construction can be
+ partly realised when the lack of manufacturing methods for this high-class
+ engine work, and the lack of experimental data on the various materials,
+ are taken into account. During its tests, Manly's engine developed 52.4
+ brake horsepower at a speed of 950 revolutions per minute, with the
+ remarkably low weight of only 2.4 lbs. per horsepower; this latter was
+ increased to 3.6 lbs. when the engine was completed by the addition of
+ ignition system, radiator, petrol tank, and all accessories, together with
+ the cooling water for the cylinders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Manly's engine, the cylinders were of steel, machined outside and
+ inside to 1/16 of an inch thickness; on the side of cylinder, at the top
+ end, the valve chamber was brazed, being machined from a solid forging,
+ The casing which formed the water-jacket was of sheet steel, 1/50 of an
+ inch in thickness, and this also was brazed on the cylinder and to the
+ valve chamber. Automatic inlet valves were fitted, and the exhaust valves
+ were operated by a cam which had two points, 180 degrees apart; the cam
+ was rotated in the opposite direction to the engine at one-quarter engine
+ speed. Ignition was obtained by using a one-spark coil and vibrator for
+ all cylinders, with a distributor to select the right cylinder for each
+ spark&mdash;this was before the days of the high-tension magneto and the
+ almost perfect ignition systems that makers now employ. The scheme of
+ ignition for this engine was originated by Manly himself, and he also
+ designed the sparking plugs fitted in the tops of the cylinders. Through
+ fear of trouble resulting if the steel pistons worked on the steel
+ cylinders, cast iron liners were introduced in the latter, 1/16 of an inch
+ thick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The connecting rods of this engine were of virtually the same type as is
+ employed on nearly all modern radial engines. The rod for one cylinder had
+ a bearing along the whole of the crank pin, and its end enclosed the pin;
+ the other four rods had bearings upon the end of the first rod, and did
+ not touch the crank pin. The accompanying diagram shows this construction,
+ together with the means employed for securing the ends of the four rods&mdash;the
+ collars were placed in position after the rods had been put on. The
+ bearings of these rods did not receive any of the rubbing effect due to
+ the rotation of the crank pin, the rubbing on them being only that of the
+ small angular displacement of the rods during each revolution; thus there
+ was no difficulty experienced with the lubrication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another early example of the radial type of engine was the French Anzani,
+ of which type one was fitted to the machine with which Bleriot first
+ crossed the English Channel&mdash;this was of 25 horse-power. The earliest
+ Anzani engines were of the three-cylinder fan type, one cylinder being
+ vertical, and the other two placed at an angle of 72 degrees on each side,
+ as the possibility of over-lubrication of the bottom cylinders was feared
+ if a regular radial construction were adopted. In order to overcome the
+ unequal balance of this type, balance weights were fitted inside the crank
+ case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The final development of this three-cylinder radial was the 'Y' type of
+ engine, in which the cylinders were regularly disposed at 120 degrees
+ apart, the bore was 4.1, stroke 4.7 inches, and the power developed was 30
+ brake horse-power at 1,300 revolutions per minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Critchley's list of aero engines being constructed in 1910 shows twelve of
+ the radial type, with powers of between 14 and 100 horse-power, and with
+ from three to ten cylinder&mdash;this last is probably the greatest number
+ of cylinders that can be successfully arranged in circular form. Of the
+ twelve types of 1910, only two were water-cooled, and it is to be noted
+ that these two ran at the slowest speeds and had the lowest weight per
+ horse-power of any.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Anzani radial was considerably developed special attention being paid
+ to this type by its makers and by 1914 the Anzani list comprised seven
+ different sizes of air-cooled radials. Of these the largest had twenty
+ cylinders, developing 200 brake horse-power&mdash;it was virtually a
+ double radial&mdash;and the smallest was the original 30 horse-power
+ three-cylinder design. A six-cylinder model was formed by a combination of
+ two groups of three cylinders each, acting upon a double-throw crankshaft;
+ the two crank pins were set at 180 degrees to each other, and the cylinder
+ groups were staggered by an amount equal to the distance between the
+ centres of the crank pins. Ten-cylinder radial engines are made with two
+ groups of five cylinders acting upon two crank pins set at 180 degrees to
+ each other, the largest Anzani 'ten' developed 125 horsepower at 1,200
+ revolutions per minute, the ten cylinders being each 4.5 inches in bore
+ with stroke of 5.9 inches, and the weight of the engine being 3.7 lbs. per
+ horse-power. In the 200 horse-power Anzani radial the cylinders are
+ arranged in four groups of five each, acting on two crank pins. The bore
+ of the cylinders in this engine is the same as in the three-cylinder, but
+ the stroke is increased to 5.5 inches. The rated power is developed at
+ 1,300 revolutions per minute, and the engine complete weighs 3.4 lbs. per
+ horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this 200 horse-power Anzani, a petrol consumption of as low as 0.49
+ lbs. of fuel per brake horse-power per hour has been obtained, but the
+ consumption of lubricating oil is compensatingly high, being up to
+ one-fifth of the fuel used. The cylinders are set desaxe with the crank
+ shaft, and are of cast-iron, provided with radiating ribs for air-cooling;
+ they are attached to the crank case by long bolts passing through bosses
+ at the top of the cylinders, and connected to other bolts at right angles
+ through the crank case. The tops of the cylinders are formed flat, and
+ seats for the inlet and exhaust valves are formed on them. The pistons are
+ cast-iron, fitted with ordinary cast-iron spring rings. An aluminium crank
+ case is used, being made in two halves connected together by bolts, which
+ latter also attach the engine to the frame of the machine. The crankshaft
+ is of nickel steel, made hollow, and mounted on ball-bearings in such a
+ manner that practically a combination of ball and plain bearings is
+ obtained; the central web of the shaft is bent to bring the centres of the
+ crank pins as close together as possible, leaving only room for the
+ connecting rods, and the pins are 180 degrees apart. Nickel steel valves
+ of the cone-seated, poppet type are fitted, the inlet valves being
+ automatic, and those for the exhaust cam-operated by means of push-rods.
+ With an engine having such a number of cylinders a very uniform rotation
+ of the crankshaft is obtained, and in actual running there are always five
+ of the cylinders giving impulses to the crankshaft at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An interesting type of pioneer radial engine was the Farcot, in which the
+ cylinders were arranged in a horizontal plane, with a vertical crankshaft
+ which operated the air-screw through bevel gearing. This was an
+ eight-cylinder engine, developing 64 horse-power at 1,200 revolutions per
+ minute. The R.E.P. type,in the early days, was a 'fan' engine, but the
+ designer, M. Robert Pelterie, turned from this design to a seven-cylinder
+ radial, which at 1,100 revolutions per minute gave 95 horse-power. Several
+ makers entered into radial engine development in the years immediately
+ preceding the War, and in 1914 there were some twenty-two different sizes
+ and types, ranging from 30 to 600 horse-power, being made, according to
+ report; the actual construction of the latter size at this time, however,
+ is doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably the best example of radial construction up to the outbreak of War
+ was the Salmson (Canton-Unne) water-cooled, of which in 1914 six sizes
+ were listed as available. Of these the smallest was a seven-cylinder 90
+ horse-power engine, and the largest, rated at 600 horse-power, had
+ eighteen cylinders. These engines, during the War, were made under license
+ by the Dudbridge Ironworks in Great Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The accompanying diagram shows the construction of the cylinders in the
+ 200 horse-power size, showing the method of cooling, and the arrangement
+ of the connecting rods. A patent planetary gear, also shown in the
+ diagram, gives exactly the same stroke to all the pistons. The complete
+ engine has fourteen cylinders, of forged steel machined all over, and so
+ secured to the crank case that any one can be removed without parting the
+ crank case. The water-jackets are of spun copper, brazed on to the
+ cylinder, and corrugated so as to admit of free expansion; the water is
+ circulated by means of a centrifugal pump. The pistons are of cast-iron,
+ each fitted with three rings, and the connecting rods are of high grade
+ steel, machined all over and fitted with bushes of phosphor bronze; these
+ rods are connected to a central collar, carried on the crank pin by two
+ ball-bearings. The crankshaft has a single throw, and is made in two parts
+ to allow the cage for carrying the big end-pins of the connecting rods to
+ be placed in position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The casing is in two parts, on one of which the brackets for fixing the
+ engine are carried, while the other part carries the valve-gear. Bolts
+ secure the two parts together. The mechanically-operated steel valves on
+ the cylinders are each fitted with double springs and the valves are
+ operated by rods and levers. Two Zenith carburettors are fitted on the
+ rear half of the crank case, and short induction pipes are led to each
+ cylinder; each of the carburettors is heated by the exhaust gases.
+ Ignition is by two high-tension magnetos, and a compressed air
+ self-starting arrangement is provided. Two oil pumps are fitted for
+ lubricating purposes, one of which forces oil to the crankshaft and
+ connecting-rod bearings, while the second forces oil to the valve gear,
+ the cylinders being so arranged that the oil which flows along the walls
+ cannot flood the lower cylinders. This engine operates upon a six-stroke
+ cycle, a rather rare arrangement for internal combustion engines of the
+ electrical ignition type; this is done in order to obtain equal angular
+ intervals for the working impulses imparted to the rotating crankshaft, as
+ the cylinders are arranged in groups of seven, and all act upon the one
+ crankshaft. The angle, therefore, between the impulses is 77 1/7 degrees.
+ A diagram is inset giving a side view of the engine, in order to show the
+ grouping of the cylinders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 600 horse-power Salmson engine was designed with a view to fitting to
+ airships, and was in reality two nine-cylindered engines, with a gear-box
+ connecting them; double air-screws were fitted, and these were so arranged
+ that either or both of them might be driven by either or both engines; in
+ addition to this, the two engines were complete and separate engines as
+ regards carburation and ignition, etc., so that they could be run
+ independently of each other. The cylinders were exceptionally 'long
+ stroke,' being 5.9 inches bore to 8.27 inches stroke, and the rated power
+ was developed at 1,200 revolutions per minute, the weight of the complete
+ engine being only 4.1 lbs. per horse-power at the normal rating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A type of engine specially devised for airship propulsion is that in which
+ the cylinders are arranged horizontally instead of vertically, the main
+ advantages of this form being the reduction of head resistance and less
+ obstruction to the view of the pilot. A casing, mounted on the top of the
+ engine, supports the air-screw, which is driven through bevel gearing from
+ the upper end of the crankshaft. With this type of engine a better rate of
+ air-screw efficiency is obtained by gearing the screw down to half the
+ rate of revolution of the engine, this giving a more even torque. The
+ petrol consumption of the type is very low, being only 0.48 lbs. per
+ horse-power per hour, and equal economy is claimed as regards lubricating
+ oil, a consumption of as little as 0.04 lbs. per horse-power per hour
+ being claimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain American radial engines were made previous to 1914, the principal
+ being the Albatross six-cylinder engines of 50 and 100 horse-powers. Of
+ these the smaller size was air-cooled, with cylinders of 4.5 inches bore
+ and 5 inches stroke, developing the rated power at 1,230 revolutions per
+ minute, with a weight of about 5 lbs. per horse-power. The 100 horse-power
+ size had cylinders of 5.5 inches bore, developing its rated power at 1,230
+ revolutions per minute, and weighing only 2.75 lbs. per horse-power. This
+ engine was markedly similar to the six-cylindered Anzani, having all the
+ valves mechanically operated, and with auxiliary exhaust ports at the
+ bottoms of the cylinders, overrun by long pistons. These Albatross engines
+ had their cylinders arranged in two groups of three, with each group of
+ three pistons operating on one of two crank pins, each 180 degrees apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The radial type of engine, thanks to Charles Manly, had the honour of
+ being first in the field as regards aero work. Its many advantages, among
+ which may be specially noted the very short crankshaft as compared with
+ vertical, Vee, or 'broad arrow' type of engine, and consequent greater
+ rigidity, ensure it consideration by designers of to-day, and render it
+ certain that the type will endure. Enthusiasts claim that the 'broad
+ arrow' type, or Vee with a third row of cylinders inset between the
+ original two, is just as much a development from the radial engine as from
+ the vertical and resulting Vee; however this may be, there is a place for
+ the radial type in air-work for as long as the internal combustion engine
+ remains as a power plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE ROTARY TYPE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ M. Laurent Seguin, the inventor of the Gnome rotary aero engine, provided
+ as great a stimulus to aviation as any that was given anterior to the war
+ period, and brought about a great advance in mechanical flight, since
+ these well-made engines gave a high-power output for their weight, and
+ were extremely smooth in running. In the rotary design the crankshaft of
+ the engine is stationary, and the cylinders, crank case, and all their
+ adherent parts rotate; the working is thus exactly opposite in principle
+ to that of the radial type of aero engine, and the advantage of the rotary
+ lies in the considerable flywheel effect produced by the revolving
+ cylinders, with consequent evenness of torque. Another advantage is that
+ air-cooling, adopted in all the Gnome engines, is rendered much more
+ effective by the rotation of the cylinders, though there is a tendency to
+ distortion through the leading side of each cylinder being more
+ efficiently cooled than the opposite side; advocates of other types are
+ prone to claim that the air resistance to the revolving cylinders absorbs
+ some 10 per cent of the power developed by the rotary engine, but that has
+ not prevented the rotary from attaining to great popularity as a prime
+ mover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were, in the list of aero engines compiled in 1910, five rotary
+ engines included, all air-cooled. Three of these were Gnome engines, and
+ two of the make known as 'International.' They ranged from 21.5 to 123
+ horse-power, the latter being rated at only 1.8 lbs. weight per brake
+ horse-power, and having fourteen cylinders, 4.33 inches in diameter by 4.7
+ inches stroke. By 1914 forty-three different sizes and types of rotary
+ engine were being constructed, and in 1913 five rotary type engines were
+ entered for the series of aeroplane engine trials held in Germany. Minor
+ defects ruled out four of these, and only the German Bayerischer Motoren
+ Flugzeugwerke completed the seven-hour test prescribed for competing
+ engines. Its large fuel consumption barred this engine from the final
+ trials, the consumption being some 0.95 pints per horse-power per hour.
+ The consumption of lubricating oil, also was excessive, standing at 0.123
+ pint per horse-power per hour. The engine gave 37.5 effective horse-power
+ during its trial, and the loss due to air resistance was 4.6 horse-power,
+ about 11 per cent. The accompanying drawing shows the construction of the
+ engine, in which the seven cylinders are arranged radially on the crank
+ case; the method of connecting the pistons to the crank pins can be seen.
+ The mixture is drawn through the crank chamber, and to enter the cylinder
+ it passes through the two automatic valves in the crown of the piston; the
+ exhaust valves are situated in the tops of the cylinders, and are actuated
+ by cams and push-rods. Cooling of the cylinder is assisted by the radial
+ rings, and the diameter of these rings is increased round the hottest part
+ of the cylinder. When long flights are undertaken the advantage of the
+ light weight of this engine is more than counterbalanced by its high fuel
+ and lubricating oil consumption, but there are other makes which are much
+ better than this seven-cylinder German in respect of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rotation of the cylinders in engines of this type is produced by the side
+ pressure of the pistons on the cylinder walls, and in order to prevent
+ this pressure from becoming abnormally large it is necessary to keep the
+ weight of the piston as low as possible, as the pressure is produced by
+ the tangential acceleration and retardation of the piston. On the upward
+ stroke the circumferential velocity of the piston is rapidly increased,
+ which causes it to exert a considerable tangential pressure on the side of
+ the cylinder, and on the return stroke there is a corresponding retarding
+ effect due to the reduction of the circumferential velocity of the piston.
+ These side pressures cause an appreciable increase in the temperatures of
+ the cylinders and pistons, which makes it necessary to keep the power
+ rating of the engines fairly low.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seguin designed his first Gnome rotary as a 34 horse-power engine when run
+ at a speed of 1,300 revolutions per minute. It had five cylinders, and the
+ weight was 3.9 lbs. per horse-power. A seven-cylinder model soon displaced
+ this first engine, and this latter, with a total weight of 165 lbs., gave
+ 61.5 horse-power. The cylinders were machined out of solid nickel
+ chrome-steel ingots, and the machining was carried out so that the
+ cylinder walls were under 1/6 of an inch in thickness. The pistons were
+ cast-iron, fitted each with two rings, and the automatic inlet valve to
+ the cylinder was placed in the crown of the piston. The connecting rods,
+ of 'H' section, were of nickel chrome-steel, and the large end of one rod,
+ known as the 'master-rod' embraced the crank pin; on the end of this rod
+ six hollow steel pins were carried, and to these the remaining six
+ connecting-rods were attached. The crankshaft of the engine was made of
+ nickel chrome-steel, and was in two parts connected together at the crank
+ pin; these two parts, after the master-rod had been placed in position and
+ the other connecting rods had been attached to it, were firmly secured.
+ The steel crank case was made in five parts, the two central ones holding
+ the cylinders in place, and on one side another of the five castings
+ formed a cam-box, to the outside of which was secured the extension to
+ which the air-screw was attached. On the other side of the crank case
+ another casting carried the thrust-box, and the whole crank case, with its
+ cylinders and gear, was carried on the fixed crank shaft by means of four
+ ball-bearings, one of which also took the axial thrust of the air-screw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For these engines, castor oil is the lubricant usually adopted, and it is
+ pumped to the crankshaft by means of a gear-driven oil pump; from this
+ shaft the other parts of the engine are lubricated by means of centrifugal
+ force, and in actual practice sufficient unburnt oil passes through the
+ cylinders to lubricate the exhaust valve, which partly accounts for the
+ high rate of consumption of lubricating oil. A very simple carburettor of
+ the float less, single-spray type was used, and the mixture was passed
+ along the hollow crankshaft to the interior of the crank case, thence
+ through the automatic inlet valves in the tops of the pistons to the
+ combustion chambers of the cylinders. Ignition was by means of a
+ high-tension magneto specially geared to give the correct timing, and the
+ working impulses occurred at equal angular intervals of 102.85 degrees.
+ The ignition was timed so that the firing spark occurred when the cylinder
+ was 26 degrees before the position in which the piston was at the outer
+ end of its stroke, and this timing gave a maximum pressure in the cylinder
+ just after the piston had passed this position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By 1913, eight different sizes of the Gnome engine were being constructed,
+ ranging from 45 to 180 brake horse-power; four of these were single-crank
+ engines one having nine and the other three having seven cylinders. The
+ remaining four were constructed with two cranks; three of them had
+ fourteen cylinders apiece, ranged in groups of seven, acting on the
+ cranks, and the one other had eighteen cylinders ranged in two groups of
+ nine, acting on its two cranks. Cylinders of the two-crank engines are so
+ arranged (in the fourteen-cylinder type) that fourteen equal angular
+ impulses occur during each cycle; these engines are supported on bearings
+ on both sides of the engine, the air-screw being placed outside the front
+ support. In the eighteen-cylinder model the impulses occur at each 40
+ degrees of angular rotation of the cylinders, securing an extremely even
+ rotation of the air-screw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1913 the Gnome Monosoupape engine was introduced, a model in which the
+ inlet valve to the cylinder was omitted, while the piston was of the
+ ordinary cast-iron type. A single exhaust valve in the cylinder head was
+ operated in a manner similar to that on the previous Gnome engines, and
+ the fact of this being the only valve on the cylinder gave the engine its
+ name. Each cylinder contained ports at the bottom which communicated with
+ the crank chamber, and were overrun by the piston when this was
+ approaching the bottom end of its stroke. During the working cycle of the
+ engine the exhaust valve was opened early to allow the exhaust gases to
+ escape from the cylinder, so that by the time the piston overran the ports
+ at the bottom the pressure within the cylinder was approximately equal to
+ that in the crank case, and practically no flow of gas took place in
+ either direction through the ports. The exhaust valve remained open as
+ usual during the succeeding up-stroke of the piston, and the valve was
+ held open until the piston had returned through about one-third of its
+ downward stroke, thus permitting fresh air to enter the cylinder. The
+ exhaust valve then closed, and the downward motion of the piston,
+ continuing, caused a partial vacuum inside the cylinder; when the piston
+ overran the ports, the rich mixture from the crank case immediately
+ entered. The cylinder was then full of the mixture, and the next upward
+ stroke of the piston compressed the charge; upon ignition the working
+ cycle was repeated. The speed variation of this engine was obtained by
+ varying the extent and duration of the opening of the exhaust valves, and
+ was controlled by the pilot by hand-operated levers acting on the valve
+ tappet rollers. The weight per horsepower of these engines was slightly
+ less than that of the two-valve type, while the lubrication of the gudgeon
+ pin and piston showed an improvement, so that a lower lubricating oil
+ consumption was obtained. The 100 horse-power Gnome Monosoupape was built
+ with nine cylinders, each 4.33 inches bore by 5.9 inches stroke, and it
+ developed its rated power at 1,200 revolutions per minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An engine of the rotary type, almost as well known as the Gnome, is the
+ Clerget, in which both cylinders and crank case are made of steel, the
+ former having the usual radial fins for cooling. In this type the inlet
+ and exhaust valves are both located in the cylinder head, and mechanically
+ operated by push-rods and rockers. Pipes are carried from the crank case
+ to the inlet valve casings to convey the mixture to the cylinders, a
+ carburettor of the central needle type being used. The carburetted mixture
+ is taken into the crank case chamber in a manner similar to that of the
+ Gnome engine. Pistons of aluminium alloy, with three cast-iron rings, are
+ fitted, the top ring being of the obturator type. The large end of one of
+ the nine connecting rods embraces the crank pin and the pressure is taken
+ on two ball-bearings housed in the end of the rod. This carries eight
+ pins, to which the other rods are attached, and the main rod being rigid
+ between the crank pin and piston pin determines the position of the
+ pistons. Hollow connecting-rods are used, and the lubricating oil for the
+ piston pins passes from the crankshaft through the centres of the rods.
+ Inlet and exhaust valves can be set quite independently of one another&mdash;a
+ useful point, since the correct timing of the opening of these valves is
+ of importance. The inlet valve opens 4 degrees from top centre and closes
+ after the bottom dead centre of the piston; the exhaust valve opens 68
+ degrees before the bottom centre and closes 4 degrees after the top dead
+ centre of the piston. The magnetos are set to give the spark in the
+ cylinder at 25 degrees before the end of the compression stroke&mdash;two
+ high-tension magnetos are used: if desired, the second one can be adjusted
+ to give a later spark for assisting the starting of the engine. The
+ lubricating oil pump is of the valveless two-plunger type, so geared that
+ it runs at seven revolutions to 100 revolutions of the engine; by counting
+ the pulsations the speed of the engine can be quickly calculated by
+ multiplying the pulsations by 100 and dividing by seven. In the 115
+ horse-power nine-cylinder Clerget the cylinders are 4.7 bore with a 6.3
+ inches stroke, and the rated power of the engine is obtained at 1,200
+ revolutions per minute. The petrol consumption is 0.75 pint per
+ horse-power per hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third rotary aero engine, equally well known with the foregoing two, is
+ the Le Rhone, made in four different sizes with power outputs of from 50
+ to 160 horse-power; the two smaller sizes are single crank engines with
+ seven and nine cylinders respectively, and the larger sizes are of
+ double-crank design, being merely the two smaller sizes doubled&mdash;fourteen
+ and eighteen-cylinder engines. The inlet and exhaust valves are located in
+ the cylinder head, and both valves are mechanically operated by one
+ push-rod and rocker, radial pipes from crank case to inlet valve casing
+ taking the mixture to the cylinders. The exhaust valves are placed on the
+ leading, or air-screw side, of the engine, in order to get the fullest
+ possible cooling effect. The rated power of each type of engine is
+ obtained at 1,200 revolutions per minute, and for all four sizes the
+ cylinder bore is 4.13 inches, with a 5.5 inches piston stroke. Thin
+ cast-iron liners are shrunk into the steel cylinders in order to reduce
+ the amount of piston friction. Although the Le Rhone engines are
+ constructed practically throughout of steel, the weight is only 2.9 lbs.
+ per horse-power in the eighteen-cylinder type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ American enterprise in the construction of the rotary type is perhaps best
+ illustrated in the 'Gyro 'engine; this was first constructed with inlet
+ valves in the heads of the pistons, after the Gnome pattern, the exhaust
+ valves being in the heads of the cylinders. The inlet valve in the crown
+ of each piston was mechanically operated in a very ingenious manner by the
+ oscillation of the connecting-rod. The Gyro-Duplex engine superseded this
+ original design, and a small cross-section illustration of this is
+ appended. It is constructed in seven and nine-cylinder sizes, with a power
+ range of from 50 to 100 horse-power; with the largest size the low weight
+ of 2.5 lbs.. per horse-power is reached. The design is of considerable
+ interest to the internal combustion engineer, for it embodies a piston
+ valve for controlling auxiliary exhaust ports, which also acts as the
+ inlet valve to the cylinder. The piston uncovers the auxiliary ports when
+ it reaches the bottom of its stroke, and at the end of the power stroke
+ the piston is in such a position that the exhaust can escape over the top
+ of it. The exhaust valve in the cylinder head is then opened by means of
+ the push-rod and rocker, and is held open until the piston has completed
+ its upward stroke and returned through more than half its subsequent
+ return stroke. When the exhaust valve closes, the cylinder has a charge of
+ fresh air, drawn in through the exhaust valve, and the further motion of
+ the piston causes a partial vacuum; by the time the piston reaches bottom
+ dead centre the piston-valve has moved up to give communication between
+ the cylinder and the crank case, therefore the mixture is drawn into the
+ cylinder. Both the piston valve and exhaust valve are operated by cams
+ formed on the one casting, which rotates at seven-eighths engine speed for
+ the seven-cylinder type, and nine-tenths engine speed for the
+ nine-cylinder engines. Each of these cams has four or five points
+ respectively, to suit the number of cylinders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The steel cylinders are machined from solid forgings and provided with
+ webs for air-cooling as shown. Cast-iron pistons are used, and are
+ connected to the crankshaft in the same manner as with the Gnome and Le
+ Rhone engines. Petrol is sprayed into the crank case by a small geared
+ pump and the mixture is taken from there to the piston valves by radial
+ pipes. Two separate pumps are used for lubrication, one forcing oil to the
+ crank-pin bearing and the other spraying the cylinders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other designs of rotary aero engines the E.J.C. is noteworthy, in
+ that the cylinders and crank case of this engine rotate in opposite
+ directions, and two air-screws are used, one being attached to the end of
+ the crankshaft, and the other to the crank case. Another interesting type
+ is the Burlat rotary, in which both the cylinders and crankshaft rotate in
+ the same direction, the rotation of the crankshaft being twice that of the
+ cylinders as regards speed. This engine is arranged to work on the
+ four-stroke cycle with the crankshaft making four, and the cylinders two,
+ revolutions per cycle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear that the rotary type of engine is capable of but little
+ more improvement&mdash;save for such devices as these of the last two
+ engines mentioned, there is little that Laurent Seguin has not already
+ done in the Gnome type. The limitation of the rotary lies in its high fuel
+ and lubricating oil consumption, which renders it unsuited for
+ long-distance aero work; it was, in the war period, an admirable engine
+ for such short runs as might be involved in patrol work 'over the lines,'
+ and for similar purposes, but the watercooled Vee or even vertical, with
+ its much lower fuel consumption, was and is to be preferred for distance
+ work. The rotary air-cooled type has its uses, and for them it will
+ probably remain among the range of current types for some time to come.
+ Experience of matters aeronautical is sufficient to show, however, that
+ prophecy in any direction is most unsafe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE HORIZONTALLY-OPPOSED ENGINE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Among the first internal combustion engines to be taken into use with
+ aircraft were those of the horizontally-opposed four-stroke cycle type,
+ and, in every case in which these engines were used, their excellent
+ balance and extremely even torque rendered them ideal-until the tremendous
+ increase in power requirements rendered the type too long and bulky for
+ placing in the fuselage of an aeroplane. As power increased, there came a
+ tendency toward placing cylinders radially round a central crankshaft,
+ and, as in the case of the early Anzani, it may be said that the radial
+ engine grew out of the horizontal opposed piston type. There were, in 1910&mdash;that
+ is, in the early days of small power units, ten different sizes of the
+ horizontally opposed engine listed for manufacture, but increase in power
+ requirements practically ruled out the type for air work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Darracq firm were the leading makers of these engines in 1910; their
+ smallest size was a 24 horsepower engine, with two cylinders each of 5.1
+ inches bore by 4.7 inches stroke. This engine developed its rated power at
+ 1,500 revolutions per minute, and worked out at a weight of 5 lbs. per
+ horse-power. With these engines the cranks are so placed that two regular
+ impulses are given to the crankshaft for each cycle of working, an
+ arrangement which permits of very even balancing of the inertia forces of
+ the engine. The Darracq firm also made a four-cylindered horizontal
+ opposed piston engine, in which two revolutions were given to the
+ crankshaft per revolution, at equal angular intervals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutheil-Chambers was another engine of this type, and had the
+ distinction of being the second largest constructed. At 1,000 revolutions
+ per minute it developed 97 horse-power; its four cylinders were each of
+ 4.93 inches bore by 11.8 inches stroke&mdash;an abnormally long stroke in
+ comparison with the bore. The weight&mdash;which owing to the build of the
+ engine and its length of stroke was bound to be rather high, actually
+ amounted to 8.2 lbs. per horse-power. Water cooling was adopted, and the
+ engine was, like the Darracq four-cylinder type, so arranged as to give
+ two impulses per revolution at equal angular intervals of crankshaft
+ rotation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the first engines of this type to be constructed in England was the
+ Alvaston, a water-cooled model which was made in 20, 30, and 50 brake
+ horse-power sizes, the largest being a four-cylinder engine. All three
+ sizes were constructed to run at 1,200 revolutions per minute. In this
+ make the cylinders were secured to the crank case by means of four long
+ tie bolts passing through bridge pieces arranged across the cylinder
+ heads, thus relieving the cylinder walls of all longitudinal explosion
+ stresses. These bridge pieces were formed from chrome vanadium steel and
+ milled to an 'H' section, and the bearings for the valve-tappet were
+ forged solid with them. Special attention was given to the machining of
+ the interiors of the cylinders and the combustion heads, with the result
+ that the exceptionally high compression of 95 lbs. per square inch was
+ obtained, giving a very flexible engine. The cylinder heads were
+ completely water-jacketed, and copper water-jackets were also fitted round
+ the cylinders. The mechanically operated valves were actuated by specially
+ shaped cams, and were so arranged that only two cams were required for the
+ set of eight valves. The inlet valves at both ends of the engine were
+ connected by a single feed-pipe to which the carburettor was attached, the
+ induction piping being arranged above the engine in an easily accessible
+ position. Auxiliary air ports were provided in the cylinder walls so that
+ the pistons overran them at the end of their stroke. A single vertical
+ shaft running in ball-bearings operated the valves and water circulating
+ pump, being driven by spiral gearing from the crankshaft at half speed. In
+ addition to the excellent balance obtained with this engine, the makers
+ claimed with justice that the number of working parts was reduced to an
+ absolute minimum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the two-cylinder Darracq, the steel cylinders were machined from solid,
+ and auxiliary exhaust ports, overrun by the piston at the inner end of its
+ stroke, were provided in the cylinder walls, consisting of a circular row
+ of drilled holes&mdash;this arrangement was subsequently adopted on some
+ of the Darracq racing car engines. The water jackets were of copper,
+ soldered to the cylinder walls; both the inlet and exhaust valves were
+ located in the cylinder heads, being operated by rockers and push-rods
+ actuated by cams on the halftime shaft driven from one end of the
+ crankshaft. Ignition was by means of a high-tension magneto, and long
+ induction pipes connected the-ends of the cylinders to the carburettor,
+ the latter being placed underneath the engine. Lubrication was effected by
+ spraying oil into the crank case by means of a pump, and a second pump
+ circulated the cooling water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another good example of this type of engine was the Eole, which had eight
+ opposed pistons, each pair of which was actuated by a common combustion
+ chamber at the centre of the engine, two crankshafts being placed at the
+ outer ends of the engine. This reversal of the ordinary arrangement had
+ two advantages; it simplified induction, and further obviated the need for
+ cylinder heads, since the explosion drove at two piston heads instead of
+ at one piston head and the top of the cylinder; against this, however, the
+ engine had to be constructed strongly enough to withstand the longitudinal
+ stresses due to the explosions, as the cranks are placed on the outer ends
+ and the cylinders and crank-cases take the full force of each explosion.
+ Each crankshaft drove a separate air-screw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This pattern of engine was taken up by the Dutheil-Chambers firm in the
+ pioneer days of aircraft, when the firm in question produced seven
+ different sizes of horizontal engines. The Demoiselle monoplane used by
+ Santos-Dumont in 1909 was fitted with a two-cylinder, horizontally-opposed
+ Dutheil-Chambers engine, which developed 25 brake horse-power at a speed
+ of 1,100 revolutions per minute, the cylinders being of 5 inches bore by
+ 5.1 inches stroke, and the total weight of the engine being some 120 lbs.
+ The crankshafts of these engines were usually fitted with steel flywheels
+ in order to give a very even torque, the wheels being specially
+ constructed with wire spokes. In all the Dutheil-Chambers engines water
+ cooling was adopted, and the cylinders were attached to the crank cases by
+ means of long bolts passing through the combustion heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For their earliest machines, the Clement-Bayard firm constructed
+ horizontal engines of the opposed piston type. The best known of these was
+ the 30 horse-power size, which had cylinders of 4.7 inches diameter by 5.1
+ inches stroke, and gave its rated power at 1,200 revolutions per minute.
+ In this engine the steel cylinders were secured to the crank case by
+ flanges, and radiating ribs were formed around the barrel to assist the
+ air-cooling. Inlet and exhaust valves were actuated by push-rods and
+ rockers actuated from the second motion shaft mounted above the crank
+ case; this shaft also drove the high-tension magneto with which the engine
+ was fitted. A ring of holes drilled round each cylinder constituted
+ auxiliary ports which the piston uncovered at the inner end of its stroke,
+ and these were of considerable assistance not only in expelling exhaust
+ gases, but also in moderating the temperature of the cylinder and of the
+ main exhaust valve fitted in the cylinder head. A water-cooled
+ Clement-Bayard horizontal engine was also made, and in this the auxiliary
+ exhaust ports were not embodied; except in this particular, the engine was
+ very similar to the water-cooled Darracq.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American Ashmusen horizontal engine, developing 100 horse-power, is
+ probably the largest example of this type constructed. It was made with
+ six cylinders arranged on each side of a common crank case, with long
+ bolts passing through the cylinder heads to assist in holding them down.
+ The induction piping and valve-operating gear were arranged below the
+ engine, and the half-speed shaft carried the air-screw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Messrs Palons and Beuse, Germans, constructed a light-weight, air-cooled,
+ horizontally-opposed engine, two-cylindered. In this the cast-iron
+ cylinders were made very thin, and were secured to the crank case by bolts
+ passing through lugs cast on the outer ends of the cylinders; the
+ crankshaft was made hollow, and holes were drilled through the webs of the
+ connecting-rods in order to reduce the weight. The valves were fitted to
+ the cylinder heads, the inlet valves being of the automatic type, while
+ the exhaust valves were mechanically operated from the cam-shaft by means
+ of rockers and push-rods. Two carburettors were fitted, to reduce the
+ induction piping to a minimum; one was attached to each combustion
+ chamber, and ignition was by the normal high-tension magneto driven from
+ the halftime shaft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was also a Nieuport two-cylinder air-cooled horizontal engine,
+ developing 35 horse-power when running at 1,300 revolutions per minute,
+ and being built at a weight of 5.1 lbs. per horse-power. The cylinders
+ were of 5.3 inches diameter by 5.9 inches stroke; the engine followed the
+ lines of the Darracq and Dutheil-Chambers pretty closely, and thus calls
+ for no special description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French Kolb-Danvin engine of the horizontal type, first constructed in
+ 1905, was probably the first two-stroke cycle engine designed to be
+ applied to the propulsion of aircraft; it never got beyond the
+ experimental stage, although its trials gave very good results. Stepped
+ pistons were adopted, and the charging pump at one end was used to
+ scavenge the power cylinder at the other ends of the engine, the transfer
+ ports being formed in the main casting. The openings of these ports were
+ controlled at both ends by the pistons, and the location of the ports
+ appears to have made it necessary to take the exhaust from the bottom of
+ one cylinder and from the top of the other. The carburetted mixture was
+ drawn into the scavenging cylinders, and the usual deflectors were cast on
+ the piston heads to assist in the scavenging and to prevent the fresh gas
+ from passing out of the exhaust ports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. THE TWO-STROKE CYCLE ENGINE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although it has been little used for aircraft propulsion, the
+ possibilities of the two-stroke cycle engine render some study of it
+ desirable in this brief review of the various types of internal combustion
+ engine applicable both to aeroplanes and airships. Theoretically the
+ two-stroke cycle engine&mdash;or as it is more commonly termed, the
+ 'two-stroke,' is the ideal power producer; the doubling of impulses per
+ revolution of the crankshaft should render it of very much more even
+ torque than the four-stroke cycle types, while, theoretically, there
+ should be a considerable saving of fuel, owing to the doubling of the
+ number of power strokes per total of piston strokes. In practice, however,
+ the inefficient scavenging of virtually every two-stroke cycle engine
+ produced nullifies or more than nullifies its advantages over the
+ four-stroke cycle engine; in many types, too, there is a waste of fuel
+ gases through the exhaust ports, and much has yet to be done in the way of
+ experiment and resulting design before the two-stroke cycle engine can be
+ regarded as equally reliable, economical, and powerful with its elder
+ brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first commercially successful engine operating on the two-stroke cycle
+ was invented by Mr Dugald Clerk, who in 1881 proved the design feasible.
+ As is more or less generally understood, the exhaust gases of this engine
+ are discharged from the cylinder during the time that the piston is
+ passing the inner dead centre, and the compression, combustion, and
+ expansion of the charge take place in similar manner to that of the
+ four-stroke cycle engine. The exhaust period is usually controlled by the
+ piston overrunning ports in the cylinder at the end of its working stroke,
+ these ports communicating direct with the outer air&mdash;the complication
+ of an exhaust valve is thus obviated; immediately after the escape of the
+ exhaust gases, charging of the cylinder occurs, and the fresh gas may be
+ introduced either through a valve in the cylinder head or through ports
+ situated diametrically opposite to the exhaust ports. The continuation of
+ the outward stroke of the piston, after the exhaust ports have been
+ closed, compresses the charge into the combustion chamber of the cylinder,
+ and the ignition of the mixture produces a recurrence of the working
+ stroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, theoretically, is obtained the maximum of energy with the minimum of
+ expenditure; in practice, however, the scavenging of the power cylinder, a
+ matter of great importance in all internal combustion engines, is often
+ imperfect, owing to the opening of the exhaust ports being of relatively
+ short duration; clearing the exhaust gases out of the cylinder is not
+ fully accomplished, and these gases mix with the fresh charge and detract
+ from its efficiency. Similarly, owing to the shorter space of time
+ allowed, the charging of the cylinder with the fresh mixture is not so
+ efficient as in the four-stroke cycle type; the fresh charge is usually
+ compressed slightly in a separate chamber&mdash;crank case, independent
+ cylinder, or charging pump, and is delivered to the working cylinder
+ during the beginning of the return stroke of the piston, while in engines
+ working on the four-stroke cycle principle a complete stroke is devoted to
+ the expulsion of the waste gases of the exhaust, and another full stroke
+ to recharging the cylinder with fresh explosive mixture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theoretically the two-stroke and the four-stroke cycle engines possess
+ exactly the same thermal efficiency, but actually this is modified by a
+ series of practical conditions which to some extent tend to neutralise the
+ very strong case in favour of the two-stroke cycle engine. The specific
+ capacity of the engine operating on the two-stroke principle is
+ theoretically twice that of one operating on the four-stroke cycle, and
+ consequently, for equal power, the former should require only about half
+ the cylinder volume of the latter; and, owing to the greater superficial
+ area of the smaller cylinder, relatively, the latter should be far more
+ easily cooled than the larger four-stroke cycle cylinder; thus it should
+ be possible to get higher compression pressures, which in turn should
+ result in great economy of working. Also the obtaining of a working
+ impulse in the cylinder for each revolution of the crankshaft should give
+ a great advantage in regularity of rotation&mdash;which it undoubtedly
+ does&mdash;and the elimination of the operating gear for the valves, inlet
+ and exhaust, should give greater simplicity of design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of all these theoretical&mdash;and some practical&mdash;advantages
+ the four-stroke cycle engine was universally adopted for aircraft work;
+ owing to the practical equality of the two principles of operation, so far
+ as thermal efficiency and friction losses are concerned, there is no doubt
+ that the simplicity of design (in theory) and high power output to weight
+ ratio (also in theory) ought to have given the 'two-stroke' a place on the
+ aeroplane. But this engine has to be developed so as to overcome its
+ inherent drawbacks; better scavenging methods have yet to be devised&mdash;for
+ this is the principal drawback&mdash;before the two-stroke can come to its
+ own as a prime mover for aircraft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr Dugald Clerk's original two-stroke cycle engine is indicated roughly,
+ as regards principle, by the accompanying diagram, from which it will be
+ seen that the elimination of the ordinary inlet and exhaust valves of the
+ four-stroke type is more than compensated by a separate cylinder which,
+ having a piston worked from the connecting-rod of the power cylinder, was
+ used to charging, drawing the mixture from the carburettor past the valve
+ in the top of the charging cylinder, and then forcing it through the
+ connecting pipe into the power cylinder. The inlet valves both on the
+ charging and the power cylinders are automatic; when the power piston is
+ near the bottom of its stroke the piston in the charging cylinder is
+ compressing the carburetted air, so that as soon as the pressure within
+ the power cylinder is relieved by the exit of the burnt gases through the
+ exhaust ports the pressure in the charging cylinder causes the valve in
+ the head of the power cylinder to open, and fresh mixture flows into the
+ cylinder, replacing the exhaust gases. After the piston has again covered
+ the exhaust ports the mixture begins to be compressed, thus automatically
+ closing the inlet valve. Ignition occurs near the end of the compression
+ stroke, and the working stroke immediately follows, thus giving an impulse
+ to the crankshaft on every down stroke of the piston. If the scavenging of
+ the cylinder were complete, and the cylinder were to receive a full charge
+ of fresh mixture for every stroke, the same mean effective pressure as is
+ obtained with four-stroke cycle engines ought to be realised, and at an
+ equal speed of rotation this engine should give twice the power obtainable
+ from a four-stroke cycle engine of equal dimensions. This result was not
+ achieved, and, with the improvements in construction brought about by
+ experiment up to 1912, the output was found to be only about fifty per
+ cent more than that of a four-stroke cycle engine of the same size, so
+ that, when the charging cylinder is included, this engine has a greater
+ weight per horse-power, while the lowest rate of fuel consumption recorded
+ was 0.68 lb. per horse-power per hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1891 Mr Day invented a two-stroke cycle engine which used the crank
+ case as a scavenging chamber, and a very large number of these engines
+ have been built for industrial purposes. The charge of carburetted air is
+ drawn through a non-return valve into the crank chamber during the
+ upstroke of the piston, and compressed to about 4 lbs. pressure per square
+ inch on the down stroke. When the piston approaches the bottom end of its
+ stroke the upper edge first overruns an exhaust port, and almost
+ immediately after uncovers an inlet port on the opposite side of the
+ cylinder and in communication with the crank chamber; the entering charge,
+ being under pressure, assists in expelling the exhaust gases from the
+ cylinder. On the next upstroke the charge is compressed into the
+ combustion space of the cylinder, a further charge simultaneously entering
+ the crank case to be compressed after the ignition for the working stroke.
+ To prevent the incoming charge escaping through the exhaust ports of the
+ cylinder a deflector is formed on the top of the piston, causing the fresh
+ gas to travel in an upward direction, thus avoiding as far as possible
+ escape of the mixture to the atmosphere. From experiments conducted in
+ 1910 by Professor Watson and Mr Fleming it was found that the proportion
+ of fresh gases which escaped unburnt through the exhaust ports diminished
+ with increase of speed; at 600 revolutions per minute about 36 per cent of
+ the fresh charge was lost; at 1,200 revolutions per minute this was
+ reduced to 20 per cent, and at 1,500 revolutions it was still farther
+ reduced to 6 per cent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much for the early designs. With regard to engines of this type
+ specially constructed for use with aircraft, three designs call for
+ special mention. Messrs A. Gobe and H. Diard, Parisian engineers, produced
+ an eight-cylindered two-stroke cycle engine of rotary design, the
+ cylinders being co-axial. Each pair of opposite pistons was secured
+ together by a rigid connecting rod, connected to a pin on a rotating
+ crankshaft which was mounted eccentrically to the axis of rotation of the
+ cylinders. The crankshaft carried a pinion gearing with an internally
+ toothed wheel on the transmission shaft which carried the air-screw. The
+ combustible mixture, emanating from a common supply pipe, was led through
+ conduits to the front ends of the cylinders, in which the charges were
+ compressed before being transferred to the working spaces through ports in
+ tubular extensions carried by the pistons. These extensions had also
+ exhaust ports, registering with ports in the cylinder which communicated
+ with the outer air, and the extensions slid over depending cylinder heads
+ attached to the crank case by long studs. The pump charge was compressed
+ in one end of each cylinder, and the pump spaces each delivered into their
+ corresponding adjacent combustion spaces. The charges entered the pump
+ spaces during the suction period through passages which communicated with
+ a central stationary supply passage at one end of the crank case,
+ communication being cut off when the inlet orifice to the passage passed
+ out of register with the port in the stationary member. The exhaust ports
+ at the outer end of the combustion space opened just before and closed a
+ little later than the air ports, and the incoming charge assisted in
+ expelling the exhaust gases in a manner similar to that of the earlier
+ types of two-stroke cycle engine; The accompanying rough diagram assists
+ in showing the working of this engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Exhibited in the Paris Aero Exhibition of 1912, the Laviator two-stroke
+ cycle engine, six-cylindered, could be operated either as a radial or as a
+ rotary engine, all its pistons acting on a single crank. Cylinder
+ dimensions of this engine were 3.94 inches bore by 5.12 inches stroke, and
+ a power output of 50 horse-power was obtained when working at a rate of
+ 1,200 revolutions per minute. Used as a radial engine, it developed 65
+ horse-power at the same rate of revolution, and, as the total weight was
+ about 198 lbs., the weight of about 3 lbs. per horse-power was attained in
+ radial use. Stepped pistons were employed, the annular space between the
+ smaller or power piston and the walls of the larger cylinder being used as
+ a charging pump for the power cylinder situated 120 degrees in rear of it.
+ The charging cylinders were connected by short pipes to ports in the crank
+ case which communicated with the hollow crankshaft through which the fresh
+ gas was supplied, and once in each revolution each port in the case
+ registered with the port in the hollow shaft. The mixture which then
+ entered the charging cylinder was transferred to the corresponding working
+ cylinder when the piston of that cylinder had reached the end of its power
+ stroke, and immediately before this the exhaust ports diametrically
+ opposite the inlet ports were uncovered; scavenging was thus assisted in
+ the usual way. The very desirable feature of being entirely valveless was
+ accomplished with this engine, which is also noteworthy for exceedingly
+ compact design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lamplough six-cylinder two-stroke cycle rotary, shown at the Aero
+ Exhibition at Olympia in 1911, had several innovations, including a
+ charging pump of rotary blower type. With the six cylinders, six power
+ impulses at regular intervals were given on each rotation; otherwise, the
+ cycle of operations was carried out much as in other two-stroke cycle
+ engines. The pump supplied the mixture under slight pressure to an inlet
+ port in each cylinder, which was opened at the same time as the exhaust
+ port, the period of opening being controlled by the piston. The rotary
+ blower sucked the mixture from the carburettor and delivered it to a
+ passage communicating with the inlet ports in the cylinder walls. A
+ mechanically-operated exhaust valve was placed in the centre of each
+ cylinder head, and towards the end of the working stroke this valve
+ opened, allowing part of the burnt gases to escape to the atmosphere; the
+ remainder was pushed out by the fresh mixture going in through the ports
+ at the bottom end of the cylinder. In practice, one or other of the
+ cylinders was always taking fresh mixture while working, therefore the
+ delivery from the pump was continuous and the mixture had not to be stored
+ under pressure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The piston of this engine was long enough to keep the ports covered when
+ it was at the top of the stroke, and a bottom ring was provided to prevent
+ the mixture from entering the crank case. In addition to preventing
+ leakage, this ring no doubt prevented an excess of oil working up the
+ piston into the cylinder. As the cylinder fired with every revolution, the
+ valve gear was of the simplest construction, a fixed cam lifting each
+ valve as the cylinder came into position. The spring of the exhaust valve
+ was not placed round the stem in the usual way, but at the end of a short
+ lever, away from the heat of the exhaust gases. The cylinders were of cast
+ steel, the crank case of aluminium, and ball-bearings were fitted to the
+ crankshaft, crank pins, and the rotary blower pump. Ignition was by means
+ of a high-tension magneto of the two-spark pattern, and with a total
+ weight of 300 lbs. the maximum output was 102 brake horse-power, giving a
+ weight of just under 3 lbs. per horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most successful of the two-stroke cycle engines was that
+ designed by Mr G. F. Mort and constructed by the New Engine Company. With
+ four cylinders of 3.69 inches bore by 4.5 inches stroke, and running at
+ 1,250 revolutions per minute, this engine developed 50 brake horse-power;
+ the total weight of the engine was 155 lbs., thus giving a weight of 3.1
+ lbs. per horse-power. A scavenging pump of the rotary type was employed,
+ driven by means of gearing from the engine crankshaft, and in order to
+ reduce weight to a minimum the vanes were of aluminium. This engine was
+ tried on a biplane, and gave very satisfactory results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ American design yields two apparently successful two-stroke cycle aero
+ engines. A rotary called the Fredericson engine was said to give an output
+ of 70 brake horse-power with five cylinders 4.5 inches diameter by 4.75
+ inches stroke, running at 1,000 revolutions per minute. Another, the
+ Roberts two-stroke cycle engine, yielded 100 brake horse-power from six
+ cylinders of the stepped piston design; two carburettors, each supplying
+ three cylinders, were fitted to this engine. Ignition was by means of the
+ usual high-tension magneto, gear-driven from the crankshaft, and the
+ engine, which was water-cooled, was of compact design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may thus be seen that the two-stroke cycle type got as far as actual
+ experiment in air work, and that with considerable success. So far,
+ however, the greater reliability of the four-stroke cycle has rendered it
+ practically the only aircraft engine, and the two-stroke has yet some way
+ to travel before it becomes a formidable competitor, in spite of its
+ admitted theoretical and questioned practical advantages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. ENGINES OF THE WAR PERIOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The principal engines of British, French, and American design used in the
+ war period and since are briefly described under the four distinct types
+ of aero engine; such notable examples as the Rolls-Royce, Sunbeam, and
+ Napier engines have been given special mention, as they embodied&mdash;and
+ still embody&mdash;all that is best in aero engine practice. So far,
+ however, little has been said about the development of German aero engine
+ design, apart from the early Daimler and other pioneer makes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the outbreak of hostilities in 1914, thanks to subsidies to contractors
+ and prizes to aircraft pilots, the German aeroplane industry was in a
+ comparatively flourishing condition. There were about twenty-two
+ establishments making different types of heavier-than-air machines,
+ monoplane and biplane, engined for the most part with the four-cylinder
+ Argus or the six-cylinder Mercedes vertical type engines, each of these
+ being of 100 horse-power&mdash;it was not till war brought increasing
+ demands on aircraft that the limit of power began to rise. Contemporary
+ with the Argus and Mercedes were the Austro-Daimler, Benz, and N.A.G., in
+ vertical design, while as far as rotary types were concerned there were
+ two, the Oberursel and the Stahlhertz; of these the former was by far the
+ most promising, and it came to virtual monopoly of the rotary-engined
+ plane as soon as the war demand began. It was practically a copy of the
+ famous Gnome rotary, and thus deserves little description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Germany, from the outbreak of war, practically, concentrated on the
+ development of the Mercedes engine; and it is noteworthy that, with one
+ exception, increase of power corresponding with the increased demand for
+ power was attained without increasing the number of cylinders. The various
+ models ranged between 75 and 260 horse-power, the latter being the most
+ recent production of this type. The exception to the rule was the
+ eight-cylinder 240 horse-power, which was replaced by the 260 horse-power
+ six-cylinder model, the latter being more reliable and but very slightly
+ heavier. Of the other engines, the 120 horsepower Argus and the 160 and
+ 225 horse-power Benz were the most used, the Oberursel being very largely
+ discarded after the Fokker monoplane had had its day, and the N.A.G. and
+ Austro-Daimler Daimler also falling to comparative disuse. It may be said
+ that the development of the Mercedes engine contributed very largely to
+ such success as was achieved in the war period by German aircraft, and, in
+ developing the engine, the builders were careful to make alterations in
+ such a way as to effect the least possible change in the design of
+ aeroplane to which they were to be fitted. Thus the engine base of the 175
+ horse-power model coincided precisely with that of the 150 horse-power
+ model, and the 200 and 240 horse-power models retained the same base
+ dimensions. It was estimated, in 1918, that well over eighty per cent of
+ German aircraft was engined with the Mercedes type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In design and construction, there was nothing abnormal about the Mercedes
+ engine, the keynote throughout being extreme reliability and such
+ simplification of design as would permit of mass production in different
+ factories. Even before the war, the long list of records set up by this
+ engine formed practical application of the wisdom of this policy; Bohn's
+ flight of 24 hours 10 minutes, accomplished on July 10th and 11th, 1914,
+ 9is an instance of this&mdash;the flight was accomplished on an Albatross
+ biplane with a 75 horsepower Mercedes engine. The radial type, instanced
+ in other countries by the Salmson and Anzani makes, was not developed in
+ Germany; two radial engines were made in that country before the war, but
+ the Germans seemed to lose faith in the type under war conditions, or it
+ may have been that insistence on standardisation ruled out all but the
+ proved examples of engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Details of one of the middle sizes of Mercedes motor, the 176 horse-power
+ type, apply very generally to the whole range; this size was in use up to
+ and beyond the conclusion of hostilities, and it may still be regarded as
+ characteristic of modern (1920) German practice. The engine is of the
+ fixed vertical type, has six cylinders in line, not off-set, and is
+ water-cooled. The cam shaft is carried in a special bronze casing, seated
+ on the immediate top of the cylinders, and a vertical shaft is interposed
+ between crankshaft and camshaft, the latter being driven by bevel gearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this vertical connecting-shaft the water pump is located, serving to
+ steady the motion of the shaft. Extending immediately below the camshaft
+ is another vertical shaft, driven by bevel gears from the crank-shaft, and
+ terminating in a worm which drives the multiple piston oil pumps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cylinders are made from steel forgings, as are the valve chamber
+ elbows, which are machined all over and welded together. A jacket of light
+ steel is welded over the valve elbows and attached to a flange on the
+ cylinders, forming a water-cooling space with a section of about 7/16 of
+ an inch. The cylinder bore is 5.5 inches, and the stroke 6.29 inches. The
+ cylinders are attached to the crank case by means of dogs and long through
+ bolts, which have shoulders near their lower ends and are bolted to the
+ lower half of the crank chamber. A very light and rigid structure is thus
+ obtained, and the method of construction won the flattery of imitation by
+ makers of other nationality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cooling system for the cylinders is extremely efficient. After leaving
+ the water pump, the water enters the top of the front cylinders and passes
+ successively through each of the six cylinders of the row; short tubes,
+ welded to the tops of the cylinders, serve as connecting links in the
+ system. The Panhard car engines for years were fitted with a similar
+ cooling system, and the White and Poppe lorry engines were also similarly
+ fitted; the system gives excellent cooling effect where it is most needed,
+ round the valve chambers and the cylinder heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pistons are built up from two pieces; a dropped forged steel piston
+ head, from which depend the piston pin bosses, is combined with a
+ cast-iron skirt, into which the steel head is screwed. Four rings are
+ fitted, three at the upper and one at the lower end of the piston skirt,
+ and two lubricating oil grooves are cut in the skirt, in addition to the
+ ring grooves. Two small rivets retain the steel head on the piston skirt
+ after it has been screwed into position, and it is also welded at two
+ points. The coefficient of friction between the cast-iron and steel is
+ considerably less than that which would exist between two steel parts, and
+ there is less tendency for the skirt to score the cylinder walls than
+ would be the case if all steel were used&mdash;so noticeable is this that
+ many makers, after giving steel pistons a trial, discarded them in favour
+ of cast-iron; the Gnome is an example of this, being originally fitted
+ with a steel piston carrying a brass ring, discarded in favour of a
+ cast-iron piston with a percentage of steel in the metal mixture. In the
+ Le Rhone engine the difficulty is overcome by a cast-iron liner to the
+ cylinders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The piston pin of the Mercedes is of chrome nickel steel, and is retained
+ in the piston by means of a set screw and cotter pin. The connecting rods,
+ of I section, are very short and rigid, carrying floating bronze bushes
+ which fit the piston pins at the small end, and carrying an oil tube on
+ each for conveying oil from the crank pin to the piston pin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crankshaft is of chrome nickel steel, carried on seven bearings. Holes
+ are drilled through each of the crank pins and main bearings, for half the
+ diameter of the shaft, and these are plugged with pressed brass studs.
+ Small holes, drilled through the crank cheeks, serve to convey lubricant
+ from the main bearings to the crank pins. The propeller thrust is taken by
+ a simple ball thrust bearing at the propeller end of the crankshaft, this
+ thrust bearing being seated in a steel retainer which is clamped between
+ the two halves of the crank case. At the forward end of the crankshaft
+ there is mounted a master bevel gear on six splines; this bevel floats on
+ the splines against a ball thrust bearing, and, in turn, the thrust is
+ taken by the crank case cover. A stuffing box prevents the loss of
+ lubricant out of the front end of the crank chamber, and an oil thrower
+ ring serves a similar purpose at the propeller end of the crank chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a motor speed of 1,450 r.p.m., the vertical shaft at the forward end
+ of the motor turns at 2,175 r.p.m., this being the speed of the two
+ magnetos and the water pump. The lower vertical shaft bevel gear and the
+ magneto driving gear are made integral with the vertical driving shaft,
+ which is carried in plain bearings in an aluminium housing. This housing
+ is clamped to the upper half of the crank case by means of three studs.
+ The cam-shaft carries eighteen cams, these being the inlet and exhaust
+ cams, and a set of half compression cams which are formed with the exhaust
+ cams and are put into action when required by means of a lever at the
+ forward end of the cam-shaft. The cam-shaft is hollow, and serves as a
+ channel for the conveyance of lubricating oil to each of the camshaft
+ bearings. At the forward end of this shaft there is also mounted an air
+ pump for maintaining pressure on the fuel supply tank, and a bevel gear
+ tachometer drive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lubrication of the engine is carried out by a full pressure system. The
+ oil is pumped through a single manifold, with seven branches to the
+ crankshaft main bearings, and then in turn through the hollow crankshaft
+ to the connecting-rod big ends and thence through small tubes, already
+ noted, to the small end bearings. The oil pump has four pistons and two
+ double valves driven from a single eccentric shaft on which are mounted
+ four eccentrics. The pump is continuously submerged in oil; in order to
+ avoid great variations in pressure in the oil lines there is a piston
+ operated pressure regulator, cut in between the pump and the oil lines.
+ The two small pistons of the pump take fresh oil from a tank located in
+ the fuselage of the machine; one of these delivers oil to the cam shaft,
+ and one delivers to the crankshaft; this fresh oil mixes with the used
+ oil, returns to the base, and back to the main large oil pump cylinders.
+ By means of these small pump pistons a constant quantity of oil is kept in
+ the motor, and the oil is continually being freshened by means of the new
+ oil coming in. All the oil pipes are very securely fastened to the lower
+ half of the crank case, and some cooling of the oil is effected by air
+ passing through channels cast in the crank case on its way to the
+ carburettor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A light steel manifold serves to connect the exhaust ports of the
+ cylinders to the main exhaust pipe, which is inclined about 25 degrees
+ from vertical and is arranged to give on to the atmosphere just over the
+ top of the upper wing of the aeroplane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As regards carburation, an automatic air valve surrounds the throat of the
+ carburettor, maintaining normal composition of mixture. A small jet is
+ fitted for starting and running without load. The channels cast in the
+ crank chamber, already alluded to in connection with oil-cooling, serve to
+ warm the air before it reaches the carburettor, of which the body is
+ water-jacketed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ignition of the engine is by means of two Bosch ZH6 magnetos, driven at a
+ speed of 2,175 revolutions per minute when the engine is running at its
+ normal speed of 1,450 revolutions. The maximum advance of spark is 12 mm.,
+ or 32 degrees before the top dead centre, and the firing order of the
+ cylinders is 1,5,3,6,2,4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The radiator fitted to this engine, together with the water-jackets, has a
+ capacity of 25 litres of water, it is rectangular in shape, and is
+ normally tilted at an angle of 30 degrees from vertical. Its weight is 26
+ kg., and it offers but slight head resistance in flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The radial type of engine, neglected altogether in Germany, was brought to
+ a very high state of perfection at the end of the War period by British
+ makers. Two makes, the Cosmos Engineering Company's 'Jupiter' and
+ 'Lucifer,' and the A.B.C. 'Wasp II' and 'Dragon Fly 1A' require special
+ mention for their light weight and reliability on trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cosmos 'Jupiter' was&mdash;for it is no longer being made&mdash;a 450
+ horse-power nine-cylinder radial engine, air-cooled, with the cylinders
+ set in one single row; it was made both geared to reduce the propeller
+ revolutions relatively to the crankshaft revolutions, and ungeared; the
+ normal power of the geared type was 450 horse-power, and the total weight
+ of the engine, including carburettors, magnetos, etc., was only 757 lbs.;
+ the engine speed was 1,850 revolutions per minute, and the propeller
+ revolutions were reduced by the gearing to 1,200. Fitted to a 'Bristol
+ Badger' aeroplane, the total weight was 2,800 lbs., including pilot,
+ passenger, two machine-guns, and full military load; at 7,000 feet the
+ registered speed, with corrections for density, was 137 miles per hour; in
+ climbing, the first 2,000 feet was accomplished in 1 minute 4 seconds;
+ 4,000 feet was reached in 2 minutes 10 seconds; 6,000 feet was reached in
+ 3 minutes 33 seconds, and 7,000 feet in 4 minutes 15 seconds. It was
+ intended to modify the plane design and fit a new propeller, in order to
+ attain even better results, but, if trials were made with these
+ modifications, the results are not obtainable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cosmos 'Lucifer' was a three-cylinder radial type engine of 100
+ horse-power, inverted Y design, made on the simplest possible principles
+ with a view to quantity production and extreme reliability. The rated 100
+ horse-power was attained at 1,600 revolutions per minute, and the cylinder
+ dimensions were 5.75 bore by 6.25 inches stroke. The cylinders were of
+ aluminium and steel mixture, with aluminium heads; overhead valves,
+ operated by push rods on the front side of the cylinders, were fitted, and
+ a simple reducing gear ran them at half engine speed. The crank case was a
+ circular aluminium casting, the engine being attached to the fuselage of
+ the aeroplane by a circular flange situated at the back of the case;
+ propeller shaft and crankshaft were integral. Dual ignition was provided,
+ the generator and distributors being driven off the back end of the engine
+ and the distributors being easily accessible. Lubrication was by means of
+ two pumps, one scavenging and one suction, oil being fed under pressure
+ from the crankshaft. A single carburettor fed all three cylinders, the
+ branch pipe from the carburettor to the circular ring being provided with
+ an exhaust heater. The total weight of the engine, 'all on,' was 280 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The A.B.C. 'Wasp II,' made by Walton Motors, Limited, is a seven-cylinder
+ radial, air-cooled engine, the cylinders having a bore of 4.75 inches and
+ stroke 6.25 inches. The normal brake horse-power at 1,650 revolutions is
+ 160, and the maximum 200 at a speed of 1,850 revolutions per minute.
+ Lubrication is by means of two rotary pumps, one feeding through the
+ hollow crankshaft to the crank pin, giving centrifugal feed to big end and
+ thence splash oiling, and one feeding to the nose of the engine, dropping
+ on to the cams and forming a permanent sump for the gears on the bottom of
+ the engine nose. Two carburettors are fitted, and two two-spark magnetos,
+ running at one and three-quarters engine speed. The total weight of this
+ engine is 350 lbs., or 1.75 lbs. per horse-power. Oil consumption at 1,850
+ revolutions is.03 pints per horse-power per hour, and petrol consumption
+ is.56 pints per horsepower per hour. The engine thus shows as very
+ economical in consumption, as well as very light in weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The A.B.C. 'Dragon Fly 1A 'is a nine-cylinder radial engine having one
+ overhead inlet and two overhead exhaust valves per cylinder. The cylinder
+ dimensions are 5.5 inches bore by 6.5 inches stroke, and the normal rate
+ of speed, 1,650 revolutions per minute, gives 340 horse-power. The oiling
+ is by means of two pumps, the system being practically identical with that
+ of the 'Wasp II.' Oil consumption is.021 pints per brake horse-power per
+ hour, and petrol consumption.56 pints&mdash;the same as that of the 'Wasp
+ II.' The weight of the complete engine, including propeller boss, is 600
+ lbs., or 1,765 lbs. per horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These A.B.C. radials have proved highly satisfactory on tests, and their
+ extreme simplicity of design and reliability commend them as engineering
+ products and at the same time demonstrate the value, for aero work, of the
+ air-cooled radial design&mdash;when this latter is accompanied by sound
+ workmanship. These and the Cosmos engines represent the minimum of weight
+ per horse-power yet attained, together with a practicable degree of
+ reliability, in radial and probably any aero engine design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPEa" id="link2H_APPEa">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX A
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ GENERAL MENSIER'S REPORT ON THE TRIALS OF CLEMENT ADER'S AVION.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Paris, October 21, 1897.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Report on the trials of M. Clement Ader's aviation apparatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Ader having notified the Minister of War by letter, July 21, 1897, that
+ the Apparatus of Aviation which he had agreed to build under the
+ conditions set forth in the convention of July 24th, 1894, was ready, and
+ therefore requesting that trials be undertaken before a Committee
+ appointed for this purpose as per the decision of August 4th, the
+ Committee was appointed as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Division General Mensier, Chairman; Division General Delambre, Inspector
+ General of the Permanent Works of Coast Defence, Member of the Technical
+ Committee of the Engineering Corps; Colonel Laussedat, Director of the
+ Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers; Sarrau, Member of the Institute,
+ Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the Polytechnic School; Leaute,
+ Member of the Institute, Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the
+ Polytechnique School.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Laussedat gave notice at once that his health and work as Director
+ of the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers did not permit him to be a member
+ of the Committee; the Minister therefore accepted his resignation on
+ September 24th, and decided not to replace him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later on, however, on the request of the Chairman of the Committee, the
+ Minister appointed a new member General Grillon, commanding the Engineer
+ Corps of the Military Government of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To carry on the trials which were to take place at the camp of Satory, the
+ Minister ordered the Governor of the Military Forces of Paris to
+ requisition from the Engineer Corps, on the request of the Chairman of the
+ Committee, the men necessary to prepare the grounds at Satory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After an inspection made on the 16th an aerodrome was chosen. M. Ader's
+ idea was to have it of circular shape with a width of 40 metres and an
+ average diameter of 450 metres. The preliminary work, laying out the
+ grounds, interior and exterior circumference, etc., was finished at the
+ end of August; the work of smoothing off the grounds began September 1st
+ with forty-five men and two rollers, and was finished on the day of the
+ first tests, October 12th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first meeting of the Committee was held August 18th in M. Ader's
+ workshop; the object being to demonstrate the machine to the Committee and
+ give all the information possible on the tests that were to be held. After
+ a careful examination and after having heard all the explanations by the
+ inventor which were deemed useful and necessary, the Committee decided
+ that the apparatus seemed to be built with a perfect understanding of the
+ purpose to be fulfilled as far as one could judge from a study of the
+ apparatus at rest; they therefore authorised M. Ader to take the machine
+ apart and carry it to the camp at Satory so as to proceed with the trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By letter of August 19th the Chairman made report to the Minister of the
+ findings of the Committee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work on the grounds having taken longer than was anticipated, the
+ Chairman took advantage of this delay to call the Committee together for a
+ second meeting, during which M. Ader was to run the two propulsive screws
+ situated at the forward end of the apparatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meeting was held October 2nd. It gave the Committee an opportunity to
+ appreciate the motive power in all its details; firebox, boiler, engine,
+ under perfect control, absolute condensation, automatic fuel and feed of
+ the liquid to be vaporised, automatic lubrication and scavenging;
+ everything, in a word, seemed well designed and executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weights in comparison with the power of the engine realised a
+ considerable advance over anything made to date, since the two engines
+ weighed together realised 42 kg., the firebox and boiler 60 kg., the
+ condenser 15 kg., or a total of 117 kg. for approximately 40 horse-power
+ or a little less than 3 kg. per horse-power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the members summed up the general opinion by saying: 'Whatever may
+ be the result from an aviation point of view, a result which could not be
+ foreseen for the moment, it was nevertheless proven that from a mechanical
+ point of view M. Ader's apparatus was of the greatest interest and real
+ ingeniosity. He expressed a hope that in any case the machine would not be
+ lost to science.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second experiment in the workshop was made in the presence of the
+ Chairman, the purpose being to demonstrate that the wings, having a spread
+ of 17 metres, were sufficiently strong to support the weight of the
+ apparatus. With this object in view, 14 sliding supports were placed under
+ each one of these, representing imperfectly the manner in which the wings
+ would support the machine in the air; by gradually raising the supports
+ with the slides, the wheels on which the machine rested were lifted from
+ the ground. It was evident at that time that the members composing the
+ skeleton of the wings supported the apparatus, and it was quite evident
+ that when the wings were supported by the air on every point of their
+ surface, the stress would be better equalised than when resting on a few
+ supports, and therefore the resistance to breakage would be considerably
+ greater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this last test, the work on the ground being practically finished,
+ the machine was transported to Satory, assembled and again made ready for
+ trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first M. Ader was to manoeuvre the machine on the ground at a moderate
+ speed, then increase this until it was possible to judge whether there was
+ a tendency for the machine to rise; and it was only after M. Ader had
+ acquired sufficient practice that a meeting of the Committee was to be
+ called to be present at the first part of the trials; namely, volutions of
+ the apparatus on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first test took place on Tuesday, October 12th, in the presence of the
+ Chairman of the Committee. It had rained a good deal during the night and
+ the clay track would have offered considerable resistance to the rolling
+ of the machine; furthermore, a moderate wind was blowing from the
+ south-west, too strong during the early part of the afternoon to allow of
+ any trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward sunset, however, the wind having weakened, M. Ader decided to make
+ his first trial; the machine was taken out of its hangar, the wings were
+ mounted and steam raised. M. Ader in his seat had, on each side of him,
+ one man to the right and one to the left, whose duty was to rectify the
+ direction of the apparatus in the event that the action of the rear wheel
+ as a rudder would not be sufficient to hold the machine in a straight
+ course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At 5.25 p.m. the machine was started, at first slowly and then at an
+ increased speed; after 250 or 300 metres, the two men who were being
+ dragged by the apparatus were exhausted and forced to fall flat on the
+ ground in order to allow the wings to pass over them, and the trip around
+ the track was completed, a total of 1,400 metres, without incident, at a
+ fair speed, which could be estimated to be from 300 to 400 metres per
+ minute. Notwithstanding M. Ader's inexperience, this being the first time
+ that he had run his apparatus, he followed approximately the chalk line
+ which marked the centre of the track and he stopped at the exact point
+ from which he started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The marks of the wheels on the ground, which was rather soft, did not show
+ up very much, and it was clear that a part of the weight of the apparatus
+ had been supported by the wings, though the speed was only about one-third
+ of what the machine could do had M. Ader used all its motive power; he was
+ running at a pressure of from 3 to 4 atmospheres, when he could have used
+ 10 to 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This first trial, so fortunately accomplished, was of great importance; it
+ was the first time that a comparatively heavy vehicle (nearly 400 kg.,
+ including the weight of the operator, fuel, and water) had been set in
+ motion by a tractive apparatus, using the air solely as a propelling
+ medium. The favourable report turned in by the Committee after the meeting
+ of October 2nd was found justified by the results demonstrated on the
+ grounds, and the first problem of aviation, namely, the creation of
+ efficient motive power, could be considered as solved, since the
+ propulsion of the apparatus in the air would be a great deal easier than
+ the traction on the ground, provided that the second part of the problem,
+ the sustaining of the machine in the air, would be realised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, Wednesday the 13th, no further trials were made on account
+ of the rain and wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Thursday the 14th the Chairman requested that General Grillon, who had
+ just been appointed a member of the Committee, accompany him so as to have
+ a second witness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weather was fine, but a fairly strong, gusty wind was blowing from the
+ south. M. Ader explained to the two members of the Committee the danger of
+ these gusts, since at two points of the circumference the wind would
+ strike him sideways. The wind was blowing in the direction A B, the
+ apparatus starting from C, and running in the direction shown by the
+ arrow. The first dangerous spot would be at B. The apparatus had been kept
+ in readiness in the event of the wind dying down. Toward sunset the wind
+ seemed to die down, as it had done on the evening of the 12th. M. Ader
+ hesitated, which, unfortunately, further events only justified, but
+ decided to make a new trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the start, which took place at 5.15 p.m., the apparatus, having the
+ wind in the rear, seemed to run at a fairly regular speed; it was,
+ nevertheless, easy to note from the marks of the wheels on the ground that
+ the rear part of the apparatus had been lifted and that the rear wheel,
+ being the rudder, had not been in constant contact with the ground. When
+ the machine came to the neighbourhood of B, the two members of the
+ Committee saw the machine swerve suddenly out of the track in a
+ semicircle, lean over to the right and finally stop. They immediately
+ proceeded to the point where the accident had taken place and endeavoured
+ to find an explanation for the same. The Chairman finally decided as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Ader was the victim of a gust of wind which he had feared as he
+ explained before starting out; feeling himself thrown out of his course,
+ he tried to use the rudder energetically, but at that time the rear wheel
+ was not in contact with the ground, and therefore did not perform its
+ function; the canvas rudder, which had as its purpose the manoeuvring of
+ the machine in the air, did not have sufficient action on the ground. It
+ would have been possible without any doubt to react by using the
+ propellers at unequal speed, but M. Ader, being still inexperienced, had
+ not thought of this. Furthermore, he was thrown out of his course so
+ quickly that he decided, in order to avoid a more serious accident, to
+ stop both engines. This sudden stop produced the half-circle already
+ described and the fall of the machine on its side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The damage to the machine was serious; consisting at first sight of the
+ rupture of both propellers, the rear left wheel and the bending of the
+ left wing tip. It will only be possible to determine after the machine is
+ taken apart whether the engine, and more particularly the organs of
+ transmission, have been put out of line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever the damage may be, though comparatively easy to repair, it will
+ take a certain amount of time, and taking into consideration the time of
+ year it is evident that the tests will have to be adjourned for the
+ present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As has been said in the above report, the tests, though prematurely
+ interrupted, have shown results of great importance, and though the final
+ results are hard to foresee, it would seem advisable to continue the
+ trials. By waiting for the return of spring there will be plenty of time
+ to finish the tests and it will not be necessary to rush matters, which
+ was a partial cause of the accident. The Chairman of the Committee
+ personally has but one hope, and that is that a decision be reached
+ accordingly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Division General,
+
+ Chairman of the Committee,
+
+ Mensier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Boulogne-sur-Seine, October 21st, 1897.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Annex to the Report of October 21st.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ General Grillon, who was present at the trials of the 14th, and who saw
+ the report relative to what happened during that day, made the following
+ observations in writing, which are reproduced herewith in quotation marks.
+ The Chairman of the Committee does not agree with General Grillon and he
+ answers these observations paragraph by paragraph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. 'If the rear wheel (there is only one of these) left but intermittent
+ tracks on the ground, does that prove that the machine has a tendency to
+ rise when running at a certain speed?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answer.&mdash;This does not prove anything in any way, and I was very
+ careful not to mention this in my report, this point being exactly what
+ was needed and that was not demonstrated during the two tests made on the
+ grounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Does not this unequal pressure of the two pair of wheels on the ground
+ show that the centre of gravity of the apparatus is placed too far forward
+ and that under the impulse of the propellers the machine has a tendency to
+ tilt forward, due to the resistance of the air?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answer.&mdash;The tendency of the apparatus to rise from the rear when it
+ was running with the wind seemed to be brought about by the effects of the
+ wind on the huge wings, having a spread of 17 metres, and I believe that
+ when the machine would have faced the wind the front wheels would have
+ been lifted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the trials of October 12th, when a complete circuit of the track
+ was accomplished without incidents, as I and Lieut. Binet witnessed, there
+ was practically no wind. I was therefore unable to verify whether during
+ this circuit the two front wheels or the rear wheel were in constant
+ contact with the ground, because when the trial was over it was dark (it
+ was 5.30) and the next day it was impossible to see anything because it
+ had rained during the night and during Wednesday morning. But what would
+ prove that the rear wheel was in contact with the ground at all times is
+ the fact that M. Ader, though inexperienced, did not swerve from the
+ circular track, which would prove that he steered pretty well with his
+ rear wheel&mdash;this he could not have done if he had been in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the tests of the 12th, the speed was at least as great as on the 14th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. 'It would seem to me that if M. Ader thought that his rear wheels were
+ off the ground he should have used his canvas rudder in order to regain
+ his proper course; this was the best way of causing the machine to rotate,
+ since it would have given an angular motion to the front axle.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answer.&mdash;I state in my report that the canvas rudder whose object was
+ the manoeuvre of the apparatus in the air could have no effect on the
+ apparatus on the ground, and to convince oneself of this point it is only
+ necessary to consider the small surface of this canvas rudder compared
+ with the mass to be handled on the ground, a weight of approximately 400
+ kg. According to my idea, and as I have stated in my report, M. Ader
+ should have steered by increasing the speed on one of his propellers and
+ slowing down the other. He admitted afterward that this remark was well
+ founded, but that he did not have time to think of it owing to the
+ suddenness of the accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. 'When the apparatus fell on its side it was under the sole influence of
+ the wind, since M. Ader had stopped the machine. Have we not a result here
+ which will always be the same when the machine comes to the ground, since
+ the engines will always have to be stopped or slowed down when coming to
+ the ground? Here seems to be a bad defect of the apparatus under trial.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answer.&mdash;I believe that the apparatus fell on its side after coming
+ to a stop, not on account of the wind, but because the semicircle
+ described was on rough ground and one of the wheels had collapsed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mensier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ October 27th, 1897.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPEb" id="link2H_APPEb">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX B
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Specification and Claims of Wright Patent, No. 821393. Filed March 23rd,
+ 1903. Issued May 22nd, 1906. Expires May 22nd, 1923.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To all whom it may concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be it known that we, Orville Wright and Wilbur Wright, citizens of the
+ United States, residing in the city of Dayton, county of Montgomery, and
+ State of Ohio, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Flying
+ Machines, of which the following is a specification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our invention relates to that class of flying-machines in which the weight
+ is sustained by the reactions resulting when one or more aeroplanes are
+ moved through the air edgewise at a small angle of incidence, either by
+ the application of mechanical power or by the utilisation of the force of
+ gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The objects of our invention are to provide means for maintaining or
+ restoring the equilibrium or lateral balance of the apparatus, to provide
+ means for guiding the machine both vertically and horizontally, and to
+ provide a structure combining lightness, strength, convenience of
+ construction and certain other advantages which will hereinafter appear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these ends our invention consists in certain novel features, which we
+ will now proceed to describe and will then particularly point out in the
+ claims. In the accompanying drawings, Figure I 1 is a perspective view of
+ an apparatus embodying our invention in one form. Fig. 2 is a plan view of
+ the same, partly in horizontal section and partly broken away. Fig. 3 is a
+ side elevation, and Figs. 4 and 5 are detail views, of one form of
+ flexible joint for connecting the upright standards with the aeroplanes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In flying machines of the character to which this invention relates the
+ apparatus is supported in the air by reason of the contact between the air
+ and the under surface of one or more aeroplanes, the contact surface being
+ presented at a small angle of incidence to the air. The relative movements
+ of the air and aeroplane may be derived from the motion of the air in the
+ form of wind blowing in the direction opposite to that in which the
+ apparatus is travelling or by a combined downward and forward movement of
+ the machine, as in starting from an elevated position or by combination of
+ these two things, and in either case the operation is that of a
+ soaring-machine, while power applied to the machine to propel it
+ positively forward will cause the air to support the machine in a similar
+ manner. In either case owing to the varying conditions to be met there are
+ numerous disturbing forces which tend to shift the machine from the
+ position which it should occupy to obtain the desired results. It is the
+ chief object of our invention to provide means for remedying this
+ difficulty, and we will now proceed to describe the construction by means
+ of which these results are accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the accompanying drawing we have shown an apparatus embodying our
+ invention in one form. In this illustrative embodiment the machine is
+ shown as comprising two parallel superposed aeroplanes, 1 and 2, may be
+ embodied in a structure having a single aeroplane. Each aeroplane is of
+ considerably greater width from side to side than from front to rear. The
+ four corners of the upper aeroplane are indicated by the reference letters
+ a, b, c, and d, while the corresponding corners of the lower aeroplane 2
+ are indicated by the reference letters e, f, g, and h. The marginal lines
+ ab and ef indicate the front edges of the aeroplanes, the lateral margins
+ of the upper aeroplane are indicated, respectively, by the lines ad and
+ bc, the lateral margins of the lower aeroplane are indicated,
+ respectively, by the lines eh and fg, while the rear margins of the upper
+ and lower aeroplanes are indicated, respectively, by the lines cd and gh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before proceeding to a description of the fundamental theory of operation
+ of the structure we will first describe the preferred mode of constructing
+ the aeroplanes and those portions of the structure which serve to connect
+ the two aeroplanes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each aeroplane is formed by stretching cloth or other suitable fabric over
+ a frame composed of two parallel transverse spars 3, extending from side
+ to side of the machine, their ends being connected by bows 4 extending
+ from front to rear of the machine. The front and rear spars 3 of each
+ aeroplane are connected by a series of parallel ribs 5, which preferably
+ extend somewhat beyond the rear spar, as shown. These spars, bows, and
+ ribs are preferably constructed of wood having the necessary strength,
+ combined with lightness and flexibility. Upon this framework the cloth
+ which forms the supporting surface of the aeroplane is secured, the frame
+ being enclosed in the cloth. The cloth for each aeroplane previous to its
+ attachment to its frame is cut on the bias and made up into a single piece
+ approximately the size and shape of the aeroplane, having the threads of
+ the fabric arranged diagonally to the transverse spars and longitudinal
+ ribs, as indicated at 6 in Fig. 2. Thus the diagonal threads of the cloth
+ form truss systems with the spars and ribs, the threads constituting the
+ diagonal members. A hem is formed at the rear edge of the cloth to receive
+ a wire 7, which is connected to the ends of the rear spar and supported by
+ the rearwardly-extending ends of the longitudinal ribs 5, thus forming a
+ rearwardly-extending flap or portion of the aeroplane. This construction
+ of the aeroplane gives a surface which has very great strength to
+ withstand lateral and longitudinal strains, at the same time being capable
+ of being bent or twisted in the manner hereinafter described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When two aeroplanes are employed, as in the construction illustrated, they
+ are connected together by upright standards 8. These standards are
+ substantially rigid, being preferably constructed of wood and of equal
+ length, equally spaced along the front and rear edges of the aeroplane, to
+ which they are connected at their top and bottom ends by hinged joints or
+ universal joints of any suitable description. We have shown one form of
+ connection which may be used for this purpose in Figs. 4 and 5 of the
+ drawings. In this construction each end of the standard 8 has secured to
+ it an eye 9 which engages with a hook 10, secured to a bracket plate 11,
+ which latter plate is in turn fastened to the spar 3. Diagonal braces or
+ stay-wires 12 extend from each end of each standard to the opposite ends
+ of the adjacent standards, and as a convenient mode of attaching these
+ parts I have shown a hook 13 made integral with the hook 10 to receive the
+ end of one of the stay-wires, the other stay-wire being mounted on the
+ hook 10. The hook 13 is shown as bent down to retain the stay-wire in
+ connection to it, while the hook 10 is shown as provided with a pin 14 to
+ hold the staywire 12 and eye 9 in position thereon. It will be seen that
+ this construction forms a truss system which gives the whole machine great
+ transverse rigidity and strength, while at the same time the jointed
+ connections of the parts permit the aeroplanes to be bent or twisted in
+ the manner which we will now proceed to describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15 indicates a rope or other flexible connection extending lengthwise of
+ the front of the machine above the lower aeroplane, passing under pulleys
+ or other suitable guides 16 at the front corners e and f of the lower
+ aeroplane, and extending thence upward and rearward to the upper rear
+ corners c and d, of the upper aeroplane, where they are attached, as
+ indicated at 17. To the central portion of the rope there is connected a
+ laterally-movable cradle 18, which forms a means for moving the rope
+ lengthwise in one direction or the other, the cradle being movable toward
+ either side of the machine. We have devised this cradle as a convenient
+ means for operating the rope 15, and the machine is intended to be
+ generally used with the operator lying face downward on the lower
+ aeroplane, with his head to the front, so that the operator's body rests
+ on the cradle, and the cradle can be moved laterally by the movements of
+ the operator's body. It will be understood, however, that the rope 15 may
+ be manipulated in any suitable manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19 indicates a second rope extending transversely of the machine along the
+ rear edge of the body portion of the lower aeroplane, passing under
+ suitable pulleys or guides 20 at the rear corners g and h of the lower
+ aeroplane and extending thence diagonally upward to the front corners a
+ and b of the upper aeroplane, where its ends are secured in any suitable
+ manner, as indicated at 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considering the structure so far as we have now described it, and assuming
+ that the cradle 18 be moved to the right in Figs. 1 and 2, as indicated by
+ the arrows applied to the cradle in Fig. 1 and by the dotted lines in Fig.
+ 2, it will be seen that that portion of the rope 15 passing under the
+ guide pulley at the corner e and secured to the corner d will be under
+ tension, while slack is paid out throughout the other side or half of the
+ rope 15. The part of the rope 15 under tension exercises a downward pull
+ upon the rear upper corner d of the structure and an upward pull upon the
+ front lower corner e, as indicated by the arrows. This causes the corner d
+ to move downward and the corner e to move upward. As the corner e moves
+ upward it carries the corner a upward with it, since the intermediate
+ standard 8 is substantially rigid and maintains an equal distance between
+ the corners a and e at all times. Similarly, the standard 8, connecting
+ the corners d and h, causes the corner h to move downward in unison with
+ the corner d. Since the corner a thus moves upward and the corner h moves
+ downward, that portion of the rope 19 connected to the corner a will be
+ pulled upward through the pulley 20 at the corner h, and the pull thus
+ exerted on the rope 19 will pull the corner b on the other wise of the
+ machine downward and at the same time pull the corner g at said other side
+ of the machine upward. This results in a downward movement of the corner b
+ and an upward movement of the corner c. Thus it results from a lateral
+ movement of the cradle 18 to the right in Fig. 1 that the lateral margins
+ ad and eh at one side of the machine are moved from their normal positions
+ in which they lie in the normal planes of their respective aeroplanes,
+ into angular relations with said normal planes, each lateral margin on
+ this side of the machine being raised above said normal plane at its
+ forward end and depressed below said normal plane at its rear end, said
+ lateral margins being thus inclined upward and forward. At the same time a
+ reverse inclination is imparted to the lateral margins bc end fg at the
+ other side of the machine, their inclination being downward and forward.
+ These positions are indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 1 of the drawings. A
+ movement of the cradle 18 in the opposite direction from its normal
+ position will reverse the angular inclination of the lateral margins of
+ the aeroplanes in an obvious manner. By reason of this construction it
+ will be seen that with the particular mode of construction now under
+ consideration it is possible to move the forward corner of the lateral
+ edges of the aeroplane on one side of the machine either above or below
+ the normal planes of the aeroplanes, a reverse movement of the forward
+ corners of the lateral margins on the other side of the machine occurring
+ simultaneously. During this operation each aeroplane is twisted or
+ distorted around a line extending centrally across the same from the
+ middle of one lateral margin to the middle of the other lateral margin,
+ the twist due to the moving of the lateral margins to different angles
+ extending across each aeroplane from side to side, so that each aeroplane
+ surface is given a helicoidal warp or twist. We prefer this construction
+ and mode of operation for the reason that it gives a gradually increasing
+ angle to the body of each aeroplane from the centre longitudinal line
+ thereof outward to the margin, thus giving a continuous surface on each
+ side of the machine, which has a gradually increasing or decreasing angle
+ of incidence from the centre of the machine to either side. We wish it to
+ be understood, however, that our invention is not limited to this
+ particular construction, since any construction whereby the angular
+ relations of the lateral margins of the aeroplanes may be varied in
+ opposite directions with respect to the normal planes of said aeroplanes
+ comes within the scope of our invention. Furthermore, it should be
+ understood that while the lateral margins of the aeroplanes move to
+ different angular positions with respect to or above and below the normal
+ planes of said aeroplanes, it does not necessarily follow that these
+ movements bring the opposite lateral edges to different angles
+ respectively above and below a horizontal plane since the normal planes of
+ the bodies of the aeroplanes are inclined to the horizontal when the
+ machine is in flight, said inclination being downward from front to rear,
+ and while the forward corners on one side of the machine may be depressed
+ below the normal planes of the bodies of the aeroplanes said depression is
+ not necessarily sufficient to carry them below the horizontal planes
+ passing through the rear corners on that side. Moreover, although we
+ prefer to so construct the apparatus that the movements of the lateral
+ margins on the opposite sides of the machine are equal in extent and
+ opposite m direction, yet our invention is not limited to a construction
+ producing this result, since it may be desirable under certain
+ circumstances to move the lateral margins on one side of the machine just
+ described without moving the lateral margins on the other side of the
+ machine to an equal extent in the opposite direction. Turning now to the
+ purpose of this provision for moving the lateral margins of the aeroplanes
+ in the manner described, it should be premised that owing to various
+ conditions of wind pressure and other causes the body of the machine is
+ apt to become unbalanced laterally, one side tending to sink and the other
+ side tending to rise, the machine turning around its central longitudinal
+ axis. The provision which we have just described enables the operator to
+ meet this difficulty and preserve the lateral balance of the machine.
+ Assuming that for some cause that side of the machine which lies to the
+ left of the observer in Figs. 1 and 2 has shown a tendency to drop
+ downward, a movement of the cradle 18 to the right of said figures, as
+ herein before assumed, will move the lateral margins of the aeroplanes in
+ the manner already described, so that the margins ad and eh will be
+ inclined downward and rearward, and the lateral margins bc and fg will be
+ inclined upward and rearward with respect to the normal planes of the
+ bodies of the aeroplanes. With the parts of the machine in this position
+ it will be seen that the lateral margins ad and eh present a larger angle
+ of incidence to the resisting air, while the lateral margins on the other
+ side of the machine present a smaller angle of incidence. Owing to this
+ fact, the side of the machine presenting the larger angle of incidence
+ will tend to lift or move upward, and this upward movement will restore
+ the lateral balance of the machine. When the other side of the machine
+ tends to drop, a movement of the cradle 18 in the reverse direction will
+ restore the machine to its normal lateral equilibrium. Of course, the same
+ effect will be produced in the same way in the case of a machine employing
+ only a single aeroplane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In connection with the body of the machine as thus operated we employ a
+ vertical rudder or tail 22, so supported as to turn around a vertical
+ axis. This rudder is supported at the rear ends on supports or arms 23,
+ pivoted at their forward ends to the rear margins of the upper and lower
+ aeroplanes, respectively. These supports are preferably V-shaped, as
+ shown, so that their forward ends are comparatively widely separated,
+ their pivots being indicated at 24. Said supports are free to swing upward
+ at their free rear ends, as indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 3, their
+ downward movement being limited in any suitable manner. The vertical
+ pivots of the rudder 22 are indicated at 25, and one of these pivots has
+ mounted thereon a sheave or pulley 26, around which passes a tiller-rope
+ 27, the ends of which are extended out laterally and secured to the rope
+ 19 on opposite sides of the central point of said rope. By reason of this
+ construction the lateral shifting of the cradle 18 serves to turn the
+ rudder to one side or the other of the line of flight. It will be observed
+ in this connection that the construction is such that the rudder will
+ always be so turned as to present its resisting surface on that side of
+ the machine on which the lateral margins of the aeroplanes present the
+ least angle of resistance. The reason of this construction is that when
+ the lateral margins of the aeroplanes are so turned in the manner
+ hereinbefore described as to present different angles of incidence to the
+ atmosphere, that side presenting the largest angle of incidence, although
+ being lifted or moved upward in the manner already described, at the same
+ time meets with an increased resistance to its forward motion, while at
+ the same time the other side of the machine, presenting a smaller angle of
+ incidence, meets with less resistance to its forward motion and tends to
+ move forward more rapidly than the retarded side. This gives the machine a
+ tendency to turn around its vertical axis, and this tendency if not
+ properly met will not only change the direction of the front of the
+ machine, but will ultimately permit one side thereof to drop into a
+ position vertically below the other side with the aero planes in vertical
+ position, thus causing the machine to fall. The movement of the rudder,
+ hereinbefore described, prevents this action, since it exerts a retarding
+ influence on that side of the machine which tends to move forward too
+ rapidly and keeps the machine with its front properly presented to the
+ direction of flight and with its body properly balanced around its central
+ longitudinal axis. The pivoting of the supports 23 so as to permit them to
+ swing upward prevents injury to the rudder and its supports in case the
+ machine alights at such an angle as to cause the rudder to strike the
+ ground first, the parts yielding upward, as indicated in dotted lines in
+ Fig. 3, and thus preventing injury or breakage. We wish it to be
+ understood, however, that we do not limit ourselves to the particular
+ description of rudder set forth, the essential being that the rudder shall
+ be vertical and shall be so moved as to present its resisting surface on
+ that side of the machine which offers the least resistance to the
+ atmosphere, so as to counteract the tendency of the machine to turn around
+ a vertical axis when the two sides thereof offer different resistances to
+ the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the central portion of the front of the machine struts 28 extend
+ horizontally forward from the lower aeroplane, and struts 29 extend
+ downward and forward from the central portion of the upper aeroplane,
+ their front ends being united to the struts 28, the forward extremities of
+ which are turned up, as indicated at 30. These struts 28 and 29 form
+ truss-skids projecting in front of the whole frame of the machine and
+ serving to prevent the machine from rolling over forward when it alights.
+ The struts 29 serve to brace the upper portion of the main frame and
+ resist its tendency to move forward after the lower aeroplane has been
+ stopped by its contact with the earth, thereby relieving the rope 19 from
+ undue strain, for it will be understood that when the machine comes into
+ contact with the earth, further forward movement of the lower portion
+ thereof being suddenly arrested, the inertia of the upper portion would
+ tend to cause it to continue to move forward if not prevented by the
+ struts 29, and this forward movement of the upper portion would bring a
+ very violent strain upon the rope 19, since it is fastened to the upper
+ portion at both of its ends, while its lower portion is connected by the
+ guides 20 to the lower portion. The struts 28 and 29 also serve to support
+ the front or horizontal rudder, the construction of which we will now
+ proceed to describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The front rudder 31 is a horizontal rudder having a flexible body, the
+ same consisting of three stiff crosspieces or sticks 32, 33, and 34, and
+ the flexible ribs 35, connecting said cross-pieces and extending from
+ front to rear. The frame thus provided is covered by a suitable fabric
+ stretched over the same to form the body of the rudder. The rudder is
+ supported from the struts 29 by means of the intermediate cross-piece 32,
+ which is located near the centre of pressure slightly in front of a line
+ equidistant between the front and rear edges of the rudder, the
+ cross-piece 32 forming the pivotal axis of the rudder, so as to constitute
+ a balanced rudder. To the front edge of the rudder there are connected
+ springs 36 which springs are connected to the upturned ends 30 of the
+ struts 28, the construction being such that said springs tend to resist
+ any movement either upward or downward of the front edge of the horizontal
+ rudder. The rear edge of the rudder lies immediately in front of the
+ operator and may be operated by him in any suitable manner. We have shown
+ a mechanism for this purpose comprising a roller or shaft 37, which may be
+ grasped by the operator so as to turn the same in either direction. Bands
+ 38 extend from the roller 37 forward to and around a similar roller or
+ shaft 39, both rollers or shafts being supported in suitable bearings on
+ the struts 28. The forward roller or shaft has rearwardly-extending arms
+ 40, which are connected by links 41 with the rear edge of the rudder 31.
+ The normal position of the rudder 31 is neutral or substantially parallel
+ with the aeroplanes 1 and 2; but its rear edge may be moved upward or
+ downward, so as to be above or below the normal plane of said rudder
+ through the mechanism provided for that purpose. It will be seen that the
+ springs 36 will resist any tendency of the forward edge of the rudder to
+ move in either direction, so that when force is applied to the rear edge
+ of said rudder the longitudinal ribs 35 bend, and the rudder thus presents
+ a concave surface to the action of the wind either above or below its
+ normal plane, said surface presenting a small angle of incidence at its
+ forward portion and said angle of incidence rapidly increasing toward the
+ rear. This greatly increases the efficiency of the rudder as compared with
+ a plane surface of equal area. By regulating the pressure on the upper and
+ lower sides of the rudder through changes of angle and curvature in the
+ manner described a turning movement of the main structure around its
+ transverse axis may be effected, and the course of the machine may thus be
+ directed upward or downward at the will of the operator and the
+ longitudinal balance thereof maintained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrary to the usual custom, we place the horizontal rudder in front of
+ the aeroplanes at a negative angle and employ no horizontal tail at all.
+ By this arrangement we obtain a forward surface which is almost entirely
+ free from pressure under ordinary conditions of flight, but which even if
+ not moved at all from its original position becomes an efficient
+ lifting-surface whenever the speed of the machine is accidentally reduced
+ very much below the normal, and thus largely counteracts that backward
+ travel of the centre of pressure on the aeroplanes which has frequently
+ been productive of serious injuries by causing the machine to turn
+ downward and forward and strike the ground head-on. We are aware that a
+ forward horizontal rudder of different construction has been used in
+ combination with a supporting surface and a rear horizontal-rudder; but
+ this combination was not intended to effect and does not effect the object
+ which we obtain by the arrangement hereinbefore described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have used the term 'aeroplane' in this specification and the appended
+ claims to indicate the supporting surface or supporting surfaces by means
+ of which the machine is sustained in the air, and by this term we wish to
+ be understood as including any suitable supporting surface which normally
+ is substantially flat, although. Of course, when constructed of cloth or
+ other flexible fabric, as we prefer to construct them, these surfaces may
+ receive more or less curvature from the resistance of the air, as
+ indicated in Fig. 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not wish to be understood as limiting ourselves strictly to the
+ precise details of construction hereinbefore described and shown in the
+ accompanying drawings, as it is obvious that these details may be modified
+ without departing from the principles of our invention. For instance,
+ while we prefer the construction illustrated in which each aeroplane is
+ given a twist along its entire length in order to set its opposite lateral
+ margins at different angles, we have already pointed out that our
+ invention is not limited to this form of construction, since it is only
+ necessary to move the lateral marginal portions, and where these portions
+ alone are moved only those upright standards which support the movable
+ portion require flexible connections at their ends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus fully described our invention, what we claim as new, and
+ desire to secure by Letters Patent, is:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. In a flying machine, a normally flat aeroplane having lateral marginal
+ portions capable of movement to different positions above or below the
+ normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being about an
+ axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral marginal
+ portions may be moved to different angles relatively to the normal plane
+ of the body of the aeroplane, so as to present to the atmosphere different
+ angles of incidence, and means for so moving said lateral marginal
+ portions, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. In a flying machine, the combination, with two normally parallel
+ aeroplanes, superposed the one above the other, of upright standards
+ connecting said planes at their margins, the connections between the
+ standards and aeroplanes at the lateral portions of the aeroplanes being
+ by means of flexible joints, each of said aeroplanes having lateral
+ marginal portions capable of movement to different positions above or
+ below the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being
+ about an axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral
+ marginal portions may be moved to different angles relatively to the
+ normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, so as to present to the
+ atmosphere different angles of incidence, the standards maintaining a
+ fixed distance between the portions of the aeroplanes which they connect,
+ and means for imparting such movement to the lateral marginal portions of
+ the aeroplanes, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. In a flying machine, a normally flat aeroplane having lateral marginal
+ portions capable of movement to different positions above or below the
+ normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being about an
+ axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral marginal
+ portions may be moved to different angles relatively to the normal plane
+ of the body of the aeroplane, and also to different angles relatively to
+ each other, so as to present to the atmosphere different angles of
+ incidence, and means for simultaneously imparting such movement to said
+ lateral marginal portions, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. In a flying machine, the combination, with parallel superposed
+ aeroplanes, each having lateral marginal portions capable of movement to
+ different positions above or below the normal plane of the body of the
+ aeroplane, such movement being about an axis transverse to the line of
+ flight, whereby said lateral marginal portions may be moved to different
+ angles relatively to the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, and to
+ different angles relatively to each other, so as to present to the
+ atmosphere different angles of incidence, of uprights connecting said
+ aeroplanes at their edges, the uprights connecting the lateral portions of
+ the aeroplanes being connected with said aeroplanes by flexible joints,
+ and means for simultaneously imparting such movement to said lateral
+ marginal portions, the standards maintaining a fixed distance between the
+ parts which they connect, whereby the lateral portions on the same side of
+ the machine are moved to the same angle, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. In a flying machine, an aeroplane having substantially the form of a
+ normally flat rectangle elongated transversely to the line of flight, in
+ combination which means for imparting to the lateral margins of said
+ aeroplane a movement about an axis lying in the body of the aeroplane
+ perpendicular to said lateral margins, and thereby moving said lateral
+ margins into different angular relations to the normal plane of the body
+ of the aeroplane, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed and normally
+ parallel aeroplanes, each having substantially the form of a normally flat
+ rectangle elongated transversely to the line of flight, of upright
+ standards connecting the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain their
+ equidistance, those standards at the lateral portions of said aeroplanes
+ being connected therewith by flexible joints, and means for simultaneously
+ imparting to both lateral margins of both aeroplanes a movement about axes
+ which are perpendicular to said margins and in the planes of the bodies of
+ the respective aeroplanes, and thereby moving the lateral margins on the
+ opposite sides of the machine into different angular relations to the
+ normal planes of the respective aeroplanes, the margins on the same side
+ of the machine moving to the same angle, and the margins on one side of
+ the machine moving to an angle different from the angle to which the
+ margins on the other side of the machine move, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, and means for
+ simultaneously moving the lateral portions thereof into different angular
+ relations to the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane and to each
+ other, so as to present to the atmosphere different angles of incidence,
+ of a vertical rudder, and means whereby said rudder is caused to present
+ to the wind that side thereof nearest the side of the aeroplane having the
+ smaller angle of incidence and offering the least resistance to the
+ atmosphere, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed and normally
+ parallel aeroplanes, upright standards connecting the edges of said
+ aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance, those standards at the lateral
+ portions of said aeroplanes being connected therewith by flexible joints,
+ and means for simultaneously moving both lateral portions of both
+ aeroplanes into different angular relations to the normal planes of the
+ bodies of the respective aeroplanes, the lateral portions on one side of
+ the machine being moved to an angle different from that to which the
+ lateral portions on the other side of the machine are moved, so as to
+ present different angles of incidence at the two sides of the machine, of
+ a vertical rudder, and means whereby said rudder is caused to present to
+ the wind that side thereof nearest the side of the aeroplanes having the
+ smaller angle of incidence and offering the least resistance to the
+ atmosphere, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. In a flying machine, an aeroplane normally flat and elongated
+ transversely to the line of flight, in combination with means for
+ imparting to said aeroplane a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse to
+ the line of flight and extending centrally along the body aeroplane in the
+ direction of the elongation aeroplane, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. In a flying machine, two aeroplanes, each normally flat and elongated
+ transversely to the line of flight, and upright standards connecting the
+ edges of said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance, the connections
+ between said standards and aeroplanes being by means of flexible joints,
+ in combination with means for simultaneously imparting to each of said
+ aeroplanes a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse to the line of
+ flight and extending centrally along the body of the aeroplane in the
+ direction of the aeroplane, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. In a flying machine, two aeroplanes, each normally flat and elongated
+ transversely to the line of flight, and upright standards connecting the
+ edges of said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance, the connections
+ between such standards and aeroplanes being by means of flexible joints,
+ in combination with means for simultaneously imparting to each of said
+ aeroplanes a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse to the line of
+ flight and extending centrally along the body of the aeroplane in the
+ direction of the elongation of the aeroplane, a vertical rudder, and means
+ whereby said rudder is caused to present to the wind that side thereof
+ nearest the side of the aeroplanes having the smaller angle of incidence
+ and offering the least resistance to the atmosphere, substantially as
+ described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, of a normally
+ flat and substantially horizontal flexible rudder, and means for curving
+ said rudder rearwardly and upwardly or rearwardly and downwardly with
+ respect to its normal plane, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, of a normally
+ flat and substantially horizontal flexible rudder pivotally mounted on an
+ axis transverse to the line of flight near its centre, springs resisting
+ vertical movement of the front edge of said rudder, and means for moving
+ the rear edge of said rudder, above or below the normal plane thereof,
+ substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. A flying machine comprising superposed connected aeroplanes means for
+ moving the opposite lateral portions of said aeroplanes to different
+ angles to the normal planes thereof, a vertical rudder, means for moving
+ said vertical rudder toward that side of the machine presenting the
+ smaller angle of incidence and the least resistance to the atmosphere, and
+ a horizontal rudder provided with means for presenting its upper or under
+ surface to the resistance of the atmosphere, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. A flying machine comprising superposed connected aeroplanes, means for
+ moving the opposite lateral portions of said aeroplanes to different
+ angles to the normal planes thereof, a vertical rudder, means for moving
+ said vertical rudder toward that side of the machine presenting the
+ smaller angle of incidence and the least resistance to the atmosphere, and
+ a horizontal rudder provided with means for presenting its upper or under
+ surface to the resistance of the atmosphere, said vertical rudder being
+ located at the rear of the machine and said horizontal rudder at the front
+ of the machine, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed and
+ connected aeroplanes, of an arm extending rearward from each aeroplane,
+ said arms being parallel and free to swing upward at their rear ends, and
+ a vertical rudder pivotally mounted in the rear ends of said arms,
+ substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. A flying machine comprising two superposed aeroplanes, normally flat
+ but flexible, upright standards connecting the margins of said aeroplanes,
+ said standards being connected to said aeroplanes by universal joints,
+ diagonal stay-wires connecting the opposite ends of the adjacent
+ standards, a rope extending along the front edge of the lower aeroplane,
+ passing through guides at the front corners thereof, and having its ends
+ secured to the rear corners of the upper aeroplane, and a rope extending
+ along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, passing through guides at the
+ rear corners thereof, and having its ends secured to the front corners of
+ the upper aeroplane, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. A flying machine comprising two superposed aeroplanes, normally flat
+ but flexible, upright standards connecting the margins of said aeroplanes,
+ said standards being connected to said aeroplanes by universal joints,
+ diagonal stay-wires connecting the opposite ends of the adjacent
+ standards, a rope extending along the front edge of the lower aeroplane,
+ passing through guides at the front corners thereof, and having its ends
+ secured to the rear corners of the upper aeroplane, and a rope extending
+ along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, passing through guides at the
+ rear corners thereof, and having its ends secured to the front corners of
+ the upper aeroplane, in combination with a vertical rudder, and a
+ tiller-rope connecting said rudder with the rope extending along the rear
+ edge of the lower aeroplane, substantially as described.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ORVILLE WRIGHT.
+
+ WILBUR WRIGHT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Witnesses:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chas. E. Taylor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ E. Earle Forrer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPEc" id="link2H_APPEc">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX C
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Proclamation published by the French Government on balloon ascents, 1783.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC! PARIS, 27TH AUGUST, 1783.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the Ascent of balloons or globes in the air. The one in question has
+ been raised in Paris this day, 27th August, 1783, at 5 p.m., in the Champ
+ de Mars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Discovery has been made, which the Government deems it right to make
+ known, so that alarm be not occasioned to the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On calculating the different weights of hot air, hydrogen gas, and common
+ air, it has been found that a balloon filled with either of the two former
+ will rise toward heaven till it is in equilibrium with the surrounding
+ air, which may not happen until it has attained a great height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first experiment was made at Annonay, in Vivarais, MM. Montgolfier,
+ the inventors; a globe formed of canvas and paper, 105 feet in
+ circumference, filled with heated air, reached an uncalculated height. The
+ same experiment has just been renewed in Paris before a great crowd. A
+ globe of taffetas or light canvas covered by elastic gum and filled with
+ inflammable air, has risen from the Champ de Mars, and been lost to view
+ in the clouds, being borne in a north-westerly direction. One cannot
+ foresee where it will descend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is proposed to repeat these experiments on a larger scale. Any one who
+ shall see in the sky such a globe, which resembles 'la lune obscurcie,'
+ should be aware that, far from being an alarming phenomenon, it is only a
+ machine that cannot possibly cause any harm, and which will some day prove
+ serviceable to the wants of society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (Signed) DE SAUVIGNY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LENOIR. <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A History of Aeronautics, by E. Charles Vivian
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of Aeronautics, by E. Charles Vivian
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A History of Aeronautics
+
+Author: E. Charles Vivian
+
+Posting Date: July 26, 2008 [EBook #874]
+Release Date: April, 1997
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF AERONAUTICS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean
+
+
+
+
+
+A HISTORY OF AERONAUTICS
+
+by E. Charles Vivian
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+Although successful heavier-than-air flight is less than two decades
+old, and successful dirigible propulsion antedates it by a very short
+period, the mass of experiment and accomplishment renders any one-volume
+history of the subject a matter of selection. In addition to the
+restrictions imposed by space limits, the material for compilation is
+fragmentary, and, in many cases, scattered through periodical and
+other publications. Hitherto, there has been no attempt at furnishing a
+detailed account of how the aeroplane and the dirigible of to-day came
+to being, but each author who has treated the subject has devoted his
+attention to some special phase or section. The principal exception to
+this rule--Hildebrandt--wrote in 1906, and a good many of his statements
+are inaccurate, especially with regard to heavier-than-air experiment.
+
+Such statements as are made in this work are, where possible, given
+with acknowledgment to the authorities on which they rest. Further
+acknowledgment is due to Lieut.-Col. Lockwood Marsh, not only for the
+section on aeroplane development which he has contributed to the work,
+but also for his kindly assistance and advice in connection with the
+section on aerostation. The author's thanks are also due to the
+Royal Aeronautical Society for free access to its valuable library of
+aeronautical literature, and to Mr A. Vincent Clarke for permission to
+make use of his notes on the development of the aero engine.
+
+In this work is no claim to originality--it has been a matter mainly of
+compilation, and some stories, notably those of the Wright Brothers and
+of Santos Dumont, are better told in the words of the men themselves
+than any third party could tell them. The author claims, however, that
+this is the first attempt at recording the facts of development and
+stating, as fully as is possible in the compass of a single volume, how
+flight and aerostation have evolved. The time for a critical history of
+the subject is not yet.
+
+In the matter of illustrations, it has been found very difficult to
+secure suitable material. Even the official series of photographs of
+aeroplanes in the war period is curiously incomplete' and the methods
+of censorship during that period prevented any complete series being
+privately collected. Omissions in this respect will probably be remedied
+in future editions of the work, as fresh material is constantly being
+located.
+
+E.C.V. October, 1920.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Part I--THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROPLANE
+ I. THE PERIOD OF LEGEND
+ II. EARLY EXPERIMENTS
+ III. SIR GEORGE CAYLEY--THOMAS WALKER
+ IV. THE MIDDLE NINETEENTH CENTURY
+ V. WENHAM, LE BRIS, AND SOME OTHERS
+ VI. THE AGE OF THE GIANTS
+ VII. LILIENTHAL AND PILCHER
+ VIII. AMERICAN GLIDING EXPERIMENTS
+ IX. NOT PROVEN
+ X. SAMUEL PIERPOINT LANGLEY
+ XI. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS
+ XII. THE FIRST YEARS OF CONQUEST
+ XIII. FIRST FLIERS IN ENGLAND
+ XIV. RHEIMS, AND AFTER
+ XV. THE CHANNEL CROSSING
+ XVI. LONDON TO MANCHESTER
+ XVII. A SUMMARY--TO 1911
+ XVIII. A SUMMARY--TO 1914
+ XIX. THE WAR PERIOD--I
+ XX. THE WAR PERIOD--II
+ XXI. RECONSTRUCTION
+ XXII. 1919-1920
+
+ Part II--1903-1920: PROGRESS IN DESIGN
+ I. THE BEGINNINGS
+ II. MULTIPLICITY OF IDEAS
+ III. PROGRESS ON STANDARDISED LINES
+ IV. THE WAR PERIOD
+
+ Part III--AEROSTATICS
+ I. BEGINNINGS
+ II. THE FIRST DIRIGIBLES
+ III. SANTOS-DUMONT
+ IV. THE MILITARY DIRIGIBLE
+ V. BRITISH AIRSHIP DESIGN
+ VI. THE AIRSHIP COMMERCIALLY
+ VII. KITE BALLOONS
+
+ PART IV--ENGINE DEVELOPMENT
+ I. THE VERTICAL TYPE
+ II. THE VEE TYPE
+ III. THE RADIAL TYPE
+ IV. THE ROTARY TYPE
+ V. THE HORIZONTALLY-OPPOSED ENGINE
+ VI. THE TWO-STROKE CYCLE ENGINE
+ VII. ENGINES OF THE WAR PERIOD
+
+ APPENDICES
+
+
+
+
+PART I. THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROPLANE
+
+
+
+
+I. THE PERIOD OF LEGEND
+
+The blending of fact and fancy which men call legend reached its fullest
+and richest expression in the golden age of Greece, and thus it is to
+Greek mythology that one must turn for the best form of any legend which
+foreshadows history. Yet the prevalence of legends regarding flight,
+existing in the records of practically every race, shows that this form
+of transit was a dream of many peoples--man always wanted to fly, and
+imagined means of flight.
+
+In this age of steel, a very great part of the inventive genius of man
+has gone into devices intended to facilitate transport, both of men and
+goods, and the growth of civilisation is in reality the facilitation of
+transit, improvement of the means of communication. He was a genius who
+first hoisted a sail on a boat and saved the labour of rowing; equally,
+he who first harnessed ox or dog or horse to a wheeled vehicle was a
+genius--and these looked up, as men have looked up from the earliest
+days of all, seeing that the birds had solved the problem of transit far
+more completely than themselves. So it must have appeared, and there
+is no age in history in which some dreamers have not dreamed of the
+conquest of the air; if the caveman had left records, these would
+without doubt have showed that he, too, dreamed this dream. His main
+aim, probably, was self-preservation; when the dinosaur looked round the
+corner, the prehistoric bird got out of the way in his usual manner,
+and prehistoric man, such of him as succeeded in getting out of the way
+after his fashion--naturally envied the bird, and concluded that as lord
+of creation in a doubtful sort of way he ought to have equal
+facilities. He may have tried, like Simon the Magician, and other early
+experimenters, to improvise those facilities; assuming that he did,
+there is the groundwork of much of the older legend with regard to men
+who flew, since, when history began, legends would be fashioned out
+of attempts and even the desire to fly, these being compounded of some
+small ingredient of truth and much exaggeration and addition.
+
+In a study of the first beginnings of the art, it is worth while to
+mention even the earliest of the legends and traditions, for they show
+the trend of men's minds and the constancy of this dream that has become
+reality in the twentieth century. In one of the oldest records of the
+world, the Indian classic Mahabarata, it is stated that 'Krishna's
+enemies sought the aid of the demons, who built an aerial chariot with
+sides of iron and clad with wings. The chariot was driven through the
+sky till it stood over Dwarakha, where Krishna's followers dwelt,
+and from there it hurled down upon the city missiles that destroyed
+everything on which they fell.' Here is pure fable, not legend, but
+still a curious forecast of twentieth century bombs from a rigid
+dirigible. It is to be noted in this case, as in many, that the power to
+fly was an attribute of evil, not of good--it was the demons who built
+the chariot, even as at Friedrichshavn. Mediaeval legend in nearly
+every case, attributes flight to the aid of evil powers, and incites
+well-disposed people to stick to the solid earth--though, curiously
+enough, the pioneers of medieval times were very largely of priestly
+type, as witness the monk of Malmesbury.
+
+The legends of the dawn of history, however, distribute the power of
+flight with less of prejudice. Egyptian sculpture gives the figure
+of winged men; the British Museum has made the winged Assyrian bulls
+familiar to many, and both the cuneiform records of Assyria and the
+hieroglyphs of Egypt record flights that in reality were never made.
+The desire fathered the story then, and until Clement Ader either hopped
+with his Avion, as is persisted by his critics, or flew, as is claimed
+by his friends.
+
+While the origin of many legends is questionable, that of others is
+easy enough to trace, though not to prove. Among the credulous the
+significance of the name of a people of Asia Minor, the Capnobates,
+'those who travel by smoke,' gave rise to the assertion that Montgolfier
+was not first in the field--or rather in the air--since surely this
+people must have been responsible for the first hot-air balloons. Far
+less questionable is the legend of Icarus, for here it is possible
+to trace a foundation of fact in the story. Such a tribe as Daedalus
+governed could have had hardly any knowledge of the rudiments of
+science, and even their ruler, seeing how easy it is for birds to
+sustain themselves in the air, might be excused for believing that he,
+if he fashioned wings for himself, could use them. In that belief, let
+it be assumed, Daedalus made his wings; the boy, Icarus, learning that
+his father had determined on an attempt at flight secured the wings and
+fastened them to his own shoulders. A cliff seemed the likeliest place
+for a 'take-off,' and Icarus leaped from the cliff edge only to find
+that the possession of wings was not enough to assure flight to a human
+being. The sea that to this day bears his name witnesses that he made
+the attempt and perished by it.
+
+In this is assumed the bald story, from which might grow the legend of a
+wise king who ruled a peaceful people--'judged, sitting in the sun,' as
+Browning has it, and fashioned for himself wings with which he flew over
+the sea and where he would, until the prince, Icarus, desired to emulate
+him. Icarus, fastening the wings to his shoulders with wax, was so
+imprudent as to fly too near the sun, when the wax melted and he fell,
+to lie mourned of water-nymphs on the shores of waters thenceforth
+Icarian. Between what we have assumed to be the base of fact, and the
+legend which has been invested with such poetic grace in Greek story,
+there is no more than a century or so of re-telling might give to any
+event among a people so simple and yet so given to imagery.
+
+We may set aside as pure fable the stories of the winged horse of
+Perseus, and the flights of Hermes as messenger of the gods. With them
+may be placed the story of Empedocles, who failed to take Etna seriously
+enough, and found himself caught by an eruption while within the crater,
+so that, flying to safety in some hurry, he left behind but one sandal
+to attest that he had sought refuge in space--in all probability, if
+he escaped at all, he flew, but not in the sense that the aeronaut
+understands it. But, bearing in mind the many men who tried to fly
+in historic times, the legend of Icarus and Daedalus, in spite of the
+impossible form in which it is presented, may rank with the story of the
+Saracen of Constantinople, or with that of Simon the Magician. A simple
+folk would naturally idealise the man and magnify his exploit, as they
+magnified the deeds of some strong man to make the legends of Hercules,
+and there, full-grown from a mere legend, is the first record of a
+pioneer of flying. Such a theory is not nearly so fantastic as that
+which makes the Capnobates, on the strength of their name, the inventors
+of hot-air balloons. However it may be, both in story and in picture,
+Icarus and his less conspicuous father have inspired the Caucasian mind,
+and the world is the richer for them.
+
+Of the unsupported myths--unsupported, that is, by even a shadow of
+probability--there is no end. Although Latin legend approaches nearer
+to fact than the Greek in some cases, in others it shows a disregard
+for possibilities which renders it of far less account. Thus Diodorus of
+Sicily relates that one Abaris travelled round the world on an arrow of
+gold, and Cassiodorus and Glycas and their like told of mechanical birds
+that flew and sang and even laid eggs. More credible is the story
+of Aulus Gellius, who in his Attic Nights tells how Archytas, four
+centuries prior to the opening of the Christian era, made a wooden
+pigeon that actually flew by means of a mechanism of balancing weights
+and the breath of a mysterious spirit hidden within it. There may yet
+arise one credulous enough to state that the mysterious spirit was
+precursor of the internal combustion engine, but, however that may be,
+the pigeon of Archytas almost certainly existed, and perhaps it actually
+glided or flew for short distances--or else Aulus Gellius was an utter
+liar, like Cassiodorus and his fellows. In far later times a certain
+John Muller, better known as Regiomontanus, is stated to have made an
+artificial eagle which accompanied Charles V. on his entry to and exit
+from Nuremberg, flying above the royal procession. But, since Muller
+died in 1436 and Charles was born in 1500, Muller may be ruled out from
+among the pioneers of mechanical flight, and it may be concluded that
+the historian of this event got slightly mixed in his dates.
+
+Thus far, we have but indicated how one may draw from the richest
+stores from which the Aryan mind draws inspiration, the Greek and Latin
+mythologies and poetic adaptations of history. The existing legends of
+flight, however, are not thus to be localised, for with two possible
+exceptions they belong to all the world and to every civilisation,
+however primitive. The two exceptions are the Aztec and the Chinese;
+regarding the first of these, the Spanish conquistadores destroyed such
+civilisation as existed in Tenochtitlan so thoroughly that, if legend
+of flight was among the Aztec records, it went with the rest; as to the
+Chinese, it is more than passing strange that they, who claim to have
+known and done everything while the first of history was shaping, even
+to antedating the discovery of gunpowder that was not made by Roger
+Bacon, have not yet set up a claim to successful handling of a monoplane
+some four thousand years ago, or at least to the patrol of the Gulf of
+Korea and the Mongolian frontier by a forerunner of the 'blimp.'
+
+The Inca civilisation of Peru yields up a myth akin to that of Icarus,
+which tells how the chieftain Ayar Utso grew wings and visited the
+sun--it was from the sun, too, that the founders of the Peruvian Inca
+dynasty, Manco Capac and his wife Mama Huella Capac, flew to earth near
+Lake Titicaca, to make the only successful experiment in pure tyranny
+that the world has ever witnessed. Teutonic legend gives forth Wieland
+the Smith, who made himself a dress with wings and, clad in it, rose
+and descended against the wind and in spite of it. Indian mythology, in
+addition to the story of the demons and their rigid dirigible, already
+quoted, gives the story of Hanouam, who fitted himself with wings by
+means of which he sailed in the air and, according to his desire, landed
+in the sacred Lauka. Bladud, the ninth king of Britain, is said to have
+crowned his feats of wizardry by making himself wings and attempting
+to fly--but the effort cost him a broken neck. Bladud may have been as
+mythic as Uther, and again he may have been a very early pioneer. The
+Finnish epic, 'Kalevala,' tells how Ilmarinen the Smith 'forged an eagle
+of fire,' with 'boat's walls between the wings,' after which he 'sat
+down on the bird's back and bones,' and flew.
+
+Pure myths, these, telling how the desire to fly was characteristic of
+every age and every people, and how, from time to time, there arose an
+experimenter bolder than his fellows, who made some attempt to translate
+desire into achievement. And the spirit that animated these pioneers,
+in a time when things new were accounted things accursed, for the most
+part, has found expression in this present century in the utter daring
+and disregard of both danger and pain that stamps the flying man, a type
+of humanity differing in spirit from his earthbound fellows as fully as
+the soldier differs from the priest.
+
+Throughout mediaeval times, records attest that here and there some man
+believed in and attempted flight, and at the same time it is clear that
+such were regarded as in league with the powers of evil. There is the
+half-legend, half-history of Simon the Magician, who, in the third year
+of the reign of Nero announced that he would raise himself in the air,
+in order to assert his superiority over St Paul. The legend states that
+by the aid of certain demons whom he had prevailed on to assist him, he
+actually lifted himself in the air--but St Paul prayed him down again.
+He slipped through the claws of the demons and fell headlong on the
+Forum at Rome, breaking his neck. The 'demons' may have been some
+primitive form of hot-air balloon, or a glider with which the magician
+attempted to rise into the wind; more probably, however, Simon
+threatened to ascend and made the attempt with apparatus as unsuitable
+as Bladud's wings, paying the inevitable penalty. Another version of the
+story gives St Peter instead of St Paul as the one whose prayers foiled
+Simon--apart from the identity of the apostle, the two accounts are
+similar, and both define the attitude of the age toward investigation
+and experiment in things untried.
+
+Another and later circumstantial story, with similar evidence of some
+fact behind it, is that of the Saracen of Constantinople, who, in the
+reign of the Emperor Comnenus--some little time before Norman William
+made Saxon Harold swear away his crown on the bones of the saints at
+Rouen--attempted to fly round the hippodrome at Constantinople, having
+Comnenus among the great throng who gathered to witness the feat.
+The Saracen chose for his starting-point a tower in the midst of the
+hippodrome, and on the top of the tower he stood, clad in a long white
+robe which was stiffened with rods so as to spread and catch the breeze,
+waiting for a favourable wind to strike on him. The wind was so long in
+coming that the spectators grew impatient. 'Fly, O Saracen!' they
+called to him. 'Do not keep us waiting so long while you try the wind!'
+Comnenus, who had present with him the Sultan of the Turks, gave it
+as his opinion that the experiment was both dangerous and vain, and,
+possibly in an attempt to controvert such statement, the Saracen leaned
+into the wind and 'rose like a bird 'at the outset. But the record of
+Cousin, who tells the story in his Histoire de Constantinople, states
+that 'the weight of his body having more power to drag him down than his
+artificial wings had to sustain him, he broke his bones, and his evil
+plight was such that he did not long survive.'
+
+Obviously, the Saracen was anticipating Lilienthal and his gliders by
+some centuries; like Simon, a genuine experimenter--both legends
+bear the impress of fact supporting them. Contemporary with him, and
+belonging to the history rather than the legends of flight, was Oliver,
+the monk of Malmesbury, who in the year 1065 made himself wings after
+the pattern of those supposed to have been used by Daedalus, attaching
+them to his hands and feet and attempting to fly with them. Twysden, in
+his Historiae Anglicanae Scriptores X, sets forth the story of Oliver,
+who chose a high tower as his starting-point, and launched himself in
+the air. As a matter of course, he fell, permanently injuring himself,
+and died some time later.
+
+After these, a gap of centuries, filled in by impossible stories of
+magical flight by witches, wizards, and the like--imagination was
+fertile in the dark ages, but the ban of the church was on all attempt
+at scientific development, especially in such a matter as the conquest
+of the air. Yet there were observers of nature who argued that since
+birds could raise themselves by flapping their wings, man had only to
+make suitable wings, flap them, and he too would fly. As early as
+the thirteenth century Roger Bacon, the scientific friar of unbounded
+inquisitiveness and not a little real genius, announced that there could
+be made 'some flying instrument, so that a man sitting in the middle and
+turning some mechanism may put in motion some artificial wings which
+may beat the air like a bird flying.' But being a cautious man, with a
+natural dislike for being burnt at the stake as a necromancer through
+having put forward such a dangerous theory, Roger added, 'not that
+I ever knew a man who had such an instrument, but I am particularly
+acquainted with the man who contrived one.' This might have been a lame
+defence if Roger had been brought to trial as addicted to black arts; he
+seems to have trusted to the inadmissibility of hearsay evidence.
+
+Some four centuries later there was published a book entitled Perugia
+Augusta, written by one C. Crispolti of Perugia--the date of the work in
+question is 1648. In it is recorded that 'one day, towards the close of
+the fifteenth century, whilst many of the principal gentry had come
+to Perugia to honour the wedding of Giovanni Paolo Baglioni, and some
+lancers were riding down the street by his palace, Giovanni Baptisti
+Danti unexpectedly and by means of a contrivance of wings that he had
+constructed proportionate to the size of his body took off from the top
+of a tower near by, and with a horrible hissing sound flew successfully
+across the great Piazza, which was densely crowded. But (oh, horror of
+an unexpected accident!) he had scarcely flown three hundred paces on
+his way to a certain point when the mainstay of the left wing gave way,
+and, being unable to support himself with the right alone, he fell on a
+roof and was injured in consequence. Those who saw not only this flight,
+but also the wonderful construction of the framework of the wings,
+said--and tradition bears them out--that he several times flew over the
+waters of Lake Thrasimene to learn how he might gradually come to earth.
+But, notwithstanding his great genius, he never succeeded.'
+
+This reads circumstantially enough, but it may be borne in mind that the
+date of writing is more than half a century later than the time of the
+alleged achievement--the story had had time to round itself out. Danti,
+however, is mentioned by a number of writers, one of whom states that
+the failure of his experiment was due to the prayers of some individual
+of a conservative turn of mind, who prayed so vigorously that Danti fell
+appropriately enough on a church and injured himself to such an extent
+as to put an end to his flying career. That Danti experimented, there
+is little doubt, in view of the volume of evidence on the point, but the
+darkness of the Middle Ages hides the real truth as to the results of
+his experiments. If he had actually flown over Thrasimene, as alleged,
+then in all probability both Napoleon and Wellington would have had air
+scouts at Waterloo.
+
+Danti's story may be taken as fact or left as fable, and with it the
+period of legend or vague statement may be said to end--the rest is
+history, both of genuine experimenters and of charlatans. Such instances
+of legend as are given here are not a tithe of the whole, but there is
+sufficient in the actual history of flight to bar out more than this
+brief mention of the legends, which, on the whole, go farther to prove
+man's desire to fly than his study and endeavour to solve the problems
+of the air.
+
+
+
+
+II. EARLY EXPERIMENTS
+
+So far, the stories of the development of flight are either legendary
+or of more or less doubtful authenticity, even including that of Danti,
+who, although a man of remarkable attainments in more directions
+than that of attempted flight, suffers--so far as reputation is
+concerned--from the inexactitudes of his chroniclers; he may have soared
+over Thrasimene, as stated, or a mere hop with an ineffectual glider may
+have grown with the years to a legend of gliding flight. So far, too,
+there is no evidence of the study that the conquest of the air demanded;
+such men as made experiments either launched themselves in the air from
+some height with made-up wings or other apparatus, and paid the penalty,
+or else constructed some form of machine which would not leave the
+earth, and then gave up. Each man followed his own way, and there was no
+attempt--without the printing press and the dissemination of knowledge
+there was little possibility of attempt--on the part of any one to
+benefit by the failures of others.
+
+Legend and doubtful history carries up to the fifteenth century, and
+then came Leonardo da Vinci, first student of flight whose work endures
+to the present day. The world knows da Vinci as artist; his age knew him
+as architect, engineer, artist, and scientist in an age when science was
+a single study, comprising all knowledge from mathematics to medicine.
+He was, of course, in league with the devil, for in no other way
+could his range of knowledge and observation be explained by his
+contemporaries; he left a Treatise on the Flight of Birds in which are
+statements and deductions that had to be rediscovered when the Treatise
+had been forgotten--da Vinci anticipated modern knowledge as Plato
+anticipated modern thought, and blazed the first broad trail toward
+flight.
+
+One Cuperus, who wrote a Treatise on the Excellence of Man, asserted
+that da Vinci translated his theories into practice, and actually flew,
+but the statement is unsupported. That he made models, especially on
+the helicopter principle, is past question; these were made of paper and
+wire, and actuated by springs of steel wire, which caused them to lift
+themselves in the air. It is, however, in the theories which he put
+forward that da Vinci's investigations are of greatest interest; these
+prove him a patient as well as a keen student of the principles of
+flight, and show that his manifold activities did not prevent him from
+devoting some lengthy periods to observations of bird flight.
+
+'A bird,' he says in his Treatise, 'is an instrument working according
+to mathematical law, which instrument it is within the capacity of man
+to reproduce with all its movements, but not with a corresponding
+degree of strength, though it is deficient only in power of maintaining
+equilibrium. We may say, therefore, that such an instrument constructed
+by man is lacking in nothing except the life of the bird, and this life
+must needs be supplied from that of man. The life which resides in the
+bird's members will, without doubt, better conform to their needs than
+will that of a man which is separated from them, and especially in the
+almost imperceptible movements which produce equilibrium. But since we
+see that the bird is equipped for many apparent varieties of movement,
+we are able from this experience to deduce that the most rudimentary
+of these movements will be capable of being comprehended by man's
+understanding, and that he will to a great extent be able to provide
+against the destruction of that instrument of which he himself has
+become the living principle and the propeller.'
+
+In this is the definite belief of da Vinci that man is capable of
+flight, together with a far more definite statement of the principles by
+which flight is to be achieved than any which had preceded it--and for
+that matter, than many that have succeeded it. Two further extracts from
+his work will show the exactness of his observations:--
+
+'When a bird which is in equilibrium throws the centre of resistance of
+the wings behind the centre of gravity, then such a bird will descend
+with its head downward. This bird which finds itself in equilibrium
+shall have the centre of resistance of the wings more forward than
+the bird's centre of gravity; then such a bird will fall with its tail
+turned toward the earth.'
+
+And again: 'A man, when flying, shall be free from the waist up, that he
+may be able to keep himself in equilibrium as he does in a boat, so
+that the centre of his gravity and of the instrument may set itself in
+equilibrium and change when necessity requires it to the changing of the
+centre of its resistance.'
+
+Here, in this last quotation, are the first beginnings of the inherent
+stability which proved so great an advance in design, in this twentieth
+century. But the extracts given do not begin to exhaust the range of
+da Vinci's observations and deductions. With regard to bird flight, he
+observed that so long as a bird keeps its wings outspread it cannot fall
+directly to earth, but must glide down at an angle to alight--a small
+thing, now that the principle of the plane in opposition to the air is
+generally grasped, but da Vinci had to find it out. From observation
+he gathered how a bird checks its own speed by opposing tail and wing
+surface to the direction of flight, and thus alights at the proper
+'landing speed.' He proved the existence of upward air currents by
+noting how a bird takes off from level earth with wings outstretched and
+motionless, and, in order to get an efficient substitute for the
+natural wing, he recommended that there be used something similar to
+the membrane of the wing of a bat--from this to the doped fabric of an
+aeroplane wing is but a small step, for both are equally impervious to
+air. Again, da Vinci recommended that experiments in flight be conducted
+at a good height from the ground, since, if equilibrium be lost through
+any cause, the height gives time to regain it. This recommendation, by
+the way, received ample support in the training areas of war pilots.
+
+Man's muscles, said da Vinci, are fully sufficient to enable him to
+fly, for the larger birds, he noted, employ but a small part of their
+strength in keeping themselves afloat in the air--by this theory he
+attempted to encourage experiment, just as, when his time came, Borelli
+reached the opposite conclusion and discouraged it. That Borelli was
+right--so far--and da Vinci wrong, detracts not at all from the repute
+of the earlier investigator, who had but the resources of his age to
+support investigations conducted in the spirit of ages after.
+
+His chief practical contributions to the science of flight--apart
+from numerous drawings which have still a value--are the helicopter or
+lifting screw, and the parachute. The former, as already noted, he
+made and proved effective in model form, and the principle which he
+demonstrated is that of the helicopter of to-day, on which sundry
+experimenters work spasmodically, in spite of the success of the plane
+with its driving propeller. As to the parachute, the idea was doubtless
+inspired by observation of the effect a bird produced by pressure of its
+wings against the direction of flight.
+
+Da Vinci's conclusions, and his experiments, were forgotten easily by
+most of his contemporaries; his Treatise lay forgotten for nearly four
+centuries, overshadowed, mayhap, by his other work. There was, however,
+a certain Paolo Guidotti of Lucca, who lived in the latter half of the
+sixteenth century, and who attempted to carry da Vinci's theories--one
+of them, at least, into practice. For this Guidotti, who was by
+profession an artist and by inclination an investigator, made for
+himself wings, of which the framework was of whalebone; these he covered
+with feathers, and with them made a number of gliding flights, attaining
+considerable proficiency. He is said in the end to have made a flight of
+about four hundred yards, but this attempt at solving the problem
+ended on a house roof, where Guidotti broke his thigh bone. After that,
+apparently, he gave up the idea of flight, and went back to painting.
+
+One other a Venetian architect named Veranzio, studied da Vinci's theory
+of the parachute, and found it correct, if contemporary records and even
+pictorial presentment are correct. Da Vinci showed his conception of a
+parachute as a sort of inverted square bag; Veranzio modified this to a
+'sort of square sail extended by four rods of equal size and having four
+cords attached at the corners,' by means of which 'a man could without
+danger throw himself from the top of a tower or any high place. For
+though at the moment there may be no wind, yet the effort of his falling
+will carry up the wind, which the sail will hold, by which means he does
+not fall suddenly but descends little by little. The size of the sail
+should be measured to the man.' By this last, evidently, Veranzio
+intended to convey that the sheet must be of such content as would
+enclose sufficient air to support the weight of the parachutist.
+
+Veranzio made his experiments about 1617-1618, but, naturally, they
+carried him no farther than the mere descent to earth, and since a
+descent is merely a descent, it is to be conjectured that he soon got
+tired of dropping from high roofs, and took to designing architecture
+instead of putting it to such a use. With the end of his experiments the
+work of da Vinci in relation to flying became neglected for nearly four
+centuries.
+
+Apart from these two experimenters, there is little to record in the
+matter either of experiment or study until the seventeenth century.
+Francis Bacon, it is true, wrote about flying in his Sylva Sylvarum, and
+mentioned the subject in the New Atlantis, but, except for the insight
+that he showed even in superficial mention of any specific subject,
+he does not appear to have made attempt at serious investigation.
+'Spreading of Feathers, thin and close and in great breadth will
+likewise bear up a great Weight,' says Francis, 'being even laid without
+Tilting upon the sides.' But a lesser genius could have told as much,
+even in that age, and though the great Sir Francis is sometimes adduced
+as one of the early students of the problems of flight, his writings
+will not sustain the reputation.
+
+The seventeenth century, however, gives us three names, those of
+Borelli, Lana, and Robert Hooke, all of which take definite place in
+the history of flight. Borelli ranks as one of the great figures in the
+study of aeronautical problems, in spite of erroneous deductions through
+which he arrived at a purely negative conclusion with regard to the
+possibility of human flight.
+
+Borelli was a versatile genius. Born in 1608, he was practically
+contemporary with Francesco Lana, and there is evidence that he either
+knew or was in correspondence with many prominent members of the Royal
+Society of Great Britain, more especially with John Collins, Dr Wallis,
+and Henry Oldenburgh, the then Secretary of the Society. He was author
+of a long list of scientific essays, two of which only are responsible
+for his fame, viz., Theorice Medicaearum Planetarum, published in
+Florence, and the better known posthumous De Motu Animalium. The first
+of these two is an astronomical study in which Borelli gives evidence of
+an instinctive knowledge of gravitation, though no definite expression
+is given of this. The second work, De Motu Animalium, deals with the
+mechanical action of the limbs of birds and animals and with a theory of
+the action of the internal organs. A section of the first part of
+this work, called De Volatu, is a study of bird flight; it is quite
+independent of Da Vinci's earlier work, which had been forgotten and
+remained unnoticed until near on the beginning of practical flight.
+
+Marey, in his work, La Machine Animale, credits Borelli with the first
+correct idea of the mechanism of flight. He says: 'Therefore we must be
+allowed to render to the genius of Borelli the justice which is due
+to him, and only claim for ourselves the merit of having furnished the
+experimental demonstration of a truth already suspected.' In fact, all
+subsequent studies on this subject concur in making Borelli the first
+investigator who illustrated the purely mechanical theory of the action
+of a bird's wings.
+
+Borelli's study is divided into a series of propositions in which he
+traces the principles of flight, and the mechanical actions of the wings
+of birds. The most interesting of these are the propositions in which he
+sets forth the method in which birds move their wings during flight and
+the manner in which the air offers resistance to the stroke of the wing.
+With regard to the first of these two points he says: 'When birds in
+repose rest on the earth their wings are folded up close against their
+flanks, but when wishing to start on their flight they first bend their
+legs and leap into the air. Whereupon the joints of their wings are
+straightened out to form a straight line at right angles to the lateral
+surface of the breast, so that the two wings, outstretched, are placed,
+as it were, like the arms of a cross to the body of the bird. Next,
+since the wings with their feathers attached form almost a plane
+surface, they are raised slightly above the horizontal, and with a
+most quick impulse beat down in a direction almost perpendicular to the
+wing-plane, upon the underlying air; and to so intense a beat the air,
+notwithstanding it to be fluid, offers resistance, partly by reason
+of its natural inertia, which seeks to retain it at rest, and partly
+because the particles of the air, compressed by the swiftness of the
+stroke, resist this compression by their elasticity, just like the hard
+ground. Hence the whole mass of the bird rebounds, making a fresh
+leap through the air; whence it follows that flight is simply a motion
+composed of successive leaps accomplished through the air. And I remark
+that a wing can easily beat the air in a direction almost perpendicular
+to its plane surface, although only a single one of the corners of the
+humerus bone is attached to the scapula, the whole extent of its base
+remaining free and loose, while the greater transverse feathers are
+joined to the lateral skin of the thorax. Nevertheless the wing can
+easily revolve about its base like unto a fan. Nor are there lacking
+tendon ligaments which restrain the feathers and prevent them from
+opening farther, in the same fashion that sheets hold in the sails of
+ships. No less admirable is nature's cunning in unfolding and folding
+the wings upwards, for she folds them not laterally, but by moving
+upwards edgewise the osseous parts wherein the roots of the feathers are
+inserted; for thus, without encountering the air's resistance the upward
+motion of the wing surface is made as with a sword, hence they can be
+uplifted with but small force. But thereafter when the wings are twisted
+by being drawn transversely and by the resistance of the air, they are
+flattened as has been declared and will be made manifest hereafter.'
+
+Then with reference to the resistance to the air of the wings he
+explains: 'The air when struck offers resistance by its elastic virtue
+through which the particles of the air compressed by the wing-beat
+strive to expand again. Through these two causes of resistance the
+downward beat of the wing is not only opposed, but even caused to recoil
+with a reflex movement; and these two causes of resistance ever increase
+the more the down stroke of the wing is maintained and accelerated. On
+the other hand, the impulse of the wing is continuously diminished and
+weakened by the growing resistance. Hereby the force of the wing and the
+resistance become balanced; so that, manifestly, the air is beaten by
+the wing with the same force as the resistance to the stroke.'
+
+He concerns himself also with the most difficult problem that confronts
+the flying man of to-day, namely, landing effectively, and his remarks
+on this subject would be instructive even to an air pilot of these days:
+'Now the ways and means by which the speed is slackened at the end of
+a flight are these. The bird spreads its wings and tail so that their
+concave surfaces are perpendicular to the direction of motion; in this
+way, the spreading feathers, like a ship's sail, strike against the
+still air, check the speed, and so that most of the impetus may be
+stopped, the wings are flapped quickly and strongly forward, inducing a
+contrary motion, so that the bird absolutely or very nearly stops.'
+
+At the end of his study Borelli came to a conclusion which militated
+greatly against experiment with any heavier-than-air apparatus, until
+well on into the nineteenth century, for having gone thoroughly into the
+subject of bird flight he states distinctly in his last proposition
+on the subject that 'It is impossible that men should be able to fly
+craftily by their own strength.' This statement, of course, remains true
+up to the present day for no man has yet devised the means by which he
+can raise himself in the air and maintain himself there by mere muscular
+effort.
+
+From the time of Borelli up to the development of the steam engine it
+may be said that flight by means of any heavier-than-air apparatus was
+generally regarded as impossible, and apart from certain deductions
+which a little experiment would have shown to be doomed to failure, this
+method of flight was not followed up. It is not to be wondered at, when
+Borelli's exaggerated estimate of the strength expended by birds in
+proportion to their weight is borne in mind; he alleged that the motive
+force in birds' wings is 10,000 times greater than the resistance of
+their weight, and with regard to human flight he remarks:--
+
+'When, therefore, it is asked whether men may be able to fly by their
+own strength, it must be seen whether the motive power of the pectoral
+muscles (the strength of which is indicated and measured by their size)
+is proportionately great, as it is evident that it must exceed the
+resistance of the weight of the whole human body 10,000 times, together
+with the weight of enormous wings which should be attached to the arms.
+And it is clear that the motive power of the pectoral muscles in men is
+much less than is necessary for flight, for in birds the bulk and weight
+of the muscles for flapping the wings are not less than a sixth part of
+the entire weight of the body. Therefore, it would be necessary that
+the pectoral muscles of a man should weigh more than a sixth part of the
+entire weight of his body; so also the arms, by flapping with the wings
+attached, should be able to exert a power 10,000 times greater than the
+weight of the human body itself. But they are far below such excess,
+for the aforesaid pectoral muscles do not equal a hundredth part of the
+entire weight of a man. Wherefore either the strength of the muscles
+ought to be increased or the weight of the human body must be decreased,
+so that the same proportion obtains in it as exists in birds. Hence
+it is deducted that the Icarian invention is entirely mythical because
+impossible, for it is not possible either to increase a man's pectoral
+muscles or to diminish the weight of the human body; and whatever
+apparatus is used, although it is possible to increase the momentum,
+the velocity or the power employed can never equal the resistance; and
+therefore wing flapping by the contraction of muscles cannot give out
+enough power to carry up the heavy body of a man.'
+
+It may be said that practically all the conclusions which Borelli
+reached in his study were negative. Although contemporary with Lana,
+he perceived the one factor which rendered Lana's project for flight by
+means of vacuum globes an impossibility--he saw that no globe could
+be constructed sufficiently light for flight, and at the same time
+sufficiently strong to withstand the pressure of the outside atmosphere.
+He does not appear to have made any experiments in flying on his
+own account, having, as he asserts most definitely, no faith in any
+invention designed to lift man from the surface of the earth. But his
+work, from which only the foregoing short quotations can be given, is,
+nevertheless, of indisputable value, for he settled the mechanics of
+bird flight, and paved the way for those later investigators who had,
+first, the steam engine, and later the internal combustion engine--two
+factors in mechanical flight which would have seemed as impossible to
+Borelli as would wireless telegraphy to a student of Napoleonic times.
+On such foundations as his age afforded Borelli built solidly and
+well, so that he ranks as one of the greatest--if not actually the
+greatest--of the investigators into this subject before the age of
+steam.
+
+The conclusion, that 'the motive force in birds' wings is apparently
+ten thousand times greater than the resistance of their weight,' is
+erroneous, of course, but study of the translation from which the
+foregoing excerpt is taken will show that the error detracts very little
+from the value of the work itself. Borelli sets out very definitely
+the mechanism of flight, in such fashion that he who runs may read. His
+reference to 'the use of a large vessel,' etc., concerns the suggestion
+made by Francesco Lana, who antedated Borelli's publication of De Motu
+Animalium by some ten years with his suggestion for an 'aerial ship,' as
+he called it. Lana's mind shows, as regards flight, a more imaginative
+twist; Borelli dived down into first causes, and reached mathematical
+conclusions; Lana conceived a theory and upheld it--theoretically, since
+the manner of his life precluded experiment.
+
+Francesco Lana, son of a noble family, was born in 1631; in 1647 he was
+received as a novice into the Society of Jesus at Rome, and remained
+a pious member of the Jesuit society until the end of his life. He was
+greatly handicapped in his scientific investigations by the vows
+of poverty which the rules of the Order imposed on him. He was more
+scientist than priest all his life; for two years he held the post of
+Professor of Mathematics at Ferrara, and up to the time of his death,
+in 1687, he spent by far the greater part of his time in scientific
+research, He had the dubious advantage of living in an age when one man
+could cover the whole range of science, and this he seems to have
+done very thoroughly. There survives an immense work of his entitled,
+Magisterium Naturae et Artis, which embraces the whole field of
+scientific knowledge as that was developed in the period in which Lana
+lived. In an earlier work of his, published in Brescia in 1670, appears
+his famous treatise on the aerial ship, a problem which Lana worked out
+with thoroughness. He was unable to make practical experiments, and thus
+failed to perceive the one insuperable drawback to his project--of which
+more anon.
+
+Only extracts from the translation of Lana's work can be given here, but
+sufficient can be given to show fully the means by which he designed to
+achieve the conquest of the air. He begins by mention of the celebrated
+pigeon of Archytas the Philosopher, and advances one or two theories
+with regard to the way in which this mechanical bird was constructed,
+and then he recites, apparently with full belief in it, the fable of
+Regiomontanus and the eagle that he is said to have constructed to
+accompany Charles V. on his entry into Nuremberg. In fact, Lana starts
+his work with a study of the pioneers of mechanical flying up to his
+own time, and then outlines his own devices for the construction of
+mechanical birds before proceeding to detail the construction of the
+aerial ship. Concerning primary experiments for this he says:--
+
+'I will, first of all, presuppose that air has weight owing to the
+vapours and halations which ascend from the earth and seas to a height
+of many miles and surround the whole of our terraqueous globe; and this
+fact will not be denied by philosophers, even by those who may have but
+a superficial knowledge, because it can be proven by exhausting, if
+not all, at any rate the greater part of, the air contained in a glass
+vessel, which, if weighed before and after the air has been exhausted,
+will be found materially reduced in weight. Then I found out how much
+the air weighed in itself in the following manner. I procured a large
+vessel of glass, whose neck could be closed or opened by means of a tap,
+and holding it open I warmed it over a fire, so that the air inside it
+becoming rarified, the major part was forced out; then quickly shutting
+the tap to prevent the re-entry I weighed it; which done, I plunged its
+neck in water, resting the whole of the vessel on the surface of the
+water, then on opening the tap the water rose in the vessel and filled
+the greater part of it. I lifted the neck out of the water, released the
+water contained in the vessel, and measured and weighed its quantity and
+density, by which I inferred that a certain quantity of air had come out
+of the vessel equal in bulk to the quantity of water which had entered
+to refill the portion abandoned by the air. I again weighed the vessel,
+after I had first of all well dried it free of all moisture, and found
+it weighed one ounce more whilst it was full of air than when it was
+exhausted of the greater part, so that what it weighed more was a
+quantity of air equal in volume to the water which took its place. The
+water weighed 640 ounces, so I concluded that the weight of air compared
+with that of water was 1 to 640--that is to say, as the water which
+filled the vessel weighed 640 ounces, so the air which filled the same
+vessel weighed one ounce.'
+
+Having thus detailed the method of exhausting air from a vessel, Lana
+goes on to assume that any large vessel can be entirely exhausted of
+nearly all the air contained therein. Then he takes Euclid's proposition
+to the effect that the superficial area of globes increases in the
+proportion of the square of the diameter, whilst the volume increases in
+the proportion of the cube of the same diameter, and he considers that
+if one only constructs the globe of thin metal, of sufficient size, and
+exhausts the air in the manner that he suggests, such a globe will be so
+far lighter than the surrounding atmosphere that it will not only
+rise, but will be capable of lifting weights. Here is Lana's own way of
+putting it:--
+
+'But so that it may be enabled to raise heavier weights and to lift
+men in the air, let us take double the quantity of copper, 1,232 square
+feet, equal to 308 lbs. of copper; with this double quantity of copper
+we could construct a vessel of not only double the capacity, but of
+four times the capacity of the first, for the reason shown by my fourth
+supposition. Consequently the air contained in such a vessel will be 718
+lbs. 4 2/3 ounces, so that if the air be drawn out of the vessel it
+will be 410 lbs. 4 2/3 ounces lighter than the same volume of air, and,
+consequently, will be enabled to lift three men, or at least two, should
+they weigh more than eight pesi each. It is thus manifest that the
+larger the ball or vessel is made, the thicker and more solid can the
+sheets of copper be made, because, although the weight will increase,
+the capacity of the vessel will increase to a greater extent and with it
+the weight of the air therein, so that it will always be capable to lift
+a heavier weight. From this it can be easily seen how it is possible to
+construct a machine which, fashioned like unto a ship, will float on the
+air.'
+
+With four globes of these dimensions Lana proposed to make an aerial
+ship of the fashion shown in his quaint illustration. He is careful to
+point out a method by which the supporting globes for the aerial ship
+may be entirely emptied of air; (this is to be done by connecting to each
+globe a tube of copper which is 'at least a length of 47 modern Roman
+palm).' A small tap is to close this tube at the end nearest the globe,
+and then vessel and tube are to be filled with water, after which the
+tube is to be immersed in water and the tap opened, allowing the water
+to run out of the vessel, while no air enters. The tap is then closed
+before the lower end of the tube is removed from the water, leaving no
+air at all in the globe or sphere. Propulsion of this airship was to be
+accomplished by means of sails, and also by oars.
+
+Lana antedated the modern propeller, and realised that the air would
+offer enough resistance to oars or paddle to impart motion to any vessel
+floating in it and propelled by these means, although he did not realise
+the amount of pressure on the air which would be necessary to accomplish
+propulsion. As a matter of fact, he foresaw and provided against
+practically all the difficulties that would be encountered in the
+working, as well as the making, of the aerial ship, finally coming up
+against what his religious training made an insuperable objection. This,
+again, is best told in his own words:--
+
+'Other difficulties I do not foresee that could prevail against this
+invention, save one only, which to me seems the greatest of them all,
+and that is that God would surely never allow such a machine to be
+successful, since it would create many disturbances in the civil and
+political governments of mankind.'
+
+He ends by saying that no city would be proof against surprise, while
+the aerial ship could set fire to vessels at sea, and destroy houses,
+fortresses, and cities by fire balls and bombs. In fact, at the end of
+his treatise on the subject, he furnishes a pretty complete resume of
+the activities of German Zeppelins.
+
+As already noted, Lana himself, owing to his vows of poverty, was
+unable to do more than put his suggestions on paper, which he did with
+a thoroughness that has procured him a place among the really great
+pioneers of flying.
+
+It was nearly 200 years before any attempt was made to realise his
+project; then, in 1843, M. Marey Monge set out to make the globes and
+the ship as Lana detailed them. Monge's experiments cost him the sum
+of 25,000 francs 75 centimes, which he expended purely from love
+of scientific investigation. He chose to make his globes of brass,
+about.004 in thickness, and weighing 1.465 lbs. to the square yard.
+Having made his sphere of this metal, he lined it with two thicknesses
+of tissue paper, varnished it with oil, and set to work to empty it of
+air. This, however, he never achieved, for such metal is incapable of
+sustaining the pressure of the outside air, as Lana, had he had the
+means to carry out experiments, would have ascertained. M. Monge's
+sphere could never be emptied of air sufficiently to rise from the
+earth; it ended in the melting-pot, ignominiously enough, and all that
+Monge got from his experiment was the value of the scrap metal and the
+satisfaction of knowing that Lana's theory could never be translated
+into practice.
+
+Robert Hooke is less conspicuous than either Borelli or Lana; his work,
+which came into the middle of the seventeenth century, consisted of
+various experiments with regard to flight, from which emerged 'a Module,
+which by the help of Springs and Wings, raised and sustained itself in
+the air.' This must be reckoned as the first model flying machine which
+actually flew, except for da Vinci's helicopters; Hooke's model appears
+to have been of the flapping-wing type--he attempted to copy the motion
+of birds, but found from study and experiment that human muscles were
+not sufficient to the task of lifting the human body. For that reason,
+he says, 'I applied my mind to contrive a way to make artificial
+muscles,' but in this he was, as he expresses it, 'frustrated of my
+expectations.' Hooke's claim to fame rests mainly on his successful
+model; the rest of his work is of too scrappy a nature to rank as a
+serious contribution to the study of flight.
+
+Contemporary with Hooke was one Allard, who, in France, undertook to
+emulate the Saracen of Constantinople to a certain extent. Allard was a
+tight-rope dancer who either did or was said to have done short gliding
+flights--the matter is open to question--and finally stated that he
+would, at St Germains, fly from the terrace in the king's presence. He
+made the attempt, but merely fell, as did the Saracen some centuries
+before, causing himself serious injury. Allard cannot be regarded as a
+contributor to the development of aeronautics in any way, and is only
+mentioned as typical of the way in which, up to the time of the Wright
+brothers, flying was regarded. Even unto this day there are many who
+still believe that, with a pair of wings, man ought to be able to fly,
+and that the mathematical data necessary to effective construction
+simply do not exist. This attitude was reasonable enough in an
+unlearned age, and Allard was one--a little more conspicuous than the
+majority--among many who made experiment in ignorance, with more or less
+danger to themselves and without practical result of any kind.
+
+The seventeenth century was not to end, however, without practical
+experiment of a noteworthy kind in gliding flight. Among the recruits to
+the ranks of pioneers was a certain Besnier, a locksmith of Sable, who
+somewhere between 1675 and 1680 constructed a glider of which a crude
+picture has come down to modern times. The apparatus, as will be seen,
+consisted of two rods with hinged flaps, and the original designer of
+the picture seems to have had but a small space in which to draw, since
+obviously the flaps must have been much larger than those shown. Besnier
+placed the rods on his shoulders, and worked the flaps by cords attached
+to his hands and feet--the flaps opened as they fell, and closed as they
+rose, so the device as a whole must be regarded as a sort of flapping
+glider. Having by experiment proved his apparatus successful, Besnier
+promptly sold it to a travelling showman of the period, and forthwith
+set about constructing a second set, with which he made gliding flights
+of considerable height and distance. Like Lilienthal, Besnier projected
+himself into space from some height, and then, according to the
+contemporary records, he was able to cross a river of considerable size
+before coming to earth. It does not appear that he had any imitators,
+or that any advantage whatever was taken of his experiments; the age was
+one in which he would be regarded rather as a freak exhibitor than as
+a serious student, and possibly, considering his origin and the sale of
+his first apparatus to such a client, he regarded the matter himself as
+more in the nature of an amusement than as a discovery.
+
+Borelli, coming at the end of the century, proved to his own
+satisfaction and that of his fellows that flapping wing flight was an
+impossibility; the capabilities of the plane were as yet undreamed, and
+the prime mover that should make the plane available for flight was
+deep in the womb of time. Da Vinci's work was forgotten--flight was an
+impossibility, or at best such a useless show as Besnier was able to
+give.
+
+The eighteenth century was almost barren of experiment. Emanuel
+Swedenborg, having invented a new religion, set about inventing a flying
+machine, and succeeded theoretically, publishing the result of his
+investigations as follows:--
+
+'Let a car or boat or some like object be made of light material such as
+cork or bark, with a room within it for the operator. Secondly, in front
+as well as behind, or all round, set a widely-stretched sail parallel to
+the machine forming within a hollow or bend which could be reefed like
+the sails of a ship. Thirdly, place wings on the sides, to be worked
+up and down by a spiral spring, these wings also to be hollow below in
+order to increase the force and velocity, take in the air, and make the
+resistance as great as may be required. These, too, should be of light
+material and of sufficient size; they should be in the shape of birds'
+wings, or the sails of a windmill, or some such shape, and should be
+tilted obliquely upwards, and made so as to collapse on the upward
+stroke and expand on the downward. Fourth, place a balance or beam
+below, hanging down perpendicularly for some distance with a small
+weight attached to its end, pendent exactly in line with the centre of
+gravity; the longer this beam is, the lighter must it be, for it must
+have the same proportion as the well-known vectis or steel-yard. This
+would serve to restore the balance of the machine if it should lean over
+to any of the four sides. Fifthly, the wings would perhaps have greater
+force, so as to increase the resistance and make the flight easier, if
+a hood or shield were placed over them, as is the case with certain
+insects. Sixthly, when the sails are expanded so as to occupy a great
+surface and much air, with a balance keeping them horizontal, only a
+small force would be needed to move the machine back and forth in a
+circle, and up and down. And, after it has gained momentum to move
+slowly upwards, a slight movement and an even bearing would keep it
+balanced in the air and would determine its direction at will.'
+
+The only point in this worthy of any note is the first device for
+maintaining stability automatically--Swedenborg certainly scored a point
+there. For the rest, his theory was but theory, incapable of being put
+to practice--he does not appear to have made any attempt at advance
+beyond the mere suggestion.
+
+Some ten years before his time the state of knowledge with regard to
+flying in Europe was demonstrated by an order granted by the King of
+Portugal to Friar Lourenzo de Guzman, who claimed to have invented a
+flying machine capable of actual flight. The order stated that 'In
+order to encourage the suppliant to apply himself with zeal toward
+the improvement of the new machine, which is capable of producing the
+effects mentioned by him, I grant unto him the first vacant place in
+my College of Barcelos or Santarem, and the first professorship of
+mathematics in my University of Coimbra, with the annual pension of
+600,000 reis during his life.--Lisbon, 17th of March, 1709.'
+
+What happened to Guzman when the non-existence of the machine was
+discovered is one of the things that is well outside the province of
+aeronautics. He was charlatan pure and simple, as far as actual flight
+was concerned, though he had some ideas respecting the design of hot-air
+balloons, according to Tissandier. (La Navigation Aerienne.) His
+flying machine was to contain, among other devices, bellows to produce
+artificial wind when the real article failed, and also magnets in globes
+to draw the vessel in an upward direction and maintain its buoyancy.
+Some draughtsman, apparently gifted with as vivid imagination as Guzman
+himself, has given to the world an illustration of the hypothetical
+vessel; it bears some resemblance to Lana's aerial ship, from which fact
+one draws obvious conclusions.
+
+A rather amusing claim to solving the problem of flight was made in the
+middle of the eighteenth century by one Grimaldi, a 'famous and unique
+Engineer' who, as a matter of actual fact, spent twenty years in
+missionary work in India, and employed the spare time that missionary
+work left him in bringing his invention to a workable state. The
+invention is described as a 'box which with the aid of clockwork rises
+in the air, and goes with such lightness and strong rapidity that it
+succeeds in flying a journey of seven leagues in an hour. It is made in
+the fashion of a bird; the wings from end to end are 25 feet in extent.
+The body is composed of cork, artistically joined together and well
+fastened with metal wire, covered with parchment and feathers. The
+wings are made of catgut and whalebone, and covered also with the same
+parchment and feathers, and each wing is folded in three seams. In the
+body of the machine are contained thirty wheels of unique work, with two
+brass globes and little chains which alternately wind up a counterpoise;
+with the aid of six brass vases, full of a certain quantity of
+quicksilver, which run in some pulleys, the machine is kept by the
+artist in due equilibrium and balance. By means, then, of the friction
+between a steel wheel adequately tempered and a very heavy and
+surprising piece of lodestone, the whole is kept in a regulated forward
+movement, given, however, a right state of the winds, since the machine
+cannot fly so much in totally calm weather as in stormy. This prodigious
+machine is directed and guided by a tail seven palmi long, which is
+attached to the knees and ankles of the inventor by leather straps; by
+stretching out his legs, either to the right or to the left, he moves
+the machine in whichever direction he pleases.... The machine's
+flight lasts only three hours, after which the wings gradually close
+themselves, when the inventor, perceiving this, goes down gently, so as
+to get on his own feet, and then winds up the clockwork and gets himself
+ready again upon the wings for the continuation of a new flight. He
+himself told us that if by chance one of the wheels came off or if one
+of the wings broke, it is certain he would inevitably fall rapidly to
+the ground, and, therefore, he does not rise more than the height of a
+tree or two, as also he only once put himself in the risk of crossing
+the sea, and that was from Calais to Dover, and the same morning he
+arrived in London.'
+
+And yet there are still quite a number of people who persist in stating
+that Bleriot was the first man to fly across the Channel!
+
+A study of the development of the helicopter principle was published
+in France in 1868, when the great French engineer Paucton produced his
+Theorie de la Vis d'Archimede. For some inexplicable reason, Paucton
+was not satisfied with the term 'helicopter,' but preferred to call it
+a 'pterophore,' a name which, so far as can be ascertained, has not been
+adopted by any other writer or investigator. Paucton stated that, since
+a man is capable of sufficient force to overcome the weight of his own
+body, it is only necessary to give him a machine which acts on the air
+'with all the force of which it is capable and at its utmost speed,' and
+he will then be able to lift himself in the air, just as by the exertion
+of all his strength he is able to lift himself in water. 'It would
+seem,' says Paucton, 'that in the pterophore, attached vertically to a
+carriage, the whole built lightly and carefully assembled, he has
+found something that will give him this result in all perfection. In
+construction, one would be careful that the machine produced the least
+friction possible, and naturally it ought to produce little, as it would
+not be at all complicated. The new Daedalus, sitting comfortably in his
+carriage, would by means of a crank give to the pterophore a suitable
+circular (or revolving) speed. This single pterophore would lift him
+vertically, but in order to move horizontally he should be supplied with
+a tail in the shape of another pterophore. When he wished to stop for a
+little time, valves fixed firmly across the end of the space between
+the blades would automatically close the openings through which the air
+flows, and change the pterophore into an unbroken surface which
+would resist the flow of air and retard the fall of the machine to a
+considerable degree.'
+
+The doctrine thus set forth might appear plausible, but it is based on
+the common misconception that all the force which might be put into the
+helicopter or 'pterophore' would be utilised for lifting or propelling
+the vehicle through the air, just as a propeller uses all its power to
+drive a ship through water. But, in applying such a propelling force
+to the air, most of the force is utilised in maintaining aerodynamic
+support--as a matter of fact, more force is needed to maintain this
+support than the muscle of man could possibly furnish to a lifting
+screw, and even if the helicopter were applied to a full-sized,
+engine-driven air vehicle, the rate of ascent would depend on the amount
+of surplus power that could be carried. For example, an upward lift
+of 1,000 pounds from a propeller 15 feet in diameter would demand an
+expenditure of 50 horse-power under the best possible conditions, and in
+order to lift this load vertically through such atmospheric pressure as
+exists at sea-level or thereabouts, an additional 20 horsepower would be
+required to attain a rate of 11 feet per second--50 horse-power must
+be continually provided for the mere support of the load, and the
+additional 20 horse-power must be continually provided in order to
+lift it. Although, in model form, there is nothing quite so strikingly
+successful as the helicopter in the range of flying machines, yet the
+essential weight increases so disproportionately to the effective area
+that it is necessary to go but very little beyond model dimensions for
+the helicopter to become quite ineffective.
+
+That is not to say that the lifting screw must be totally ruled out
+so far as the construction of aircraft is concerned. Much is still
+empirical, so far as this branch of aeronautics is concerned, and
+consideration of the structural features of a propeller goes to show
+that the relations of essential weight and effective area do not
+altogether apply in practice as they stand in theory. Paucton's dream,
+in some modified form, may yet become reality--it is only so short
+a time ago as 1896 that Lord Kelvin stated he had not the smallest
+molecule of faith in aerial navigation, and since the whole history of
+flight consists in proving the impossible possible, the helicopter may
+yet challenge the propelled plane surface for aerial supremacy.
+
+It does not appear that Paucton went beyond theory, nor is there in his
+theory any advance toward practical flight--da Vinci could have told
+him as much as he knew. He was followed by Meerwein, who invented an
+apparatus apparently something between a flapping wing machine and a
+glider, consisting of two wings, which were to be operated by means of a
+rod; the venturesome one who would fly by means of this apparatus had to
+lie in a horizontal position beneath the wings to work the rod. Meerwein
+deserves a place of mention, however, by reason of his investigations
+into the amount of surface necessary to support a given weight. Taking
+that weight at 200 pounds--which would allow for the weight of a man
+and a very light apparatus--he estimated that 126 square feet would be
+necessary for support. His pamphlet, published at Basle in 1784, shows
+him to have been a painstaking student of the potentialities of flight.
+
+Jean-Pierre Blanchard, later to acquire fame in connection with balloon
+flight, conceived and described a curious vehicle, of which he even
+announced trials as impending. His trials were postponed time after
+time, and it appears that he became convinced in the end of the futility
+of his device, being assisted to such a conclusion by Lalande, the
+astronomer, who repeated Borelli's statement that it was impossible for
+man ever to fly by his own strength. This was in the closing days of
+the French monarchy, and the ascent of the Montgolfiers' first hot-air
+balloon in 1783--which shall be told more fully in its place--put an
+end to all French experiments with heavier-than-air apparatus, though in
+England the genius of Cayley was about to bud, and even in France there
+were those who understood that ballooning was not true flight.
+
+
+
+
+III. SIR GEORGE CAYLEY--THOMAS WALKER
+
+On the fifth of June, 1783, the Montgolfiers' hot-air balloon rose at
+Versailles, and in its rising divided the study of the conquest of the
+air into two definite parts, the one being concerned with the
+propulsion of gas lifted, lighter-than-air vehicles, and the other being
+crystallised in one sentence by Sir George Cayley: 'The whole problem,'
+he stated, 'is confined within these limits, viz.: to make a surface
+support a given weight by the application of power to the resistance of
+the air.' For about ten years the balloon held the field entirely, being
+regarded as the only solution of the problem of flight that man could
+ever compass. So definite for a time was this view on the eastern side
+of the Channel that for some years practically all the progress that was
+made in the development of power-driven planes was made in Britain.
+
+In 1800 a certain Dr Thomas Young demonstrated that certain curved
+surfaces suspended by a thread moved into and not away from a horizontal
+current of air, but the demonstration, which approaches perilously near
+to perpetual motion if the current be truly horizontal, has never been
+successfully repeated, so that there is more than a suspicion that
+Young's air-current was NOT horizontal. Others had made and were making
+experiments on the resistance offered to the air by flat surfaces, when
+Cayley came to study and record, earning such a place among the pioneers
+as to win the title of 'father of British aeronautics.'
+
+Cayley was a man in advance of his time, in many ways. Of independent
+means, he made the grand tour which was considered necessary to the
+education of every young man of position, and during this excursion he
+was more engaged in studies of a semi-scientific character than in the
+pursuits that normally filled such a period. His various writings prove
+that throughout his life aeronautics was the foremost subject in his
+mind; the Mechanic's Magazine, Nicholson's Journal, the Philosophical
+Magazine, and other periodicals of like nature bear witness to Cayley's
+continued research into the subject of flight. He approached the subject
+after the manner of the trained scientist, analysing the mechanical
+properties of air under chemical and physical action. Then he set to
+work to ascertain the power necessary for aerial flight, and was one of
+the first to enunciate the fallacy of the hopes of successful flight by
+means of the steam engine of those days, owing to the fact that it was
+impossible to obtain a given power with a given weight.
+
+Yet his conclusions on this point were not altogether negative, for as
+early as 1810 he stated that he could construct a balloon which could
+travel with passengers at 20 miles an hour--he was one of the first to
+consider the possibilities of applying power to a balloon. Nearly thirty
+years later--in 1837--he made the first attempt at establishing an
+aeronautical society, but at that time the power-driven plane was
+regarded by the great majority as an absurd dream of more or less mad
+inventors, while ballooning ranked on about the same level as tight-rope
+walking, being considered an adjunct to fairs and fetes, more a pastime
+than a study.
+
+Up to the time of his death, in 1857, Cayley maintained his study of
+aeronautical matters, and there is no doubt whatever that his work
+went far in assisting the solution of the problem of air conquest. His
+principal published work, a monograph entitled Aerial Navigation, has
+been republished in the admirable series of 'Aeronautical Classics'
+issued by the Royal Aeronautical Society. He began this work by
+pointing out the impossibility of flying by means of attached wings, an
+impossibility due to the fact that, while the pectoral muscles of a bird
+account for more than two-thirds of its whole muscular strength, in a
+man the muscles available for flying, no matter what mechanism might be
+used, would not exceed one-tenth of his total strength.
+
+Cayley did not actually deny the possibility of a man flying by muscular
+effort, however, but stated that 'the flight of a strong man by great
+muscular exertion, though a curious and interesting circumstance,
+inasmuch as it will probably be the means of ascertaining finis power
+and supplying the basis whereon to improve it, would be of little use.'
+
+From this he goes on to the possibility of using a Boulton and Watt
+steam engine to develop the power necessary for flight, and in this he
+saw a possibility of practical result. It is worthy of note that in
+this connection he made mention of the forerunner of the modern internal
+combustion engine; 'The French,' he said, 'have lately shown the great
+power produced by igniting inflammable powders in closed vessels,
+and several years ago an engine was made to work in this country in
+a similar manner by inflammation of spirit of tar.' In a subsequent
+paragraph of his monograph he anticipates almost exactly the
+construction of the Lenoir gas engine, which came into being more than
+fifty-five years after his monograph was published.
+
+Certain experiments detailed in his work were made to ascertain the
+size of the surface necessary for the support of any given weight.
+He accepted a truism of to-day in pointing out that in any matters
+connected with aerial investigation, theory and practice are as
+widely apart as the poles. Inclined at first to favour the helicopter
+principle, he finally rejected this in favour of the plane, with which
+he made numerous experiments. During these, he ascertained the peculiar
+advantages of curved surfaces, and saw the necessity of providing both
+vertical and horizontal rudders in order to admit of side steering
+as well as the control of ascent and descent, and for preserving
+equilibrium. He may be said to have anticipated the work of Lilienthal
+and Pilcher, since he constructed and experimented with a fixed surface
+glider. 'It was beautiful,' he wrote concerning this, 'to see this noble
+white bird sailing majestically from the top of a hill to any given
+point of the plain below it with perfect steadiness and safety,
+according to the set of its rudder, merely by its own weight, descending
+at an angle of about eight degrees with the horizon.'
+
+It is said that he once persuaded his gardener to trust himself in this
+glider for a flight, but if Cayley himself ventured a flight in it he
+has left no record of the fact. The following extract from his work,
+Aerial Navigation, affords an instance of the thoroughness of his
+investigations, and the concluding paragraph also shows his faith in the
+ultimate triumph of mankind in the matter of aerial flight:--
+
+'The act of flying requires less exertion than from the appearance is
+supposed. Not having sufficient data to ascertain the exact degree of
+propelling power exerted by birds in the act of flying, it is uncertain
+what degree of energy may be required in this respect for vessels of
+aerial navigation; yet when we consider the many hundreds of miles of
+continued flight exerted by birds of passage, the idea of its being only
+a small effort is greatly corroborated. To apply the power of the first
+mover to the greatest advantage in producing this effect is a very
+material point. The mode universally adopted by Nature is the oblique
+waft of the wing. We have only to choose between the direct beat
+overtaking the velocity of the current, like the oar of a boat, or
+one applied like the wing, in some assigned degree of obliquity to it.
+Suppose 35 feet per second to be the velocity of an aerial vehicle, the
+oar must be moved with this speed previous to its being able to receive
+any resistance; then if it be only required to obtain a pressure of
+one-tenth of a lb. upon each square foot it must exceed the velocity of
+the current 7.3 feet per second. Hence its whole velocity must be 42.5
+feet per second. Should the same surface be wafted downward like a wing
+with the hinder edge inclined upward in an angle of about 50 deg. 40
+feet to the current it will overtake it at a velocity of 3.5 feet per
+second; and as a slight unknown angle of resistance generates a lb.
+pressure per square foot at this velocity, probably a waft of a little
+more than 4 feet per second would produce this effect, one-tenth part
+of which would be the propelling power. The advantage of this mode of
+application compared with the former is rather more than ten to one.
+
+'In continuing the general principles of aerial navigation, for the
+practice of the art, many mechanical difficulties present themselves
+which require a considerable course of skilfully applied experiments
+before they can be overcome; but, to a certain extent, the air has
+already been made navigable, and no one who has seen the steadiness
+with which weights to the amount of ten stone (including four stone,
+the weight of the machine) hover in the air can doubt of the ultimate
+accomplishment of this object.'
+
+This extract from his work gives but a faint idea of the amount of
+research for which Cayley was responsible. He had the humility of the
+true investigator in scientific problems, and so far as can be seen
+was never guilty of the great fault of so many investigators in this
+subject--that of making claims which he could not support. He was
+content to do, and pass after having recorded his part, and although
+nearly half a century had to pass between the time of his death and the
+first actual flight by means of power-driven planes, yet he may be said
+to have contributed very largely to the solution of the problem, and his
+name will always rank high in the roll of the pioneers of flight.
+
+Practically contemporary with Cayley was Thomas Walker, concerning whom
+little is known save that he was a portrait painter of Hull, where
+was published his pamphlet on The Art of Flying in 1810, a second and
+amplified edition being produced, also in Hull, in 1831. The pamphlet,
+which has been reproduced in extenso in the Aeronautical Classics series
+published by the Royal Aeronautical Society, displays a curious mixture
+of the true scientific spirit and colossal conceit. Walker appears to
+have been a man inclined to jump to conclusions, which carried him up to
+the edge of discovery and left him vacillating there.
+
+The study of the two editions of his pamphlet side by side shows that
+their author made considerable advances in the practicability of his
+designs in the 21 intervening years, though the drawings which accompany
+the text in both editions fail to show anything really capable
+of flight. The great point about Walker's work as a whole is its
+suggestiveness; he did not hesitate to state that the 'art' of flying is
+as truly mechanical as that of rowing a boat, and he had some conception
+of the necessary mechanism, together with an absolute conviction that he
+knew all there was to be known. 'Encouraged by the public,' he says,
+'I would not abandon my purpose of making still further exertions to
+advance and complete an art, the discovery of the TRUE PRINCIPLES (the
+italics are Walker's own) of which, I trust, I can with certainty affirm
+to be my own.'
+
+The pamphlet begins with Walker's admiration of the mechanism of flight
+as displayed by birds. 'It is now almost twenty years,' he says, 'since
+I was first led to think, by the study of birds and their means of
+flying, that if an artificial machine were formed with wings in exact
+imitation of the mechanism of one of those beautiful living machines,
+and applied in the very same way upon the air, there could be no doubt
+of its being made to fly, for it is an axiom in philosophy that the same
+cause will ever produce the same effect.' With this he confesses his
+inability to produce the said effect through lack of funds, though he
+clothes this delicately in the phrase 'professional avocations and other
+circumstances.' Owing to this inability he published his designs that
+others might take advantage of them, prefacing his own researches with
+a list of the very early pioneers, and giving special mention to
+Friar Bacon, Bishop Wilkins, and the Portuguese friar, De Guzman. But,
+although he seems to suggest that others should avail themselves of
+his theoretical knowledge, there is a curious incompleteness about the
+designs accompanying his work, and about the work itself, which seems
+to suggest that he had more knowledge to impart than he chose to make
+public--or else that he came very near to complete solution of the
+problem of flight, and stayed on the threshold without knowing it.
+
+After a dissertation upon the history and strength of the condor, and
+on the differences between the weights of birds, he says: 'The following
+observations upon the wonderful difference in the weight of some birds,
+with their apparent means of supporting it in their flight, may tend
+to remove some prejudices against my plan from the minds of some of
+my readers. The weight of the humming-bird is one drachm, that of the
+condor not less than four stone. Now, if we reduce four stone into
+drachms we shall find the condor is 14,336 times as heavy as the
+humming-bird. What an amazing disproportion of weight! Yet by the same
+mechanical use of its wings the condor can overcome the specific gravity
+of its body with as much ease as the little humming-bird. But this is
+not all. We are informed that this enormous bird possesses a power in
+its wings, so far exceeding what is necessary for its own conveyance
+through the air, that it can take up and fly away with a whole sheer in
+its talons, with as much ease as an eagle would carry off, in the same
+manner, a hare or a rabbit. This we may readily give credit to, from the
+known fact of our little kestrel and the sparrow-hawk frequently flying
+off with a partridge, which is nearly three times the weight of these
+rapacious little birds.'
+
+After a few more observations he arrives at the following conclusion:
+'By attending to the progressive increase in the weight of birds, from
+the delicate little humming-bird up to the huge condor, we clearly
+discover that the addition of a few ounces, pounds, or stones, is no
+obstacle to the art of flying; the specific weight of birds avails
+nothing, for by their possessing wings large enough, and sufficient
+power to work them, they can accomplish the means of flying equally well
+upon all the various scales and dimensions which we see in nature. Such
+being a fact, in the name of reason and philosophy why shall not man,
+with a pair of artificial wings, large enough, and with sufficient power
+to strike them upon the air, be able to produce the same effect?'
+
+Walker asserted definitely and with good ground that muscular effort
+applied without mechanism is insufficient for human flight, but he
+states that if an aeronautical boat were constructed so that a man could
+sit in it in the same manner as when rowing, such a man would be able to
+bring into play his whole bodily strength for the purpose of flight,
+and at the same time would be able to get an additional advantage by
+exerting his strength upon a lever. At first he concluded there must
+be expansion of wings large enough to resist in a sufficient degree
+the specific gravity of whatever is attached to them, but in the second
+edition of his work he altered this to 'expansion of flat passive
+surfaces large enough to reduce the force of gravity so as to float
+the machine upon the air with the man in it.' The second requisite is
+strength enough to strike the wings with sufficient force to complete
+the buoyancy and give a projectile motion to the machine. Given
+these two requisites, Walker states definitely that flying must be
+accomplished simply by muscular exertion. 'If we are secure of these two
+requisites, and I am very confident we are, we may calculate upon the
+success of flight with as much certainty as upon our walking.'
+
+Walker appears to have gained some confidence from the experiments of a
+certain M. Degen, a watchmaker of Vienna, who, according to the Monthly
+Magazine of September, 1809, invented a machine by means of which a
+person might raise himself into the air. The said machine, according to
+the magazine, was formed of two parachutes which might be folded up or
+extended at pleasure, while the person who worked them was placed in the
+centre. This account, however, was rather misleading, for the magazine
+carefully avoided mention of a balloon to which the inventor fixed his
+wings or parachutes. Walker, knowing nothing of the balloon, concluded
+that Degen actually raised himself in the air, though he is doubtful
+of the assertion that Degen managed to fly in various directions,
+especially against the wind.
+
+Walker, after considering Degen and all his works, proceeds to detail
+his own directions for the construction of a flying machine, these
+being as follows: 'Make a car of as light material as possible, but
+with sufficient strength to support a man in it; provide a pair of wings
+about four feet each in length; let them be horizontally expanded and
+fastened upon the top edge of each side of the car, with two joints
+each, so as to admit of a vertical motion to the wings, which motion may
+be effected by a man sitting and working an upright lever in the middle
+of the car. Extend in the front of the car a flat surface of silk, which
+must be stretched out and kept fixed in a passive state; there must
+be the same fixed behind the car; these two surfaces must be perfectly
+equal in length and breadth and large enough to cover a sufficient
+quantity of air to support the whole weight as nearly in equilibrium as
+possible, thus we shall have a great sustaining power in those passive
+surfaces and the active wings will propel the car forward.'
+
+A description of how to launch this car is subsequently given: 'It
+becomes necessary,' says the theorist, 'that I should give directions
+how it may be launched upon the air, which may be done by various means;
+perhaps the following method may be found to answer as well as any: Fix
+a poll upright in the earth, about twenty feet in height, with two open
+collars to admit another poll to slide upwards through them; let there
+be a sliding platform made fast upon the top of the sliding poll; place
+the car with a man in it upon the platform, then raise the platform to
+the height of about thirty feet by means of the sliding poll, let the
+sliding poll and platform suddenly fall down, the car will then be
+left upon the air, and by its pressing the air a projectile force will
+instantly propel the car forward; the man in the car must then strike
+the active wings briskly upon the air, which will so increase the
+projectile force as to become superior to the force of gravitation, and
+if he inclines his weight a little backward, the projectile impulse will
+drive the car forward in an ascending direction. When the car is brought
+to a sufficient altitude to clear the tops of hills, trees, buildings,
+etc., the man, by sitting a little forward on his seat, will then bring
+the wings upon a horizontal plane, and by continuing the action of the
+wings he will be impelled forward in that direction. To descend, he
+must desist from striking the wings, and hold them on a level with their
+joints; the car will then gradually come down, and when it is within
+five or six feet of the ground the man must instantly strike the wings
+downwards, and sit as far back as he can; he will by this means check
+the projectile force, and cause the car to alight very gently with a
+retrograde motion. The car, when up in the air, may be made to turn
+to the right or to the left by forcing out one of the fins, having one
+about eighteen inches long placed vertically on each side of the car for
+that purpose, or perhaps merely by the man inclining the weight of his
+body to one side.'
+
+Having stated how the thing is to be done, Walker is careful to explain
+that when it is done there will be in it some practical use, notably in
+respect of the conveyance of mails and newspapers, or the saving of
+life at sea, or for exploration, etc. It might even reduce the number of
+horses kept by man for his use, by means of which a large amount of land
+might be set free for the growth of food for human consumption.
+
+At the end of his work Walker admits the idea of steam power for driving
+a flying machine in place of simple human exertion, but he, like Cayley,
+saw a drawback to this in the weight of the necessary engine. On the
+whole, he concluded, navigation of the air by means of engine power
+would be mostly confined to the construction of navigable balloons.
+
+As already noted, Walker's work is not over practical, and the foregoing
+extract includes the most practical part of it; the rest is a series
+of dissertations on bird flight, in which, evidently, the portrait
+painter's observations were far less thorough than those of da Vinci or
+Borelli. Taken on the whole, Walker was a man with a hobby; he devoted
+to it much time and thought, but it remained a hobby, nevertheless. His
+observations have proved useful enough to give him a place among the
+early students of flight, but a great drawback to his work is the lack
+of practical experiment, by means of which alone real advance could
+be made; for, as Cayley admitted, theory and practice are very widely
+separated in the study of aviation, and the whole history of flight is
+a matter of unexpected results arising from scarcely foreseen causes,
+together with experiment as patient as daring.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE MIDDLE NINETEENTH CENTURY
+
+Both Cayley and Walker were theorists, though Cayley supported his
+theoretical work with enough of practice to show that he studied along
+right lines; a little after his time there came practical men
+who brought to being the first machine which actually flew by the
+application of power. Before their time, however, mention must be made
+of the work of George Pocock of Bristol, who, somewhere about 1840
+invented what was described as a 'kite carriage,' a vehicle which
+carried a number of persons, and obtained its motive power from a large
+kite. It is on record that, in the year 1846 one of these carriages
+conveyed sixteen people from Bristol to London. Another device of
+Pocock's was what he called a 'buoyant sail,' which was in effect a
+man-lifting kite, and by means of which a passenger was actually raised
+100 yards from the ground, while the inventor's son scaled a cliff
+200 feet in height by means of one of these, 'buoyant sails.' This
+constitutes the first definitely recorded experiment in the use of
+man-lifting kites. A History of the Charvolant or Kite-carriage,
+published in London in 1851, states that 'an experiment of a bold and
+very novel character was made upon an extensive down, where a large
+wagon with a considerable load was drawn along, whilst this huge machine
+at the same time carried an observer aloft in the air, realising almost
+the romance of flying.'
+
+Experimenting, two years after the appearance of the 'kite-carriage,'
+on the helicopter principle, W. H. Phillips constructed a model machine
+which weighed two pounds; this was fitted with revolving fans, driven
+by the combustion of charcoal, nitre, and gypsum, producing steam which,
+discharging into the air, caused the fans to revolve. The inventor
+stated that 'all being arranged, the steam was up in a few seconds, when
+the whole apparatus spun around like any top, and mounted into the
+air faster than a bird; to what height it ascended I had no means of
+ascertaining; the distance travelled was across two fields, where, after
+a long search, I found the machine minus the wings, which had been
+torn off in contact with the ground.' This could hardly be described as
+successful flight, but it was an advance in the construction of machines
+on the helicopter principle, and it was the first steam-driven model of
+the type which actually flew. The invention, however, was not followed
+up.
+
+After Phillips, we come to the great figures of the middle nineteenth
+century, W. S. Henson and John Stringfellow. Cayley had shown, in
+1809, how success might be attained by developing the idea of the plane
+surface so driven as to take advantage of the resistance offered by
+the air, and Henson, who as early as 1840 was experimenting with model
+gliders and light steam engines, evolved and patented an idea for
+something very nearly resembling the monoplane of the early twentieth
+century. His patent, No. 9478, of the year 1842 explains the principle
+of the machine as follows:--
+
+In order that the description hereafter given be rendered clear, I will
+first shortly explain the principle on which the machine is constructed.
+If any light and flat or nearly flat article be projected or thrown
+edgewise in a slightly inclined position, the same will rise on the
+air till the force exerted is expended, when the article so thrown or
+projected will descend; and it will readily be conceived that, if the
+article so projected or thrown possessed in itself a continuous power or
+force equal to that used in throwing or projecting it, the article
+would continue to ascend so long as the forward part of the surface was
+upwards in respect to the hinder part, and that such article, when the
+power was stopped, or when the inclination was reversed, would descend
+by gravity aided by the force of the power contained in the article, if
+the power be continued, thus imitating the flight of a bird.
+
+Now, the first part of my invention consists of an apparatus so
+constructed as to offer a very extended surface or plane of a light yet
+strong construction, which will have the same relation to the general
+machine which the extended wings of a bird have to the body when a bird
+is skimming in the air; but in place of the movement or power for onward
+progress being obtained by movement of the extended surface or plane, as
+is the case with the wings of birds, I apply suitable paddle-wheels
+or other proper mechanical propellers worked by a steam or other
+sufficiently light engine, and thus obtain the requisite power for
+onward movement to the plane or extended surface; and in order to give
+control as to the upward and downward direction of such a machine I
+apply a tail to the extended surface which is capable of being inclined
+or raised, so that when the power is acting to propel the machine, by
+inclining the tail upwards, the resistance offered by the air will
+cause the machine to rise on the air; and, on the contrary, when the
+inclination of the tail is reversed, the machine will immediately be
+propelled downwards, and pass through a plane more or less inclined to
+the horizon as the inclination of the tail is greater or less; and in
+order to guide the machine as to the lateral direction which it shall
+take, I apply a vertical rudder or second tail, and, according as the
+same is inclined in one direction or the other, so will be the direction
+of the machine.'
+
+The machine in question was very large, and differed very little from
+the modern monoplane; the materials were to be spars of bamboo and
+hollow wood, with diagonal wire bracing. The surface of the planes was
+to amount to 4,500 square feet, and the tail, triangular in form (here
+modern practice diverges) was to be 1,500 square feet. The inventor
+estimated that there would be a sustaining power of half a pound per
+square foot, and the driving power was to be supplied by a steam engine
+of 25 to 30 horse-power, driving two six-bladed propellers. Henson was
+largely dependent on Stringfellow for many details of his design, more
+especially with regard to the construction of the engine.
+
+The publication of the patent attracted a great amount of public
+attention, and the illustrations in contemporary journals, representing
+the machine flying over the pyramids and the Channel, anticipated fact
+by sixty years and more; the scientific world was divided, as it was
+up to the actual accomplishment of flight, as to the value of the
+invention.
+
+Strongfellow and Henson became associated after the conception of their
+design, with an attorney named Colombine, and a Mr Marriott, and
+between the four of them a project grew for putting the whole thing on
+a commercial basis--Henson and Stringfellow were to supply the idea;
+Marriott, knowing a member of Parliament, would be useful in getting a
+company incorporated, and Colombine would look after the purely legal
+side of the business. Thus an application was made by Mr Roebuck,
+Marriott's M.P., for an act of incorporation for 'The Aerial Steam
+Transit Company,' Roebuck moving to bring in the bill on the 24th of
+March, 1843. The prospectus, calling for funds for the development of
+the invention, makes interesting reading at this stage of aeronautical
+development; it was as follows:
+
+ PROPOSAL.
+
+For subscriptions of sums of L100, in furtherance of an Extraordinary
+Invention not at present safe to be developed by securing the necessary
+Patents, for which three times the sum advanced, namely, L300, is
+conditionally guaranteed for each subscription on February 1, 1844,
+in case of the anticipations being realised, with the option of the
+subscribers being shareholders for the large amount if so desired, but
+not otherwise.
+
+---------An Invention has recently been discovered, which if ultimately
+successful will be without parallel even in the age which introduced to
+the world the wonderful effects of gas and of steam.
+
+The discovery is of that peculiar nature, so simple in principle yet
+so perfect in all the ingredients required for complete and permanent
+success, that to promulgate it at present would wholly defeat its
+development by the immense competition which would ensue, and the views
+of the originator be entirely frustrated.
+
+This work, the result of years of labour and study, presents a wonderful
+instance of the adaptation of laws long since proved to the scientific
+world combined with established principles so judiciously and carefully
+arranged, as to produce a discovery perfect in all its parts and alike
+in harmony with the laws of Nature and of science.
+
+The Invention has been subjected to several tests and examinations
+and the results are most satisfactory so much so that nothing but the
+completion of the undertaking is required to determine its practical
+operation, which being once established its utility is undoubted, as it
+would be a necessary possession of every empire, and it were hardly too
+much to say, of every individual of competent means in the civilised
+world.
+
+Its qualities and capabilities are so vast that it were impossible and,
+even if possible, unsafe to develop them further, but some idea may
+be formed from the fact that as a preliminary measure patents in Great
+Britain Ireland, Scotland, the Colonies, France, Belgium, and the
+United States, and every other country where protection to the first
+discoveries of an Invention is granted, will of necessity be immediately
+obtained, and by the time these are perfected, which it is estimated
+will be in the month of February, the Invention will be fit for Public
+Trial, but until the Patents are sealed any further disclosure would be
+most dangerous to the principle on which it is based.
+
+Under these circumstances, it is proposed to raise an immediate sum of
+L2,000 in furtherance of the Projector's views, and as some protection
+to the parties who may embark in the matter, that this is not a
+visionary plan for objects imperfectly considered, Mr Colombine, to whom
+the secret has been confided, has allowed his name to be used on the
+occasion, and who will if referred to corroborate this statement, and
+convince any inquirer of the reasonable prospects of large pecuniary
+results following the development of the Invention.
+
+It is, therefore, intended to raise the sum of L2,000 in twenty sums of
+L100 each (of which any subscriber may take one or more not exceeding
+five in number to be held by any individual) the amount of which is to
+be paid into the hands of Mr Colombine as General Manager of the concern
+to be by him appropriated in procuring the several Patents and providing
+the expenses incidental to the works in progress. For each of which
+sums of L100 it is intended and agreed that twelve months after the
+1st February next, the several parties subscribing shall receive as an
+equivalent for the risk to be run the sum of L300 for each of the sums
+of L100 now subscribed, provided when the time arrives the Patents shall
+be found to answer the purposes intended.
+
+As full and complete success is alone looked to, no moderate or
+imperfect benefit is to be anticipated, but the work, if it once passes
+the necessary ordeal, to which inventions of every kind must be first
+subject, will then be regarded by every one as the most astonishing
+discovery of modern times; no half success can follow, and therefore the
+full nature of the risk is immediately ascertained.
+
+The intention is to work and prove the Patent by collective instead of
+individual aid as less hazardous at first end more advantageous in the
+result for the Inventor, as well as others, by having the interest of
+several engaged in aiding one common object--the development of a
+Great Plan. The failure is not feared, yet as perfect success might, by
+possibility, not ensue, it is necessary to provide for that result,
+and the parties concerned make it a condition that no return of
+the subscribed money shall be required, if the Patents shall by any
+unforeseen circumstances not be capable of being worked at all; against
+which, the first application of the money subscribed, that of securing
+the Patents, affords a reasonable security, as no one without solid
+grounds would think of such an expenditure.
+
+It is perfectly needless to state that no risk or responsibility of any
+kind can arise beyond the payment of the sum to be subscribed under any
+circumstances whatever.
+
+As soon as the Patents shall be perfected and proved it is contemplated,
+so far as may be found practicable, to further the great object in view
+a Company shall be formed but respecting which it is unnecessary to
+state further details, than that a preference will be given to all those
+persons who now subscribe, and to whom shares shall be appropriated
+according to the larger amount (being three times the sum to be paid by
+each person) contemplated to be returned as soon as the success of the
+Invention shall have been established, at their option, or the money
+paid, whereby the Subscriber will have the means of either withdrawing
+with a large pecuniary benefit, or by continuing his interest in the
+concern lay the foundation for participating in the immense benefit
+which must follow the success of the plan.
+
+It is not pretended to conceal that the project is a speculation--all
+parties believe that perfect success, and thence incalculable advantage
+of every kind, will follow to every individual joining in this great
+undertaking; but the Gentlemen engaged in it wish that no concealment
+of the consequences, perfect success, or possible failure, should in the
+slightest degree be inferred. They believe this will prove the germ of a
+mighty work, and in that belief call for the operation of others with no
+visionary object, but a legitimate one before them, to attain that point
+where perfect success will be secured from their combined exertions.
+
+All applications to be made to D. E. Colombine, Esquire, 8 Carlton
+Chambers, Regent Street.
+
+The applications did not materialise, as was only to be expected in view
+of the vagueness of the proposals. Colombine did some advertising, and
+Mr Roebuck expressed himself as unwilling to proceed further in the
+venture. Henson experimented with models to a certain extent, while
+Stringfellow looked for funds for the construction of a full-sized
+monoplane. In November of 1843 he suggested that he and Henson should
+construct a large model out of their own funds. On Henson's suggestion
+Colombine and Marriott were bought out as regards the original patent,
+and Stringfellow and Henson entered into an agreement and set to work.
+
+Their work is briefly described in a little pamphlet by F. J.
+Stringfellow, entitled A few Remarks on what has been done with
+screw-propelled Aero-plane Machines from 1809 to 1892. The author writes
+with regard to the work that his father and Henson undertook:--
+
+'They commenced the construction of a small model operated by a spring,
+and laid down the larger model 20 ft. from tip to tip of planes, 3 1/2
+ft. wide, giving 70 ft. of sustaining surface, about 10 more in the
+tail. The making of this model required great consideration; various
+supports for the wings were tried, so as to combine lightness with
+firmness, strength and rigidity.
+
+'The planes were staid from three sets of fish-shaped masts, and rigged
+square and firm by flat steel rigging. The engine and boiler were put in
+the car to drive two screw-propellers, right and left-handed, 3 ft. in
+diameter, with four blades each, occupying three-quarters of the area
+of the circumference, set at an angle of 60 degrees. A considerable time
+was spent in perfecting the motive power. Compressed air was tried and
+abandoned. Tappets, cams, and eccentrics were all tried, to work the
+slide valve, to obtain the best results. The piston rod of engine passed
+through both ends of the cylinder, and with long connecting rods worked
+direct on the crank of the propellers. From memorandum of experiments
+still preserved the following is a copy of one: June, 27th, 1845, water
+50 ozs., spirit 10 ozs., lamp lit 8.45, gauge moves 8.46, engine started
+8.48 (100 lb. pressure), engine stopped 8.57, worked 9 minutes, 2,288
+revolutions, average 254 per minute. No priming, 40 ozs. water consumed,
+propulsion (thrust of propellers), 5 lbs. 4 1/2 ozs. at commencement,
+steady, 4 lbs. 1/2 oz., 57 revolutions to 1 oz. water, steam cut off
+one-third from beginning.
+
+'The diameter of cylinder of engine was 1 1/2 inch, length of stroke 3
+inches.
+
+'In the meantime an engine was also made for the smaller model, and a
+wing action tried, but with poor results. The time was mostly devoted to
+the larger model, and in 1847 a tent was erected on Bala Down, about two
+miles from Chard, and the model taken up one night by the workmen. The
+experiments were not so favourable as was expected. The machine could
+not support itself for any distance, but, when launched off, gradually
+descended, although the power and surface should have been ample;
+indeed, according to latest calculations, the thrust should have carried
+more than three times the weight, for there was a thrust of 5 lbs. from
+the propellers, and a surface of over 70 square feet to sustain under 30
+lbs., but necessary speed was lacking.'
+
+Stringfellow himself explained the failure as follows:--
+
+'There stood our aerial protegee in all her purity--too delicate, too
+fragile, too beautiful for this rough world; at least those were
+my ideas at the time, but little did I think how soon it was to be
+realised. I soon found, before I had time to introduce the spark, a
+drooping in the wings, a flagging in all the parts. In less than ten
+minutes the machine was saturated with wet from a deposit of dew, so
+that anything like a trial was impossible by night. I did not consider
+we could get the silk tight and rigid enough. Indeed, the framework
+altogether was too weak. The steam-engine was the best part. Our want of
+success was not for want of power or sustaining surface, but for want of
+proper adaptation of the means to the end of the various parts.'
+
+Henson, who had spent a considerable amount of money in these
+experimental constructions, consoled himself for failure by venturing
+into matrimony; in 1849 he went to America, leaving Stringfellow to
+continue experimenting alone. From 1846 to 1848 Stringfellow worked on
+what is really an epoch-making item in the history of aeronautics--the
+first engine-driven aeroplane which actually flew. The machine in
+question had a 10 foot span, and was 2 ft. across in the widest part of
+the wing; the length of tail was 3 ft. 6 ins., and the span of tail in
+the widest part 22 ins., the total sustaining area being about 14
+sq. ft. The motive power consisted of an engine with a cylinder of
+three-quarter inch diameter and a two-inch stroke; between this and
+the crank shaft was a bevelled gear giving three revolutions of the
+propellers to every stroke of the engine; the propellers, right and left
+screw, were four-bladed and 16 inches in diameter. The total weight of
+the model with engine was 8 lbs. Its successful flight is ascribed to
+the fact that Stringfellow curved the wings, giving them rigid front
+edges and flexible trailing edges, as suggested long before both by Da
+Vinci and Borelli, but never before put into practice.
+
+Mr F. J. Stringfellow, in the pamphlet quoted above, gives the best
+account of the flight of this model: 'My father had constructed another
+small model which was finished early in 1848, and having the loan of a
+long room in a disused lace factory, early in June the small model was
+moved there for experiments. The room was about 22 yards long and
+from 10 to 12 ft. high.... The inclined wire for starting the machine
+occupied less than half the length of the room and left space at the end
+for the machine to clear the floor. In the first experiment the tail was
+set at too high an angle, and the machine rose too rapidly on leaving
+the wire. After going a few yards it slid back as if coming down an
+inclined plane, at such an angle that the point of the tail struck the
+ground and was broken. The tail was repaired and set at a smaller angle.
+The steam was again got up, and the machine started down the wire, and,
+upon reaching the point of self-detachment, it gradually rose until
+it reached the farther end of the room, striking a hole in the canvas
+placed to stop it. In experiments the machine flew well, when rising as
+much as one in seven. The late Rev. J. Riste, Esq., lace manufacturer,
+Northcote Spicer, Esq., J. Toms, Esq., and others witnessed experiments.
+Mr Marriatt, late of the San Francisco News Letter brought down from
+London Mr Ellis, the then lessee of Cremorne Gardens, Mr Partridge, and
+Lieutenant Gale, the aeronaut, to witness experiments. Mr Ellis offered
+to construct a covered way at Cremorne for experiments. Mr Stringfellow
+repaired to Cremorne, but not much better accommodations than he had
+at home were provided, owing to unfulfilled engagement as to room.
+Mr Stringfellow was preparing for departure when a party of gentlemen
+unconnected with the Gardens begged to see an experiment, and finding
+them able to appreciate his endeavours, he got up steam and started the
+model down the wire. When it arrived at the spot where it should leave
+the wire it appeared to meet with some obstruction, and threatened to
+come to the ground, but it soon recovered itself and darted off in
+as fair a flight as it was possible to make at a distance of about 40
+yards, where it was stopped by the canvas.
+
+'Having now demonstrated the practicability of making a steam-engine
+fly, and finding nothing but a pecuniary loss and little honour,
+this experimenter rested for a long time, satisfied with what he had
+effected. The subject, however, had to him special charms, and he still
+contemplated the renewal of his experiments.'
+
+It appears that Stringfellow's interest did not revive sufficiently
+for the continuance of the experiments until the founding of the
+Aeronautical Society of Great Britain in 1866. Wenham's paper on Aerial
+Locomotion read at the first meeting of the Society, which was held at
+the Society of Arts under the Presidency of the Duke of Argyll, was
+the means of bringing Stringfellow back into the field. It was Wenham's
+suggestion, in the first place, that monoplane design should be
+abandoned for the superposition of planes; acting on this suggestion
+Stringfellow constructed a model triplane, and also designed a steam
+engine of slightly over one horse-power, and a one horse-power copper
+boiler and fire box which, although capable of sustaining a pressure of
+500 lbs. to the square inch, weighed only about 40 lbs.
+
+Both the engine and the triplane model were exhibited at the first
+Aeronautical Exhibition held at the Crystal Palace in 1868. The triplane
+had a supporting surface of 28 sq. ft.; inclusive of engine, boiler,
+fuel, and water its total weight was under 12 lbs. The engine worked two
+21 in. propellers at 600 revolutions per minute, and developed 100 lbs.
+steam pressure in five minutes, yielding one-third horse-power. Since
+no free flight was allowed in the Exhibition, owing to danger from fire,
+the triplane was suspended from a wire in the nave of the building,
+and it was noted that, when running along the wire, the model made a
+perceptible lift.
+
+A prize of L100 was awarded to the steam engine as the lightest steam
+engine in proportion to its power. The engine and model together may
+be reckoned as Stringfellow's best achievement. He used his L100 in
+preparation for further experiments, but he was now an old man, and
+his work was practically done. Both the triplane and the engine were
+eventually bought for the Washington Museum; Stringfellow's earlier
+models, together with those constructed by him in conjunction with
+Henson, remain in this country in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
+
+John Stringfellow died on December 13th, 1883. His place in the history
+of aeronautics is at least equal to that of Cayley, and it may be
+said that he laid the foundation of such work as was subsequently
+accomplished by Maxim, Langley, and their fellows. It was the coming of
+the internal combustion engine that rendered flight practicable, and had
+this prime mover been available in John Stringfellow's day the Wright
+brothers' achievement might have been antedated by half a century.
+
+
+
+
+V. WENHAM, LE BRIS, AND SOME OTHERS
+
+There are few outstanding events in the development of aeronautics
+between Stringfellow's final achievement and the work of such men as
+Lilienthal, Pilcher, Montgomery, and their kind; in spite of this, the
+later middle decades of the nineteenth century witnessed a considerable
+amount of spade work both in England and in France, the two countries
+which led in the way in aeronautical development until Lilienthal gave
+honour to Germany, and Langley and Montgomery paved the way for the
+Wright Brothers in America.
+
+Two abortive attempts characterised the sixties of last century in
+France. As regards the first of these, it was carried out by three men,
+Nadar, Ponton d'Amecourt, and De la Landelle, who conceived the idea
+of a full-sized helicopter machine. D'Amecourt exhibited a steam model,
+constructed in 1865, at the Aeronautical Society's Exhibition in 1868.
+The engine was aluminium with cylinders of bronze, driving two screws
+placed one above the other and rotating in Opposite directions, but the
+power was not sufficient to lift the model. De la Landelle's principal
+achievement consisted in the publication in 1863 of a book entitled
+Aviation which has a certain historical value; he got out several
+designs for large machines on the helicopter principle, but did little
+more until the three combined in the attempt to raise funds for the
+construction of their full-sized machine. Since the funds were not
+forthcoming, Nadar took to ballooning as the means of raising money;
+apparently he found this substitute for real flight sufficiently
+interesting to divert him from the study of the helicopter principle,
+for the experiment went no further.
+
+The other experimenter of this period, one Count d'Esterno, took out a
+patent in 1864 for a soaring machine which allowed for alteration of
+the angle of incidence of the wings in the manner that was subsequently
+carried out by the Wright Brothers. It was not until 1883 that any
+attempt was made to put this patent to practical use, and, as the
+inventor died while it was under construction, it was never completed.
+D'Esterno was also responsible for the production of a work entitled
+Du Vol des Oiseaux, which is a very remarkable study of the flight of
+birds.
+
+Mention has already been made of the founding of the Aeronautical
+Society of Great Britain, which, since 1918 has been the Royal
+Aeronautical Society. 1866 witnessed the first meeting of the Society
+under the Presidency of the Duke of Argyll, when in June, at the Society
+of Arts, Francis Herbert Wenham read his now classic paper Aerial
+Locomotion. Certain quotations from this will show how clearly Wenham
+had thought out the problems connected with flight.
+
+'The first subject for consideration is the proportion of surface to
+weight, and their combined effect in descending perpendicularly through
+the atmosphere. The datum is here based upon the consideration of
+safety, for it may sometimes be needful for a living being to drop
+passively, without muscular effort. One square foot of sustaining
+surface for every pound of the total weight will be sufficient for
+security.
+
+'According to Smeaton's table of atmospheric resistances, to produce
+a force of one pound on a square foot, the wind must move against the
+plane (or which is the same thing, the plane against the wind), at the
+rate of twenty-two feet per second, or 1,320 feet per minute, equal to
+fifteen miles per hour. The resistance of the air will now balance the
+weight on the descending surface, and, consequently, it cannot exceed
+that speed. Now, twenty-two feet per second is the velocity acquired at
+the end of a fall of eight feet--a height from which a well-knit man or
+animal may leap down without much risk of injury. Therefore, if a man
+with parachute weigh together 143 lbs., spreading the same number of
+square feet of surface contained in a circle fourteen and a half feet
+in diameter, he will descend at perhaps an unpleasant velocity, but with
+safety to life and limb.
+
+'It is a remarkable fact how this proportion of wing-surface to weight
+extends throughout a great variety of the flying portion of the
+animal kingdom, even down to hornets, bees, and other insects. In some
+instances, however, as in the gallinaceous tribe, including pheasants,
+this area is somewhat exceeded, but they are known to be very poor
+fliers. Residing as they do chiefly on the ground, their wings are
+only required for short distances, or for raising them or easing their
+descent from their roosting-places in forest trees, the shortness
+of their wings preventing them from taking extended flights. The
+wing-surface of the common swallow is rather more than in the ratio of
+two square feet per pound, but having also great length of pinion, it is
+both swift and enduring in its flight. When on a rapid course this bird
+is in the habit of furling its wings into a narrow compass. The greater
+extent of surface is probably needful for the continual variations of
+speed and instant stoppages for obtaining its insect food.
+
+'On the other hand, there are some birds, particularly of the duck
+tribe, whose wing-surface but little exceeds half a square foot,
+or seventy-two inches per pound, yet they may be classed among the
+strongest and swiftest of fliers. A weight of one pound, suspended
+from an area of this extent, would acquire a velocity due to a fall of
+sixteen feet--a height sufficient for the destruction or injury of most
+animals. But when the plane is urged forward horizontally, in a manner
+analogous to the wings of a bird during flight, the sustaining power is
+greatly influenced by the form and arrangement of the surface.
+
+'In the case of perpendicular descent, as a parachute, the sustaining
+effect will be much the same, whatever the figure of the outline of the
+superficies may be, and a circle perhaps affords the best resistance of
+any. Take, for example, a circle of twenty square feet (as possessed
+by the pelican) loaded with as many pounds. This, as just stated, will
+limit the rate of perpendicular descent to 1,320 feet per minute. But
+instead of a circle sixty-one inches in diameter, if the area is bounded
+by a parallelogram ten feet long by two feet broad, and whilst at
+perfect freedom to descend perpendicularly, let a force be applied
+exactly in a horizontal direction, so as to carry it edgeways, with the
+long side foremost, at a forward speed of thirty miles per hour--just
+double that of its passive descent: the rate of fall under these
+conditions will be decreased most remarkably, probably to less than
+one-fifteenth part, or eighty-eight feet per minute, or one mile per
+hour.'
+
+And again: 'It has before been shown how utterly inadequate the mere
+perpendicular impulse of a plane is found to be in supporting a weight,
+when there is no horizontal motion at the time. There is no material
+weight of air to be acted upon, and it yields to the slightest force,
+however great the velocity of impulse may be. On the other hand, suppose
+that a large bird, in full flight, can make forty miles per hour, or
+3,520 feet per minute, and performs one stroke per second. Now, during
+every fractional portion of that stroke, the wing is acting upon and
+obtaining an impulse from a fresh and undisturbed body of air; and if
+the vibration of the wing is limited to an arc of two feet, this by no
+means represents the small force of action that would be obtained when
+in a stationary position, for the impulse is secured upon a stratum of
+fifty-eight feet in length of air at each stroke. So that the conditions
+of weight of air for obtaining support equally well apply to weight of
+air and its reaction in producing forward impulse.
+
+'So necessary is the acquirement of this horizontal speed, even in
+commencing flight, that most heavy birds, when possible, rise against
+the wind, and even run at the top of their speed to make their wings
+available, as in the example of the eagle, mentioned at the commencement
+of this paper. It is stated that the Arabs, on horseback, can approach
+near enough to spear these birds, when on the plain, before they are
+able to rise; their habit is to perch on an eminence, where possible.
+
+'The tail of a bird is not necessary for flight. A pigeon can fly
+perfectly with this appendage cut short off; it probably performs an
+important function in steering, for it is to be remarked, that most
+birds that have either to pursue or evade pursuit are amply provided
+with this organ.
+
+'The foregoing reasoning is based upon facts, which tend to show that
+the flight of the largest and heaviest of all birds is really performed
+with but a small amount of force, and that man is endowed with
+sufficient muscular power to enable him also to take individual and
+extended flights, and that success is probably only involved in a
+question of suitable mechanical adaptations. But if the wings are to be
+modelled in imitation of natural examples, but very little consideration
+will serve to demonstrate its utter impracticability when applied in
+these forms.'
+
+Thus Wenham, one of the best theorists of his age. The Society with
+which this paper connects his name has done work, between that time and
+the present, of which the importance cannot be overestimated, and has
+been of the greatest value in the development of aeronautics, both in
+theory and experiment. The objects of the Society are to give a stronger
+impulse to the scientific study of aerial navigation, to promote the
+intercourse of those interested in the subject at home and abroad, and
+to give advice and instruction to those who study the principles upon
+which aeronautical science is based. From the date of its foundation the
+Society has given special study to dynamic flight, putting this before
+ballooning. Its library, its bureau of advice and information, and its
+meetings, all assist in forwarding the study of aeronautics, and its
+twenty-three early Annual Reports are of considerable value, containing
+as they do a large amount of useful information on aeronautical
+subjects, and forming practically the basis of aeronautical science.
+
+Ante to Wenham, Stringfellow and the French experimenters already noted,
+by some years, was Le Bris, a French sea captain, who appears to have
+required only a thorough scientific training to have rendered him of
+equal moment in the history of gliding flight with Lilienthal himself.
+Le Bris, it appears, watched the albatross and deduced, from the manner
+in which it supported itself in the air, that plane surfaces could
+be constructed and arranged to support a man in like manner. Octave
+Chanute, himself a leading exponent of gliding, gives the best
+description of Le Bris's experiments in a work, Progress in Flying
+Machines, which, although published as recently as I 1894, is already
+rare. Chanute draws from a still rarer book, namely, De la Landelle's
+work published in 1884. Le Bris himself, quoted by De la Landelle as
+speaking of his first visioning of human flight, describes how he killed
+an albatross, and then--'I took the wing of the albatross and exposed
+it to the breeze; and lo! in spite of me it drew forward into the wind;
+notwithstanding my resistance it tended to rise. Thus I had discovered
+the secret of the bird! I comprehended the whole mystery of flight.'
+
+This apparently took place while at sea; later on Le Bris, returning to
+France, designed and constructed an artificial albatross of sufficient
+size to bear his own weight. The fact that he followed the bird outline
+as closely as he did attests his lack of scientific training for his
+task, while at the same time the success of the experiment was proof of
+his genius. The body of his artificial bird, boat-shaped, was 13 1/2 ft.
+in length, with a breadth of 4 ft. at the widest part. The material
+was cloth stretched over a wooden framework; in front was a small mast
+rigged after the manner of a ship's masts to which were attached poles
+and cords with which Le Bris intended to work the wings. Each wing was
+23 ft. in length, giving a total supporting surface of nearly 220 sq.
+ft.; the weight of the whole apparatus was only 92 pounds. For steering,
+both vertical and horizontal, a hinged tail was provided, and the
+leading edge of each wing was made flexible. In construction throughout,
+and especially in that of the wings, Le Bris adhered as closely as
+possible to the original albatross.
+
+He designed an ingenious kind of mechanism which he termed 'Rotules,'
+which by means of two levers gave a rotary motion to the front edge of
+the wings, and also permitted of their adjustment to various angles.
+The inventor's idea was to stand upright in the body of the contrivance,
+working the levers and cords with his hands, and with his feet on
+a pedal by means of which the steering tail was to be worked. He
+anticipated that, given a strong wind, he could rise into the air after
+the manner of an albatross, without any need for flapping his wings, and
+the account of his first experiment forms one of the most interesting
+incidents in the history of flight. It is related in full in Chanute's
+work, from which the present account is summarised.
+
+Le Bris made his first experiment on a main road near Douarnenez, at
+Trefeuntec. From his observation of the albatross Le Bris concluded
+that it was necessary to get some initial velocity in order to make the
+machine rise; consequently on a Sunday morning, with a breeze of about
+12 miles an hour blowing down the road, he had his albatross placed on a
+cart and set off, with a peasant driver, against the wind. At the outset
+the machine was fastened to the cart by a rope running through the rails
+on which the machine rested, and secured by a slip knot on Le Bris's own
+wrist, so that only a jerk on his part was necessary to loosen the rope
+and set the machine free. On each side walked an assistant holding the
+wings, and when a turn of the road brought the machine full into the
+wind these men were instructed to let go, while the driver increased the
+pace from a walk to a trot. Le Bris, by pressure on the levers of the
+machine, raised the front edges of his wings slightly; they took the
+wind almost instantly to such an extent that the horse, relieved of a
+great part of the weight he had been drawing, turned his trot into a
+gallop. Le Bris gave the jerk of the rope that should have unfastened
+the slip knot, but a concealed nail on the cart caught the rope, so that
+it failed to run. The lift of the machine was such, however, that it
+relieved the horse of very nearly the weight of the cart and driver, as
+well as that of Le Bris and his machine, and in the end the rails of the
+cart gave way. Le Bris rose in the air, the machine maintaining perfect
+balance and rising to a height of nearly 300 ft., the total length of
+the glide being upwards of an eighth of a mile. But at the last moment
+the rope which had originally fastened the machine to the cart got wound
+round the driver's body, so that this unfortunate dangled in the air
+under Le Bris and probably assisted in maintaining the balance of the
+artificial albatross. Le Bris, congratulating himself on his success,
+was prepared to enjoy just as long a time in the air as the pressure of
+the wind would permit, but the howls of the unfortunate driver at the
+end of the rope beneath him dispelled his dreams; by working his levers
+he altered the angle of the front wing edges so skilfully as to make a
+very successful landing indeed for the driver, who, entirely uninjured,
+disentangled himself from the rope as soon as he touched the ground, and
+ran off to retrieve his horse and cart.
+
+Apparently his release made a difference in the centre of gravity, for
+Le Bris could not manipulate his levers for further ascent; by skilful
+manipulation he retarded the descent sufficiently to escape injury to
+himself; the machine descended at an angle, so that one wing, striking
+the ground in front of the other, received a certain amount of damage.
+
+It may have been on account of the reluctance of this same or another
+driver that Le Bris chose a different method of launching himself in
+making a second experiment with his albatross. He chose the edge of a
+quarry which had been excavated in a depression of the ground; here he
+assembled his apparatus at the bottom of the quarry, and by means of a
+rope was hoisted to a height of nearly 100 ft. from the quarry bottom,
+this rope being attached to a mast which he had erected upon the edge
+of the depression in which the quarry was situated. Thus hoisted, the
+albatross was swung to face a strong breeze that blew inland, and Le
+Bris manipulated his levers to give the front edges of his wings a
+downward angle, so that only the top surfaces should take the wing
+pressure. Having got his balance, he obtained a lifting angle of
+incidence on the wings by means of his levers, and released the hook
+that secured the machine, gliding off over the quarry. On the glide he
+met with the inevitable upward current of air that the quarry and the
+depression in which it was situated caused; this current upset the
+balance of the machine and flung it to the bottom of the quarry,
+breaking it to fragments. Le Bris, apparently as intrepid as ingenious,
+gripped the mast from which his levers were worked, and, springing
+upward as the machine touched earth, escaped with no more damage than a
+broken leg. But for the rebound of the levers he would have escaped even
+this.
+
+The interest of these experiments is enhanced by the fact that Le Bris
+was a seafaring man who conducted them from love of the science which
+had fired his imagination, and in so doing exhausted his own small
+means. It was in 1855 that he made these initial attempts, and
+twelve years passed before his persistence was rewarded by a public
+subscription made at Brest for the purpose of enabling him to continue
+his experiments. He built a second albatross, and on the advice of his
+friends ballasted it for flight instead of travelling in it himself. It
+was not so successful as the first, probably owing to the lack of human
+control while in flight; on one of the trials a height of 150 ft. was
+attained, the glider being secured by a thin rope and held so as to face
+into the wind. A glide of nearly an eighth of a mile was made with the
+rope hanging slack, and, at the end of this distance, a rise in the
+ground modified the force of the wind, whereupon the machine settled
+down without damage. A further trial in a gusty wind resulted in the
+complete destruction of this second machine; Le Bris had no more
+funds, no further subscriptions were likely to materialise, and so
+the experiments of this first exponent of the art of gliding (save
+for Besnier and his kind) came to an end. They constituted a notable
+achievement, and undoubtedly Le Bris deserves a better place than has
+been accorded him in the ranks of the early experimenters.
+
+Contemporary with him was Charles Spencer, the first man to practice
+gliding in England. His apparatus consisted of a pair of wings with a
+total area of 30 sq. ft., to which a tail and body were attached. The
+weight of this apparatus was some 24 lbs., and, launching himself on
+it from a small eminence, as was done later by Lilienthal in his
+experiments, the inventor made flights of over 120 feet. The glider in
+question was exhibited at the Aeronautical Exhibition of 1868.
+
+
+
+
+VI. THE AGE OF THE GIANTS
+
+Until the Wright Brothers definitely solved the problem of flight and
+virtually gave the aeroplane its present place in aeronautics, there
+were three definite schools of experiment. The first of these was
+that which sought to imitate nature by means of the ornithopter or
+flapping-wing machines directly imitative of bird flight; the second
+school was that which believed in the helicopter or lifting screw; the
+third and eventually successful school is that which followed up the
+principle enunciated by Cayley, that of opposing a plane surface to the
+resistance of the air by supplying suitable motive power to drive it at
+the requisite angle for support.
+
+Engineering problems generally go to prove that too close an imitation
+of nature in her forms of recipro-cating motion is not advantageous; it
+is impossible to copy the minutiae of a bird's wing effectively, and the
+bird in flight depends on the tiniest details of its feathers just as
+much as on the general principle on which the whole wing is constructed.
+Bird flight, however, has attracted many experimenters, including even
+Lilienthal; among others may be mentioned F. W. Brearey, who invented
+what he called the 'Pectoral cord,' which stored energy on each upstroke
+of the artificial wing; E. P. Frost; Major R. Moore, and especially
+Hureau de Villeneuve, a most enthusiastic student of this form of
+flight, who began his experiments about 1865, and altogether designed
+and made nearly 300 artificial birds, one of his later constructions
+was a machine in bird form with a wing span of about 50 ft.; the
+motive power for this was supplied by steam from a boiler which, being
+stationary on the ground, was connected by a length of hose to the
+machine. De Villeneuve, turning on steam for his first trial, obtained
+sufficient power to make the wings beat very forcibly; with the inventor
+on the machine the latter rose several feet into the air, whereupon de
+Villeneuve grew nervous and turned off the steam supply. The machine
+fell to the earth, breaking one of its wings, and it does not appear
+that de Villeneuve troubled to reconstruct it. This experiment remains
+as the greatest success yet achieved by any machine constructed on the
+ornithopter principle.
+
+It may be that, as forecasted by the prophet Wells, the flapping-wing
+machine will yet come to its own and compete with the aeroplane in
+efficiency. Against this, however, are the practical advantages of
+the rotary mechanism of the aeroplane propeller as compared with the
+movement of a bird's wing, which, according to Marey, moves in a figure
+of eight. The force derived from a propeller is of necessity continual,
+while it is equally obvious that that derived from a flapping movement
+is intermittent, and, in the recovery of a wing after completion of one
+stroke for the next, there is necessarily a certain cessation, if not
+loss, of power.
+
+The matter of experiment along any lines in connection with aviation is
+primarily one of hard cash. Throughout the whole history of flight up to
+the outbreak of the European war development has been handicapped on
+the score of finance, and, since the arrival of the aeroplane, both
+ornithopter and helicopter schools have been handicapped by this
+consideration. Thus serious study of the efficiency of wings in
+imitation of those of the living bird has not been carried to a point
+that might win success for this method of propulsion. Even Wilbur Wright
+studied this subject and propounded certain theories, while a later and
+possibly more scientific student, F. W. Lanchester, has also contributed
+empirical conclusions. Another and earlier student was Lawrence
+Hargrave, who made a wing-propelled model which achieved successful
+flight, and in 1885 was exhibited before the Royal Society of New South
+Wales. Hargrave called the principle on which his propeller worked that
+of a 'Trochoided plane'; it was, in effect, similar to the feathering of
+an oar.
+
+Hargrave, to diverge for a brief while from the machine to the man,
+was one who, although he achieved nothing worthy of special remark,
+contributed a great deal of painstaking work to the science of flight.
+He made a series of experiments with man-lifting kites in addition to
+making a study of flapping-wing flight. It cannot be said that he set
+forth any new principle; his work was mainly imitative, but at the same
+time by developing ideas originated in great measure by others he helped
+toward the solution of the problem.
+
+Attempts at flight on the helicopter principle consist in the work of De
+la Landelle and others already mentioned. The possibility of flight by
+this method is modified by a very definite disadvantage of which lovers
+of the helicopter seem to take little account. It is always claimed for
+a machine of this type that it possesses great advantages both in rising
+and in landing, since, if it were effective, it would obviously be able
+to rise from and alight on any ground capable of containing its own
+bulk; a further advantage claimed is that the helicopter would be able
+to remain stationary in the air, maintaining itself in any position by
+the vertical lift of its propeller.
+
+These potential assets do not take into consideration the fact that
+efficiency is required not only in rising, landing, and remaining
+stationary in the air, but also in actual flight. It must be evident
+that if a certain amount of the motive force is used in maintaining the
+machine off the ground, that amount of force is missing from the total
+of horizontal driving power. Again, it is often assumed by advocates of
+this form of flight that the rapidity of climb of the helicopter would
+be far greater than that of the driven plane; this view overlooks the
+fact that the maintenance of aerodynamic support would claim the greater
+part of the engine-power; the rate of ascent would be governed by the
+amount of power that could be developed surplus to that required for
+maintenance.
+
+This is best explained by actual figures: assuming that a propeller 15
+ft. in diameter is used, almost 50 horse-power would be required to
+get an upward lift of 1,000 pounds; this amount of horse-power would be
+continually absorbed in maintaining the machine in the air at any given
+level; for actual lift from one level to another at a speed of eleven
+feet per second a further 20 horse-power would be required, which means
+that 70 horse-power must be constantly provided for; this absorption
+of power in the mere maintenance of aero-dynamic support is a permanent
+drawback.
+
+The attraction of the helicopter lies, probably, in the ease with which
+flight is demonstrated by means of models constructed on this principle,
+but one truism with regard to the principles of flight is that the
+problems change remarkably, and often unexpectedly, with the size of
+the machine constructed for experiment. Berriman, in a brief but very
+interesting manual entitled Principles of Flight, assumed that 'there is
+a significant dimension of which the effective area is an expression
+of the second power, while the weight became an expression of the third
+power. Then once again we have the two-thirds power law militating
+against the successful construction of large helicopters, on the ground
+that the essential weight increases disproportionately fast to the
+effective area. From a consideration of the structural features of
+propellers it is evident that this particular relationship does not
+apply in practice, but it seems reasonable that some such governing
+factor should exist as an explanation of the apparent failure of all
+full-sized machines that have been constructed. Among models there is
+nothing more strikingly successful than the toy helicopter, in which the
+essential weight is so small compared with the effective area.'
+
+De la Landelle's work, already mentioned, was carried on a few years
+later by another Frenchman, Castel, who constructed a machine with eight
+propellers arranged in two fours and driven by a compressed air motor or
+engine. The model with which Castel experimented had a total weight of
+only 49 lbs.; it rose in the air and smashed itself by driving against
+a wall, and the inventor does not seem to have proceeded further.
+Contemporary with Castel was Professor Forlanini, whose design was for
+a machine very similar to de la Landelle's, with two superposed screws.
+This machine ranks as the second on the helicopter principle to achieve
+flight; it remained in the air for no less than the third of a minute in
+one of its trials.
+
+Later experimenters in this direction were Kress, a German; Professor
+Wellner, an Austrian; and W. R. Kimball, an American. Kress, like most
+Germans, set to the development of an idea which others had originated;
+he followed de la Landelle and Forlanini by fitting two superposed
+propellers revolving in opposite directions, and with this machine he
+achieved good results as regards horse-power to weight; Kimball, it
+appears, did not get beyond the rubber-driven model stage, and any
+success he may have achieved was modified by the theory enunciated by
+Berriman and quoted above.
+
+Comparing these two schools of thought, the helicopter and bird-flight
+schools, it appears that the latter has the greater chance of eventual
+success--that is, if either should ever come into competition with the
+aeroplane as effective means of flight. So far, the aeroplane holds
+the field, but the whole science of flight is so new and so full of
+unexpected developments that this is no reason for assuming that other
+means may not give equal effect, when money and brains are diverted from
+the driven plane to a closer imitation of natural flight.
+
+Reverting from non-success to success, from consideration of the two
+methods mentioned above to the direction in which practical flight
+has been achieved, it is to be noted that between the time of Le
+Bris, Stringfellow, and their contemporaries, and the nineties of last
+century, there was much plodding work carried out with little visible
+result, more especially so far as English students were concerned. Among
+the incidents of those years is one of the most pathetic tragedies in
+the whole history of aviation, that of Alphonse Penaud, who, in his
+thirty years of life, condensed the experience of his predecessors and
+combined it with his own genius to state in a published patent what
+the aeroplane of to-day should be. Consider the following abstract of
+Penaud's design as published in his patent of 1876, and comparison of
+this with the aeroplane that now exists will show very few divergences
+except for those forced on the inventor by the fact that the internal
+combustion engine had not then developed. The double surfaced planes
+were to be built with wooden ribs and arranged with a slight dihedral
+angle; there was to be a large aspect ratio and the wings were cambered
+as in Stringfellow's later models. Provision was made for warping the
+wings while in flight, and the trailing edges were so designed as to
+be capable of upward twist while the machine was in the air. The planes
+were to be placed above the car, and provision was even made for a glass
+wind-screen to give protection to the pilot during flight. Steering was
+to be accomplished by means of lateral and vertical planes forming
+a tail; these controlled by a single lever corresponding to the 'joy
+stick' of the present day plane.
+
+Penaud conceived this machine as driven by two propellers; alternatively
+these could be driven by petrol or steam-fed motor, and the centre of
+gravity of the machine while in flight was in the front fifth of the
+wings. Penaud estimated from 20 to 30 horse-power sufficient to drive
+this machine, weighing with pilot and passenger 2,600 lbs., through the
+air at a speed of 60 miles an hour, with the wings set at an angle
+of incidence of two degrees. So complete was the design that it even
+included instruments, consisting of an aneroid, pressure indicator, an
+anemometer, a compass, and a level. There, with few alterations, is the
+aeroplane as we know it--and Penaud was twenty-seven when his patent was
+published.
+
+For three years longer he worked, experimenting with models,
+contributing essays and other valuable data to French papers on the
+subject of aeronautics. His gains were ill health, poverty, and neglect,
+and at the age of thirty a pistol shot put an end to what had promised
+to be one of the most brilliant careers in all the history of flight.
+
+Two years before the publication of Penaud's patent Thomas Moy
+experimented at the Crystal Palace with a twin-propelled aeroplane,
+steam driven, which seems to have failed mainly because the internal
+combustion engine had not yet come to give sufficient power for weight.
+Moy anchored his machine to a pole running on a prepared circular track;
+his engine weighed 80 lbs. and, developing only three horse-power, gave
+him a speed of 12 miles an hour. He himself estimated that the machine
+would not rise until he could get a speed of 35 miles an hour, and his
+estimate was correct. Two six-bladed propellers were placed side by side
+between the two main planes of the machine, which was supported on a
+triangular wheeled undercarriage and steered by fairly conventional tail
+planes. Moy realised that he could not get sufficient power to achieve
+flight, but he went on experimenting in various directions, and left
+much data concerning his experiments which has not yet been deemed
+worthy of publication, but which still contains a mass of information
+that is of practical utility, embodying as it does a vast amount of
+painstaking work.
+
+Penaud and Moy were followed by Goupil, a Frenchman, who, in place of
+attempting to fit a motor to an aeroplane, experimented by making the
+wind his motor. He anchored his machine to the ground, allowing it two
+feet of lift, and merely waited for a wind to come along and lift it.
+The machine was stream lined, and the wings, curving as in the early
+German patterns of war aeroplanes, gave a total lifting surface of about
+290 sq. ft. Anchored to the ground and facing a wind of 19 feet per
+second, Goupil's machine lifted its own weight and that of two men as
+well to the limit of its anchorage. Although this took place as late
+as 1883 the inventor went no further in practical work. He published a
+book, however, entitled La Locomotion Aerienne, which is still of great
+importance, more especially on the subject of inherent stability.
+
+In 1884 came the first patents of Horatio Phillips, whose work lay
+mainly in the direction of investigation into the curvature of plane
+surfaces, with a view to obtaining the greatest amount of support.
+Phillips was one of the first to treat the problem of curvature of
+planes as a matter for scientific experiment, and, great as has been the
+development of the driven plane in the 36 years that have passed since
+he began, there is still room for investigation into the subject which
+he studied so persistently and with such valuable result.
+
+At this point it may be noted that, with the solitary exception of
+Le Bris, practically every student of flight had so far set about
+constructing the means of launching humanity into the air without any
+attempt at ascertaining the nature and peculiarities of the sustaining
+medium. The attitude of experimenters in general might be compared to
+that of a man who from boyhood had grown up away from open water, and,
+at the first sight of an expanse of water, set to work to construct a
+boat with a vague idea that, since wood would float, only sufficient
+power was required to make him an efficient navigator. Accident,
+perhaps, in the shape of lack of means of procuring driving power, drove
+Le Bris to the form of experiment which he actually carried out; it
+remained for the later years of the nineteenth century to produce men
+who were content to ascertain the nature of the support the air would
+afford before attempting to drive themselves through it.
+
+Of the age in which these men lived and worked, giving their all in many
+cases to the science they loved, even to life itself, it may be said
+with truth that 'there were giants on the earth in those days,' as far
+as aeronautics is in question. It was an age of giants who lived and
+dared and died, venturing into uncharted space, knowing nothing of its
+dangers, giving, as a man gives to his mistress, without stint and
+for the joy of the giving. The science of to-day, compared with the
+glimmerings that were in that age of the giants, is a fixed and certain
+thing; the problems of to-day are minor problems, for the great major
+problem vanished in solution when the Wright Brothers made their first
+ascent. In that age of the giants was evolved the flying man, the new
+type in human species which found full expression and came to full
+development in the days of the war, achieving feats of daring and
+endurance which leave the commonplace landsman staggered at thought of
+that of which his fellows prove themselves capable. He is a new type,
+this flying man, a being of self-forgetfulness; of such was Lilienthal,
+of such was Pilcher; of such in later days were Farman, Bleriot, Hamel,
+Rolls, and their fellows; great names that will live for as long as man
+flies, adventurers equally with those of the spacious days of Elizabeth.
+To each of these came the call, and he worked and dared and passed,
+having, perhaps, advanced one little step in the long march that has led
+toward the perfecting of flight.
+
+It is not yet twenty years since man first flew, but into that twenty
+years have been compressed a century or so of progress, while, in the
+two decades that preceded it, was compressed still more. We have only to
+recall and recount the work of four men: Lilienthal, Langley, Pilcher,
+and Clement Ader to see the immense stride that was made between the
+time when Penaud pulled a trigger for the last time and the Wright
+Brothers first left the earth. Into those two decades was compressed the
+investigation that meant knowledge of the qualities of the air, together
+with the development of the one prime mover that rendered flight a
+possibility--the internal combustion engine. The coming and progress of
+this latter is a thing apart, to be detailed separately; for the present
+we are concerned with the evolution of the driven plane, and with it the
+evolution of that daring being, the flying man. The two are inseparable,
+for the men gave themselves to their art; the story of Lilienthal's life
+and death is the story of his work; the story of Pilcher's work is that
+of his life and death.
+
+Considering the flying man as he appeared in the war period, there
+entered into his composition a new element--patriotism--which brought
+about a modification of the type, or, perhaps, made it appear that
+certain men belonged to the type who in reality were commonplace
+mortals, animated, under normal conditions, by normal motives, but
+driven by the stress of the time to take rank with the last expression
+of human energy, the flying type. However that may be, what may be
+termed the mathematising of aeronautics has rendered the type itself
+evanescent; your pilot of to-day knows his craft, once he is trained,
+much in the manner that a driver of a motor-lorry knows his vehicle;
+design has been systematised, capabilities have been tabulated; camber,
+dihedral angle, aspect ratio, engine power, and plane surface, are
+business items of drawing office and machine shop; there is room for
+enterprise, for genius, and for skill; once and again there is room for
+daring, as in the first Atlantic flight. Yet that again was a thing of
+mathematical calculation and petrol storage, allied to a certain stark
+courage which may be found even in landsmen. For the ventures into the
+unknown, the limit of daring, the work for work's sake, with the almost
+certainty that the final reward was death, we must look back to the age
+of the giants, the age when flying was not a business, but romance.
+
+
+
+
+VII. LILIENTHAL AND PILCHER
+
+There was never a more enthusiastic and consistent student of the
+problems of flight than Otto Lilienthal, who was born in 1848 at Anklam,
+Pomerania, and even from his early school-days dreamed and planned the
+conquest of the air. His practical experiments began when, at the age
+of thirteen, he and his brother Gustav made wings consisting of wooden
+framework covered with linen, which Otto attached to his arms, and then
+ran downhill flapping them. In consequence of possible derision on the
+part of other boys, Otto confined these experiments for the most part to
+moonlit nights, and gained from them some idea of the resistance offered
+by flat surfaces to the air. It was in 1867 that the two brothers
+began really practical work, experimenting with wings which, from
+their design, indicate some knowledge of Besnier and the history of his
+gliding experiments; these wings the brothers fastened to their backs,
+moving them with their legs after the fashion of one attempting to swim.
+Before they had achieved any real success in gliding the Franco-German
+war came as an interruption; both brothers served in this campaign,
+resuming their experiments in 1871 at the conclusion of hostilities.
+
+The experiments made by the brothers previous to the war had convinced
+Otto that previous experimenters in gliding flight had failed through
+reliance on empirical conclusions or else through incomplete observation
+on their own part, mostly of bird flight. From 1871 onward Otto
+Lilenthal (Gustav's interest in the problem was not maintained as was
+his brother's) made what is probably the most detailed and accurate
+series of observations that has ever been made with regard to the
+properties of curved wing surfaces. So far as could be done, Lilienthal
+tabulated the amount of air resistance offered to a bird's wing,
+ascertaining that the curve is necessary to flight, as offering far more
+resistance than a flat surface. Cayley, and others, had already stated
+this, but to Lilienthal belongs the honour of being first to put the
+statement to effective proof--he made over 2,000 gliding flights
+between 1891 and the regrettable end of his experiments; his practical
+conclusions are still regarded as part of the accepted theory of
+students of flight. In 1889 he published a work on the subject of
+gliding flight which stands as data for investigators, and, on the
+conclusions embodied in this work, he began to build his gliders and
+practice what he had preached, turning from experiment with models to
+wings that he could use.
+
+It was in the summer of 1891 that he built his first glider of rods of
+peeled willow, over which was stretched strong cotton fabric; with this,
+which had a supporting surface of about 100 square feet, Otto Lilienthal
+launched himself in the air from a spring board, making glides which, at
+first of only a few feet, gradually lengthened. As his experience of
+the supporting qualities of the air progressed he gradually altered
+his designs until, when Pilcher visited him in the spring of 1895,
+he experimented with a glider, roughly made of peeled willow rods and
+cotton fabric, having an area of 150 square feet and weighing half a
+hundredweight. By this time Lilienthal had moved from his springboard to
+a conical artificial hill which he had had thrown up on level ground at
+Grosse Lichterfelde, near Berlin. This hill was made with earth taken
+from the excavations incurred in constructing a canal, and had a cave
+inside in which Lilienthal stored his machines. Pilcher, in his paper
+on 'Gliding,' [*] gives an excellent short summary of Lilienthal's
+experiments, from which the following extracts are taken:--
+
+[*] Aeronautical Classes, No. 5. Royal Aeronautical Society's
+publications.
+
+'At first Lilienthal used to experiment by jumping off a springboard
+with a good run. Then he took to practicing on some hills close to
+Berlin. In the summer of 1892 he built a flat-roofed hut on the summit
+of a hill, from the top of which he used to jump, trying, of course, to
+soar as far as possible before landing.... One of the great dangers with
+a soaring machine is losing forward speed, inclining the machine too
+much down in front, and coming down head first. Lilienthal was the
+first to introduce the system of handling a machine in the air merely
+by moving his weight about in the machine; he always rested only on his
+elbows or on his elbows and shoulders....
+
+'In 1892 a canal was being cut, close to where Lilienthal lived, in the
+suburbs of Berlin, and with the surplus earth Lilienthal had a special
+hill thrown up to fly from. The country round is as flat as the sea, and
+there is not a house or tree near it to make the wind unsteady, so
+this was an ideal practicing ground; for practicing on natural hills
+is generally rendered very difficult by shifty and gusty winds.... This
+hill is 50 feet high, and conical. Inside the hill there is a cave for
+the machines to be kept in.... When Lilienthal made a good flight he
+used to land 300 feet from the centre of the hill, having come down at
+an angle of 1 in 6; but his best flights have been at an angle of about
+1 in 10.
+
+'If it is calm, one must run a few steps down the hill, holding the
+machine as far back on oneself as possible, when the air will gradually
+support one, and one slides off the hill into the air. If there is any
+wind, one should face it at starting; to try to start with a side wind
+is most unpleasant. It is possible after a great deal of practice to
+turn in the air, and fairly quickly. This is accomplished by throwing
+one's weight to one side, and thus lowering the machine on that side
+towards which one wants to turn. Birds do the same thing--crows and
+gulls show it very clearly. Last year Lilienthal chiefly experimented
+with double-surfaced machines. These were very much like the old
+machines with awnings spread above them.
+
+'The object of making these double-surfaced machines was to get more
+surface without increasing the length and width of the machine. This,
+of course, it does, but I personally object to any machine in which
+the wing surface is high above the weight. I consider that it makes
+the machine very difficult to handle in bad weather, as a puff of wind
+striking the surface, high above one, has a great tendency to heel the
+machine over.
+
+'Herr Lilienthal kindly allowed me to sail down his hill in one of these
+double-surfaced machines last June. With the great facility afforded by
+his conical hill the machine was handy enough; but I am afraid I should
+not be able to manage one at all in the squally districts I have had to
+practice in over here.
+
+'Herr Lilienthal came to grief through deserting his old method of
+balancing. In order to control his tipping movements more rapidly he
+attached a line from his horizontal rudder to his head, so that when he
+moved his head forward it would lift the rudder and tip the machine up
+in front, and vice versa. He was practicing this on some natural hills
+outside Berlin, and he apparently got muddled with the two motions, and,
+in trying to regain speed after he had, through a lull in the wind, come
+to rest in the air, let the machine get too far down in front, came down
+head first and was killed.'
+
+Then in another passage Pilcher enunciates what is the true value of
+such experiments as Lilienthal--and, subsequently, he himself--made:
+'The object of experimenting with soaring machines,' he says, 'is to
+enable one to have practice in starting and alighting and controlling a
+machine in the air. They cannot possibly float horizontally in the
+air for any length of time, but to keep going must necessarily lose in
+elevation. They are excellent schooling machines, and that is all they
+are meant to be, until power, in the shape of an engine working a screw
+propeller, or an engine working wings to drive the machine forward, is
+added; then a person who is used to soaring down a hill with a simple
+soaring machine will be able to fly with comparative safety. One can
+best compare them to bicycles having no cranks, but on which one could
+learn to balance by coming down an incline.'
+
+It was in 1895 that Lilienthal passed from experiment with the monoplane
+type of glider to the construction of a biplane glider which, according
+to his own account, gave better results than his previous machines.
+'Six or seven metres velocity of wind,' he says, 'sufficed to enable
+the sailing surface of 18 square metres to carry me almost horizontally
+against the wind from the top of my hill without any starting jump. If
+the wind is stronger I allow myself to be simply lifted from the point
+of the hill and to sail slowly towards the wind. The direction of the
+flight has, with strong wind, a strong upwards tendency. I often reach
+positions in the air which are much higher than my starting point. At
+the climax of such a line of flight I sometimes come to a standstill
+for some time, so that I am enabled while floating to speak with the
+gentlemen who wish to photograph me, regarding the best position for the
+photographing.'
+
+Lilienthal's work did not end with simple gliding, though he did not
+live to achieve machine-driven flight. Having, as he considered, gained
+sufficient experience with gliders, he constructed a power-driven
+machine which weighed altogether about 90 lbs., and this was thoroughly
+tested. The extremities of its wings were made to flap, and the driving
+power was obtained from a cylinder of compressed carbonic acid gas,
+released through a hand-operated valve which, Lilienthal anticipated,
+would keep the machine in the air for four minutes. There were certain
+minor accidents to the mechanism, which delayed the trial flights, and
+on the day that Lilienthal had determined to make his trial he made a
+long gliding flight with a view to testing a new form of rudder that--as
+Pilcher relates--was worked by movements of his head. His death came
+about through the causes that Pilcher states; he fell from a height of
+50 feet, breaking his spine, and the next day he died.
+
+It may be said that Lilienthal accomplished as much as any one of the
+great pioneers of flying. As brilliant in his conceptions as da Vinci
+had been in his, and as conscientious a worker as Borelli, he laid the
+foundations on which Pilcher, Chanute, and Professor Montgomery were
+able to build to such good purpose. His book on bird flight, published
+in 1889, with the authorship credited both to Otto and his brother
+Gustav, is regarded as epoch-making; his gliding experiments are no less
+entitled to this description.
+
+In England Lilienthal's work was carried on by Percy Sinclair Pilcher,
+who, born in 1866, completed six years' service in the British Navy
+by the time that he was nineteen, and then went through a course of
+engineering, subsequently joining Maxim in his experimental work. It was
+not until 1895 that he began to build the first of the series of gliders
+with which he earned his plane among the pioneers of flight. Probably
+the best account of Pilcher's work is that given in the Aeronautical
+Classics issued by the Royal Aeronautical Society, from which the
+following account of Pilcher's work is mainly abstracted.[*]
+
+[*] Aeronautical Classes, No. 5. Royal Aeronautical Society
+publications.
+
+The 'Bat,' as Pilcher named his first glider, was a monoplane which he
+completed before he paid his visit to Lilienthal in 1895. Concerning
+this Pilcher stated that he purposely finished his own machine before
+going to see Lilienthal, so as to get the greatest advantage from any
+original ideas he might have; he was not able to make any trials with
+this machine, however, until after witnessing Lilienthal's experiments
+and making several glides in the biplane glider which Lilienthal
+constructed.
+
+
+The wings of the 'Bat' formed a pronounced dihedral angle; the tips
+being raised 4 feet above the body. The spars forming the entering
+edges of the wings crossed each other in the centre and were lashed to
+opposite sides of the triangle that served as a mast for the stay-wires
+that guyed the wings. The four ribs of each wing, enclosed in pockets
+in the fabric, radiated fanwise from the centre, and were each stayed by
+three steel piano-wires to the top of the triangular mast, and similarly
+to its base. These ribs were bolted down to the triangle at their roots,
+and could be easily folded back on to the body when the glider was not
+in use. A small fixed vertical surface was carried in the rear. The
+framework and ribs were made entirely of Riga pine; the surface fabric
+was nainsook. The area of the machine was 150 square feet; its weight
+45 lbs.; so that in flight, with Pilcher's weight of 145 lbs. added, it
+carried one and a half pounds to the square foot.
+
+Pilcher's first glides, which he carried out on a grass hill on the
+banks of the Clyde near Cardross, gave little result, owing to the
+exaggerated dihedral angle of the wings, and the absence of a horizontal
+tail. The 'Bat 'was consequently reconstructed with a horizontal tail
+plane added to the vertical one, and with the wings lowered so that the
+tips were only six inches above the level of the body. The machine now
+gave far better results; on the first glide into a head wind Pilcher
+rose to a height of twelve feet and remained in the the air for a third
+of a minute; in the second attempt a rope was used to tow the glider,
+which rose to twenty feet and did not come to earth again until nearly
+a minute had passed. With experience Pilcher was able to lengthen his
+glide and improve his balance, but the dropped wing tips made landing
+difficult, and there were many breakages.
+
+In consequence of this Pilcher built a second glider which he named
+the 'Beetle,' because, as he said, it looked like one. In this the
+square-cut wings formed almost a continuous plane, rigidly fixed to the
+central body, which consisted of a shaped girder. These wings were built
+up of five transverse bamboo spars, with two shaped ribs running from
+fore to aft of each wing, and were stayed overhead to a couple of masts.
+The tail, consisting of two discs placed crosswise (the horizontal
+one alone being movable), was carried high up in the rear. With the
+exception of the wing-spars, the whole framework was built of white
+pine. The wings in this machine were actually on a higher level than the
+operator's head; the centre of gravity was, consequently, very low, a
+fact which, according to Pilcher's own account, made the glider very
+difficult to handle. Moreover, the weight of the 'Beetle,' 80 lbs., was
+considerable; the body had been very solidly built to enable it to carry
+the engine which Pilcher was then contemplating; so that the glider
+carried some 225 lbs. with its area of 170 square feet--too great a mass
+for a single man to handle with comfort.
+
+It was in the spring of 1896 that Pilcher built his third glider, the
+'Gull,' with 300 square feet of area and a weight of 55 lbs. The size of
+this machine rendered it unsuitable for experiment in any but very calm
+weather, and it incurred such damage when experiments were made in a
+breeze that Pilcher found it necessary to build a fourth, which he named
+the 'Hawk.' This machine was very soundly built, being constructed of
+bamboo, with the exception of the two main transverse beams. The wings
+were attached to two vertical masts, 7 feet high, and 8 feet apart,
+joined at their summits and their centres by two wooden beams. Each wing
+had nine bamboo ribs, radiating from its mast, which was situated at a
+distance of 2 feet 6 inches from the forward edge of the wing. Each rib
+was rigidly stayed at the top of the mast by three tie-wires, and by a
+similar number to the bottom of the mast, by which means the curve of
+each wing was maintained uniformly. The tail was formed of a triangular
+horizontal surface to which was affixed a triangular vertical surface,
+and was carried from the body on a high bamboo mast, which was also
+stayed from the masts by means of steel wires, but only on its upper
+surface, and it was the snapping of one of these guy wires which caused
+the collapse of the tail support and brought about the fatal end of
+Pilcher's experiments. In flight, Pilcher's head, shoulders, and the
+greater part of his chest projected above the wings. He took up his
+position by passing his head and shoulders through the top aperture
+formed between the two wings, and resting his forearms on the
+longitudinal body members. A very simple form of undercarriage, which
+took the weight off the glider on the ground, was fitted, consisting of
+two bamboo rods with wheels suspended on steel springs.
+
+Balance and steering were effected, apart from the high degree of
+inherent stability afforded by the tail, as in the case of Lilienthal's
+glider, by altering the position of the body. With this machine Pilcher
+made some twelve glides at Eynsford in Kent in the summer of 1896, and
+as he progressed he increased the length of his glides, and also handled
+the machine more easily, both in the air and in landing. He was occupied
+with plans for fitting an engine and propeller to the 'Hawk,' but, in
+these early days of the internal combustion engine, was unable to
+get one light enough for his purpose. There were rumours of an engine
+weighing 15 lbs. which gave 1 horse-power, and was reported to be in
+existence in America, but it could not be traced.
+
+In the spring of 1897 Pilcher took up his gliding experiments again,
+obtaining what was probably the best of his glides on June 19th, when he
+alighted after a perfectly balanced glide of over 250 yards in length,
+having crossed a valley at a considerable height. From his various
+experiments he concluded that once the machine was launched in the air
+an engine of, at most, 3 horse-power would suffice for the maintenance
+of horizontal flight, but he had to allow for the additional weight
+of the engine and propeller, and taking into account the comparative
+inefficiency of the propeller, he planned for an engine of 4
+horse-power. Engine and propeller together were estimated at under 44
+lbs. weight, the engine was to be fitted in front of the operator, and
+by means of an overhead shaft was to operate the propeller situated
+in rear of the wings. 1898 went by while this engine was under
+construction. Then in 1899 Pilcher became interested in Lawrence
+Hargrave's soaring kites, with which he carried out experiments during
+the summer of 1899. It is believed that he intended to incorporate
+a number of these kites in a new machine, a triplane, of which the
+fragments remaining are hardly sufficient to reconstitute the complete
+glider. This new machine was never given a trial. For on September 30th,
+1899, at Stamford Hall, Market Harborough, Pilcher agreed to give a
+demonstration of gliding flight, but owing to the unfavourable weather
+he decided to postpone the trial of the new machine and to experiment
+with the 'Hawk,' which was intended to rise from a level field, towed by
+a line passing over a tackle drawn by two horses. At the first trial the
+machine rose easily, but the tow-line snapped when it was well clear of
+the ground, and the glider descended, weighed down through being sodden
+with rain. Pilcher resolved on a second trial, in which the glider again
+rose easily to about thirty feet, when one of the guy wires of the tail
+broke, and the tail collapsed; the machine fell to the ground, turning
+over, and Pilcher was unconscious when he was freed from the wreckage.
+
+Hopes were entertained of his recovery, but he died on Monday, October
+2nd, 1899, aged only thirty-four. His work in the cause of flying
+lasted only four years, but in that time his actual accomplishments were
+sufficient to place his name beside that of Lilienthal, with whom he
+ranks as one of the greatest exponents of gliding flight.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. AMERICAN GLIDING EXPERIMENTS
+
+While Pilcher was carrying on Lilienthal's work in England, the great
+German had also a follower in America; one Octave Chanute, who, in one
+of the statements which he has left on the subject of his experiments
+acknowledges forty years' interest in the problem of flight, did more
+to develop the glider in America than--with the possible exception
+of Montgomery--any other man. Chanute had all the practicality of an
+American; he began his work, so far as actual gliding was concerned,
+with a full-sized glider of the Lilienthal type, just before Lilienthal
+was killed. In a rather rare monograph, entitled Experiments in Flying,
+Chanute states that he found the Lilienthal glider hazardous and decided
+to test the value of an idea of his own; in this he followed the same
+general method, but reversed the principle upon which Lilienthal had
+depended for maintaining his equilibrium in the air. Lilienthal had
+shifted the weight of his body, under immovable wings, as fast and as
+far as the sustaining pressure varied under his surfaces; this shifting
+was mainly done by moving the feet, as the actions required were small
+except when alighting. Chanute's idea was to have the operator remain
+seated in the machine in the air, and to intervene only to steer or to
+alight; moving mechanism was provided to adjust the wings automatically
+in order to restore balance when necessary.
+
+Chanute realised that experiments with models were of little use; in
+order to be fully instructive, these experiments should be made with
+a full-sized machine which carried its operator, for models seldom fly
+twice alike in the open air, and no relation can be gained from them of
+the divergent air currents which they have experienced. Chanute's idea
+was that any flying machine which might be constructed must be able to
+operate in a wind; hence the necessity for an operator to report upon
+what occurred in flight, and to acquire practical experience of the work
+of the human factor in imitation of bird flight. From this point of
+view he conducted his own experiments; it must be noted that he was
+over sixty years of age when he began, and, being no longer sufficiently
+young and active to perform any but short and insignificant glides, the
+courage of the man becomes all the more noteworthy; he set to work to
+evolve the state required by the problem of stability, and without any
+expectation of advancing to the construction of a flying machine which
+might be of commercial value. His main idea was the testing of devices
+to secure equilibrium; for this purpose he employed assistants to
+carry out the practical work, where he himself was unable to supply the
+necessary physical energy.
+
+Together with his assistants he found a suitable place for experiments
+among the sandhills on the shore of Lake Michigan, about thirty miles
+eastward from Chicago. Here a hill about ninety-five feet high was
+selected as a point from which Chanute's gliders could set off; in
+practice, it was found that the best observation was to be obtained
+from short glides at low speed, and, consequently, a hill which was
+only sixty-one feet above the shore of the lake was employed for the
+experimental work done by the party.
+
+In the years 1896 and 1897, with parties of from four to six persons,
+five full-sized gliders were tried out, and from these two distinct
+types were evolved: of these one was a machine consisting of five tiers
+of wings and a steering tail, and the other was of the biplane type;
+Chanute believed these to be safer than any other machine previously
+evolved, solving, as he states in his monograph, the problem of inherent
+equilibrium as fully as this could be done. Unfortunately, very few
+photographs were taken of the work in the first year, but one view of a
+multiple wing-glider survives, showing the machine in flight. In 1897 a
+series of photographs was taken exhibiting the consecutive phases of
+a single flight; this series of photographs represents the experience
+gained in a total of about one thousand glides, but the point of view
+was varied so as to exhibit the consecutive phases of one single flight.
+
+The experience gained is best told in Chanute's own words. 'The first
+thing,' he says, 'which we discovered practically was that the wind
+flowing up a hill-side is not a steadily-flowing current like that of a
+river. It comes as a rolling mass, full of tumultuous whirls and eddies,
+like those issuing from a chimney; and they strike the apparatus with
+constantly varying force and direction, sometimes withdrawing support
+when most needed. It has long been known, through instrumental
+observations, that the wind is constantly changing in force and
+direction; but it needed the experience of an operator afloat on a
+gliding machine to realise that this all proceeded from cyclonic action;
+so that more was learned in this respect in a week than had previously
+been acquired by several years of experiments with models. There was a
+pair of eagles, living in the top of a dead tree about two miles from
+our tent, that came almost daily to show us how such wind effects are
+overcome and utilised. The birds swept in circles overhead on
+pulseless wings, and rose high up in the air. Occasionally there was
+a side-rocking motion, as of a ship rolling at sea, and then the birds
+rocked back to an even keel; but although we thought the action was
+clearly automatic, and were willing to learn, our teachers were too
+far off to show us just how it was done, and we had to experiment for
+ourselves.'
+
+Chanute provided his multiple glider with a seat, but, since each
+glide only occupied between eight and twelve seconds, there was little
+possibility of the operator seating himself. With the multiple glider a
+pair of horizontal bars provided rest for the arms, and beyond these
+was a pair of vertical bars which the operator grasped with his hands;
+beyond this, the operator was in no way attached to the machine. He
+took, at the most, four running steps into the wind, which launched
+him in the air, and thereupon he sailed into the wind on a generally
+descending course. In the matter of descent Chanute observed the sparrow
+and decided to imitate it. 'When the latter,' he says, 'approaches the
+street, he throws his body back, tilts his outspread wings nearly square
+to the course, and on the cushion of air thus encountered he stops his
+speed and drops lightly to the ground. So do all birds. We tried it with
+misgivings, but found it perfectly effective. The soft sand was a great
+advantage, and even when the experts were racing there was not a single
+sprained ankle.'
+
+With the multiple winged glider some two to three hundred glides were
+made without any accident either to the man or to the machine, and the
+action was found so effective, the principle so sound, that full plans
+were published for the benefit of any experimenters who might wish to
+improve on this apparatus. The American Aeronautical Annual for 1897
+contains these plans; Chanute confessed that some movement on the part
+of the operator was still required to control the machine, but it was
+only a seventh or a sixth part of the movement required for control of
+the Lilienthal type.
+
+Chanute waxed enthusiastic over the possibilities of gliding, concerning
+which he remarks that 'There is no more delightful sensation than that
+of gliding through the air. All the faculties are on the alert, and
+the motion is astonishingly smooth and elastic. The machine responds
+instantly to the slightest movement of the operator; the air rushes by
+one's ears; the trees and bushes flit away underneath, and the landing
+comes all too quickly. Skating, sliding, and bicycling are not to be
+compared for a moment to aerial conveyance, in which, perhaps, zest is
+added by the spice of danger. For it must be distinctly understood that
+there is constant danger in such preliminary experiments. When this
+hazard has been eliminated by further evolution, gliding will become a
+most popular sport.'
+
+Later experiments proved that the biplane type of glider gave better
+results than the rather cumbrous model consisting of five tiers of
+planes. Longer and more numerous glides, to the number of seven to eight
+hundred, were obtained, the rate of descent being about one in six. The
+longest distance traversed was about 120 yards, but Chanute had dreams
+of starting from a hill about 200 feet high, which would have given him
+gliding flights of 1,200 feet. He remarked that 'In consequence of
+the speed gained by running, the initial stage of the flight is nearly
+horizontal, and it is thrilling to see the operator pass from thirty to
+forty feet overhead, steering his machine, undulating his course, and
+struggling with the wind-gusts which whistle through the guy wires. The
+automatic mechanism restores the angle of advance when compromised by
+variations of the breeze; but when these come from one side and tilt the
+apparatus, the weight has to be shifted to right the machine... these
+gusts sometimes raise the machine from ten to twenty feet vertically,
+and sometimes they strike the apparatus from above, causing it to
+descend suddenly. When sailing near the ground, these vicissitudes can
+be counteracted by movements of the body from three to four inches; but
+this has to be done instantly, for neither wings nor gravity will wait
+on meditation. At a height of three hundred or four hundred feet the
+regulating mechanism would probably take care of these wind-gusts, as it
+does, in fact, for their minor variations. The speed of the machine
+is generally about seventeen miles an hour over the ground, and from
+twenty-two to thirty miles an hour relative to the air. Constant effort
+was directed to keep down the velocity, which was at times fifty-two
+miles an hour. This is the purpose of the starting and gliding against
+the wind, which thus furnishes an initial velocity without there being
+undue speed at the landing. The highest wind we dared to experiment in
+blew at thirty-one miles an hour; when the wind was stronger, we waited
+and watched the birds.'
+
+Chanute details an amusing little incident which occurred in the course
+of experiment with the biplane glider. He says that 'We had taken one
+of the machines to the top of the hill, and loaded its lower wings with
+sand to hold it while we e went to lunch. A gull came strolling inland,
+and flapped full-winged to inspect. He swept several circles above the
+machine, stretched his neck, gave a squawk and went off. Presently he
+returned with eleven other gulls, and they seemed to hold a conclave
+about one hundred feet above the big new white bird which they had
+discovered on the sand. They circled round after round, and once in a
+while there was a series of loud peeps, like those of a rusty gate, as
+if in conference, with sudden flutterings, as if a terrifying suggestion
+had been made. The bolder birds occasionally swooped downwards to
+inspect the monster more closely; they twisted their heads around to
+bring first one eye and then the other to bear, and then they rose
+again. After some seven or eight minutes of this performance, they
+evidently concluded either that the stranger was too formidable to
+tackle, if alive, or that he was not good to eat, if dead, and they flew
+off to resume fishing, for the weak point about a bird is his stomach.'
+
+The gliders were found so stable, more especially the biplane form, that
+in the end Chanute permitted amateurs to make trials under guidance,
+and throughout the whole series of experiments not a single accident
+occurred. Chanute came to the conclusion that any young, quick, and
+handy man could master a gliding machine almost as soon as he could get
+the hang of a bicycle, although the penalty for any mistake would be
+much more severe.
+
+At the conclusion of his experiments he decided that neither the
+multiple plane nor the biplane type of glider was sufficiently perfected
+for the application of motive power. In spite of the amount of automatic
+stability that he had obtained he considered that there was yet more to
+be done, and he therefore advised that every possible method of securing
+stability and safety should be tested, first with models, and then with
+full-sized machines; designers, he said, should make a point of practice
+in order to make sure of the action, to proportion and adjust the parts
+of their machine, and to eliminate hidden defects. Experimental
+flight, he suggested, should be tried over water, in order to break any
+accidental fall; when a series of experiments had proved the stability
+of a glider, it would then be time to apply motive power. He admitted
+that such a process would be both costly and slow, but, he said, that
+'it greatly diminished the chance of those accidents which bring a whole
+line of investigation into contempt.' He saw the flying machine as what
+it has, in fact, been; a child of evolution, carried on step by step
+by one investigator after another, through the stages of doubt and
+perplexity which lie behind the realm of possibility, beyond which is
+the present day stage of actual performance and promise of ultimate
+success and triumph over the earlier, more cumbrous, and slower forms of
+the transport that we know.
+
+Chanute's monograph, from which the foregoing notes have been comprised,
+was written soon after the conclusion of his series of experiments. He
+does not appear to have gone in for further practical work, but to
+have studied the subject from a theoretical view-point and with great
+attention to the work done by others. In a paper contributed in 1900
+to the American Independent, he remarks that 'Flying machines promise
+better results as to speed, but yet will be of limited commercial
+application. They may carry mails and reach other inaccessible places,
+but they cannot compete with railroads as carriers of passengers or
+freight. They will not fill the heavens with commerce, abolish custom
+houses, or revolutionise the world, for they will be expensive for
+the loads which they can carry, and subject to too many weather
+contingencies. Success is, however, probable. Each experimenter has
+added something to previous knowledge which his successors can avail of.
+It now seems likely that two forms of flying machines, a sporting type
+and an exploration type, will be gradually evolved within one or two
+generations, but the evolution will be costly and slow, and must be
+carried on by well-equipped and thoroughly informed scientific men; for
+the casual inventor, who relies upon one or two happy inspirations, will
+have no chance of success whatever.'
+
+Follows Professor John J. Montgomery, who, in the true American spirit,
+describes his own experiments so well that nobody can possibly do it
+better. His account of his work was given first of all in the American
+Journal, Aeronautics, in January, 1909, and thence transcribed in the
+English paper of the same name in May, 1910, and that account is here
+copied word for word. It may, however, be noted first that as far back
+as 1860, when Montgomery was only a boy, he was attracted to the study
+of aeronautical problems, and in 1883 he built his first machine,
+which was of the flapping-wing ornithopter type, and which showed its
+designer, with only one experiment, that he must design some other
+form of machine if he wished to attain to a successful flight.
+Chanute details how, in 1884 and 1885 Montgomery built three gliders,
+demonstrating the value of curved surfaces. With the first of these
+gliders Montgomery copied the wing of a seagull; with the second he
+proved that a flat surface was virtually useless, and with the third
+he pivoted his wings as in the Antoinette type of power-propelled
+aeroplane, proving to his own satisfaction that success lay in this
+direction. His own account of the gliding flights carried out under his
+direction is here set forth, being the best description of his work that
+can be obtained:--
+
+'When I commenced practical demonstration in my work with aeroplanes
+I had before me three points; first, equilibrium; second, complete
+control; and third, long continued or soaring flight. In starting I
+constructed and tested three sets of models, each in advance of the
+other in regard to the continuance of their soaring powers, but all
+equally perfect as to equilibrium and control. These models were tested
+by dropping them from a cable stretched between two mountain tops, with
+various loads, adjustments and positions. And it made no difference
+whether the models were dropped upside down or any other conceivable
+position, they always found their equilibrium immediately and glided
+safely to earth.
+
+'Then I constructed a large machine patterned after the first model, and
+with the assistance of three cowboy friends personally made a number of
+flights in the steep mountains near San Juan (a hundred miles distant).
+In making these flights I simply took the aeroplane and made a running
+jump. These tests were discontinued after I put my foot into a squirrel
+hole in landing and hurt my leg.
+
+'The following year I commenced the work on a larger scale, by engaging
+aeronauts to ride my aeroplane dropped from balloons. During this work I
+used five hot-air balloons and one gas balloon, five or six aeroplanes,
+three riders--Maloney, Wilkie, and Defolco--and had sixteen applicants
+on my list, and had a training station to prepare any when I needed
+them.
+
+'Exhibitions were given in Santa Cruz, San Jose, Santa Clara, Oaklands,
+and Sacramento. The flights that were made, instead of being haphazard
+affairs, were in the order of safety and development. In the first
+flight of an aeronaut the aeroplane was so arranged that the rider had
+little liberty of action, consequently he could make only a limited
+flight. In some of the first flights, the aeroplane did little more than
+settle in the air. But as the rider gained experience in each successive
+flight I changed the adjustments, giving him more liberty of action, so
+he could obtain longer flights and more varied movements in the flights.
+But in none of the flights did I have the adjustments so that the riders
+had full liberty, as I did not consider that they had the requisite
+knowledge and experience necessary for their safety; and hence, none
+of my aeroplanes were launched so arranged that the rider could make
+adjustments necessary for a full flight.
+
+'This line of action caused a good deal of trouble with aeronauts or
+riders, who had unbounded confidence and wanted to make long flights
+after the first few trials; but I found it necessary, as they seemed
+slow in comprehending the important elements and were willing to
+take risks. To give them the full knowledge in these matters I was
+formulating plans for a large starting station on the Mount Hamilton
+Range from which I could launch an aeroplane capable of carrying two,
+one of my aeronauts and myself, so I could teach him by demonstration.
+But the disasters consequent on the great earthquake completely stopped
+all my work on these lines. The flights that were given were only the
+first of the series with aeroplanes patterned after the first model.
+There were no aeroplanes constructed according to the two other models,
+as I had not given the full demonstration of the workings of the first,
+though some remarkable and startling work was done. On one occasion
+Maloney, in trying to make a very short turn in rapid flight, pressed
+very hard on the stirrup which gives a screw-shape to the wings, and
+made a side somersault. The course of the machine was very much like one
+turn of a corkscrew. After this movement the machine continued on its
+regular course. And afterwards Wilkie, not to be outdone by Maloney,
+told his friends he would do the same, and in a subsequent flight made
+two side somersaults, one in one direction and the other in an opposite,
+then made a deep dive and a long glide, and, when about three hundred
+feet in the air, brought the aeroplane to a sudden stop and settled to
+the earth. After these antics, I decreased the extent of the possible
+change in the form of wing-surface, so as to allow only straight sailing
+or only long curves in turning.
+
+'During my work I had a few carping critics that I silenced by this
+standing offer: If they would deposit a thousand dollars I would cover
+it on this proposition. I would fasten a 150 pound sack of sand in the
+rider's seat, make the necessary adjustments, and send up an aeroplane
+upside down with a balloon, the aeroplane to be liberated by a time
+fuse. If the aeroplane did not immediately right itself, make a flight,
+and come safely to the ground, the money was theirs.
+
+'Now a word in regard to the fatal accident. The circumstances are
+these: The ascension was given to entertain a military company in which
+were many of Maloney's friends, and he had told them he would give the
+most sensational flight they ever heard of. As the balloon was rising
+with the aeroplane, a guy rope dropping switched around the right wing
+and broke the tower that braced the two rear wings and which also gave
+control over the tail. We shouted Maloney that the machine was broken,
+but he probably did not hear us, as he was at the same time saying,
+"Hurrah for Montgomery's airship," and as the break was behind him, he
+may not have detected it. Now did he know of the breakage or not, and if
+he knew of it did he take a risk so as not to disappoint his friends?
+At all events, when the machine started on its flight the rear wings
+commenced to flap (thus indicating they were loose), the machine turned
+on its back, and settled a little faster than a parachute. When we
+reached Maloney he was unconscious and lived only thirty minutes. The
+only mark of any kind on him was a scratch from a wire on the side of
+his neck. The six attending physicians were puzzled at the cause of his
+death. This is remarkable for a vertical descent of over 2,000 feet.'
+
+The flights were brought to an end by the San Francisco earthquake in
+April, 1906, which, Montgomery states, 'Wrought such a disaster that I
+had to turn my attention to other subjects and let the aeroplane rest
+for a time.' Montgomery resumed experiments in 1911 in California, and
+in October of that year an accident brought his work to an end. The
+report in the American Aeronautics says that 'a little whirlwind caught
+the machine and dashed it head on to the ground; Professor Montgomery
+landed on his head and right hip. He did not believe himself seriously
+hurt, and talked with his year-old bride in the tent. He complained of
+pains in his back, and continued to grow worse until he died.'
+
+
+
+
+IX. NOT PROVEN
+
+The early history of flying, like that of most sciences, is replete
+with tragedies; in addition to these it contains one mystery concerning
+Clement Ader, who was well known among European pioneers in the
+development of the telephone, and first turned his attention to the
+problems of mechanical flight in 1872. At the outset he favoured the
+ornithopter principle, constructing a machine in the form of a bird with
+a wing-spread of twenty-six feet; this, according to Ader's conception,
+was to fly through the efforts of the operator. The result of such
+an attempt was past question and naturally the machine never left the
+ground.
+
+A pause of nineteen years ensued, and then in 1886 Ader turned his mind
+to the development of the aeroplane, constructing a machine of bat-like
+form with a wingspread of about forty-six feet, a weight of eleven
+hundred pounds, and a steam-power plant of between twenty and thirty
+horse-power driving a four-bladed tractor screw. On October 9th, 1890,
+the first trials of this machine were made, and it was alleged to have
+flown a distance of one hundred and sixty-four feet. Whatever truth
+there may be in the allegation, the machine was wrecked through
+deficient equilibrium at the end of the trial. Ader repeated the
+construction, and on October 14th, 1897, tried out his third machine
+at the military establishment at Satory in the presence of the French
+military authorities, on a circular track specially prepared for the
+experiment. Ader and his friends alleged that a flight of nearly a
+thousand feet was made; again the machine was wrecked at the end of the
+trial, and there Ader's practical work may be said to have ended, since
+no more funds were forthcoming for the subsidy of experiments.
+
+There is the bald narrative, but it is worthy of some amplification. If
+Ader actually did what he claimed, then the position which the Wright
+Brothers hold as first to navigate the air in a power-driven plane is
+nullified. Although at this time of writing it is not a quarter of a
+century since Ader's experiment in the presence of witnesses competent
+to judge on his accomplishment, there is no proof either way, and
+whether he was or was not the first man to fly remains a mystery in the
+story of the conquest of the air.
+
+The full story of Ader's work reveals a persistence and determination to
+solve the problem that faced him which was equal to that of Lilienthal.
+He began by penetrating into the interior of Algeria after having
+disguised himself as an Arab, and there he spent some months in studying
+flight as practiced by the vultures of the district. Returning to France
+in 1886 he began to construct the 'Eole,' modelling it, not on the
+vulture, but in the shape of a bat. Like the Lilienthal and Pilcher
+gliders this machine was fitted with wings which could be folded; the
+first flight made, as already noted, on October 9th, 1890, took place
+in the grounds of the chateau d'Amainvilliers, near Bretz; two
+fellow-enthusiasts named Espinosa and Vallier stated that a flight
+was actually made; no statement in the history of aeronautics has been
+subject of so much question, and the claim remains unproved.
+
+It was in September of 1891 that Ader, by permission of the Minister of
+War, moved the 'Eole' to the military establishment at Satory for the
+purpose of further trial. By this time, whether he had flown or not,
+his nineteen years of work in connection with the problems attendant on
+mechanical flight had attracted so much attention that henceforth
+his work was subject to the approval of the military authorities, for
+already it was recognised that an efficient flying machine would confer
+an inestimable advantage on the power that possessed it in the event
+of war. At Satory the 'Eole' was alleged to have made a flight of 109
+yards, or, according to another account, 164 feet, as stated above, in
+the trial in which the machine wrecked itself through colliding with
+some carts which had been placed near the track--the root cause of this
+accident, however, was given as deficient equilibrium.
+
+Whatever the sceptics may say, there is reason for belief in the
+accomplishment of actual flight by Ader with his first machine in the
+fact that, after the inevitable official delay of some months, the
+French War Ministry granted funds for further experiment. Ader named
+his second machine, which he began to build in May, 1892, the 'Avion,'
+and--an honour which he well deserve--that name remains in French
+aeronautics as descriptive of the power-driven aeroplane up to this day.
+
+This second machine, however, was not a success, and it was not until
+1897 that the second 'Avion,' which was the third power-driven aeroplane
+of Ader's construction, was ready for trial. This was fitted with
+two steam motors of twenty horse-power each, driving two four-bladed
+propellers; the wings warped automatically: that is to say, if it
+were necessary to raise the trailing edge of one wing on the turn,
+the trailing edge of the opposite wing was also lowered by the same
+movement; an under-carriage was also fitted, the machine running on
+three small wheels, and levers controlled by the feet of the aviator
+actuated the movement of the tail planes.
+
+On October the 12th, 1897, the first trials of this 'Avion' were made
+in the presence of General Mensier, who admitted that the machine made
+several hops above the ground, but did not consider the performance as
+one of actual flight. The result was so encouraging, in spite of the
+partial failure, that, two days later, General Mensier, accompanied by
+General Grillon, a certain Lieutenant Binet, and two civilians named
+respectively Sarrau and Leaute, attended for the purpose of giving the
+machine an official trial, over which the great controversy regarding
+Ader's success or otherwise may be said to have arisen.
+
+We will take first Ader's own statement as set out in a very competent
+account of his work published in Paris in 1910. Here are Ader's own
+words: 'After some turns of the propellers, and after travelling a few
+metres, we started off at a lively pace; the pressure-gauge registered
+about seven atmospheres; almost immediately the vibrations of the rear
+wheel ceased; a little later we only experienced those of the front
+wheels at intervals. 'Unhappily, the wind became suddenly strong, and
+we had some difficulty in keeping the "Avion" on the white line. We
+increased the pressure to between eight and nine atmospheres, and
+immediately the speed increased considerably, and the vibrations of
+the wheels were no longer sensible; we were at that moment at the point
+marked G in the sketch; the "Avion" then found itself freely supported
+by its wings; under the impulse of the wind it continually tended to go
+outside the (prepared) area to the right, in spite of the action of
+the rudder. On reaching the point V it found itself in a very critical
+position; the wind blew strongly and across the direction of the white
+line which it ought to follow; the machine then, although still going
+forward, drifted quickly out of the area; we immediately put over the
+rudder to the left as far as it would go; at the same time increasing
+the pressure still more, in order to try to regain the course. The
+"Avion" obeyed, recovered a little, and remained for some seconds headed
+towards its intended course, but it could not struggle against the wind;
+instead of going back, on the contrary it drifted farther and farther
+away. And ill-luck had it that the drift took the direction towards
+part of the School of Musketry, which was guarded by posts and
+barriers. Frightened at the prospect of breaking ourselves against these
+obstacles, surprised at seeing the earth getting farther away from under
+the "Avion," and very much impressed by seeing it rushing sideways at
+a sickening speed, instinctively we stopped everything. What passed
+through our thoughts at this moment which threatened a tragic turn would
+be difficult to set down. All at once came a great shock, splintering, a
+heavy concussion: we had landed.'
+
+Thus speaks the inventor; the cold official mind gives out a different
+account, crediting the 'Avion' with merely a few hops, and to-day, among
+those who consider the problem at all, there is a little group which
+persists in asserting that to Ader belongs the credit of the first
+power-driven flight, while a larger group is equally persistent in
+stating that, save for a few ineffectual hops, all three wheels of the
+machine never left the ground. It is past question that the 'Avion' was
+capable of power-driven flight; whether it achieved it or no remains an
+unsettled problem.
+
+Ader's work is negative proof of the value of such experiments as
+Lilienthal, Pilcher, Chanute, and Montgomery conducted; these four set
+to work to master the eccentricities of the air before attempting to
+use it as a supporting medium for continuous flight under power; Ader
+attacked the problem from the other end; like many other experimenters
+he regarded the air as a stable fluid capable of giving such support to
+his machine as still water might give to a fish, and he reckoned that he
+had only to produce the machine in order to achieve flight. The wrecked
+'Avion' and the refusal of the French War Ministry to grant any more
+funds for further experiment are sufficient evidence of the need for
+working along the lines taken by the pioneers of gliding rather than on
+those which Ader himself adopted.
+
+Let it not be thought that in this comment there is any desire to
+derogate from the position which Ader should occupy in any study of
+the pioneers of aeronautical enterprise. If he failed, he failed
+magnificently, and if he succeeded, then the student of aeronautics does
+him an injustice and confers on the Brothers Wright an honour which,
+in spite of the value of their work, they do not deserve. There was
+one earlier than Ader, Alphonse Penaud, who, in the face of a lesser
+disappointment than that which Ader must have felt in gazing on the
+wreckage of his machine, committed suicide; Ader himself, rendered
+unable to do more, remained content with his achievement, and with the
+knowledge that he had played a good part in the long search which must
+eventually end in triumph. Whatever the world might say, he himself was
+certain that he had achieved flight. This, for him, was perforce enough.
+
+Before turning to consideration of the work accomplished by the Brothers
+Wright, and their proved conquest of the air, it is necessary first to
+sketch as briefly as may be the experimental work of Sir (then Mr) Hiram
+Maxim, who, in his book, Artificial and Natural Flight, has given
+a fairly complete account of his various experiments. He began by
+experimenting with models, with screw-propelled planes so attached to a
+horizontal movable arm that when the screw was set in motion the plane
+described a circle round a central point, and, eventually, he built a
+giant aeroplane having a total supporting area of 1,500 square feet,
+and a wing-span of fifty feet. It has been thought advisable to give
+a fairly full description of the power plant used to the propulsion
+of this machine in the section devoted to engine development. The
+aeroplane, as Maxim describes it, had five long and narrow planes
+projecting from each side, and a main or central plane of pterygoid
+aspect. A fore and aft rudder was provided, and had all the auxiliary
+planes been put in position for experimental work a total lifting
+surface of 6,000 square feet could have been obtained. Maxim, however,
+did not use more than 4,000 square feet of lifting surface even in his
+later experiments; with this he judged the machine capable of lifting
+slightly under 8,000 lbs. weight, made up of 600 lbs. water in the
+boiler and tank, a crew of three men, a supply of naphtha fuel, and the
+weight of the machine itself.
+
+Maxim's intention was, before attempting free flight, to get as much
+data as possible regarding the conditions under which flight must be
+obtained, by what is known in these days as 'taxi-ing'--that is, running
+the propellers at sufficient speed to drive the machine along the ground
+without actually mounting into the air. He knew that he had an immense
+lifting surface and a tremendous amount of power in his engine even when
+the total weight of the experimental plant was taken into consideration,
+and thus he set about to devise some means of keeping the machine on the
+nine foot gauge rail track which had been constructed for the trials. At
+the outset he had a set of very heavy cast-iron wheels made on which to
+mount the machine, the total weight of wheels, axles, and connections
+being about one and a half tons. These were so constructed that the
+light flanged wheels which supported the machine on the steel rails
+could be lifted six inches above the track, still leaving the heavy
+wheels on the rails for guidance of the machine. 'This arrangement,'
+Maxim states, 'was tried on several occasions, the machine being run
+fast enough to lift the forward end off the track. However, I found
+considerable difficulty in starting and stopping quickly on account of
+the great weight, and the amount of energy necessary to set such heavy
+wheels spinning at a high velocity. The last experiment with these
+wheels was made when a head wind was blowing at the rate of about ten
+miles an hour. It was rather unsteady, and when the machine was running
+at its greatest velocity, a sudden gust lifted not only the front
+end, but also the heavy front wheels completely off the track, and the
+machine falling on soft ground was soon blown over by the wind.'
+
+Consequently, a safety track was provided, consisting of squared pine
+logs, three inches by nine inches, placed about two feet above the steel
+way and having a thirty-foot gauge. Four extra wheels were fitted to the
+machine on outriggers and so adjusted that, if the machine should
+lift one inch clear of the steel rails, the wheels at the ends of the
+outriggers would engage the under side of the pine trackway.
+
+The first fully loaded run was made in a dead calm with 150 lbs. steam
+pressure to the square inch, and there was no sign of the wheels leaving
+the steel track. On a second run, with 230 lbs. steam pressure the
+machine seemed to alternate between adherence to the lower and upper
+tracks, as many as three of the outrigger wheels engaging at the same
+time, and the weight on the steel rails being reduced practically to
+nothing. In preparation for a third run, in which it was intended to use
+full power, a dynamometer was attached to the machine and the engines
+were started at 200 lbs. pressure, which was gradually increased to 310
+lbs per square inch. The incline of the track, added to the reading of
+the dynamometer, showed a total screw thrust of 2,164 lbs. After the
+dynamometer test had been completed, and everything had been made ready
+for trial in motion, careful observers were stationed on each side of
+the track, and the order was given to release the machine. What follows
+is best told in Maxim's own words:--
+
+'The enormous screw-thrust started the engine so quickly that it nearly
+threw the engineers off their feet, and the machine bounded over the
+track at a great rate. Upon noticing a slight diminution in the
+steam pressure, I turned on more gas, when almost instantly the steam
+commenced to blow a steady blast from the small safety valve, showing
+that the pressure was at least 320 lbs. in the pipes supplying the
+engines with steam. Before starting on this run, the wheels that were
+to engage the upper track were painted, and it was the duty of one of
+my assistants to observe these wheels during the run, while another
+assistant watched the pressure gauges and dynagraphs. The first part of
+the track was up a slight incline, but the machine was lifted clear
+of the lower rails and all of the top wheels were fully engaged on the
+upper track when about 600 feet had been covered. The speed rapidly
+increased, and when 900 feet had been covered, one of the rear axle
+trees, which were of two-inch steel tubing, doubled up and set the rear
+end of the machine completely free. The pencils ran completely across
+the cylinders of the dynagraphs and caught on the underneath end. The
+rear end of the machine being set free, raised considerably above the
+track and swayed. At about 1,000 feet, the left forward wheel also got
+clear of the upper track, and shortly afterwards the right forward wheel
+tore up about 100 feet of the upper track. Steam was at once shut off
+and the machine sank directly to the earth, embedding the wheels in the
+soft turf without leaving any other marks, showing most conclusively
+that the machine was completely suspended in the air before it settled
+to the earth. In this accident, one of the pine timbers forming the
+upper track went completely through the lower framework of the machine
+and broke a number of the tubes, but no damage was done to the machinery
+except a slight injury to one of the screws.'
+
+It is a pity that the multifarious directions in which Maxim turned his
+energies did not include further development of the aeroplane, for it
+seems fairly certain that he was as near solution of the problem as Ader
+himself, and, but for the holding-down outer track, which was really the
+cause of his accident, his machine would certainly have achieved free
+flight, though whether it would have risen, flown and alighted, without
+accident, is matter for conjecture.
+
+The difference between experiments with models and with full-sized
+machines is emphasised by Maxim's statement to the effect that with
+a small apparatus for ascertaining the power required for artificial
+flight, an angle of incidence of one in fourteen was most advantageous,
+while with a large machine he found it best to increase his angle to one
+in eight in order to get the maximum lifting effect on a short run at a
+moderate speed. He computed the total lifting effect in the experiments
+which led to the accident as not less than 10,000 lbs., in which is
+proof that only his rail system prevented free flight.
+
+
+
+
+X. SAMUEL PIERPOINT LANGLEY
+
+Langley was an old man when he began the study of aeronautics, or, as
+he himself might have expressed it, the study of aerodromics, since he
+persisted in calling the series of machines he built 'Aerodromes,' a
+word now used only to denote areas devoted to use as landing spaces for
+flying machines; the Wright Brothers, on the other hand, had the great
+gift of youth to aid them in their work. Even so it was a great race
+between Langley, aided by Charles Manly, and Wilbur and Orville Wright,
+and only the persistent ill-luck which dogged Langley from the start to
+the finish of his experiments gave victory to his rivals. It has been
+proved conclusively in these later years of accomplished flight that the
+machine which Langley launched on the Potomac River in October of 1903
+was fully capable of sustained flight, and only the accidents incurred
+in launching prevented its pilot from being the first man to navigate
+the air successfully in a power-driven machine.
+
+The best account of Langley's work is that diffused throughout a weighty
+tome issued by the Smithsonian Institution, entitled the Langley Memoir
+on Mechanical Flight, of which about one-third was written by Langley
+himself, the remainder being compiled by Charles M. Manly, the engineer
+responsible for the construction of the first radial aero-engine, and
+chief assistant to Langley in his experiments. To give a twentieth
+of the contents of this volume in the present short account of the
+development of mechanical flight would far exceed the amount of space
+that can be devoted even to so eminent a man in aeronautics as S.
+P. Langley, who, apart from his achievement in the construction of a
+power-driven aeroplane really capable of flight, was a scientist of no
+mean order, and who brought to the study of aeronautics the skill of the
+trained investigator allied to the inventive resource of the genius.
+
+That genius exemplified the antique saw regarding the infinite capacity
+for taking pains, for the Langley Memoir shows that as early as 1891
+Langley had completed a set of experiments, lasting through years,
+which proved it possible to construct machines giving such a velocity
+to inclined surfaces that bodies indefinitely heavier than air could
+be sustained upon it and propelled through it at high speed. For full
+account (very full) of these experiments, and of a later series leading
+up to the construction of a series of 'model aerodromes' capable of
+flight under power, it is necessary to turn to the bulky memoir of
+Smithsonian origin.
+
+The account of these experiments as given by Langley himself reveals
+the humility of the true investigator. Concerning them, Langley remarks
+that, 'Everything here has been done with a view to putting a trial
+aerodrome successfully in flight within a few years, and thus giving an
+early demonstration of the only kind which is conclusive in the eyes of
+the scientific man, as well as of the general public--a demonstration
+that mechanical flight is possible--by actually flying. All that has
+been done has been with an eye principally to this immediate result,
+and all the experiments given in this book are to be considered only as
+approximations to exact truth. All were made with a view, not to some
+remote future, but to an arrival within the compass of a few years at
+some result in actual flight that could not be gainsaid or mistaken.'
+
+With a series of over thirty rubber-driven models Langley demonstrated
+the practicability of opposing curved surfaces to the resistance of the
+air in such a way as to achieve flight, in the early nineties of last
+century; he then set about finding the motive power which should permit
+of the construction of larger machines, up to man-carrying size. The
+internal combustion engine was then an unknown quantity, and he had to
+turn to steam, finally, as the propulsive energy for his power plant.
+The chief problem which faced him was that of the relative weight and
+power of his engine; he harked back to the Stringfellow engine of 1868,
+which in 1889 came into the possession of the Smithsonian Institution
+as a historical curiosity. Rightly or wrongly Langley concluded on
+examination that this engine never had developed and never could
+develop more than a tenth of the power attributed to it; consequently
+he abandoned the idea of copying the Stringfellow design and set about
+making his own engine.
+
+How he overcame the various difficulties that faced him and constructed
+a steam-engine capable of the task allotted to it forms a story in
+itself, too long for recital here. His first power-driven aerodrome
+of model size was begun in November of 1891, the scale of construction
+being decided with the idea that it should be large enough to carry an
+automatic steering apparatus which would render the machine capable of
+maintaining a long and steady flight. The actual weight of the first
+model far exceeded the theoretical estimate, and Langley found that a
+constant increase of weight under the exigencies of construction was a
+feature which could never be altogether eliminated. The machine was made
+principally of steel, the sustaining surfaces being composed of silk
+stretched from a steel tube with wooden attachments. The first engines
+were the oscillating type, but were found deficient in power. This led
+to the construction of single-acting inverted oscillating engines with
+high and low pressure cylinders, and with admission and exhaust ports
+to avoid the complication and weight of eccentric and valves. Boiler and
+furnace had to be specially designed; an analysis of sustaining surfaces
+and the settlement of equilibrium while in flight had to be overcome,
+and then it was possible to set about the construction of the series of
+model aerodromes and make test of their 'lift.'
+
+By the time Langley had advanced sufficiently far to consider it
+possible to conduct experiments in the open air, even with these models,
+he had got to his fifth aerodrome, and to the year 1894. Certain tests
+resulted in failure, which in turn resulted in further modifications of
+design, mainly of the engines. By February of 1895 Langley reported
+that under favourable conditions a lift of nearly sixty per cent of
+the flying weight was secured, but although this was much more than
+was required for flight, it was decided to postpone trials until two
+machines were ready for the test. May, 1896, came before actual trials
+were made, when one machine proved successful and another, a later
+design, failed. The difficulty with these models was that of securing
+a correct angle for launching; Langley records how, on launching one
+machine, it rose so rapidly that it attained an angle of sixty degrees
+and then did a tail slide into the water with its engines working at
+full speed, after advancing nearly forty feet and remaining in the
+air for about three seconds. Here, Langley found that he had to obtain
+greater rigidity in his wings, owing to the distortion of the form of
+wing under pressure, and how he overcame this difficulty constitutes yet
+another story too long for the telling here.
+
+Field trials were first attempted in 1893, and Langley blamed his
+launching apparatus for their total failure. There was a brief, but at
+the same time practical, success in model flight in 1894, extending
+to between six and seven seconds, but this only proved the need for
+strengthening of the wing. In 1895 there was practically no advance
+toward the solution of the problem, but the flights of May 6th and
+November 28th, 1896, were notably successful. A diagram given in
+Langley's memoir shows the track covered by the aerodrome on these two
+flights; in the first of them the machine made three complete circles,
+covering a distance of 3,200 feet; in the second, that of November 28th,
+the distance covered was 4,200 feet, or about three-quarters of a mile,
+at a speed of about thirty miles an hour.
+
+These achievements meant a good deal; they proved mechanically propelled
+flight possible. The difference between them and such experiments as
+were conducted by Clement Ader, Maxim, and others, lay principally in
+the fact that these latter either did or did not succeed in rising into
+the air once, and then, either willingly or by compulsion, gave up
+the quest, while Langley repeated his experiments and thus attained to
+actual proof of the possibilities of flight. Like these others, however,
+he decided in 1896 that he would not undertake the construction of a
+large man-carrying machine. In addition to a multitude of actual duties,
+which left him practically no time available for original research, he
+had as an adverse factor fully ten years of disheartening difficulties
+in connection with his model machines. It was President McKinley who, by
+requesting Langley to undertake the construction and test of a machine
+which might finally lead to the development of a flying machine
+capable of being used in warfare, egged him on to his final experiment.
+Langley's acceptance of the offer to construct such a machine is
+contained in a letter addressed from the Smithsonian Institution on
+December 12th, 1898, to the Board of Ordnance and Fortification of the
+United States War Department; this letter is of such interest as to
+render it worthy of reproduction:--
+
+'Gentlemen,--In response to your invitation I repeat what I had the
+honour to say to the Board--that I am willing, with the consent of the
+Regents of this Institution, to undertake for the Government the further
+investigation of the subject of the construction of a flying machine
+on a scale capable of carrying a man, the investigation to include the
+construction, development and test of such a machine under conditions
+left as far as practicable in my discretion, it being understood that my
+services are given to the Government in such time as may not be occupied
+by the business of the Institution, and without charge.
+
+'I have reason to believe that the cost of the construction will come
+within the sum of $50,000.00, and that not more than one-half of that
+will be called for in the coming year.
+
+'I entirely agree with what I understand to be the wish of the Board
+that privacy be observed with regard to the work, and only when it
+reaches a successful completion shall I wish to make public the fact of
+its success.
+
+'I attach to this a memorandum of my understanding of some points of
+detail in order to be sure that it is also the understanding of the
+Board, and I am, gentlemen, with much respect, your obedient servant, S.
+P. Langley.'
+
+One of the chief problems in connection with the construction of a
+full-sized apparatus was that of the construction of an engine, for it
+was realised from the first that a steam power plant for a full-sized
+machine could only be constructed in such a way as to make it a constant
+menace to the machine which it was to propel. By this time (1898) the
+internal combustion engine had so far advanced as to convince Langley
+that it formed the best power plant available. A contract was made for
+the delivery of a twelve horse-power engine to weigh not more than a
+hundred pounds, but this contract was never completed, and it fell to
+Charles M. Manly to design the five-cylinder radial engine, of which a
+brief account is included in the section of this work devoted to aero
+engines, as the power plant for the Langley machine.
+
+The history of the years 1899 to 1903 in the Langley series of
+experiments contains a multitude of detail far beyond the scope of
+this present study, and of interest mainly to the designer. There were
+frames, engines, and propellers, to be considered, worked out, and
+constructed. We are concerned here mainly with the completed machine and
+its trials. Of these latter it must be remarked that the only two actual
+field trials which took place resulted in accidents due to the failure
+of the launching apparatus, and not due to any inherent defect in the
+machine. It was intended that these two trials should be the first of
+a series, but the unfortunate accidents, and the fact that no further
+funds were forthcoming for continuance of experiments, prevented
+Langley's success, which, had he been free to go through as he intended
+with his work, would have been certain.
+
+The best brief description of the Langley aerodrome in its final form,
+and of the two attempted trials, is contained in the official report of
+Major M. M. Macomb of the United States Artillery Corps, which report is
+here given in full:--
+
+ REPORT
+
+Experiments with working models which were concluded August 8 last
+having proved the principles and calculations on which the design of the
+Langley aerodrome was based to be correct, the next step was to apply
+these principles to the construction of a machine of sufficient size
+and power to permit the carrying of a man, who could control the motive
+power and guide its flight, thus pointing the way to attaining the final
+goal of producing a machine capable of such extensive and precise aerial
+flight, under normal atmospheric conditions, as to prove of military or
+commercial utility.
+
+Mr C. M. Manly, working under Professor Langley, had, by the summer
+of 1903, succeeded in completing an engine-driven machine which under
+favourable atmospheric conditions was expected to carry a man for any
+time up to half an hour, and to be capable of having its flight directed
+and controlled by him.
+
+The supporting surface of the wings was ample, and experiment showed the
+engine capable of supplying more than the necessary motive power.
+
+Owing to the necessity of lightness, the weight of the various elements
+had to be kept at a minimum, and the factor of safety in construction
+was therefore exceedingly small, so that the machine as a whole was
+delicate and frail and incapable of sustaining any unusual strain. This
+defect was to be corrected in later models by utilising data gathered in
+future experiments under varied conditions.
+
+One of the most remarkable results attained was the production of a
+gasoline engine furnishing over fifty continuous horse-power for a
+weight of 120 lbs.
+
+The aerodrome, as completed and prepared for test, is briefly described
+by Professor Langley as 'built of steel, weighing complete about
+730 lbs., supported by 1,040 feet of sustaining surface, having two
+propellers driven by a gas engine developing continuously over fifty
+brake horse-power.'
+
+The appearance of the machine prepared for flight was exceedingly light
+and graceful, giving an impression to all observers of being capable of
+successful flight.
+
+On October 7 last everything was in readiness, and I witnessed the
+attempted trial on that day at Widewater, Va. On the Potomac. The engine
+worked well and the machine was launched at about 12.15 p.m. The trial
+was unsuccessful because the front guy-post caught in its support on the
+launching car and was not released in time to give free flight, as was
+intended, but, on the contrary, caused the front of the machine to be
+dragged downward, bending the guy-post and making the machine plunge
+into the water about fifty yards in front of the house-boat. The machine
+was subsequently recovered and brought back to the house-boat. The
+engine was uninjured and the frame only slightly damaged, but the four
+wings and rudder were practically destroyed by the first plunge and
+subsequent towing back to the house-boat.
+
+This accident necessitated the removal of the house-boat to Washington
+for the more convenient repair of damages.
+
+On December 8 last, between 4 and 5 p.m., another attempt at a trial was
+made, this time at the junction of the Anacostia with the Potomac, just
+below Washington Barracks.
+
+On this occasion General Randolph and myself represented the Board of
+Ordnance and Fortification. The launching car was released at 4.45 p.m.
+being pointed up the Anacostia towards the Navy Yard. My position was
+on the tug Bartholdi, about 150 feet from and at right angles to
+the direction of proposed flight. The car was set in motion and the
+propellers revolved rapidly, the engine working perfectly, but there was
+something wrong with the launching. The rear guy-post seemed to drag,
+bringing the rudder down on the launching ways, and a crashing, rending
+sound, followed by the collapse of the rear wings, showed that the
+machine had been wrecked in the launching, just how, it was impossible
+for me to see. The fact remains that the rear wings and rudder were
+wrecked before the machine was free of the ways. Their collapse deprived
+the machine of its support in the rear, and it consequently reared up
+in front under the action of the motor, assumed a vertical position,
+and then toppled over to the rear, falling into the water a few feet in
+front of the boat.
+
+Mr Manly was pulled out of the wreck uninjured and the wrecked
+machine--was subsequently placed upon the house-boat, and the whole
+brought back to Washington.
+
+From what has been said it will be seen that these unfortunate accidents
+have prevented any test of the apparatus in free flight, and the claim
+that an engine-driven, man-carrying aerodrome has been constructed lacks
+the proof which actual flight alone can give.
+
+Having reached the present stage of advancement in its development, it
+would seem highly desirable, before laying down the investigation, to
+obtain conclusive proof of the possibility of free flight, not only
+because there are excellent reasons to hope for success, but because
+it marks the end of a definite step toward the attainment of the final
+goal.
+
+Just what further procedure is necessary to secure successful flight
+with the large aerodrome has not yet been decided upon. Professor
+Langley is understood to have this subject under advisement, and
+will doubtless inform the Board of his final conclusions as soon as
+practicable.
+
+In the meantime, to avoid any possible misunderstanding, it should be
+stated that even after a successful test of the present great aerodrome,
+designed to carry a man, we are still far from the ultimate goal, and it
+would seem as if years of constant work and study by experts, together
+with the expenditure of thousands of dollars, would still be necessary
+before we can hope to produce an apparatus of practical utility on these
+lines.--Washington, January 6, 1904.
+
+A subsequent report of the Board of ordnance and Fortification to the
+Secretary of War embodied the principal points in Major Macomb's report,
+but as early as March 3rd, 1904, the Board came to a similar conclusion
+to that of the French Ministry of War in respect of Clement Ader's work,
+stating that it was not 'prepared to make an additional allotment
+at this time for continuing the work.' This decision was in no small
+measure due to hostile newspaper criticisms. Langley, in a letter to
+the press explaining his attitude, stated that he did not wish to make
+public the results of his work till these were certain, in consequence
+of which he refused admittance to newspaper representatives, and this
+attitude produced a hostility which had effect on the United States
+Congress. An offer was made to commercialise the invention, but Langley
+steadfastly refused it. Concerning this, Manly remarks that Langley
+had 'given his time and his best labours to the world without hope of
+remuneration, and he could not bring himself, at his stage of life, to
+consent to capitalise his scientific work.'
+
+The final trial of the Langley aerodrome was made on December 8th, 1903;
+nine days later, on December 17th, the Wright Brothers made their first
+flight in a power-propelled machine, and the conquest of the air was
+thus achieved. But for the two accidents that spoilt his trials, the
+honour which fell to the Wright Brothers would, beyond doubt, have been
+secured by Samuel Pierpoint Langley.
+
+
+
+
+XI. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS
+
+Such information as is given here concerning the Wright Brothers is
+derived from the two best sources available, namely, the writings of
+Wilbur Wright himself, and a lecture given by Dr Griffith Brewer to
+members of the Royal Aeronautical Society. There is no doubt that so
+far as actual work in connection with aviation accomplished by the two
+brothers is concerned, Wilbur Wright's own statements are the clearest
+and best available. Apparently Wilbur was, from the beginning, the
+historian of the pair, though he himself would have been the last to
+attempt to detract in any way from the fame that his brother's work also
+deserves. Throughout all their experiments the two were inseparable,
+and their work is one indivisible whole; in fact, in every department
+of that work, it is impossible to say where Orville leaves off and where
+Wilbur begins.
+
+It is a great story, this of the Wright Brothers, and one worth all the
+detail that can be spared it. It begins on the 16th April, 1867, when
+Wilbur Wright was born within eight miles of Newcastle, Indiana. Before
+Orville's birth on the 19th August, 1871, the Wright family had moved
+to Dayton, Ohio, and settled on what is known as the 'West Side' of the
+town. Here the brothers grew up, and, when Orville was still a boy in
+his teens, he started a printing business, which, as Griffith Brewer
+remarks, was only limited by the smallness of his machine and small
+quantity of type at his disposal. This machine was in such a state that
+pieces of string and wood were incorporated in it by way of repair, but
+on it Orville managed to print a boys' paper which gained considerable
+popularity in Dayton 'West Side.' Later, at the age of seventeen,
+he obtained a more efficient outfit, with which he launched a weekly
+newspaper, four pages in size, entitled The West Side News. After three
+months' running the paper was increased in size and Wilbur came into
+the enterprise as editor, Orville remaining publisher. In 1894 the two
+brothers began the publication of a weekly magazine, Snap-Shots, to
+which Wilbur contributed a series of articles on local affairs that gave
+evidence of the incisive and often sarcastic manner in which he was able
+to express himself throughout his life. Dr Griffith Brewer describes him
+as a fearless critic, who wrote on matters of local interest in a kindly
+but vigorous manner, which did much to maintain the healthy public
+municipal life of Dayton.
+
+Editorial and publishing enterprise was succeeded by the formation, just
+across the road from the printing works, of the Wright Cycle Company,
+where the two brothers launched out as cycle manufacturers with the
+'Van Cleve' bicycle, a machine of great local repute for excellence of
+construction, and one which won for itself a reputation that lasted long
+after it had ceased to be manufactured. The name of the machine was that
+of an ancestor of the brothers, Catherine Van Cleve, who was one of the
+first settlers at Dayton, landing there from the River Miami on April
+1st, 1796, when the country was virgin forest.
+
+It was not until 1896 that the mechanical genius which characterised
+the two brothers was turned to the consideration of aeronautics. In that
+year they took up the problem thoroughly, studying all the aeronautical
+information then in print. Lilienthal's writings formed one basis for
+their studies, and the work of Langley assisted in establishing in
+them a confidence in the possibility of a solution to the problems of
+mechanical flight. In 1909, at the banquet given by the Royal Aero Club
+to the Wright Brothers on their return to America, after the series of
+demonstration flights carried out by Wilbur Wright on the Continent,
+Wilbur paid tribute to the great pioneer work of Stringfellow, whose
+studies and achievements influenced his own and Orville's early work. He
+pointed out how Stringfellow devised an aeroplane having two propellers
+and vertical and horizontal steering, and gave due place to this early
+pioneer of mechanical flight.
+
+Neither of the brothers was content with mere study of the work of
+others. They collected all the theory available in the books published
+up to that time, and then built man-carrying gliders with which to test
+the data of Lilienthal and such other authorities as they had consulted.
+For two years they conducted outdoor experiments in order to test the
+truth or otherwise of what were enunciated as the principles of flight;
+after this they turned to laboratory experiments, constructing a wind
+tunnel in which they made thousands of tests with models of various
+forms of curved planes. From their experiments they tabulated thousands
+of readings, which Griffith Brewer remarks as giving results equally
+efficient with those of the elaborate tables prepared by learned
+institutions.
+
+Wilbur Wright has set down the beginnings of the practical experiments
+made by the two brothers very clearly. 'The difficulties,' he says,
+'which obstruct the pathway to success in flying machine construction
+are of three general classes: (1) Those which relate to the construction
+of the sustaining wings; (2) those which relate to the generation and
+application of the power required to drive the machine through the air;
+(3) those relating to the balancing and steering of the machine after
+it is actually in flight. Of these difficulties two are already to
+a certain extent solved. Men already know how to construct wings, or
+aeroplanes, which, when driven through the air at sufficient speed, will
+not only sustain the weight of the wings themselves, but also that of
+the engine and the engineer as well. Men also know how to build engines
+and' screws of sufficient lightness and power to drive these planes
+at sustaining speed. Inability to balance and steer still confronts
+students of the flying problem, although nearly ten years have passed
+(since Lilienthal's success). When this one feature has been worked out,
+the age of flying machines will have arrived, for all other difficulties
+are of minor importance.
+
+'The person who merely watches the flight of a bird gathers the
+impression that the bird has nothing to think of but the flapping of
+its wings. As a matter of fact, this is a very small part of its mental
+labour. Even to mention all the things the bird must constantly keep in
+mind in order to fly securely through the air would take a considerable
+time. If I take a piece of paper and, after placing it parallel with
+the ground, quickly let it fall, it will not settle steadily down as
+a staid, sensible piece of paper ought to do, but it insists on
+contravening every recognised rule of decorum, turning over and darting
+hither and thither in the most erratic manner, much after the style of
+an untrained horse. Yet this is the style of steed that men must learn
+to manage before flying can become an everyday sport. The bird has
+learned this art of equilibrium, and learned it so thoroughly that its
+skill is not apparent to our sight. We only learn to appreciate it when
+we can imitate it.
+
+'Now, there are only two ways of learning to ride a fractious horse: one
+is to get on him and learn by actual practice how each motion and trick
+may be best met; the other is to sit on a fence and watch the beast
+awhile, and then retire to the house and at leisure figure out the best
+way of overcoming his jumps and kicks. The latter system is the safer,
+but the former, on the whole, turns out the larger proportion of good
+riders. It is very much the same in learning to ride a flying machine;
+if you are looking for perfect safety you will do well to sit on a fence
+and watch the birds, but if you really wish to learn you must mount
+a machine and become acquainted with its tricks by actual trial. The
+balancing of a gliding or flying machine is very simple in theory. It
+merely consists in causing the centre of pressure to coincide with the
+centre of gravity.'
+
+These comments are taken from a lecture delivered by Wilbur Wright
+before the Western Society of Engineers in September of 1901, under the
+presidency of Octave Chanute. In that lecture Wilbur detailed the way
+in which he and his brother came to interest themselves in aeronautical
+problems and constructed their first glider. He speaks of his own
+notice of the death of Lilienthal in 1896, and of the way in which this
+fatality roused him to an active interest in aeronautical problems,
+which was stimulated by reading Professor Marey's Animal Mechanism, not
+for the first time. 'From this I was led to read more modern works, and
+as my brother soon became equally interested with myself, we soon passed
+from the reading to the thinking, and finally to the working stage. It
+seemed to us that the main reason why the problem had remained so long
+unsolved was that no one had been able to obtain any adequate practice.
+We figured that Lilienthal in five years of time had spent only about
+five hours in actual gliding through the air. The wonder was not that he
+had done so little, but that he had accomplished so much. It would not
+be considered at all safe for a bicycle rider to attempt to ride through
+a crowded city street after only five hours' practice, spread out in
+bits of ten seconds each over a period of five years; yet Lilienthal
+with this brief practice was remarkably successful in meeting the
+fluctuations and eddies of wind-gusts. We thought that if some method
+could be found by which it would be possible to practice by the hour
+instead of by the second there would be hope of advancing the solution
+of a very difficult problem. It seemed feasible to do this by building a
+machine which would be sustained at a speed of eighteen miles per hour,
+and then finding a locality where winds of this velocity were common.
+With these conditions a rope attached to the machine to keep it from
+floating backward would answer very nearly the same purpose as a
+propeller driven by a motor, and it would be possible to practice by the
+hour, and without any serious danger, as it would not be necessary to
+rise far from the ground, and the machine would not have any forward
+motion at all. We found, according to the accepted tables of air
+pressure on curved surfaces, that a machine spreading 200 square feet of
+wing surface would be sufficient for our purpose, and that places would
+easily be found along the Atlantic coast where winds of sixteen to
+twenty-five miles were not at all uncommon. When the winds were low it
+was our plan to glide from the tops of sandhills, and when they were
+sufficiently strong to use a rope for our motor and fly over one spot.
+Our next work was to draw up the plans for a suitable machine. After
+much study we finally concluded that tails were a source of trouble
+rather than of assistance, and therefore we decided to dispense with
+them altogether. It seemed reasonable that if the body of the operator
+could be placed in a horizontal position instead of the upright, as in
+the machines of Lilienthal, Pilcher, and Chanute, the wind resistance
+could be very materially reduced, since only one square foot instead of
+five would be exposed. As a full half horse-power would be saved by this
+change, we arranged to try at least the horizontal position. Then the
+method of control used by Lilienthal, which consisted in shifting the
+body, did not seem quite as quick or effective as the case required; so,
+after long study, we contrived a system consisting of two large surfaces
+on the Chanute double-deck plan, and a smaller surface placed a short
+distance in front of the main surfaces in such a position that the
+action of the wind upon it would counterbalance the effect of the travel
+of the centre of pressure on the main surfaces. Thus changes in the
+direction and velocity of the wind would have little disturbing effect,
+and the operator would be required to attend only to the steering of the
+machine, which was to be effected by curving the forward surface up or
+down. The lateral equilibrium and the steering to right or left was
+to be attained by a peculiar torsion of the main surfaces which was
+equivalent to presenting one end of the wings at a greater angle than
+the other. In the main frame a few changes were also made in the details
+of construction and trussing employed by Mr Chanute. The most important
+of these were: (1) The moving of the forward main crosspiece of the
+frame to the extreme front edge; (2) the encasing in the cloth of all
+crosspieces and ribs of the surfaces; (3) a rearrangement of the wires
+used in trussing the two surfaces together, which rendered it possible
+to tighten all the wires by simply shortening two of them.'
+
+The brothers intended originally to get 200 square feet of supporting
+surface for their glider, but the impossibility of obtaining suitable
+material compelled them to reduce the area to 165 square feet, which, by
+the Lilienthal tables, admitted of support in a wind of about twenty-one
+miles an hour at an angle of three degrees. With this glider they went
+in the summer of I 1900 to the little settlement of Kitty Hawk, North
+Carolina, situated on the strip of land dividing Albemarle Sound from
+the Atlantic. Here they reckoned on obtaining steady wind, and here, on
+the day that they completed the machine, they took it out for trial as
+a kite with the wind blowing at between twenty-five and thirty miles
+an hour. They found that in order to support a man on it the glider
+required an angle nearer twenty degrees than three, and even with the
+wind at thirty miles an hour they could not get down to the planned
+angle of three degrees. 'Later, when the wind was too light to support
+the machine with a man on it, they tested it as a kite, working the
+rudders by cords. Although they obtained satisfactory results in this
+way they realised fully that actual gliding experience was necessary
+before the tests could be considered practical.
+
+A series of actual measurements of lift and drift of the machine gave
+astonishing results. 'It appeared that the total horizontal pull of the
+machine, while sustaining a weight of 52 lbs., was only 8.5 lbs., which
+was less than had been previously estimated for head resistance of the
+framing alone. Making allowance for the weight carried, it appeared that
+the head resistance of the framing was but little more than fifty per
+cent of the amount which Mr Chanute had estimated as the head resistance
+of the framing of his machine. On the other hand, it appeared sadly
+deficient in lifting power as compared with the calculated lift of
+curved surfaces of its size... we decided to arrange our machine for the
+following year so that the depth of curvature of its surfaces could be
+varied at will, and its covering air-proofed.'
+
+After these experiments the brothers decided to turn to practical
+gliding, for which they moved four miles to the south, to the Kill Devil
+sandhills, the principal of which is slightly over a hundred feet
+in height, with an inclination of nearly ten degrees on its main
+north-western slope. On the day after their arrival they made about a
+dozen glides, in which, although the landings were made at a speed of
+more than twenty miles an hour, no injury was sustained either by the
+machine or by the operator.
+
+'The slope of the hill was 9.5 degrees, or a drop of one foot in six. We
+found that after attaining a speed of about twenty-five to thirty miles
+with reference to the wind, or ten to fifteen miles over the ground, the
+machine not only glided parallel to the slope of the hill, but greatly
+increased its speed, thus indicating its ability to glide on a somewhat
+less angle than 9.5 degrees, when we should feel it safe to rise higher
+from the surface. The control of the machine proved even better than we
+had dared to expect, responding quickly to the slightest motion of the
+rudder. With these glides our experiments for the year 1900 closed.
+Although the hours and hours of practice we had hoped to obtain finally
+dwindled down to about two minutes, we were very much pleased with the
+general results of the trip, for, setting out as we did with almost
+revolutionary theories on many points and an entirely untried form of
+machine, we considered it quite a point to be able to return without
+having our pet theories completely knocked on the head by the hard logic
+of experience, and our own brains dashed out in the bargain. Everything
+seemed to us to confirm the correctness of our original opinions:
+(1) That practice is the key to the secret of flying; (2) that it
+is practicable to assume the horizontal position; (3) that a smaller
+surface set at a negative angle in front of the main bearing surfaces,
+or wings, will largely counteract the effect of the fore and aft travel
+of the centre of pressure; (4) that steering up and down can be attained
+with a rudder without moving the position of the operator's body; (5)
+that twisting the wings so as to present their ends to the wind at
+different angles is a more prompt and efficient way of maintaining
+lateral equilibrium than shifting the body of the operator.'
+
+For the gliding experiments of 1901 it was decided to retain the form of
+the 1900 glider, but to increase the area to 308 square feet, which, the
+brothers calculated, would support itself and its operator in a wind
+of seventeen miles an hour with an angle of incidence of three degrees.
+Camp was formed at Kitty Hawk in the middle of July, and on July 27th
+the machine was completed and tried for the first time in a wind of
+about fourteen miles an hour. The first attempt resulted in landing
+after a glide of only a few yards, indicating that the centre of gravity
+was too far in front of the centre of pressure. By shifting his position
+farther and farther back the operator finally achieved an undulating
+flight of a little over 300 feet, but to obtain this success he had to
+use full power of the rudder to prevent both stalling and nose-diving.
+With the 1900 machine one-fourth of the rudder action had been necessary
+for far better control.
+
+Practically all glides gave the same result, and in one the machine rose
+higher and higher until it lost all headway. 'This was the position from
+which Lilienthal had always found difficulty in extricating himself,
+as his machine then, in spite of his greatest exertions, manifested a
+tendency to dive downward almost vertically and strike the ground head
+on with frightful velocity. In this case a warning cry from the ground
+caused the operator to turn the rudder to its full extent and also to
+move his body slightly forward. The machine then settled slowly to the
+ground, maintaining its horizontal position almost perfectly, and landed
+without any injury at all. This was very encouraging, as it showed that
+one of the very greatest dangers in machines with horizontal tails had
+been overcome by the use of the front rudder. Several glides later the
+same experience was repeated with the same result. In the latter case
+the machine had even commenced to move backward, but was nevertheless
+brought safely to the ground in a horizontal position. On the whole this
+day's experiments were encouraging, for while the action of the rudder
+did not seem at all like that of our 1900 machine, yet we had escaped
+without difficulty from positions which had proved very dangerous
+to preceding experimenters, and after less than one minute's actual
+practice had made a glide of more than 300 feet, at an angle of
+descent of ten degrees, and with a machine nearly twice as large as had
+previously been considered safe. The trouble with its control, which
+has been mentioned, we believed could be corrected when we should have
+located its cause.'
+
+It was finally ascertained that the defect could be remedied by
+trussing down the ribs of the whole machine so as to reduce the depth of
+curvature. When this had been done gliding was resumed, and after a few
+trials glides of 366 and 389 feet were made with prompt response on the
+part of the machine, even to small movements of the rudder. The rest of
+the story of the gliding experiments of 1901 cannot be better told than
+in Wilbur Wright's own words, as uttered by him in the lecture from
+which the foregoing excerpts have been made.
+
+'The machine, with its new curvature, never failed to respond promptly
+to even small movements of the rudder. The operator could cause it to
+almost skim the ground, following the undulations of its surface, or he
+could cause it to sail out almost on a level with the starting point,
+and, passing high above the foot of the hill, gradually settle down to
+the ground. The wind on this day was blowing eleven to fourteen miles
+per hour. The next day, the conditions being favourable, the machine
+was again taken out for trial. This time the velocity of the wind was
+eighteen to twenty-two miles per hour. At first we felt some doubt as to
+the safety of attempting free flight in so strong a wind, with a machine
+of over 300 square feet and a practice of less than five minutes spent
+in actual flight. But after several preliminary experiments we decided
+to try a glide. The control of the machine seemed so good that we then
+felt no apprehension in sailing boldly forth. And thereafter we made
+glide after glide, sometimes following the ground closely and sometimes
+sailing high in the air. Mr Chanute had his camera with him and took
+pictures of some of these glides, several of which are among those
+shown.
+
+'We made glides on subsequent days, whenever the conditions were
+favourable. The highest wind thus experimented in was a little over
+twelve metres per second--nearly twenty-seven miles per hour.
+
+It had been our intention when building the machine to do the larger
+part of the experimenting in the following manner:--When the wind blew
+seventeen miles an hour, or more, we would attach a rope to the machine
+and let it rise as a kite with the operator upon it. When it should
+reach a proper height the operator would cast off the rope and glide
+down to the ground just as from the top of a hill. In this way we would
+be saved the trouble of carrying the machine uphill after each glide,
+and could make at least ten glides in the time required for one in the
+other way. But when we came to try it, we found that a wind of seventeen
+miles, as measured by Richards' anemometer, instead of sustaining the
+machine with its operator, a total weight of 240 lbs., at an angle of
+incidence of three degrees, in reality would not sustain the machine
+alone--100 lbs.--at this angle. Its lifting capacity seemed scarcely one
+third of the calculated amount. In order to make sure that this was not
+due to the porosity of the cloth, we constructed two small experimental
+surfaces of equal size, one of which was air-proofed and the other left
+in its natural state; but we could detect no difference in their lifting
+powers. For a time we were led to suspect that the lift of curved
+surfaces very little exceeded that of planes of the same size, but
+further investigation and experiment led to the opinion that (1) the
+anemometer used by us over-recorded the true velocity of the wind by
+nearly 15 per cent; (2) that the well-known Smeaton co-efficient of.005
+V squared for the wind pressure at 90 degrees is probably too great by
+at least 20 per cent; (3) that Lilienthal's estimate that the pressure
+on a curved surface having an angle of incidence of 3 degrees equals.545
+of the pressure at go degrees is too large, being nearly 50 per
+cent greater than very recent experiments of our own with a pressure
+testing-machine indicate; (4) that the superposition of the surfaces
+somewhat reduced the lift per square foot, as compared with a single
+surface of equal area.
+
+'In gliding experiments, however, the amount of lift is of less relative
+importance than the ratio of lift to drift, as this alone decides
+the angle of gliding descent. In a plane the pressure is always
+perpendicular to the surface, and the ratio of lift to drift is
+therefore the same as that of the cosine to the sine of the angle of
+incidence. But in curved surfaces a very remarkable situation is found.
+The pressure, instead of being uniformly normal to the chord of the
+arc, is usually inclined considerably in front of the perpendicular.
+The result is that the lift is greater and the drift less than if
+the pressure were normal. Lilienthal was the first to discover this
+exceedingly important fact, which is fully set forth in his book, Bird
+Flight the Basis of the Flying Art, but owing to some errors in the
+methods he used in making measurements, question was raised by other
+investigators not only as to the accuracy of his figures, but even as
+to the existence of any tangential force at all. Our experiments confirm
+the existence of this force, though our measurements differ considerably
+from those of Lilienthal. While at Kitty Hawk we spent much time in
+measuring the horizontal pressure on our unloaded machine at various
+angles of incidence. We found that at 13 degrees the horizontal pressure
+was about 23 lbs. This included not only the drift proper, or horizontal
+component of the pressure on the side of the surface, but also the head
+resistance of the framing as well. The weight of the machine at the time
+of this test was about 108 lbs. Now, if the pressure had been normal to
+the chord of the surface, the drift proper would have been to the lift
+(108 lbs.) as the sine of 13 degrees is to the cosine of 13 degrees,
+or.22 X 108/.97 = 24+ lbs.; but this slightly exceeds the total pull
+of 23 pounds on our scales. Therefore it is evident that the average
+pressure on the surface, instead of being normal to the chord, was so
+far inclined toward the front that all the head resistance of framing
+and wires used in the construction was more than overcome. In a wind of
+fourteen miles per hour resistance is by no means a negligible factor,
+so that tangential is evidently a force of considerable value. In a
+higher wind, which sustained the machine at an angle of 10 degrees the
+pull on the scales was 18 lbs. With the pressure normal to the chord the
+drift proper would have been 17 X 98/.98. The travel of the centre of
+pressure made it necessary to put sand on the front rudder to bring
+the centres of gravity and pressure into coincidence, consequently the
+weight of the machine varied from 98 lbs. to 108 lbs. in the different
+tests= 17 lbs., so that, although the higher wind velocity must have
+caused an increase in the head resistance, the tangential force still
+came within 1 lb. of overcoming it. After our return from Kitty Hawk
+we began a series of experiments to accurately determine the amount and
+direction of the pressure produced on curved surfaces when acted upon by
+winds at the various angles from zero to 90 degrees. These experiments
+are not yet concluded, but in general they support Lilienthal in the
+claim that the curves give pressures more favourable in amount and
+direction than planes; but we find marked differences in the exact
+values, especially at angles below 10 degrees. We were unable to obtain
+direct measurements of the horizontal pressures of the machine with
+the operator on board, but by comparing the distance travelled with the
+vertical fall, it was easily calculated that at a speed of 24 miles per
+hour the total horizontal resistances of our machine, when bearing
+the operator, amounted to 40 lbs., which is equivalent to about 2 1/3
+horse-power. It must not be supposed, however, that a motor developing
+this power would be sufficient to drive a man-bearing machine. The extra
+weight of the motor would require either a larger machine, higher speed,
+or a greater angle of incidence in order to support it, and therefore
+more power. It is probable, however, that an engine of 6 horse-power,
+weighing 100 lbs. would answer the purpose. Such an engine is entirely
+practicable. Indeed, working motors of one-half this weight per
+horse-power (9 lbs. per horse-power) have been constructed by several
+different builders. Increasing the speed of our machine from 24 to 33
+miles per hour reduced the total horizontal pressure from 40 to about 35
+lbs. This was quite an advantage in gliding, as it made it possible to
+sail about 15 per cent farther with a given drop. However, it would
+be of little or no advantage in reducing the size of the motor in
+a power-driven machine, because the lessened thrust would be
+counterbalanced by the increased speed per minute. Some years ago
+Professor Langley called attention to the great economy of thrust which
+might be obtained by using very high speeds, and from this many were led
+to suppose that high speed was essential to success in a motor-driven
+machine. But the economy to which Professor Langley called attention was
+in foot pounds per mile of travel, not in foot pounds per minute. It
+is the foot pounds per minute that fixes the size of the motor. The
+probability is that the first flying machines will have a relatively low
+speed, perhaps not much exceeding 20 miles per hour, but the problem of
+increasing the speed will be much simpler in some respects than that of
+increasing the speed of a steamboat; for, whereas in the latter case the
+size of the engine must increase as the cube of the speed, in the flying
+machine, until extremely high speeds are reached, the capacity of the
+motor increases in less than simple ratio; and there is even a decrease
+in the fuel per mile of travel. In other words, to double the speed of
+a steamship (and the same is true of the balloon type of airship) eight
+times the engine and boiler capacity would be required, and four times
+the fuel consumption per mile of travel: while a flying machine would
+require engines of less than double the size, and there would be an
+actual decrease in the fuel consumption per mile of travel. But looking
+at the matter conversely, the great disadvantage of the flying machine
+is apparent; for in the latter no flight at all is possible unless the
+proportion of horse-power to flying capacity is very high; but on
+the other hand a steamship is a mechanical success if its ratio of
+horse-power to tonnage is insignificant. A flying machine that would fly
+at a speed of 50 miles per hour with engines of 1,000 horse-power would
+not be upheld by its wings at all at a speed of less than 25 miles
+an hour, and nothing less than 500 horse-power could drive it at this
+speed. But a boat which could make 40 miles an hour with engines of
+1,000 horse-power would still move 4 miles an hour even if the engines
+were reduced to 1 horse-power. The problems of land and water travel
+were solved in the nineteenth century, because it was possible to begin
+with small achievements, and gradually work up to our present success.
+The flying problem was left over to the twentieth century, because in
+this case the art must be highly developed before any flight of any
+considerable duration at all can be obtained.
+
+'However, there is another way of flying which requires no artificial
+motor, and many workers believe that success will come first by this
+road. I refer to the soaring flight, by which the machine is permanently
+sustained in the air by the same means that are employed by soaring
+birds. They spread their wings to the wind, and sail by the hour,
+with no perceptible exertion beyond that required to balance and steer
+themselves. What sustains them is not definitely known, though it is
+almost certain that it is a rising current of air. But whether it be a
+rising current or something else, it is as well able to support a
+flying machine as a bird, if man once learns the art of utilising it.
+In gliding experiments it has long been known that the rate of vertical
+descent is very much retarded, and the duration of the flight greatly
+prolonged, if a strong wind blows UP the face of the hill parallel
+to its surface. Our machine, when gliding in still air, has a rate of
+vertical descent of nearly 6 feet per second, while in a wind blowing
+26 miles per hour up a steep hill we made glides in which the rate of
+descent was less than 2 feet per second. And during the larger part of
+this time, while the machine remained exactly in the rising current,
+THERE WAS NO DESCENT AT ALL, BUT EVEN A SLIGHT RISE. If the operator
+had had sufficient skill to keep himself from passing beyond the rising
+current he would have been sustained indefinitely at a higher point than
+that from which he started. The illustration shows one of these very
+slow glides at a time when the machine was practically at a standstill.
+The failure to advance more rapidly caused the photographer some trouble
+in aiming, as you will perceive. In looking at this picture you will
+readily understand that the excitement of gliding experiments does
+not entirely cease with the breaking up of camp. In the photographic
+dark-room at home we pass moments of as thrilling interest as any in
+the field, when the image begins to appear on the plate and it is yet an
+open question whether we have a picture of a flying machine or merely a
+patch of open sky. These slow glides in rising current probably hold out
+greater hope of extensive practice than any other method within man's
+reach, but they have the disadvantage of requiring rather strong winds
+or very large supporting surfaces. However, when gliding operators
+have attained greater skill, they can with comparative safety maintain
+themselves in the air for hours at a time in this way, and thus by
+constant practice so increase their knowledge and skill that they can
+rise into the higher air and search out the currents which enable the
+soaring birds to transport themselves to any desired point by first
+rising in a circle and then sailing off at a descending angle. This
+illustration shows the machine, alone, flying in a wind of 35 miles per
+hour on the face of a steep hill, 100 feet high. It will be seen
+that the machine not only pulls upward, but also pulls forward in the
+direction from which the wind blows, thus overcoming both gravity and
+the speed of the wind. We tried the same experiment with a man on it,
+but found danger that the forward pull would become so strong, that the
+men holding the ropes would be dragged from their insecure foothold on
+the slope of the hill. So this form of experimenting was discontinued
+after four or five minutes' trial.
+
+'In looking over our experiments of the past two years, with models and
+full-size machines, the following points stand out with clearness:--
+
+'1. That the lifting power of a large machine, held stationary in a wind
+at a small distance from the earth, is much less than the Lilienthal
+table and our own laboratory experiments would lead us to expect. When
+the machine is moved through the air, as in gliding, the discrepancy
+seems much less marked.
+
+'2. That the ratio of drift to lift in well-shaped surfaces is less at
+angles of incidence of 5 degrees to 12 degrees than at an angle of 3
+degrees.
+
+'3. That in arched surfaces the centre of pressure at 90 degrees is near
+the centre of the surface, but moves slowly forward as the angle becomes
+less, till a critical angle varying with the shape and depth of the
+curve is reached, after which it moves rapidly toward the rear till the
+angle of no lift is found.
+
+'4. That with similar conditions large surfaces may be controlled with
+not much greater difficulty than small ones, if the control is effected
+by manipulation of the surfaces themselves, rather than by a movement of
+the body of the operator.
+
+'5. That the head resistances of the framing can be brought to a point
+much below that usually estimated as necessary.
+
+'6. That tails, both vertical and horizontal, may with safety be
+eliminated in gliding and other flying experiments.
+
+'7. That a horizontal position of the operator's body may be assumed
+without excessive danger, and thus the head resistance reduced to about
+one-fifth that of the upright position.
+
+'8. That a pair of superposed, or tandem surfaces, has less lift in
+proportion to drift than either surface separately, even after making
+allowance for weight and head resistance of the connections.'
+
+Thus, to the end of the 1901 experiments, Wilbur Wright provided a
+fairly full account of what was accomplished; the record shows an amount
+of patient and painstaking work almost beyond belief--it was no question
+of making a plane and launching it, but a business of trial and error,
+investigation and tabulation of detail, and the rejection time after
+time of previously accepted theories, till the brothers must have felt
+the the solid earth was no longer secure, at times. Though it was Wilbur
+who set down this and other records of the work done, yet the actual
+work was so much Orville's as his brother's that no analysis could
+separate any set of experiments and say that Orville did this and Wilbur
+that--the two were inseparable. On this point Griffith Brewer remarked
+that 'in the arguments, if one brother took one view, the other brother
+took the opposite view as a matter of course, and the subject was
+thrashed to pieces until a mutually acceptable result remained. I have
+often been asked since these pioneer days, "Tell me, Brewer, who was
+really the originator of those two?" In reply, I used first to say,
+"I think it was mostly Wilbur," and later, when I came to know Orville
+better, I said, "The thing could not have been without Orville." Now,
+when asked, I have to say, "I don't know," and I feel the more I think
+of it that it was only the wonderful combination of these two brothers,
+who devoted their lives together or this common object, that made the
+discovery of the art of flying possible.'
+
+Beyond the 1901 experiments in gliding, the record grows more scrappy,
+less detailed. It appears that once power-driven flight had been
+achieved, the brothers were not so willing to talk as before;
+considering the amount of work that they put in, there could have been
+little time for verbal description of that work--as already remarked,
+their tables still stand for the designer and experimenter. The end of
+the 1901 experiments left both brothers somewhat discouraged, though
+they had accomplished more than any others. 'Having set out with
+absolute faith in the existing scientific data, we ere driven to doubt
+one thing after another, finally, after two years of experiment, we cast
+it all aside, and decided to rely entirely on our own investigations.
+Truth and error were everywhere so intimately mixed as to be
+indistinguishable.... We had taken up aeronautics as a sport. We
+reluctantly entered upon the scientific side of it.'
+
+Yet, driven thus to the more serious aspect of the work, they found in
+the step its own reward, for the work of itself drew them on and on, to
+the construction of measuring machines for the avoidance of error, and
+to the making of series after series of measurements, concerning which
+Wilbur wrote in 1908 (in the Century Magazine) that 'after making
+preliminary measurements on a great number of different shaped surfaces,
+to secure a general understanding of the subject, we began systematic
+measurements of standard surfaces, so varied in design as to bring
+out the underlying causes of differences noted in their pressures.
+Measurements were tabulated on nearly fifty of these at all angles from
+zero to 45 degrees, at intervals of 2 1/2 degrees. Measurements were
+also secured showing the effects on each other when surfaces are
+superposed, or when they follow one another.
+
+'Some strange results were obtained. One surface, with a heavy roll at
+the front edge, showed the same lift for all angles from 7 1/2 to 45
+degrees. This seemed so anomalous that we were almost ready to doubt our
+own measurements, when a simple test was suggested. A weather vane, with
+two planes attached to the pointer at an angle of 80 degrees with
+each other, was made. According to our table, such a vane would be in
+unstable equilibrium when pointing directly into the wind, for if by
+chance the wind should happen to strike one plane at 39 degrees and the
+other at 41 degrees, the plane with the smaller angle would have the
+greater pressure and the pointer would be turned still farther out
+of the course of the wind until the two vanes again secured equal
+pressures, which would be at approximately 30 and 50 degrees. But the
+vane performed in this very manner. Further corroboration of the tables
+was obtained in experiments with the new glider at Kill Devil Hill the
+next season.
+
+'In September and October, 1902 nearly 1,000 gliding flights were made,
+several of which covered distances of over 600 feet. Some, made against
+a wind of 36 miles an hour, gave proof of the effectiveness of the
+devices for control. With this machine, in the autumn of 1903, we made
+a number of flights in which we remained in the air for over a minute,
+often soaring for a considerable time in one spot, without any descent
+at all. Little wonder that our unscientific assistant should think the
+only thing needed to keep it indefinitely in the air would be a coat of
+feathers to make it light!'
+
+It was at the conclusion of these experiments of 1903 that the brothers
+concluded they had obtained sufficient data from their thousands of
+glides and multitude of calculations to permit of their constructing
+and making trial of a power-driven machine. The first designs got out
+provided for a total weight of 600 lbs., which was to include the weight
+of the motor and the pilot; but on completion it was found that there
+was a surplus of power from the motor, and thus they had 150 lbs. weight
+to allow for strengthening wings and other parts.
+
+They came up against the problem to which Riach has since devoted so
+much attention, that of propeller design. 'We had thought of getting the
+theory of the screw-propeller from the marine engineers, and then, by
+applying our table of air-pressures to their formulae, of designing
+air-propellers suitable for our uses. But, so far as we could learn, the
+marine engineers possessed only empirical formulae, and the exact action
+of the screw propeller, after a century of use, was still very obscure.
+As we were not in a position to undertake a long series of practical
+experiments to discover a propeller suitable for our machine, it seemed
+necessary to obtain such a thorough understanding of the theory of its
+reactions as would enable us to design them from calculation alone.
+What at first seemed a simple problem became more complex the longer we
+studied it. With the machine moving forward, the air flying backward,
+the propellers turning sidewise, and nothing standing still, it seemed
+impossible to find a starting point from which to trace the various
+simultaneous reactions. Contemplation of it was confusing. After long
+arguments we often found ourselves in the ludicrous position of each
+having been converted to the other's side, with no more agreement than
+when the discussion began.
+
+'It was not till several months had passed, and every phase of the
+problem had been thrashed over and over, that the various reactions
+began to untangle themselves. When once a clear understanding had been
+obtained there was no difficulty in designing a suitable propeller, with
+proper diameter, pitch, and area of blade, to meet the requirements of
+the flier. High efficiency in a screw-propeller is not dependent upon
+any particular or peculiar shape, and there is no such thing as a "best"
+screw. A propeller giving a high dynamic efficiency when used upon one
+machine may be almost worthless when used upon another. The propeller
+should in every case be designed to meet the particular conditions of
+the machine to which it is to be applied. Our first propellers, built
+entirely from calculation, gave in useful work 66 per cent of the power
+expended. This was about one-third more than had been secured by Maxim
+or Langley.'
+
+Langley had made his last attempt with the 'aerodrome,' and his splendid
+failure but a few days before the brothers made their first attempt at
+power-driven aeroplane flight. On December 17th, 1903, the machine was
+taken out; in addition to Wilbur and Orville Wright, there were present
+five spectators: Mr A. D. Etheridge, of the Kill Devil life-saving
+station; Mr W. S.Dough, Mr W. C. Brinkley, of Manteo; Mr John Ward, of
+Naghead, and Mr John T. Daniels.[*] A general invitation had been given
+to practically all the residents in the vicinity, but the Kill Devil
+district is a cold area in December, and history had recorded so many
+experiments in which machines had failed to leave the ground that
+between temperature and scepticism only these five risked a waste of
+their time.
+
+[*] This list is as given by Wilbur Wright himself.
+
+And these five were in at the greatest conquest man had made since James
+Watt evolved the steam engine--perhaps even a greater conquest than that
+of Watt. Four flights in all were made; the first lasted only twelve
+seconds, 'the first in the history of the world in which a machine
+carrying a man had raised itself into the air by its own power in free
+flight, had sailed forward on a level course without reduction of
+speed, and had finally landed without being wrecked,' said Wilbur
+Wright concerning the achievement.[*] The next two flights were slightly
+longer, and the fourth and last of the day was one second short of the
+complete minute; it was made into the teeth of a 20 mile an hour wind,
+and the distance travelled was 852 feet.
+
+[*] Century Magazine, September, 1908.
+
+This bald statement of the day's doings is as Wilbur Wright himself
+has given it, and there is in truth nothing more to say; no amount of
+statement could add to the importance of the achievement, and no more
+than the bare record is necessary. The faith that had inspired the long
+roll of pioneers, from da Vinci onward, was justified at last.
+
+Having made their conquest, the brothers took the machine back to camp,
+and, as they thought, placed it in safety. Talking with the little group
+of spectators about the flights, they forgot about the machine, and then
+a sudden gust of wind struck it. Seeing that it was being overturned,
+all made a rush toward it to save it, and Mr Daniels, a man of large
+proportions, was in some way lifted off his feet, falling between the
+planes. The machine overturned fully, and Daniels was shaken like a die
+in a cup as the wind rolled the machine over and over--he came out at
+the end of his experience with a series of bad bruises, and no more, but
+the damage done to the machine by the accident was sufficient to render
+it useless for further experiment that season.
+
+A new machine, stronger and heavier, was constructed by the brothers,
+and in the spring of 1904 they began experiments again at Sims
+Station, eight miles to the east of Dayton, their home town. Press
+representatives were invited for the first trial, and about a dozen
+came--the whole gathering did not number more than fifty people. 'When
+preparations had been concluded,' Wilbur Wright wrote of this trial, 'a
+wind of only three or four miles an hour was blowing--insufficient for
+starting on so short a track--but since many had come a long way to
+see the machine in action, an attempt was made. To add to the other
+difficulty, the engine refused to work properly. The machine, after
+running the length of the track, slid off the end without rising into
+the air at all. Several of the newspaper men returned next day but were
+again disappointed. The engine performed badly, and after a glide of
+only sixty feet the machine again came to the ground. Further trial was
+postponed till the motor could be put in better running condition. The
+reporters had now, no doubt, lost confidence in the machine, though
+their reports, in kindness, concealed it. Later, when they heard that
+we were making flights of several minutes' duration, knowing that longer
+flights had been made with airships, and not knowing any essential
+difference between airships and flying machines, they were but little
+interested.
+
+'We had not been flying long in 1904 before we found that the problem of
+equilibrium had not as yet been entirely solved. Sometimes, in making
+a circle, the machine would turn over sidewise despite anything the
+operator could do, although, under the same conditions in ordinary
+straight flight it could have been righted in an instant. In one flight,
+in 1905, while circling round a honey locust-tree at a height of about
+50 feet, the machine suddenly began to turn up on one wing, and took a
+course toward the tree. The operator, not relishing the idea of landing
+in a thorn tree, attempted to reach the ground. The left wing, however,
+struck the tree at a height of 10 or 12 feet from the ground and carried
+away several branches; but the flight, which had already covered a
+distance of six miles, was continued to the starting point.
+
+'The causes of these troubles--too technical for explanation here--were
+not entirely overcome till the end of September, 1905. The flights then
+rapidly increased in length, till experiments were discontinued after
+October 5 on account of the number of people attracted to the field.
+Although made on a ground open on every side, and bordered on two sides
+by much-travelled thoroughfares, with electric cars passing every hour,
+and seen by all the people living in the neighbourhood for miles around,
+and by several hundred others, yet these flights have been made by some
+newspapers the subject of a great "mystery."'
+
+Viewing their work from the financial side, the two brothers incurred
+but little expense in the earlier gliding experiments, and, indeed,
+viewed these only as recreation, limiting their expenditure to that
+which two men might spend on any hobby. When they had once achieved
+successful power-driven flight, they saw the possibilities of their
+work, and abandoned such other business as had engaged their energies,
+sinking all their capital in the development of a practical flying
+machine. Having, in 1905, improved their designs to such an extent that
+they could consider their machine a practical aeroplane, they devoted
+the years 1906 and 1907 to business negotiations and to the construction
+of new machines, resuming flying experiments in May of 1908 in order to
+test the ability of their machine to meet the requirements of a contract
+they had made with the United States Government, which required an
+aeroplane capable of carrying two men, together with sufficient fuel
+supplies for a flight of 125 miles at 40 miles per hour. Practically
+similar to the machine used in the experiments of 1905, the contract
+aeroplane was fitted with a larger motor, and provision was made for
+seating a passenger and also for allowing of the operator assuming a
+sitting position, instead of lying prone.
+
+Before leaving the work of the brothers to consider contemporary events,
+it may be noted that they claimed--with justice--that they were first to
+construct wings adjustable to different angles of incidence on the right
+and left side in order to control the balance of an aeroplane; the
+first to attain lateral balance by adjusting wing-tips to respectively
+different angles of incidence on the right and left sides, and the first
+to use a vertical vane in combination with wing-tips, adjustable to
+respectively different angles of incidence, in balancing and steering
+an aeroplane. They were first, too, to use a movable vertical tail, in
+combination with wings adjustable to different angles of incidence, in
+controlling the balance and direction of an aeroplane.[*]
+
+[*]Aeronautical Journal, No. 79.
+
+A certain Henry M. Weaver, who went to see the work of the brothers,
+writing in a letter which was subsequently read before the Aero Club de
+France records that he had a talk in 1905 with the farmer who rented the
+field in which the Wrights made their flights.' On October 5th (1905) he
+was cutting corn in the next field east, which is higher ground. When
+he noticed the aeroplane had started on its flight he remarked to his
+helper: "Well, the boys are at it again," and kept on cutting corn, at
+the same time keeping an eye on the great white form rushing about its
+course. "I just kept on shocking corn," he continued, "until I got down
+to the fence, and the durned thing was still going round. I thought it
+would never stop."'
+
+He was right. The brothers started it, and it will never stop.
+
+Mr Weaver also notes briefly the construction of the 1905 Wright flier.
+'The frame was made of larch wood-from tip to tip of the wings the
+dimension was 40 feet. The gasoline motor--a special construction
+made by them--much the same, though, as the motor on the Pope-Toledo
+automobile--was of from 12 to 15 horse-power. The motor weighed 240 lbs.
+The frame was covered with ordinary muslin of good quality. No attempt
+was made to lighten the machine; they simply built it strong enough
+to stand the shocks. The structure stood on skids or runners, like a
+sleigh. These held the frame high enough from the ground in alighting
+to protect the blades of the propeller. Complete with motor, the machine
+weighed 925 lbs.
+
+
+
+
+XII. THE FIRST YEARS OF CONQUEST
+
+It is no derogation of the work accomplished by the Wright Brothers to
+say that they won the honour of the first power-propelled flights in
+a heavier-than-air machine only by a short period. In Europe, and
+especially in France, independent experiment was being conducted by
+Ferber, by Santos-Dumont, and others, while in England Cody was not far
+behind the other giants of those days. The history of the early years
+of controlled power flights is a tangle of half-records; there were no
+chroniclers, only workers, and much of what was done goes unrecorded
+perforce, since it was not set down at the time.
+
+Before passing to survey of those early years, let it be set down that
+in 1907, when the Wright Brothers had proved the practicability of their
+machines, negotiations were entered into between the brothers and
+the British War office. On April 12th 1907, the apostle of military
+stagnation, Haldane, then War Minister, put an end to the negotiations
+by declaring that 'the War office is not disposed to enter into
+relations at present with any manufacturer of aeroplanes' The state
+of the British air service in 1914 at the outbreak of hostilities, is
+eloquent regarding the pursuance of the policy which Haldane initiated.
+
+'If I talked a lot,' said Wilbur Wright once, 'I should be like the
+parrot, which is the bird that speaks most and flies least.' That
+attitude is emblematic of the majority of the early fliers, and because
+of it the record of their achievements is incomplete to-day. Ferber,
+for instance, has left little from which to state what he did, and that
+little is scattered through various periodicals, scrappily enough. A
+French army officer, Captain Ferber was experimenting with monoplane
+and biplane gliders at the beginning of the century-his work was
+contemporary with that of the Wrights. He corresponded both with Chanute
+and with the Wrights, and in the end he was commissioned by the
+French Ministry of War to undertake the journey to America in order
+to negotiate with the Wright Brothers concerning French rights in the
+patents they had acquired, and to study their work at first hand.
+
+Ferber's experiments in gliding began in 1899 at the Military School at
+Fountainebleau, with a canvas glider of some 80 square feet supporting
+surface, and weighing 65 lbs. Two years later he constructed a larger
+and more satisfactory machine, with which he made numerous excellent
+glides. Later, he constructed an apparatus which suspended a plane from
+a long arm which swung on a tower, in order that experiments might be
+carried out without risk to the experimenter, and it was not until 1905
+that he attempted power-driven free flight. He took up the Voisin design
+of biplane for his power-driven flights, and virtually devoted all his
+energies to the study of aeronautics. His book, Aviation, its Dawn
+and Development, is a work of scientific value--unlike many of his
+contemporaries, Ferber brought to the study of the problems of flight a
+trained mind, and he was concerned equally with the theoretical problems
+of aeronautics and the practical aspects of the subject.
+
+After Bleriot's successful cross-Channel flight, it was proposed to
+offer a prize of L1,000 for the feat which C. S. Rolls subsequently
+accomplished (starting from the English side of the Channel), a flight
+from Boulogne to Dover and back; in place of this, however, an aviation
+week at Boulogne was organised, but, although numerous aviators were
+invited to compete, the condition of the flying grounds was such that
+no competitions took place. Ferber was virtually the only one to do any
+flying at Boulogne, and at the outset he had his first accident; after
+what was for those days a good flight, he made a series of circles
+with his machine, when it suddenly struck the ground, being partially
+wrecked. Repairs were carried out, and Ferber resumed his exhibition
+flights, carrying on up to Wednesday, September 22nd, 1909. On that day
+he remained in the air for half an hour, and, as he was about to land,
+the machine struck a mound of earth and overturned, pinning Ferber under
+the weight of the motor. After being extricated, Ferber seemed to show
+little concern at the accident, but in a few minutes he complained of
+great pain, when he was conveyed to the ambulance shed on the ground.
+
+'I was foolish,' he told those who were with him there. 'I was flying
+too low. It was my own fault and it will be a severe lesson to me.
+I wanted to turn round, and was only five metres from the ground.' A
+little after this, he got up from the couch on which he had been placed,
+and almost immediately collapsed, dying five minutes later.
+
+Ferber's chief contemporaries in France were Santos-Dumont, of airship
+fame, Henri and Maurice Farman, Hubert Latham, Ernest Archdeacon, and
+Delagrange. These are names that come at once to mind, as does that of
+Bleriot, who accomplished the second great feat of power-driven flight,
+but as a matter of fact the years 1903-10 are filled with a little host
+of investigators and experimenters, many of whom, although their names
+do not survive to any extent, are but a very little way behind those
+mentioned here in enthusiasm and devotion. Archdeacon and Gabriel
+Voisin, the former of whom took to heart the success achieved by the
+Wright Brothers, co-operated in experiments in gliding. Archdeacon
+constructed a glider in box-kite fashion, and Voisin experimented with
+it on the Seine, the glider being towed by a motorboat to attain the
+necessary speed. It was Archdeacon who offered a cup for the first
+straight flight of 200 metres, which was won by Santos-Dumont, and he
+also combined with Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe in giving the prize for
+the first circular flight of a mile, which was won by Henry Farman on
+January 13th, 1908.
+
+A history of the development of aviation in France in these, the
+strenuous years, would fill volumes in itself. Bleriot was carrying
+out experiments with a biplane glider on the Seine, and Robert
+Esnault-Pelterie was working on the lines of the Wright Brothers,
+bringing American practice to France. In America others besides the
+Wrights had wakened to the possibilities of heavier-than-air flight;
+Glenn Curtiss, in company with Dr Alexander Graham Bell, with J. A. D.
+McCurdy, and with F. W. Baldwin, a Canadian engineer, formed the Aerial
+Experiment Company, which built a number of aeroplanes, most famous of
+which were the 'June Bug,' the 'Red Wing,' and the 'White Wing.' In 1908
+the 'June Bug 'won a cup presented by the Scientific American--it was
+the first prize offered in America in connection with aeroplane flight.
+
+Among the little group of French experimenters in these first years of
+practical flight, Santos-Dumont takes high rank. He built his 'No. 14
+bis' aeroplane in biplane form, with two superposed main plane surfaces,
+and fitted it with an eight-cylinder Antoinette motor driving a
+two-bladed aluminium propeller, of which the blades were 6 feet only
+from tip to tip. The total lift surface of 860 square feet was given
+with a wing-span of a little under 40 feet, and the weight of the
+complete machine was 353 lbs., of which the engine weighed 158 lbs.
+In July of 1906 Santos-Dumont flew a distance of a few yards in this
+machine, but damaged it in striking the ground; on October 23rd of the
+same year he made a flight of nearly 200 feet--which might have been
+longer, but that he feared a crowd in front of the aeroplane and cut
+off his ignition. This may be regarded as the first effective flight in
+Europe, and by it Santos-Dumont takes his place as one of the chief--if
+not the chief--of the pioneers of the first years of practical flight,
+so far as Europe is concerned.
+
+Meanwhile, the Voisin Brothers, who in 1904 made cellular kites for
+Archdeacon to test by towing on the Seine from a motor launch, obtained
+data for the construction of the aeroplane which Delagrange and Henry
+Farman were to use later. The Voisin was a biplane, constructed with
+due regard to the designs of Langley, Lilienthal, and other earlier
+experimenters--both the Voisins and M. Colliex, their engineer, studied
+Lilienthal pretty exhaustively in getting out their design, though their
+own researches were very thorough as well. The weight of this Voisin
+biplane was about 1,450 lbs., and its maximum speed was some 38 to 40
+miles per hour, the total supporting surface being about 535 square
+feet. It differed from the Wright design in the possession of a
+tail-piece, a characteristic which marked all the French school of early
+design as in opposition to the American. The Wright machine got its
+longitudinal stability by means of the main planes and the elevating
+planes, while the Voisin type added a third factor of stability in its
+sailplanes. Further, the Voisins fitted their biplane with a wheeled
+undercarriage, while the Wright machine, being fitted only with runners,
+demanded a launching rail for starting. Whether a machine should be
+tailless or tailed was for some long time matter for acute controversy,
+which in the end was settled by the fitting of a tail to the Wright
+machines-France won the dispute by the concession.
+
+Henry Farman, who began his flying career with a Voisin machine, evolved
+from it the aeroplane which bore his name, following the main lines of
+the Voisin type fairly closely, but making alterations in the controls,
+and in the design of the undercarriage, which was somewhat elaborated,
+even to the inclusion of shock absorbers. The seven-cylinder 50
+horse-power Gnome rotary engine was fitted to the Farman machine--the
+Voisins had fitted an eight-cylinder Antoinette, giving 50 horse-power
+at 1,100 revolutions per minute, with direct drive to the propeller.
+Farman reduced the weight of the machine from the 1,450 lbs. of the
+Voisins to some 1,010 lbs. or thereabouts, and the supporting area to
+450 square feet. This machine won its chief fame with Paulhan as pilot
+in the famous London to Manchester flight--it is to be remarked, too,
+that Farman himself was the first man in Europe to accomplish a flight
+of a mile.
+
+Other notable designs of these early days were the 'R.E.P.', Esnault
+Pelterie's machine, and the Curtiss-Herring biplane. Of these Esnault
+Pelterie's was a monoplane, designed in that form since Esnault Pelterie
+had found by experiment that the wire used in bracing offers far more
+resistance to the air than its dimensions would seem to warrant. He
+built the wings of sufficient strength to stand the strain of flight
+without bracing wires, and dependent only for their support on the
+points of attachment to the body of the machine; for the rest, it
+carried its propeller in front of the planes, and both horizontal and
+vertical rudders at the stern--a distinct departure from the Wright
+and similar types. One wheel only was fixed under the body where the
+undercarriage exists on a normal design, but light wheels were fixed,
+one at the extremity of each wing, and there was also a wheel under the
+tail portion of the machine. A single lever actuated all the controls
+for steering. With a supporting surface of 150 square feet the machine
+weighed 946 lbs., about 6.4 lbs. per square foot of lifting surface.
+
+The Curtiss biplane, as flown by Glenn Curtiss at the Rheims meeting,
+was built with a bamboo framework, stayed by means of very fine
+steel-stranded cables. A--then--novel feature of the machine was the
+moving of the ailerons by the pilot leaning to one side or the other in
+his seat, a light, tubular arm-rest being pressed by his body when he
+leaned to one side or the other, and thus operating the movement of the
+ailerons employed for tilting the plane when turning. A steering-wheel
+fitted immediately in front of the pilot's seat served to operate a rear
+steering-rudder when the wheel was turned in either direction, while
+pulling back the wheel altered the inclination of the front elevating
+planes, and so gave lifting or depressing control of the plane.
+
+This machine ran on three wheels before leaving the ground, a central
+undercarriage wheel being fitted in front, with two more in line with
+a right angle line drawn through the centre of the engine crank at the
+rear end of the crank-case. The engine was a 35 horsepower Vee design,
+water cooled, with overhead inlet and exhaust valves, and Bosch
+high-tension magneto ignition. The total weight of the plane in flying
+order was about 700 lbs.
+
+As great a figure in the early days as either Ferber or Santos-Dumont
+was Louis Bleriot, who, as early as 1900 built a flapping-wing model,
+this before ever he came to experimenting with the Voisin biplane type
+of glider on the Seine. Up to 1906 he had built four biplanes of his own
+design, and in March of 1907 he built his first monoplane, to wreck
+it only a few days after completion in an accident from which he had
+a fortunate escape. His next machine was a double monoplane, designed
+after Langley's precept, to a certain extent, and this was totally
+wrecked in September of 1907. His seventh machine, a monoplane, was
+built within a month of this accident, and with this he had a number
+of mishaps, also achieving some good flights, including one in which
+he made a turn. It was wrecked in December of 1907, whereupon he built
+another monoplane on which, on July 6th, 1908, Bleriot made a flight
+lasting eight and a half minutes. In October of that year he flew the
+machine from Toury to Artenay and returned on it--this was just a day
+after Farman's first cross-country flight--but, trying to repeat the
+success five days later, Bleriot collided with a tree in a fog and
+wrecked the machine past repair. Thereupon he set about building his
+eleventh machine, with which he was to achieve the first flight across
+the English channel.
+
+Henry Farman, to whom reference has already been made, was engaged with
+his two brothers, Maurice and Richard, in the motor-car business, and
+turned to active interest in flying in 1907, when the Voisin firm built
+his first biplane on the box-kite principle. In July of 1908 he won
+a prize of L400 for a flight of thirteen miles, previously having
+completed the first kilometre flown in Europe with a passenger, the said
+passenger being Ernest Archdeaon. In September of 1908 Farman put up a
+speed record of forty miles an hour in a flight lasting forty minutes.
+
+Santos-Dumont produced the famous 'Demoiselle' monoplane early in 1909,
+a tiny machine in which the pilot had his seat in a sort of miniature
+cage under the main plane. It was a very fast, light little machine but
+was difficult to fly, and owing to its small wingspread was unable
+to glide at a reasonably safe angle. There has probably never been a
+cheaper flying machine to build than the 'Demoiselle,' which could be so
+upset as to seem completely wrecked, and then repaired ready for further
+flight by a couple of hours' work. Santos-Dumont retained no patent
+in the design, but gave it out freely to any one who chose to build
+'Demoiselles'; the vogue of the pattern was brief, owing to the
+difficulty of piloting the machine.
+
+These were the years of records, broken almost as soon as made. There
+was Farman's mile, there was the flight of the Comte de Lambert over the
+Eiffel Tower, Latham's flight at Blackpool in a high wind, the Rheims
+records, and then Henry Farman's flight of four hours later in 1909,
+Orville Wright's height record of 1,640 feet, and Delagrange's speed
+record of 49.9 miles per hour. The coming to fame of the Gnome rotary
+engine helped in the making of these records to a very great extent,
+for in this engine was a prime mover which gave the reliability that
+aeroplane builders and pilots had been searching for, but vainly. The
+Wrights and Glenn Curtiss, of course, had their own designs of engine,
+but the Gnome, in spite of its lack of economy in fuel and oil, and its
+high cost, soon came to be regarded as the best power plant for flight.
+
+Delagrange, one of the very good pilots of the early days, provided a
+curious insight to the way in which flying was regarded, at the opening
+of the Juvisy aero aerodrome in May of 1909. A huge crowd had gathered
+for the first day's flying, and nine machines were announced to appear,
+but only three were brought out. Delagrange made what was considered an
+indifferent little flight, and another pilot, one De Bischoff, attempted
+to rise, but could not get his machine off the ground. Thereupon the
+crowd of 30,000 people lost their tempers, broke down the barriers
+surrounding the flying course, and hissed the officials, who were quite
+unable to maintain order. Delagrange, however, saved the situation
+by making a circuit of the course at a height of thirty feet from the
+ground, which won him rounds of cheering and restored the crowd to
+good humour. Possibly the smash achieved by Rougier, the famous racing
+motorist, who crashed his Voisin biplane after Delagrange had made his
+circuit, completed the enjoyment of the spectators. Delagrange, flying
+at Argentan in June of 1909, made a flight of four kilometres at a
+height of sixty feet; for those days this was a noteworthy performance.
+Contemporary with this was Hubert Latham's flight of an hour and seven
+minutes on an Antoinette monoplane; this won the adjective 'magnificent'
+from contemporary recorders of aviation.
+
+Viewing the work of the little group of French experimenters, it is,
+at this length of time from their exploits, difficult to see why
+they carried the art as far as they did. There was in it little of
+satisfaction, a certain measure of fame, and practically no profit--the
+giants of those days got very little for their pains. Delagrange's
+experience at the opening of the Juvisy ground was symptomatic of the
+way in which flight was regarded by the great mass of people--it was a
+sport, and nothing more, but a sport without the dividends attaching
+to professional football or horse-racing. For a brief period, after the
+Rheims meeting, there was a golden harvest to be reaped by the best of
+the pilots. Henry Farman asked L2,000 for a week's exhibition flying in
+England, and Paulhan asked half that sum, but a rapid increase in
+the number of capable pilots, together with the fact that most flying
+meetings were financial failures, owing to great expense in organisation
+and the doubtful factor of the weather, killed this goose before many
+golden eggs had been gathered in by the star aviators. Besides, as
+height and distance records were broken one after another, it became
+less and less necessary to pay for entrance to an aerodrome in order to
+see a flight--the thing grew too big for a mere sports ground.
+
+Long before Rheims and the meeting there, aviation had grown too big for
+the chronicling of every individual effort. In that period of the first
+days of conquest of the air, so much was done by so many whose names
+are now half-forgotten that it is possible only to pick out the great
+figures and make brief reference to their achievements and the machines
+with which they accomplished so much, pausing to note such epoch-making
+events as the London-Manchester flight, Bleriot's Channel crossing,
+and the Rheims meeting itself, and then passing on beyond the days of
+individual records to the time when the machine began to dominate the
+man. This latter because, in the early days, it was heroism to trust
+life to the planes that were turned out--the 'Demoiselle' and the
+Antoinette machine that Latham used in his attempt to fly the Channel
+are good examples of the flimsiness of early types--while in the later
+period, that of the war and subsequently, the heroism turned itself in a
+different--and nobler-direction. Design became standardised, though
+not perfected. The domination of the machine may best be expressed by
+contrasting the way in which machines came to be regarded as compared
+with the men who flew them: up to 1909, flying enthusiasts talked of
+Farman, of Bleriot, of Paulhan, Curtiss, and of other men; later, they
+began to talk of the Voisin, the Deperdussin, and even to the Fokker,
+the Avro, and the Bristol type. With the standardising of the machine,
+the days of the giants came to an end.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. FIRST FLIERS IN ENGLAND
+
+Certain experiments made in England by Mr Phillips seem to have come
+near robbing the Wright Brothers of the honour of the first flight;
+notes made by Colonel J. D. Fullerton on the Phillips flying machine
+show that in 1893 the first machine was built with a length of 25 feet,
+breadth of 22 feet, and height of 11 feet, the total weight, including a
+72 lb. load, being 420 lbs. The machine was fitted with some fifty wood
+slats, in place of the single supporting surface of the monoplane or two
+superposed surfaces of the biplane, these slats being fixed in a steel
+frame so that the whole machine rather resembled a Venetian blind. A
+steam engine giving about 9 horse-power provided the motive power for
+the six-foot diameter propeller which drove the machine. As it was
+not possible to put a passenger in control as pilot, the machine was
+attached to a central post by wire guys and run round a circle 100
+feet in diameter, the track consisting of wooden planking 4 feet wide.
+Pressure of air under the slats caused the machine to rise some two or
+three feet above the track when sufficient velocity had been attained,
+and the best trials were made on June 19th 1893, when at a speed of 40
+miles an hour, with a total load of 385 lbs., all the wheels were off
+the ground for a distance of 2,000 feet.
+
+In 1904 a full-sized machine was constructed by Mr Phillips, with a
+total weight, including that of the pilot, of 600 lbs. The machine was
+designed to lift when it had attained a velocity of 50 feet per
+second, the motor fitted giving 22 horse-power. On trial, however, the
+longitudinal equilibrium was found to be defective, and a further design
+was got out, the third machine being completed in 1907. In this the wood
+slats were held in four parallel container frames, the weight of the
+machine, excluding the pilot, being 500 lbs. A motor similar to that
+used in the 1904 machine was fitted, and the machine was designed to
+lift at a velocity of about 30 miles an hour, a seven-foot propeller
+doing the driving. Mr Phillips tried out this machine in a field about
+400 yards across. 'The machine was started close to the hedge, and rose
+from the ground when about 200 yards had been covered. When the machine
+touched the ground again, about which there could be no doubt, owing to
+the terrific jolting, it did not run many yards. When it came to rest I
+was about ten yards from the boundary. Of course, I stopped the engine
+before I commenced to descend.'[*]
+
+[*] Aeronautical Journal, July, 1908.
+
+S. F. Cody, an American by birth, aroused the attention not only of the
+British public, but of the War office and Admiralty as well, as early as
+1905 with his man-lifting kites. In that year a height of 1,600 feet was
+reached by one of these box-kites, carrying a man, and later in the same
+year one Sapper Moreton, of the Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers
+(the parent of the Royal Flying Corps) remained for an hour at an
+altitude of 2,600 feet. Following on the success of these kites, Cody
+constructed an aeroplane which he designated a 'power kite,' which
+was in reality a biplane that made the first flight in Great Britain.
+Speaking before the Aeronautical Society in 1908, Cody said that 'I have
+accomplished one thing that I hoped for very much, that is, to be the
+first man to fly in Great Britain.... I made a machine that left the
+ground the first time out; not high, possibly five or six inches only. I
+might have gone higher if I wished. I made some five flights in all, and
+the last flight came to grief.... On the morning of the accident I
+went out after adjusting my propellers at 8 feet pitch running at 600
+(revolutions per minute). I think that I flew at about twenty-eight
+miles per hour. I had 50 horsepower motor power in the engine. A bunch
+of trees, a flat common above these trees, and from this flat there is a
+slope goes down... to another clump of trees. Now, these clumps of trees
+are a quarter of a mile apart or thereabouts.... I was accused of doing
+nothing but jumping with my machine, so I got a bit agitated and went to
+fly.
+
+I went out this morning with an easterly wind, and left the ground at
+the bottom of the hill and struck the ground at the top, a distance of
+74 yards. That proved beyond a doubt that the machine would fly--it
+flew uphill. That was the most talented flight the machine did, in my
+opinion. Now, I turned round at the top and started the machine and left
+the ground--remember, a ten mile wind was blowing at the time. Then, 60
+yards from where the men let go, the machine went off in this direction
+(demonstrating)--I make a line now where I hoped to land--to cut these
+trees off at that side and land right off in here. I got here somewhat
+excited, and started down and saw these trees right in front of me. I
+did not want to smash my head rudder to pieces, so I raised it again and
+went up. I got one wing direct over that clump of trees, the right wing
+over the trees, the left wing free; the wind, blowing with me, had to
+lift over these trees. So I consequently got a false lift on the right
+side and no lift on the left side. Being only about 8 feet from the
+tree tops, that turned my machine up like that (demonstrating). This
+end struck the ground shortly after I had passed the trees. I pulled the
+steering handle over as far as I could. Then I faced another bunch of
+trees right in front of me. Trying to avoid this second bunch of trees I
+turned the rudder, and turned it rather sharp. That side of the machine
+struck, and it crumpled up like so much tissue paper, and the machine
+spun round and struck the ground that way on, and the framework was
+considerably wrecked. Now, I want to advise all aviators not to try
+to fly with the wind and to cross over any big clump of earth or any
+obstacle of any description unless they go square over the top of it,
+because the lift is enormous crossing over anything like that, and in
+coming the other way against the wind it would be the same thing when
+you arrive at the windward side of the obstacle. That is a point I did
+not think of, and had I thought of it I would have been more cautious.'
+
+This Cody machine was a biplane with about 40 foot span, the wings being
+about 7 feet in depth with about 8 feet between upper and lower wing
+surfaces. 'Attached to the extremities of the lower planes are two small
+horizontal planes or rudders, while a third small vertical plane is
+fixed over the centre of the upper plane.' The tail-piece and principal
+rudder were fitted behind the main body of the machine, and a horizontal
+rudder plane was rigged out in front, on two supporting arms extending
+from the centre of the machine. The small end-planes and the vertical
+plane were used in conjunction with the main rudder when turning to
+right or left, the inner plane being depressed on the turn, and the
+outer one correspondingly raised, while the vertical plane, working in
+conjunction, assisted in preserving stability. Two two-bladed propellers
+were driven by an eight-cylinder 50 horse-power Antoinette motor. With
+this machine Cody made his first flights over Laffan's plain, being then
+definitely attached to the Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers as
+military aviation specialist.
+
+There were many months of experiment and trial, after the accident which
+Cody detailed in the statement given above, and then, on May 14th, 1909,
+Cody took the air and made a flight of 1,200 yards with entire success.
+Meanwhile A. V. Roe was experimenting at Lea Marshes with a triplane
+of rather curious design the pilot having his seat between two sets of
+three superposed planes, of which the front planes could be tilted and
+twisted while the machine was in motion. He comes but a little way after
+Cody in the chronology of early British experimenters, but Cody, a born
+inventor, must be regarded as the pioneer of the present century so
+far as Britain is concerned. He was neither engineer nor trained
+mathematician, but he was a good rule-of-thumb mechanic and a man of
+pluck and perseverance; he never strove to fly on an imperfect machine,
+but made alteration after alteration in order to find out what was
+improvement and what was not, in consequence of which it was said of him
+that he was 'always satisfied with his alterations.'
+
+By July of 1909 he had fitted an 80 horse-power motor to his biplane,
+and with this he made a flight of over four miles over Laffan's Plain on
+July 21st. By August he was carrying passengers, the first being Colonel
+Capper of the R.E. Balloon Section, who flew with Cody for over
+two miles, and on September 8th, 1909, he made a world's record
+cross-country flight of over forty miles in sixty-six minutes, taking
+a course from Laffan's Plain over Farnborough, Rushmoor, and Fleet,
+and back to Laffan's Plain. He was one of the competitors in the 1909
+Doncaster Aviation Meeting, and in 1910 he competed at Wolverhampton,
+Bournemouth, and Lanark. It was on June 7th, 1910, that he qualified for
+his brevet, No. 9, on the Cody biplane.
+
+He built a machine which embodied all the improvements for which he had
+gained experience, in 1911, a biplane with a length of 35 feet and
+span of 43 feet, known as the 'Cody cathedral' on account of its
+rather cumbrous appearance. With this, in 1911, he won the two Michelin
+trophies presented in England, completed the Daily Mail circuit of
+Britain, won the Michelin cross-country prize in 1912 and altogether, by
+the end of 1912, had covered more than 7,000 miles with the machine.
+It was fitted with a 120 horse-power Austro-Daimler engine, and was
+characterised by an exceptionally wide range of speed--the great
+wingspread gave a slow landing speed.
+
+A few of his records may be given: in 1910, flying at Laffan's Plain in
+his biplane, fitted with a 50-60 horsepower Green engine, on December
+31st, he broke the records for distance and time by flying 185 miles,
+787 yards, in 4 hours 37 minutes. On October 31st, 1911, he beat this
+record by flying for 5 hours 15 minutes, in which period he covered
+261 miles 810 yards with a 60 horse-power Green engine fitted to his
+biplane. In 1912, competing in the British War office tests of military
+aeroplanes, he won the L5,000 offered by the War Office. This was in
+competition with no less than twenty-five other machines, among which
+were the since-famous Deperdussin, Bristol, Flanders, and Avro types,
+as well as the Maurice Farman and Bleriot makes of machine. Cody's
+remarkable speed range was demonstrated in these trials, the speeds of
+his machine varying between 72.4 and 48.5 miles per hour. The machine
+was the only one delivered for the trials by air, and during the three
+hours' test imposed on all competitors a maximum height of 5,000 feet
+was reached, the first thousand feet being achieved in three and a half
+minutes.
+
+During the summer of 1913 Cody put his energies into the production of
+a large hydro-biplane, with which he intended to win the L5,000 prize
+offered by the Daily Mail to the first aviator to fly round Britain on
+a waterplane. This machine was fitted with landing gear for its tests,
+and, while flying it over Laffan's Plain on August 7th, 1913, with Mr W.
+H. B. Evans as passenger, Cody met with the accident that cost both
+him and his passenger their lives. Aviation lost a great figure by his
+death, for his plodding, experimenting, and dogged courage not only won
+him the fame that came to a few of the pilots of those days, but also
+advanced the cause of flying very considerably and contributed not a
+little to the sum of knowledge in regard to design and construction.
+
+Another figure of the early days was A. V. Roe, who came from marine
+engineering to the motor industry and aviation in 1905. In 1906 he went
+out to Colorado, getting out drawings for the Davidson helicopter, and
+in 1907 having returned to England, he obtained highest award out of 200
+entries in a model aeroplane flying competition. From the design of
+this model he built a full-sized machine, and made a first flight on it,
+fitted with a 24 horse-power Antoinette engine, in June of 1908 Later,
+he fitted a 9 horsepower motor-cycle engine to a triplane of his own
+design, and with this made a number of short flights; he got his flying
+brevet on a triplane with a motor of 35 horse-power, which, together
+with a second triplane, was entered for the Blackpool aviation meeting
+of 1910 but was burnt in transport to the meeting. He was responsible
+for the building of the first seaplane to rise from English waters, and
+may be counted the pioneer of the tractor type of biplane. In 1913 he
+built a two-seater tractor biplane with 80 horse-power engine, a machine
+which for some considerable time ranked as a leader of design. Together
+with E. V. Roe and H. V. Roe, 'A. V.' controlled the Avro works, which
+produced some of the most famous training machines of the war period in
+a modification of the original 80 horse-power tractor. The first of the
+series of Avro tractors to be adopted by the military authorities was
+the 1912 biplane, a two-seater fitted with 50 horsepower engine. It was
+the first tractor biplane with a closed fuselage to be used for military
+work, and became standard for the type. The Avro seaplane, of I 100
+horse-power (a fourteen-cylinder Gnome engine was used) was taken up
+by the British Admiralty in 1913. It had a length of 34 feet and a
+wing-span of 50 feet, and was of the twin-float type.
+
+Geoffrey de Havilland, though of later rank, counts high among designers
+of British machines. He qualified for his brevet as late as February,
+1911, on a biplane of his own construction, and became responsible for
+the design of the BE2, the first successful British Government biplane.
+On this he made a British height record of 10,500 feet over Salisbury
+Plain, in August of 1912, when he took up Major Sykes as passenger. In
+the war period he was one of the principal designers of fighting and
+reconnaissance machines.
+
+F. Handley Page, who started in business as an aeroplane builder in
+1908, having works at Barking, was one of the principal exponents of
+the inherently stable machine, to which he devoted practically all his
+experimental work up to the outbreak of war. The experiments were made
+with various machines, both of monoplane and biplane type, and of these
+one of the best was a two-seater monoplane built in 1911, while a second
+was a larger machine, a biplane, built in 1913 and fitted with a 110
+horse-power Anzani engine. The war period brought out the giant biplane
+with which the name of Handley Page is most associated, the twin-engined
+night-bomber being a familiar feature of the later days of the war;
+the four-engined bomber had hardly had a chance of proving itself under
+service conditions when the war came to an end.
+
+Another notable figure of the early period was 'Tommy' Sopwith, who took
+his flying brevet at Brooklands in November of 1910, and within four
+days made the British duration record of 108 miles in 3 hours 12
+minutes. On December 18th, 1910, he won the Baron de Forrest prize of
+L4,000 for the longest flight from England to the Continent, flying
+from Eastchurch to Tirlemont, Belgium, in three hours, a distance of 161
+miles. After two years of touring in America, he returned to England and
+established a flying school. In 1912 he won the first aerial Derby, and
+in 1913 a machine of his design, a tractor biplane, raised the British
+height record to 13,000 feet (June 16th, at Brooklands). First as
+aviator, and then as designer, Sopwith has done much useful work in
+aviation.
+
+These are but a few, out of a host who contributed to the development of
+flying in this country, for, although France may be said to have set
+the pace as regards development, Britain was not far behind. French
+experimenters received far more Government aid than did the early
+British aviators and designers--in the early days the two were
+practically synonymous, and there are many stories of the very early
+days at Brooklands, where, when funds ran low, the ardent spirits
+patched their trousers with aeroplane fabric and went on with their work
+with Bohemian cheeriness. Cody, altering and experimenting on Laffan's
+Plain, is the greatest figure of them all, but others rank, too, as
+giants of the early days, before the war brought full recognition of the
+aeroplane's potentialities.
+
+One of the first men actually to fly in England, Mr J. C. T.
+Moore-Brabazon, was a famous figure in the days of exhibition flying,
+and won his reputation mainly through being first to fly a circular
+mile on a machine designed and built in Great Britain and piloted by a
+British subject. Moore-Brabazon's earliest flights were made in France
+on a Voisin biplane in 1908, and he brought this machine over to
+England, to the Aero Club grounds at Shellness, but soon decided that he
+would pilot a British machine instead. An order was placed for a Short
+machine, and this, fitted with a 50-60 horse-power Green engine, was
+used for the circular mile, which won a prize of L1,000 offered by the
+Daily Mail, the feat being accomplished on October 30th, 1909. Five
+days later, Moore-Brabazon achieved the longest flight up to that time
+accomplished on a British-built machine, covering three and a half
+miles. In connection with early flying in England, it is claimed that A.
+V. Roe, flying 'Avro B,',' on June 8th, 1908, was actually the first man
+to leave the ground, this being at Brooklands, but in point of fact Cody
+antedated him.
+
+No record of early British fliers could be made without the name of C.
+S. Rolls, a son of Lord Llangattock, on June 2nd, 1910, he flew across
+the English Channel to France, until he was duly observed over French
+territory, when he returned to England without alighting. The trip was
+made on a Wright biplane, and was the third Channel crossing by air,
+Bleriot having made the first, and Jacques de Lesseps the second. Rolls
+was first to make the return journey in one trip. He was eventually
+killed through the breaking of the tail-plane of his machine in
+descending at a flying meeting at Bournemouth. The machine was a Wright
+biplane, but the design of the tail-plane--which, by the way, was
+an addition to the machine, and was not even sanctioned by the
+Wrights--appears to have been carelessly executed, and the plane itself
+was faulty in construction. The breakage caused the machine to overturn,
+killing Rolls, who was piloting it.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. RHEIMS, AND AFTER
+
+The foregoing brief--and necessarily incomplete--survey of the early
+British group of fliers has taken us far beyond some of the great events
+of the early days of successful flight, and it is necessary to go back
+to certain landmarks in the history of aviation, first of which is the
+great meeting at Rheims in 1909. Wilbur Wright had come to Europe,
+and, flying at Le Mans and Pau--it was on August 8th, 1908, that Wilbur
+Wright made the first of his ascents in Europe--had stimulated public
+interest in flying in France to a very great degree. Meanwhile, Orville
+Wright, flying at Fort Meyer, U.S.A., with Lieutenant Selfridge as a
+passenger, sustained an accident which very nearly cost him his life
+through the transmission gear of the motor breaking. Selfridge was
+killed and Orville Wright was severely injured--it was the first fatal
+accident with a Wright machine.
+
+Orville Wright made a flight of over an hour on September 9th, 1908, and
+on December 31st of that year Wilbur flew for 2 hours 19 minutes. Thus,
+when the Rheims meeting was organised--more notable because it was the
+first of its kind, there were already records waiting to be broken. The
+great week opened on August 22nd, there being thirty entrants, including
+all the most famous men among the early fliers in France. Bleriot,
+fresh from his Channel conquest, was there, together with Henry Farman,
+Paulhan, Curtiss, Latham, and the Comte de Lambert, first pupil of the
+Wright machine in Europe to achieve a reputation as an aviator.
+
+'To say that this week marks an epoch in the history of the world is to
+state a platitude. Nevertheless, it is worth stating, and for us who
+are lucky enough to be at Rheims during this week there is a solid
+satisfaction in the idea that we are present at the making of history.
+In perhaps only a few years to come the competitions of this week may
+look pathetically small and the distances and speeds may appear paltry.
+Nevertheless, they are the first of their kind, and that is sufficient.'
+
+So wrote a newspaper correspondent who was present at the famous
+meeting, and his words may stand, being more than mere journalism; for
+the great flying week which opened on August 22nd, 1909, ranks as one of
+the great landmarks in the history of heavier-than-air flight. The day
+before the opening of the meeting a downpour of rain spoilt the flying
+ground; Sunday opened with a fairly high wind, and in a lull M.
+Guffroy turned out on a crimson R.E.P. monoplane, but the wheels of
+his undercarriage stuck in the mud and prevented him from rising in
+the quarter of an hour allowed to competitors to get off the ground.
+Bleriot, following, succeeded in covering one side of the triangular
+course, but then came down through grit in the carburettor. Latham,
+following him with thirteen as the number of his machine, experienced
+his usual bad luck and came to earth through engine trouble after a very
+short flight. Captain Ferber, who, owing to military regulations, always
+flew under the name of De Rue, came out next with his Voisin biplane,
+but failed to get off the ground; he was followed by Lefebvre on a
+Wright biplane, who achieved the success of the morning by rounding the
+course--a distance of six and a quarter miles--in nine minutes with a
+twenty mile an hour wind blowing. His flight finished the morning.
+
+Wind and rain kept competitors out of the air until the evening, when
+Latham went up, to be followed almost immediately by the Comte de
+Lambert. Sommer, Cockburn (the only English competitor), Delagrange,
+Fournier, Lefebvre, Bleriot, Bunau-Varilla, Tissandier, Paulhan,
+and Ferber turned out after the first two, and the excitement of the
+spectators at seeing so many machines in the air at one time provoked
+wild cheering. The only accident of the day came when Bleriot damaged
+his propeller in colliding with a haycock.
+
+The main results of the day were that the Comte de Lambert flew 30
+kilometres in 29 minutes 2 seconds; Lefebvre made the ten-kilometre
+circle of the track in just a second under 9 minutes, while Tissandier
+did it in 9 1/4 minutes, and Paulhan reached a height of 230 feet. Small
+as these results seem to us now, and ridiculous as may seem enthusiasm
+at the sight of a few machines in the air at the same time, the Rheims
+Meeting remains a great event, since it proved definitely to the whole
+world that the conquest of the air had been achieved.
+
+Throughout the week record after record was made and broken. Thus on
+the Monday, Lefebvre put up a record for rounding the course and Bleriot
+beat it, to be beaten in turn by Glenn Curtiss on his Curtiss-Herring
+biplane. On that day, too, Paulhan covered 34 3/4 miles in 1 hour 6
+minutes. On the next day, Paulhan on his Voisin biplane took the air
+with Latham, and Fournier followed, only to smash up his machine by
+striking an eddy of wind which turned him over several times. On the
+Thursday, one of the chief events was Latham's 43 miles accomplished in
+1 hour 2 minutes in the morning and his 96.5 miles in 2 hours 13 minutes
+in the afternoon, the latter flight only terminated by running out of
+petrol. On the Friday, the Colonel Renard French airship, which had
+flown over the ground under the pilotage of M. Kapfarer, paid Rheims a
+second visit; Latham manoeuvred round the airship on his Antoinette and
+finally left it far behind. Henry Farman won the Grand Prix de Champagne
+on this day, covering 112 miles in 3 hours, 4 minutes, 56 seconds,
+Latham being second with his 96.5 miles flight, and Paulhan third.
+
+On the Saturday, Glenn Curtiss came to his own, winning the
+Gordon-Bennett Cup by covering 20 kilometres in 15 minutes 50.6 seconds.
+Bleriot made a good second with 15 minutes 56.2 seconds as his time,
+and Latham and Lefebvre were third and fourth. Farman carried off the
+passenger prize by carrying two passengers a distance of 6 miles in 10
+minutes 39 seconds. On the last day Delagrange narrowly escaped serious
+accident through the bursting of his propeller while in the air, Curtiss
+made a new speed record by travelling at the rate of over 50 miles an
+hour, and Latham, rising to 500 feet, won the altitude prize.
+
+These are the cold statistics of the meeting; at this length of time it
+is difficult to convey any idea of the enthusiasm of the crowds over
+the achievements of the various competitors, while the incidents of
+the week, comic and otherwise, are nearly forgotten now even by those
+present in this making of history. Latham's great flight on the Thursday
+was rendered a breathless episode by a downpour of rain when he had
+covered all but a kilometre of the record distance previously achieved
+by Paulhan, and there was wild enthusiasm when Latham flew on through
+the rain until he had put up a new record and his petrol had run out.
+Again, on the Friday afternoon, the Colonel Renard took the air together
+with a little French dirigible, Zodiac III; Latham was already in the
+air directly over Farman, who was also flying, and three crows which
+turned out as rivals to the human aviators received as much cheering for
+their appearance as had been accorded to the machines, which doubtless
+they could not understand. Frightened by the cheering, the crows tried
+to escape from the course, but as they came near the stands, the crowd
+rose to cheer again and the crows wheeled away to make a second charge
+towards safety, with the same result; the crowd rose and cheered at them
+a third and fourth time; between ten and fifteen thousand people stood
+on chairs and tables and waved hats and handkerchiefs at three ordinary,
+everyday crows. One thoughtful spectator, having thoroughly enjoyed the
+funny side of the incident, remarked that the ultimate mastery of the
+air lies with the machine that comes nearest to natural flight. This
+still remains for the future to settle.
+
+Farman's world record, which won the Grand Prix de Champagne, was done
+with a Gnome Rotary Motor which had only been run on the test bench
+and was fitted to his machine four hours before he started on the great
+flight. His propeller had never been tested, having only been completed
+the night before. The closing laps of that flight, extending as they did
+into the growing of the dusk, made a breathlessly eerie experience for
+such of the spectators as stayed on to watch--and these were many. Night
+came on steadily and Farman covered lap after lap just as steadily, a
+buzzing, circling mechanism with something relentless in its isolated
+persistency.
+
+The final day of the meeting provided a further record in the quarter
+million spectators who turned up to witness the close of the great week.
+Bleriot, turning out in the morning, made a landing in some such fashion
+as flooded the carburettor and caused it to catch fire. Bleriot himself
+was badly burned, since the petrol tank burst and, in the end, only
+the metal parts of the machine were left. Glenn Curtis tried to beat
+Bleriot's time for a lap of the course, but failed. In the evening,
+Farman and Latham went out and up in great circles, Farman cleaving his
+way upward in what at the time counted for a huge machine, on circles
+of about a mile diameter. His first round took him level with the top of
+the stands, and, in his second, he circled the captive balloon anchored
+in the middle of the grounds. After another circle, he came down on a
+long glide, when Latham's lean Antoinette monoplane went up in circles
+more graceful than those of Farman. 'Swiftly it rose and swept round
+close to the balloon, veered round to the hangars, and out over to the
+Rheims road. Back it came high over the stands, the people craning their
+necks as the shrill cry of the engine drew nearer and nearer behind the
+stands. Then of a sudden, the little form appeared away up in the deep
+twilight blue vault of the sky, heading straight as an arrow for the
+anchored balloon. Over it, and high, high above it went the Antoinette,
+seemingly higher by many feet than the Farman machine. Then, wheeling
+in a long sweep to the left, Latham steered his machine round past the
+stands, where the people, their nerve-tension released on seeing the
+machine descending from its perilous height of 500 feet, shouted their
+frenzied acclamations to the hero of the meeting.
+
+'For certainly "Le Tham," as the French call him, was the popular hero.
+He always flew high, he always flew well, and his machine was a joy to
+the eye, either afar off or at close quarters. The public feeling for
+Bleriot is different. Bleriot, in the popular estimation, is the man who
+fights against odds, who meets the adverse fates calmly and with good
+courage, and to whom good luck comes once in a while as a reward for
+much labour and anguish, bodily and mental. Latham is the darling of
+the Gods, to whom Fate has only been unkind in the matter of the Channel
+flight, and only then because the honour belonged to Bleriot.
+
+'Next to these two, the public loved most Lefebvre, the joyous, the
+gymnastic. Lefebvre was the comedian of the meeting. When things began
+to flag, the gay little Lefebvre would trot out to his starting rail,
+out at the back of the judge's enclosure opposite the stands, and after
+a little twisting of propellers his Wright machine would bounce off the
+end of its starting rail and proceed to do the most marvellous tricks
+for the benefit of the crowd, wheeling to right and left, darting up and
+down, now flying over a troop of the cavalry who kept the plain clear of
+people and sending their horses into hysterics, anon making straight
+for an unfortunate photographer who would throw himself and his precious
+camera flat on the ground to escape annihilation as Lefebvre swept over
+him 6 or 7 feet off the ground. Lefebvre was great fun, and when he had
+once found that his machine was not fast enough to compete for speed
+with the Bleriots, Antoinettes, and Curtiss, he kept to his metier of
+amusing people. The promoters of the meeting owe Lefebvre a debt of
+gratitude, for he provided just the necessary comic relief.'--(The Aero,
+September 7th, 1909.)
+
+It may be noted, in connection with the fact that Cockburn was the only
+English competitor at the meeting, that the Rheims Meeting did more than
+anything which had preceded it to waken British interest in aviation.
+Previously, heavier-than-air flight in England had been regarded as
+a freak business by the great majority, and the very few pioneers who
+persevered toward winning England a share in the conquest of the air
+came in for as much derision as acclamation. Rheims altered this; it
+taught the world in general, and England in particular, that a serious
+rival to the dirigible balloon had come to being, and it awakened the
+thinking portion of the British public to the fact that the aeroplane
+had a future.
+
+The success of this great meeting brought about a host of imitations
+of which only a few deserve bare mention since, unlike the first, they
+taught nothing and achieved little. There was the meeting at Boulogne
+late in September of 1909, of which the only noteworthy event was
+Ferber's death. There was a meeting at Brescia where Curtiss again took
+first prize for speed and Rougier put up a world's height record of 645
+feet. The Blackpool meeting followed between 18th and 23rd of October,
+1909, forming, with the exception of Doncaster, the first British Flying
+Meeting. Chief among the competitors were Henry Farman, who took the
+distance prize, Rougier, Paulhan, and Latham, who, by a flight in a high
+wind, convinced the British public that the theory that flying was only
+possible in a calm was a fallacy. A meeting at Doncaster was practically
+simultaneous with the Blackpool week; Delagrange, Le Blon, Sommer, and
+Cody were the principal figures in this event. It should be added
+that 130 miles was recorded as the total flown at Doncaster, while at
+Blackpool only 115 miles were flown. Then there were Juvisy, the first
+Parisian meeting, Wolverhampton, and the Comte de Lambert's flight round
+the Eiffel Tower at a height estimated at between 1,200 and 1,300 feet.
+This may be included in the record of these aerial theatricals, since it
+was nothing more.
+
+Probably wakened to realisation of the possibilities of the aeroplane by
+the Rheims Meeting, Germany turned out its first plane late in 1909.
+It was known as the Grade monoplane, and was a blend of the Bleriot and
+Santos-Dumont machines, with a tail suggestive of the Antoinette type.
+The main frame took the form of a single steel tube, at the forward end
+of which was rigged a triangular arrangement carrying the pilot's seat
+and the landing wheels underneath, with the wing warping wires and stays
+above. The sweep of the wings was rather similar to the later Taube
+design, though the sweep back was not so pronounced, and the machine was
+driven by a four-cylinder, 20 horse-power, air-cooled engine which drove
+a two-bladed tractor propeller. In spite of Lilienthal's pioneer
+work years before, this was the first power-driven German plane which
+actually flew.
+
+Eleven months after the Rheims meeting came what may be reckoned the
+only really notable aviation meeting on English soil, in the form of the
+Bournemouth week, July 10th to 16th, 1910. This gathering is noteworthy
+mainly in view of the amazing advance which it registered on the Rheims
+performances. Thus, in the matter of altitude, Morane reached 4,107
+feet and Drexel came second with 2,490 feet. Audemars on a Demoiselle
+monoplane made a flight of 17 miles 1,480 yards in 27 minutes 17.2
+seconds, a great flight for the little Demoiselle. Morane achieved a
+speed of 56.64 miles per hour, and Grahame White climbed to 1,000 feet
+altitude in 6 minutes 36.8 seconds. Machines carrying the Gnome engine
+as power unit took the great bulk of the prizes, and British-built
+engines were far behind.
+
+The Bournemouth Meeting will always be remembered with regret for the
+tragedy of C. S. Rolls's death, which took place on the Tuesday, the
+second day of the meeting. The first competition of the day was that
+for the landing prize; Grahame White, Audemars, and Captain Dickson had
+landed with varying luck, and Rolls, following on a Wright machine with
+a tail-plane which ought never to have been fitted and was not part of
+the Wright design, came down wind after a left-hand turn and turned left
+again over the top of the stands in order to land up wind. He began to
+dive when just clear of the stands, and had dropped to a height of 40
+feet when he came over the heads of the people against the barriers.
+Finding his descent too steep, he pulled back his elevator lever to
+bring the nose of the machine up, tipping down the front end of the tail
+to present an almost flat surface to the wind. Had all gone well, the
+nose of the machine would have been forced up, but the strain on the
+tail and its four light supports was too great; the tail collapsed, the
+wind pressed down the biplane elevator, and the machine dived vertically
+for the remaining 20 feet of the descent, hitting the ground vertically
+and crumpling up. Major Kennedy, first to reach the debris, found Rolls
+lying with his head doubled under him on the overturned upper main
+plane; the lower plane had been flung some few feet away with the engine
+and tanks under it. Rolls was instantaneously killed by concussion of
+the brain.
+
+Antithesis to the tragedy was Audemars on his Demoiselle, which was
+named 'The Infuriated Grasshopper.' Concerning this, it was recorded
+at the time that 'Nothing so excruciatingly funny as the action of
+this machine has ever been seen at any aviation ground. The little
+two-cylinder engine pops away with a sound like the frantic drawing of
+ginger beer corks; the machine scutters along the ground with its tail
+well up; then down comes the tail suddenly and seems to slap the ground
+while the front jumps up, and all the spectators rock with laughter. The
+whole attitude and the jerky action of the machine suggest a grasshopper
+in a furious rage, and the impression is intensified when it comes down,
+as it did twice on Wednesday, in long grass, burying its head in the
+ground in its temper.'--(The Aero, July, 1910.)
+
+The Lanark Meeting followed in August of the same year, and with the
+bare mention of this, the subject of flying meetings may he left
+alone, since they became mere matters of show until there came military
+competitions such as the Berlin Meeting at the end of August, 1910,
+and the British War office Trials on Salisbury Plain, when Cody won his
+greatest triumphs. The Berlin meeting proved that, from the time of the
+construction of the first successful German machine mentioned above, to
+the date of the meeting, a good number of German aviators had qualified
+for flight, but principally on Wright and Antoinette machines, though
+by that time the Aviatik and Dorner German makes had taken the air. The
+British War office Trials deserve separate and longer mention.
+
+In 1910 in spite of official discouragement, Captain Dickson proved the
+value of the aeroplane for scouting purposes by observing movements
+of troops during the Military Manoeuvres on Salisbury Plain. Lieut.
+Lancelot Gibbs and Robert Loraine, the actor-aviator, also made flights
+over the manoeuvre area, locating troops and in a way anticipating the
+formation and work of the Royal Flying Corps by a usefulness which could
+not be officially recognised.
+
+
+
+
+XV. THE CHANNEL CROSSING
+
+It may be said that Louis Bleriot was responsible for the second great
+landmark in the history of successful flight. The day when the brothers
+Wright succeeded in accomplishing power-driven flight ranks as the first
+of these landmarks. Ader may or may not have left the ground, but the
+wreckage of his 'Avion' at the end of his experiment places his doubtful
+success in a different category from that of the brothers Wright and
+leaves them the first definite conquerors, just as Bleriot ranks as
+first definite conqueror of the English Channel by air.
+
+In a way, Louis Bleriot ranks before Farman in point of time; his
+first flapping-wing model was built as early as 1900, and Voisin flew a
+biplane glider of his on the Seine in the very early experimental days.
+Bleriot's first four machines were biplanes, and his fifth, a monoplane,
+was wrecked almost immediately after its construction. Bleriot had
+studied Langley's work to a certain extent, and his sixth construction
+was a double monoplane based on the Langley principle. A month after
+he had wrecked this without damaging himself--for Bleriot had as many
+miraculous escapes as any of the other fliers-he brought out number
+seven, a fairly average monoplane. It was in December of 1907 after a
+series of flights that he wrecked this machine, and on its successor, in
+July of 1908, he made a flight of over 8 minutes. Sundry flights, more
+or less successful, including the first cross-country flight from Toury
+to Artenay, kept him busy up to the beginning of November, 1908, when
+the wreckage in a fog of the machine he was flying sent him to the
+building of 'number eleven,' the famous cross-channel aeroplane.
+
+Number eleven was shown at the French Aero Show in the Grand Palais
+and was given its first trials on the 18th January, 1909. It was first
+fitted with a R.E.P. motor and had a lifting area of 120 square feet,
+which was later increased to 150 square feet. The framework was of oak
+and poplar spliced and reinforced with piano wire; the weight of the
+machine was 47 lbs. and the undercarriage weight a further 60 lbs., this
+consisting of rubber cord shock absorbers mounted on two wheels. The
+R.E.P. motor was found unsatisfactory, and a three-cylinder Anzani
+of 105 mm. bore and 120 mm. stroke replaced it. An accident seriously
+damaged the machine on June 2nd, but Bleriot repaired it and tested it
+at Issy, where between June 19th and June 23rd he accomplished flights
+of 8, 12, 15, 16, and 36 minutes. On July 4th he made a 50-minute flight
+and on the 13th flew from Etampes to Chevilly.
+
+A few further details of construction may be given: the wings themselves
+and an elevator at the tail controlled the rate of ascent and descent,
+while a rudder was also fitted at the tail. The steering lever,
+working on a universally jointed shaft--forerunner of the modern
+joystick--controlled both the rudder and the wings, while a pedal
+actuated the elevator. The engine drove a two-bladed tractor screw of 6
+feet 7 inches diameter, and the angle of incidence of the wings was 20
+degrees. Timed at Issy, the speed of the machine was given as 36 miles
+an hour, and as Bleriot accomplished the Channel flight of 20 miles in
+37 minutes, he probably had a slight following wind.
+
+The Daily Mail had offered a prize of L1,000 for the first Cross-Channel
+flight, and Hubert Latham set his mind on winning it. He put up a
+shelter on the French coast at Sangatte, half-way between Calais and
+Cape Blanc Nez. From here he made his first attempt to fly to England
+on Monday the 19th of July. He soared to a fair height, circling, and
+reached an estimated height of about 900 feet as he came over the water
+with every appearance of capturing the Cross-Channel prize. The luck
+which dogged his career throughout was against him, for, after he had
+covered some 8 miles, his engine stopped and he came down to the water
+in a series of long glides. It was discovered afterward that a small
+piece of wire had worked its way into a vital part of the engine to rob
+Latham of the honour he coveted. The tug that came to his rescue found
+him seated on the fuselage of his Antoinette, smoking a cigarette and
+waiting for a boat to take him to the tug. It may be remarked that
+Latham merely assumed his Antoinette would float in case he failed to
+make the English coast; he had no actual proof.
+
+Bleriot immediately entered his machine for the prize and took up his
+quarters at Barraques. On Sunday, July 25th, 1909, shortly after 4 a.m.,
+Bleriot had his machine taken out from its shelter and prepared for
+flight. He had been recently injured in a petrol explosion and hobbled
+out on crutches to make his cross-Channel attempt; he made two great
+circles in the air to try the machine, and then alighted. 'In ten
+minutes I start for England,' he declared, and at 4.35 the motor was
+started up. After a run of 100 yards, the machine rose in the air and
+got a height of about 100 feet over the land, then wheeling sharply
+seaward and heading for Dover.
+
+Bleriot had no means of telling direction, and any change of wind might
+have driven him out over the North Sea, to be lost, as were Cecil Grace
+and Hamel later on. Luck was with him, however, and at 5.12 a.m. of that
+July Sunday, he made his landing in the North Fall meadow, just behind
+Dover Castle. Twenty minutes out from the French coast, he lost sight of
+the destroyer which was patrolling the Channel, and at the same time
+he was out of sight of land without compass or any other means of
+ascertaining his direction. Sighting the English coast, he found that
+he had gone too far to the east, for the wind increased in strength
+throughout the flight, this to such an extent as almost to turn the
+machine round when he came over English soil. Profiting by Latham's
+experience, Bleriot had fitted an inflated rubber cylinder a foot in
+diameter by 5 feet in length along the middle of his fuselage, to render
+floating a certainty in case he had to alight on the water.
+
+Latham in his camp at Sangatte had been allowed to sleep through the
+calm of the early morning through a mistake on the part of a friend, and
+when his machine was turned out--in order that he might emulate Bleriot,
+although he no longer hoped to make the first flight, it took so long
+to get the machine ready and dragged up to its starting-point that there
+was a 25 mile an hour wind by the time everything was in readiness.
+Latham was anxious to make the start in spite of the wind, but the
+Directors of the Antoinette Company refused permission. It was not until
+two days later that the weather again became favourable, and then with a
+fresh machine, since the one on which he made his first attempt had
+been very badly damaged in being towed ashore, he made a circular trial
+flight of about 5 miles. In landing from this, a side gust of wind drove
+the nose of the machine against a small hillock, damaging both propeller
+blades and chassis, and it was not until evening that the damage was
+repaired.
+
+French torpedo boats were set to mark the route, and Latham set out on
+his second attempt at six o'clock. Flying at a height of 200 feet, he
+headed over the torpedo boats for Dover and seemed certain of making the
+English coast, but a mile and a half out from Dover his engine failed
+him again, and he dropped to the water to be picked up by the steam
+pinnace of an English warship and put aboard the French destroyer
+Escopette.
+
+There is little to choose between the two aviators for courage in
+attempting what would have been considered a foolhardy feat a year or
+two before. Bleriot's state, with an abscess in the burnt foot which had
+to control the elevator of his machine, renders his success all the
+more remarkable. His machine was exhibited in London for a time, and
+was afterwards placed in the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, while a
+memorial in stone, copying his monoplane in form, was let into the turf
+at the point where he landed.
+
+The second Channel crossing was not made until 1910, a year of new
+records. The altitude record had been lifted to over 10,000 feet, the
+duration record to 8 hours 12 minutes, and the distance for a single
+flight to 365 miles, while a speed of over 65 miles an hour had been
+achieved, when Jacques de Lesseps, son of the famous engineer of Suez
+Canal and Panama fame, crossed from France to England on a Bleriot
+monoplane. By this time flying had dropped so far from the marvellous
+that this second conquest of the Channel aroused but slight public
+interest in comparison with Bleriot's feat.
+
+The total weight of Bleriot's machine in Cross Channel trim was 660
+lbs., including the pilot and sufficient petrol for a three hours' run;
+at a speed of 37 miles an hour, it was capable of carrying about 5
+lbs. per square foot of lifting surface. It was the three-cylinder 25
+horse-power Anzani motor which drove the machine for the flight. Shortly
+after the flight had been accomplished, it was announced that the
+Bleriot firm would construct similar machines for sale at L400 apiece--a
+good commentary on the prices of those days.
+
+On June the 2nd, 1910, the third Channel crossing was made by C. S.
+Rolls, who flew from Dover, got himself officially observed over French
+soil at Barraques, and then flew back without landing. He was the first
+to cross from the British side of the Channel and also was the first
+aviator who made the double journey. By that time, however, distance
+flights had so far increased as to reduce the value of the feat, and
+thenceforth the Channel crossing was no exceptional matter. The honour,
+second only to that of the Wright Brothers, remains with Bleriot.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. LONDON TO MANCHESTER
+
+The last of the great contests to arouse public enthusiasm was the
+London to Manchester Flight of 1910. As far back as 1906, the Daily
+Mail had offered a prize of L10,000 to the first aviator who should
+accomplish this journey, and, for a long time, the offer was regarded as
+a perfectly safe one for any person or paper to make--it brought forth
+far more ridicule than belief. Punch offered a similar sum to the first
+man who should swim the Atlantic and also for the first flight to Mars
+and back within a week, but in the spring of 1910 Claude Grahame White
+and Paulhan, the famous French pilot, entered for the 183 mile run on
+which the prize depended. Both these competitors flew the Farman biplane
+with the 50 horse-power Gnome motor as propulsive power. Grahame White
+surveyed the ground along the route, and the L. & N. W. Railway Company,
+at his request, whitewashed the sleepers for 100 yards on the north side
+of all junctions to give him his direction on the course. The machine
+was run out on to the starting ground at Park Royal and set going at
+5.19 a.m. on April 23rd. After a run of 100 yards, the machine went up
+over Wormwood Scrubs on its journey to Normandy, near Hillmorten, which
+was the first arranged stopping place en route; Grahame White landed
+here in good trim at 7.20 a.m., having covered 75 miles and made a
+world's record cross country flight. At 8.15 he set off again to come
+down at Whittington, four miles short of Lichfield, at about 9.20, with
+his machine in good order except for a cracked landing skid. Twice, on
+this second stage of the journey, he had been caught by gusts of wind
+which turned the machine fully round toward London, and, when over a
+wood near Tamworth, the engine stopped through a defect in the balance
+springs of two exhaust valves; although it started up again after a 100
+foot glide, it did not give enough power to give him safety in the gale
+he was facing. The rising wind kept him on the ground throughout the
+day, and, though he hoped for better weather, the gale kept up until
+the Sunday evening. The men in charge of the machine during its halt had
+attempted to hold the machine down instead of anchoring it with stakes
+and ropes, and, in consequence of this, the wind blew the machine over
+on its back, breaking the upper planes and the tail. Grahame White had
+to return to London, while the damaged machine was prepared for a second
+flight. The conditions of the competition enacted that the full journey
+should be completed within 24 hours, which made return to the starting
+ground inevitable.
+
+Louis Paulhan, who had just arrived with his Farman machine, immediately
+got it unpacked and put together in order to be ready to make his
+attempt for the prize as soon as the weather conditions should admit.
+At 5.31 p.m., on April 27th, he went up from Hendon and had travelled
+50 miles when Grahame White, informed of his rival's start, set out to
+overtake him. Before nightfall Paulhan landed at Lichfield, 117 miles
+from London, while Grahame White had to come down at Roden, only 60
+miles out. The English aviator's chance was not so small as it seemed,
+for, as Latham had found in his cross-Channel attempts, engine failure
+was more the rule than the exception, and a very little thing might
+reverse the relative positions.
+
+A special train accompanied Paulhan along the North-Western route,
+conveying Madame Paulhan, Henry Farman, and the mechanics who fitted the
+Farman biplane together. Paulhan himself, who had flown at a height of
+1,000 feet, spent the night at Lichfield, starting again at 4.9 a.m.
+On the 28th, passing Stafford at 4.45, Crewe at 5.20, and landing at
+Burnage, near Didsbury, at 5.32, having had a clean run.
+
+Meanwhile, Grahame White had made a most heroic attempt to beat his
+rival. An hour before dawn on the 28th, he went to the small field in
+which his machine had landed, and in the darkness managed to make an
+ascent from ground which made starting difficult even in daylight.
+Purely by instinct and his recollection of the aspect of things the
+night before, he had to clear telegraph wires and a railway bridge,
+neither of which he could possibly see at that hour. His engine, too,
+was faltering, and it was obvious to those who witnessed his start that
+its note was far from perfect.
+
+At 3.50 he was over Nuneaton and making good progress; between
+Atherstone and Lichfield the wind caught him and the engine failed more
+and more, until at 4.13 in the morning he was forced to come to earth,
+having covered 6 miles less distance than in his first attempt. It was
+purely a case of engine failure, for, with full power, he would have
+passed over Paulhan just as the latter was preparing for the restart.
+Taking into consideration the two machines, there is little doubt that
+Grahame White showed the greater flying skill, although he lost the
+prize. After landing and hearing of Paulhan's victory, on which he wired
+congratulations, he made up his mind to fly to Manchester within the
+24 hours. He started at 5 o'clock in the afternoon from Polesworth, his
+landing place, but was forced to land at 5.30 at Whittington, where
+he had landed on the previous Saturday. The wind, which had forced his
+descent, fell again and permitted of starting once more; on this third
+stage he reached Lichfield, only to make his final landing at 7.15 p.m.,
+near the Trent Valley station. The defective running of the Gnome engine
+prevented his completing the course, and his Farman machine had to be
+brought back to London by rail.
+
+The presentation of the prize to Paulhan was made the occasion for the
+announcement of a further competition, consisting of a 1,000 mile flight
+round a part of Great Britain. In this, nineteen competitors started,
+and only four finished; the end of the race was a great fight between
+Beaumont and Vedrines, both of whom scorned weather conditions in their
+determination to win. Beaumont made the distance in a flying time of
+22 hours 28 minutes 19 seconds, and Vedrines covered the journey in
+a little over 23 1/2 hours. Valentine came third on a Deperdussin
+monoplane and S. F. Cody on his Cathedral biplane was fourth. This was
+in 1911, and by that time heavier-than-air flight had so far advanced
+that some pilots had had war experience in the Italian campaign in
+Tripoli, while long cross-country flights were an everyday event, and
+bad weather no longer counted.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. A SUMMARY, TO 1911
+
+There is so much overlapping in the crowded story of the first years
+of successful power-driven flight that at this point it is advisable to
+make a concise chronological survey of the chief events of the period of
+early development, although much of this is of necessity recapitulation.
+The story begins, of course, with Orville Wright's first flight of 852
+feet at Kitty Hawk on December 19th, 1903. The next event of note was
+Wright's flight of 11.12 miles in 18 minutes 9 seconds at Dayton,
+Ohio, on September 26th, 1905, this being the first officially recorded
+flight. On October 4th of the same year, Wright flew 20.75 miles in 33
+minutes 17 seconds, this being the first flight of over 20 miles ever
+made. Then on September 14th 1906, Alberto Santos-Dumont made a
+flight of eight seconds on the second heavier-than-air machine he had
+constructed. It was a big box-kite-like machine; this was the second
+power-driven aeroplane in Europe to fly, for although Santos-Dumont's
+first machine produced in 1905 was reckoned an unsuccessful design, it
+had actually got off the ground for brief periods. Louis Bleriot came
+into the ring on April 5th, 1907, with a first flight of 6 seconds on a
+Bleriot monoplane, his eighth but first successful construction.
+
+Henry Farman made his first appearance in the history of aviation with a
+flight of 935 feet on a Voisin biplane on October 15th 1907. On October
+25th, in a flight of 2,530 feet, he made the first recorded turn in
+the air, and on March 29th, 1908, carrying Leon Delagrange on a Voisin
+biplane, he made the first passenger flight. On April 10th of this
+year, Delagrange, in flying 1 1/2 miles, made the first flight in Europe
+exceeding a mile in distance. He improved on this by flying 10 1/2 miles
+at Milan on June 22nd, while on July 8th, at Turin, he took up Madame
+Peltier, the first woman to make an aeroplane flight.
+
+Wilbur Wright, coming over to Europe, made his first appearance on the
+Continent with a flight of 1 3/4 minutes at Hunaudieres, France, on
+August 8th, 1908. On September 6th, at Chalons, he flew for 1 hour 4
+minutes 26 seconds with a passenger, this being the first flight in
+which an hour in the air was exceeded with a passenger on board.
+
+On September 12th 1908, Orville Wright, flying at Fort Meyer, U.S.A.,
+with Lieut. Selfridge as passenger, crashed his machine, suffering
+severe injuries, while Selfridge was killed. This was the first
+aeroplane fatality. On October 30th, 1908, Farman made the first
+cross-country flight, covering the distance of 17 miles between Bouy and
+Rheims. The next day, Louis Bleriot, in flying from Toury to Artenay,
+made two landings en route, this being the first cross-country flight
+with landings. On the last day of the year, Wilbur Wright won the
+Michelin Cup at Auvours with a flight of 90 miles, which, lasting 2
+hours 20 minutes 23 seconds, exceeded 2 hours in the air for the first
+time.
+
+On January 2nd, 1909, S. F. Cody opened the New Year by making the first
+observed flight at Farnborough on a British Army aeroplane. It was not
+until July 18th of 1909 that the first European height record deserving
+of mention was put up by Paulhan, who achieved a height of 450 feet on a
+Voisin biplane. This preceded Latham's first attempt to fly the Channel
+by two days, and five days later, on the 25th of the month, Bleriot made
+the first Channel crossing. The Rheims Meeting followed on August 22nd,
+and it was a great day for aviation when nine machines were seen in
+the air at once. It was here that Farman, with a 118 mile flight,
+first exceeded the hundred miles, and Latham raised the height record
+officially to 500 feet, though actually he claimed to have reached 1,200
+feet. On September 8th, Cody, flying from Aldershot, made a 40 mile
+journey, setting up a new cross-country record. On October 19th the
+Comte de Lambert flew from Juvisy to Paris, rounded the Eiffel Tower and
+flew back. J. T. C. Moore-Brabazon made the first circular mile flight
+by a British aviator on an all-British machine in Great Britain, on
+October 30th, flying a Short biplane with a Green engine. Paulhan,
+flying at Brooklands on November 2nd, accomplished 96 miles in 2 hours
+48 minutes, creating a British distance record; on the following
+day, Henry Farman made a flight of 150 miles in 4 hours 22 minutes
+at Mourmelon, and on the 5th of the month, Paulhan, flying a Farman
+biplane, made a world's height record of 977 feet. This, however, was
+not to stand long, for Latham got up to 1,560 feet on an Antoinette at
+Mourmelon on December 1st. December 31st witnessed the first flight
+in Ireland, made by H. Ferguson on a monoplane which he himself had
+constructed at Downshire Park, Lisburn.
+
+These, thus briefly summarised, are the principal events up to the end
+of 1909. 1910 opened with tragedy, for on January 4th Leon Delagrange,
+one of the greatest pilots of his time, was killed while flying at
+Pau. The machine was the Bleriot XI which Delagrange had used at the
+Doncaster meeting, and to which Delagrange had fitted a 50 horse-power
+Gnome engine, increasing the speed of the machine from its original
+30 to 45 miles per hour. With the Rotary Gnome engine there was of
+necessity a certain gyroscopic effect, the strain of which proved too
+much for the machine. Delagrange had come to assist in the inauguration
+of the Croix d'Hins aerodrome, and had twice lapped the course at a
+height of about 60 feet. At the beginning of the third lap, the strain
+of the Gnome engine became too great for the machine; one wing collapsed
+as if the stay wires had broken, and the whole machine turned over and
+fell, killing Delagrange.
+
+On January 7th Latham, flying at Mourmelon, first made the vertical
+kilometre and dedicated the record to Delagrange, this being the day of
+his friend's funeral. The record was thoroughly authenticated by a large
+registering barometer which Latham carried, certified by the officials
+of the French Aero Club. Three days later Paulhan, who was at Los
+Angeles, California, raised the height record to 4,146 feet.
+
+On January 25th the Brussels Exhibition opened, when the Antoinette
+monoplane, the Gaffaux and Hanriot monoplanes, together with the
+d'Hespel aeroplane, were shown; there were also the dirigible Belgica
+and a number of interesting aero engines, including a German airship
+engine and a four-cylinder 50 horse-power Miesse, this last air-cooled
+by means of 22 fans driving a current of air through air jackets
+surrounding fluted cylinders.
+
+On April 2nd Hubert Le Blon, flying a Bleriot with an Anzani engine,
+was killed while flying over the water. His machine was flying quite
+steadily, when it suddenly heeled over and came down sideways into the
+sea; the motor continued running for some seconds and the whole machine
+was drawn under water. When boats reached the spot, Le Blon was found
+lying back in the driving seat floating just below the surface. He had
+done good flying at Doncaster, and at Heliopolis had broken the world's
+speed records for 5 and 10 kilometres. The accident was attributed to
+fracture of one of the wing stay wires when running into a gust of wind.
+
+The next notable event was Paulhan's London-Manchester flight, of which
+full details have already been given. In May Captain Bertram Dickson,
+flying at the Tours meeting, beat all the Continental fliers whom he
+encountered, including Chavez, the Peruvian, who later made the
+first crossing of the Alps. Dickson was the first British winner of
+international aviation prizes.
+
+C. S. Rolls, of whom full details have already been given, was killed at
+Bournemouth on July 12th, being the first British aviator of note to be
+killed in an aeroplane accident. His return trip across the Channel had
+taken place on June 2nd. Chavez, who was rapidly leaping into fame, as
+a pilot, raised the British height record to 5,750 feet while flying at
+Blackpool on August 3rd. On the 11th of that month, Armstrong Drexel,
+flying a Bleriot, made a world's height record of 6,745 feet.
+
+It was in 1910 that the British War office first began fully to realise
+that there might be military possibilities in heavier-than-air flying.
+C. S. Rolls had placed a Wright biplane at the disposal of the military
+authorities, and Cody, as already recorded, had been experimenting with
+a biplane type of his own for some long period. Such development as was
+achieved was mainly due to the enterprise and energy of Colonel J. E.
+Capper, C.B., appointed to the superintendency of the Balloon Factory
+and Balloon School at Farnborough in 1906. Colonel Capper's retirement
+in 1910 brought (then) Mr Mervyn O'Gorman to command, and by that time
+the series of successes of the Cody biplane, together with the proved
+efficiency of the aeroplane in various civilian meetings, had convinced
+the British military authorities that the mastery of the air did not lie
+altogether with dirigible airships, and it may be said that in 1910 the
+British War office first began seriously to consider the possibilities
+of the aeroplane, though two years more were to elapse before the
+formation of the Royal Flying Corps marked full realisation of its
+value.
+
+A triumph and a tragedy were combined in September of 1910. On the 23rd
+of the month, Georges Chavez set out to fly across the Alps on a Bleriot
+monoplane. Prizes had been offered by the Milan Aviation Committee for
+a flight from Brigue in Switzerland over the Simplon Pass to Milan,
+a distance of 94 miles with a minimum height of 6,600 feet above sea
+level. Chavez started at 1.30 p.m. On the 23rd, and 41 minutes later he
+reached Domodossola, 25 miles distant. Here he descended, numbed with
+the cold of the journey; it was said that the wings of his machine
+collapsed when about 30 feet from the ground, but however this may
+have been, he smashed the machine on landing, and broke both legs, in
+addition to sustaining other serious injuries. He lay in hospital until
+the 27th September, when he died, having given his life to the conquest
+of the Alps. His death in the moment of success was as great a tragedy
+as were those of Pilcher and Lilienthal.
+
+The day after Chavez's death, Maurice Tabuteau flew across the Pyrenees,
+landing in the square at Biarritz. On December 30th, Tabuteau made a
+flight of 365 miles in 7 hours 48 minutes. Farman, on December 18th, had
+flown for over 8 hours, but his total distance was only 282 miles. The
+autumn of this year was also noteworthy for the fact that aeroplanes
+were first successfully used in the French Military Manoeuvres. The
+British War Office, by the end of the year, had bought two machines, a
+military type Farman and a Paulhan, ignoring British experimenters and
+aeroplane builders of proved reliability. These machines, added to an
+old Bleriot two-seater, appear to have constituted the British aeroplane
+fleet of the period.
+
+There were by this time three main centres of aviation in England, apart
+from Cody, alone on Laffan's Plain. These three were Brooklands, Hendon,
+and the Isle of Sheppey, and of the three Brooklands was chief.
+Here such men as Graham Gilmour, Rippen, Leake, Wickham, and Thomas
+persistently experimented. Hendon had its own little group, and
+Shellbeach, Isle of Sheppey, held such giants of those days as C. S.
+Rolls and Moore Brabazon, together with Cecil Grace and Rawlinson. One
+or other, and sometimes all of these were deserted on the occasion of
+some meeting or other, but they were the points where the spade work was
+done, Brooklands taking chief place. 'If you want the early history
+of flying in England, it is there,' one of the early school remarked,
+pointing over toward Brooklands course.
+
+1911 inaugurated a new series of records of varying character. On
+the 17th January, E. B. Ely, an American, flew from the shore of San
+Francisco to the U.S. cruiser Pennsylvania, landing on the cruiser,
+and then flew back to the shore. The British military designing of
+aeroplanes had been taken up at Farnborough by G. H. de Havilland, who
+by the end of January was flying a machine of his own design, when he
+narrowly escaped becoming a casualty through collision with an obstacle
+on the ground, which swept the undercarriage from his machine.
+
+A list of certified pilots of the countries of the world was issued
+early in 1911, showing certificates granted up to the end of 1910.
+France led the way easily with 353 pilots; England came next with 57,
+and Germany next with 46; Italy owned 32, Belgium 27, America 26, and
+Austria 19; Holland and Switzerland had 6 aviators apiece, while Denmark
+followed with 3, Spain with 2, and Sweden with 1. The first certificate
+in England was that of J. T. C. Moore-Brabazon, while Louis Bleriot was
+first on the French list and Glenn Curtiss, first holder of an American
+certificate, also held the second French brevet.
+
+On the 7th March, Eugene Renaux won the Michelin Grand Prize by flying
+from the French Aero Club ground at St Cloud and landing on the Puy de
+Dome. The landing, which was one of the conditions of the prize, was
+one of the most dangerous conditions ever attached to a competition;
+it involved dropping on to a little plateau 150 yards square, with
+a possibility of either smashing the machine against the face of the
+mountain, or diving over the edge of the plateau into the gulf beneath.
+The length of the journey was slightly over 200 miles and the height of
+the landing point 1,465 metres, or roughly 4,500 feet above sea-level.
+Renaux carried a passenger, Doctor Senoucque, a member of Charcot's
+South Polar Expedition.
+
+The 1911 Aero Exhibition held at Olympia bore witness to the enormous
+strides made in construction, more especially by British designers,
+between 1908 and the opening of the Show. The Bristol Firm showed three
+machines, including a military biplane, and the first British built
+biplane with tractor screw. The Cody biplane, with its enormous size
+rendering it a prominent feature of the show, was exhibited. Its
+designer anticipated later engines by expressing his desire for a motor
+of 150 horse-power, which in his opinion was necessary to get the best
+results from the machine. The then famous Dunne monoplane was exhibited
+at this show, its planes being V-shaped in plan, with apex leading. It
+embodied the results of very lengthy experiments carried out both with
+gliders and power-driven machines by Colonel Capper, Lieut. Gibbs,
+and Lieut. Dunne, and constituted the longest step so far taken in the
+direction of inherent stability.
+
+Such forerunners of the notable planes of the war period as the Martin
+Handasyde, the Nieuport, Sopwith, Bristol, and Farman machines, were
+features of the show; the Handley-Page monoplane, with a span of 32
+feet over all, a length of 22 feet, and a weight of 422 lbs., bore no
+relation at all to the twin-engined giant which later made this firm
+famous. In the matter of engines, the principal survivals to the present
+day, of which this show held specimens, were the Gnome, Green, Renault
+air-cooled, Mercedes four-cylinder dirigible engine of 115 horse-power,
+and 120 horsepower Wolseley of eight cylinders for use with dirigibles.
+
+On April 12th, of 1911, Paprier, instructor at the Bleriot school at
+Hendon, made the first non-stop flight between London and Paris. He left
+the aerodrome at 1.37 p.m., and arrived at Issy-les-Moulineaux at 5.33
+p.m., thus travelling 250 miles in a little under 4 hours. He followed
+the railway route practically throughout, crossing from Dover to nearly
+opposite Calais, keeping along the coast to Boulogne, and then following
+the Nord Railway to Amiens, Beauvais, and finally Paris.
+
+In May, the Paris-Madrid race took place; Vedrines, flying a Morane
+biplane, carried off the prize by first completing the distance of 732
+miles. The Paris-Rome race of 916 miles was won in the same month by
+Beaumont, flying a Bleriot monoplane. In July, Koenig won the German
+National Circuit race of 1,168 miles on an Albatross biplane. This was
+practically simultaneous with the Circuit of Britain won by Beaumont,
+who covered 1,010 miles on a Bleriot monoplane, having already won
+the Paris-Brussels-London-Paris Circuit of 1,080 miles, this also on
+a Bleriot. It was in August that a new world's height record of 11,152
+feet was set up by Captain Felix at Etampes, while on the 7th of the
+month Renaux flew nearly 600 miles on a Maurice Farman machine in 12
+hours. Cody and Valentine were keeping interest alive in the Circuit of
+Britain race, although this had long been won, by determinedly plodding
+on at finishing the course.
+
+On September 9th, the first aerial post was tried between Hendon and
+Windsor, as an experiment in sending mails by aeroplane. Gustave Hamel
+flew from Hendon to Windsor and back in a strong wind. A few days
+later, Hamel went on strike, refusing to carry further mails unless the
+promoters of the Aerial Postal Service agreed to pay compensation to
+Hubert, who fractured both his legs on the 11th of the month while
+engaged in aero postal work. The strike ended on September 25th, when
+Hamel resumed mail-carrying in consequence of the capitulation of the
+Postmaster-General, who agreed to set aside L500 as compensation to
+Hubert.
+
+September also witnessed the completion in America of a flight across
+the Continent, a distance of 2,600 miles. The only competitor who
+completed the full distance was C. P. Rogers, who was disqualified
+through failing to comply with the time limit. Rogers needed so many
+replacements to his machine on the journey that, expressing it in
+American fashion, he arrived with practically a dfferent aeroplane from
+that with which he started.
+
+With regard to the aerial postal service, analysis of the matter carried
+and the cost of the service seemed to show that with a special charge of
+one shilling for letters and sixpence for post cards, the revenue just
+balanced the expenditure. It was not possible to keep to the time-table
+as, although the trials were made in the most favourable season of the
+year, aviation was not sufficiently advanced to admit of facing all
+weathers and complying with time-table regulations.
+
+French military aeroplane trials took place at Rheims in October, the
+noteworthy machines being Antoinette, Farman, Nieuport, and Deperdussin.
+The tests showed the Nieuport monoplane with Gnome motor as first in
+position; the Breguet biplane was second, and the Deperdussin monoplanes
+third. The first five machines in order of merit were all engined with
+the Gnome motor.
+
+The records quoted for 1911 form the best evidence that can be given of
+advance in design and performance during the year. It will be seen that
+the days of the giants were over; design was becoming more and more
+standardised and aviation not so much a matter of individual courage and
+even daring, as of the reliability of the machine and its engine.
+This was the first year in which the twin-engined aeroplane made its
+appearance, and it was the year, too, in which flying may be said to
+have grown so common that the 'meetings' which began with Rheims were
+hardly worth holding, owing to the fact that increase in height and
+distance flown rendered it no longer necessary for a would-be spectator
+of a flight to pay half a crown and enter an enclosure. Henceforth,
+flying as a spectacle was very little to be considered; its commercial
+aspects were talked of, and to a very slight degree exploited, but, more
+and more, the fact that the aeroplane was primarily an engine of war,
+and the growing German menace against the peace of the world combined
+to point the way of speediest development, and the arrangements for the
+British Military Trials to be held in August, 1912, showed that even
+the British War office was waking up to the potentialities of this new
+engine of war.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. A SUMMARY, TO 1914
+
+Consideration of the events in the years immediately preceding the War
+must be limited to as brief a summary as possible, this not only because
+the full history of flying achievements is beyond the compass of any
+single book, but also because, viewing the matter in perspective, the
+years 1903-1911 show up as far more important as regards both design and
+performance. From 1912 to August of 1914, the development of aeronautics
+was hindered by the fact that it had not progressed far enough to form
+a real commercial asset in any country. The meetings which drew vast
+concourses of people to such places as Rheims and Bournemouth may have
+been financial successes at first, but, as flying grew more common and
+distances and heights extended, a great many people found it other than
+worth while to pay for admission to an aerodrome. The business of taking
+up passengers for pleasure flights was not financially successful, and,
+although schemes for commercial routes were talked of, the aeroplane was
+not sufficiently advanced to warrant the investment of hard cash in
+any of these projects. There was a deadlock; further development
+was necessary in order to secure financial aid, and at the same time
+financial aid was necessary in order to secure further development.
+Consequently, neither was forthcoming.
+
+This is viewing the matter in a broad and general sense; there were
+firms, especially in France, but also in England and America, which
+looked confidently for the great days of flying to arrive, and regarded
+their sunk capital as investment which would eventually bring its due
+return. But when one looks back on those years, the firms in question
+stand out as exceptions to the general run of people, who regarded
+aeronautics as something extremely scientific, exceedingly dangerous,
+and very expensive. The very fame that was attained by such pilots as
+became casualties conduced to the advertisement of every death, and the
+dangers attendant on the use of heavier-than-air machines became greatly
+exaggerated; considering the matter as one of number of miles flown,
+even in the early days, flying exacted no more toll in human life than
+did railways or road motors in the early stages of their development.
+But to take one instance, when C. S. Rolls was killed at Bournemouth by
+reason of a faulty tail-plane, the fact was shouted to the whole world
+with almost as much vehemence as characterised the announcement of the
+Titanic sinking in mid-Atlantic.
+
+Even in 1911 the deadlock was apparent; meetings were falling off in
+attendance, and consequently in financial benefit to the promoters;
+there remained, however, the knowledge--for it was proved past
+question--that the aeroplane in its then stage of development was a
+necessity to every army of the world. France had shown this by the more
+than interest taken by the French Government in what had developed into
+an Air Section of the French army; Germany, of course, was hypnotised by
+Count Zeppelin and his dirigibles, to say nothing of the Parsevals which
+had been proved useful military accessories; in spite of this, it was
+realised in Germany that the aeroplane also had its place in military
+affairs. England came into the field with the military aeroplane trials
+of August 1st to 15th, 1912, barely two months after the founding of the
+Royal Flying Corps.
+
+When the R.F.C. was founded--and in fact up to two years after its
+founding--in no country were the full military potentialities of the
+aeroplane realised; it was regarded as an accessory to cavalry for
+scouting more than as an independent arm; the possibilities of bombing
+were very vaguely considered, and the fact that it might be possible to
+shoot from an aeroplane was hardly considered at all. The conditions of
+the British Military Trials of 1912 gave to the War office the option
+of purchasing for L1,000 any machine that might be awarded a prize.
+Machines were required, among other things, to carry a useful load of
+350 lbs. in addition to equipment, with fuel and oil for 4 1/2-hours;
+thus loaded, they were required to fly for 3 hours, attaining an
+altitude of 4,500 feet, maintaining a height of 1,500 feet for 1 hour,
+and climbing 1,000 feet from the ground at a rate of 200 feet per
+minute, 'although 300 feet per minute is desirable.' They had to attain
+a speed of not less than 55 miles per hour in a calm, and be able to
+plane down to the ground in a calm from not more than 1,000 feet with
+engine stopped, traversing 6,000 feet horizontal distance. For those
+days, the landing demands were rather exacting; the machine should be
+able to rise without damage from long grass, clover, or harrowed land,
+in 100 yards in a calm, and should be able to land without damage on any
+cultivated ground, including rough ploughed land, and, when landing on
+smooth turf in a calm, be able to pull up within 75 yards of the point
+of first touching the ground. It was required that pilot and observer
+should have as open a view as possible to front and flanks, and they
+should be so shielded from the wind as to be able to communicate with
+each other. These are the main provisions out of the set of conditions
+laid down for competitors, but a considerable amount of leniency was
+shown by the authorities in the competition, who obviously wished to try
+out every machine entered and see what were its capabilities.
+
+The beginning of the competition consisted in assembling the machines
+against time from road trim to flying trim. Cody's machine, which was
+the only one to be delivered by air, took 1 hour and 35 minutes to
+assemble; the best assembling time was that of the Avro, which was got
+into flying trim in 14 minutes 30 seconds. This machine came to grief
+with Lieut. Parke as pilot, on the 7th, through landing at very high
+speed on very bad ground; a securing wire of the under-carriage broke in
+the landing, throwing the machine forward on to its nose and then over
+on its back. Parke was uninjured, fortunately; the damaged machine was
+sent off to Manchester for repair and was back again on the 16th of
+August.
+
+It is to be noted that by this time the Royal Aircraft Factory was
+building aeroplanes of the B.E. and F.E. types, but at the same time it
+is also to be noted that British military interest in engines was not
+sufficient to bring them up to the high level attained by the planes,
+and it is notorious that even the outbreak of war found England
+incapable of providing a really satisfactory aero engine. In the 1912
+Trials, the only machines which actually completed all their tests were
+the Cody biplane, the French Deperdussin, the Hanriot, two Bleriots and
+a Maurice Farman. The first prize of L4,000, open to all the world,
+went to F. S. Cody's British-built biplane, which complied with all
+the conditions of the competition and well earned its official
+acknowledgment of supremacy. The machine climbed at 280 feet per minute
+and reached a height of 5,000 feet, while in the landing test, in spite
+of its great weight and bulk, it pulled up on grass in 56 yards. The
+total weight was 2,690 lbs. when fully loaded, and the total area of
+supporting surface was 500 square feet; the motive power was supplied
+by a six-cylinder 120 horsepower Austro-Daimler engine. The second prize
+was taken by A. Deperdussin for the French-built Deperdussin monoplane.
+Cody carried off the only prize awarded for a British-built plane,
+this being the sum of L1,000, and consolation prizes of L500 each were
+awarded to the British Deperdussin Company and The British and Colonial
+Aeroplane Company, this latter soon to become famous as makers of the
+Bristol aeroplane, of which the war honours are still fresh in men's
+minds.
+
+While these trials were in progress Audemars accomplished the first
+flight between Paris and Berlin, setting out from Issy early in the
+morning of August 18th, landing at Rheims to refill his tanks within an
+hour and a half, and then coming into bad weather which forced him
+to land successively at Mezieres, Laroche, Bochum, and finally nearly
+Gersenkirchen, where, owing to a leaky petrol tank, the attempt to win
+the prize offered for the first flight between the two capitals had to
+be abandoned after 300 miles had been covered, as the time limit was
+definitely exceeded. Audemars determined to get through to Berlin, and
+set off at 5 in the morning of the 19th, only to be brought down by fog;
+starting off again at 9.15 he landed at Hanover, was off again at 1.35,
+and reached the Johannisthal aerodrome in the suburbs of Berlin at 6.48
+that evening.
+
+As early as 1910 the British Government possessed some ten aeroplanes,
+and in 1911 the force developed into the Army Air Battalion, with the
+aeroplanes under the control of Major J. H. Fulton, R.F.A. Toward the
+end of 1911 the Air Battalion was handed over to (then) Brig.-Gen. D.
+Henderson, Director of Military Training. On June 6th, 1912, the Royal
+Flying Corps was established with a military wing under Major F. H.
+Sykes and a naval wing under Commander C. R. Samson. A joint Naval and
+Military Flying School was established at Upavon with Captain Godfrey
+M. Paine, R.N., as Commandant and Major Hugh Trenchard as Assistant
+Commandant. The Royal Aircraft Factory brought out the B.E. and F.E.
+types of biplane, admittedly superior to any other British design of the
+period, and an Aircraft Inspection Department was formed under Major J.
+H. Fulton. The military wing of the R.F.C. was equipped almost entirely
+with machines of Royal Aircraft Factory design, but the Navy preferred
+to develop British private enterprise by buying machines from private
+firms. On July 1st, 1914 the establishment of the Royal Naval Air
+Service marked the definite separation of the military and naval sides
+of British aviation, but the Central Flying School at Upavon continued
+to train pilots for both services.
+
+It is difficult at this length of time, so far as the military wing was
+concerned, to do full justice to the spade work done by Major-General
+Sir David Henderson in the early days. Just before war broke out,
+British military air strength consisted officially of eight squadrons,
+each of 12 machines and 13 in reserve, with the necessary complement of
+road transport. As a matter of fact, there were three complete squadrons
+and a part of a fourth which constituted the force sent to France at the
+outbreak of war. The value of General Henderson's work lies in the fact
+that, in spite of official stinginess and meagre supplies of every kind,
+he built up a skeleton organisation so elastic and so well thought out
+that it conformed to war requirements as well as even the German plans
+fitted in with their aerial needs. On the 4th of August, 1914, the
+nominal British air strength of the military wing was 179 machines. Of
+these, 82 machines proceeded to France, landing at Amiens and flying
+to Maubeuge to play their part in the great retreat with the British
+Expeditionary Force, in which they suffered heavy casualties both in
+personnel and machines. The history of their exploits, however, belongs
+to the War period.
+
+The development of the aeroplane between 1912 and 1914 can be judged by
+comparison of the requirements of the British War Office in 1912 with
+those laid down in an official memorandum issued by the War Office
+in February, 1914. This latter called for a light scout aeroplane, a
+single-seater, with fuel capacity to admit of 300 miles range and a
+speed range of from 50 to 85 miles per hour. It had to be able to climb
+3,500 feet in five minutes, and the engine had to be so constructed that
+the pilot could start it without assistance. At the same time, a heavier
+type of machine for reconnaissance work was called for, carrying fuel
+for a 200 mile flight with a speed range of between 35 and 60 miles per
+hour, carrying both pilot and observer. It was to be equipped with
+a wireless telegraphy set, and be capable of landing over a 30 foot
+vertical obstacle and coming to rest within a hundred yards' distance
+from the obstacle in a wind of not more than 15 miles per hour. A third
+requirement was a heavy type of fighting aeroplane accommodating pilot
+and gunner with machine gun and ammunition, having a speed range of
+between 45 and 75 miles per hour and capable of climbing 3,500 feet in 8
+minutes. It was required to carry fuel for a 300 mile flight and to give
+the gunner a clear field of fire in every direction up to 30 degrees on
+each side of the line of flight. Comparison of these specifications with
+those of the 1912 trials will show that although fighting, scouting, and
+reconnaissance types had been defined, the development of performance
+compared with the marvellous development of the earlier years of
+achieved flight was small.
+
+Yet the records of those years show that here and there an outstanding
+design was capable of great things. On the 9th September, 1912,
+Vedrines, flying a Deperdussin monoplane at Chicago, attained a speed of
+105 miles an hour. On August 12th, G. de Havilland took a passenger to a
+height of 10,560 feet over Salisbury Plain, flying a B.E. biplane with
+a 70 horse-power Renault engine. The work of de Havilland may be said to
+have been the principal influence in British military aeroplane design,
+and there is no doubt that his genius was in great measure responsible
+for the excellence of the early B.E. and F.E. types.
+
+On the 31st May, 1913, H. G. Hawker, flying at Brooklands, reached
+a height of 11,450 feet on a Sopwith biplane engined with an 80
+horse-power Gnome engine. On June 16th, with the same type of machine
+and engine, he achieved 12,900 feet. On the 2nd October, in the same
+year, a Grahame White biplane with 120 horse-power Austro-Daimler
+engine, piloted by Louis Noel, made a flight of just under 20 minutes
+carrying 9 passengers. In France a Nieuport monoplane piloted by G.
+Legagneaux attained a height of 6,120 metres, or just over 20,070 feet,
+this being the world's height record. It is worthy of note that of the
+world's aviation records as passed by the International Aeronautical
+Federation up to June 30th, 1914, only one, that of Noel, is credited to
+Great Britain.
+
+Just as records were made abroad, with one exception, so were the
+really efficient engines. In England there was the Green engine, but the
+outbreak of war found the Royal Flying Corps with 80 horse-power Gnomes,
+70 horse-power Renaults, and one or two Antoinette motors, but not one
+British, while the Royal Naval Air Service had got 20 machines with
+engines of similar origin, mainly land planes in which the wheeled
+undercarriages had been replaced by floats. France led in development,
+and there is no doubt that at the outbreak of war, the French military
+aeroplane service was the best in the world. It was mainly composed of
+Maurice Farman two-seater biplanes and Bleriot monoplanes--the latter
+type banned for a period on account of a number of serious accidents
+that took place in 1912.
+
+America had its Army Aviation School, and employed Burgess-Wright
+and Curtiss machines for the most part. In the pre-war years, once
+the Wright Brothers had accomplished their task, America's chief
+accomplishment consisted in the development of the 'Flying Boat,'
+alternatively named with characteristic American clumsiness, 'The
+Hydro-Aeroplane.' In February of 1911, Glenn Curtiss attached a
+float to a machine similar to that with which he won the first
+Gordon-Bennett Air Contest and made his first flying boat
+experiment. From this beginning he developed the boat form of body
+which obviated the use and troubles of floats--his hydroplane became
+its own float.
+
+Mainly owing to greater engine reliability the duration records steadily
+increased. By September of 1912 Fourny, on a Maurice Farman biplane, was
+able to accomplish a distance of 628 miles without a landing, remaining
+in the air for 13 hours 17 minutes and just over 57 seconds. By 1914
+this was raised by the German aviator, Landemann, to 21 hours 48 3/4
+seconds. The nature of this last record shows that the factors in such a
+record had become mere engine endurance, fuel capacity, and capacity
+of the pilot to withstand air conditions for a prolonged period, rather
+than any exceptional flying skill.
+
+Let these years be judged by the records they produced, and even then
+they are rather dull. The glory of achievement such as characterised the
+work of the Wright Brothers, of Bleriot, and of the giants of the early
+days, had passed; the splendid courage, the patriotism and devotion
+of the pilots of the War period had not yet come to being. There was
+progress, past question, but it was mechanical, hardly ever inspired.
+The study of climatic conditions was definitely begun and aeronautical
+meteorology came to being, while another development already noted was
+the fitting of wireless telegraphy to heavier-than-air machines, as
+instanced in the British War office specification of February, 1914.
+These, however, were inevitable; it remained for the War to force
+development beyond the inevitable, producing in five years that which
+under normal circumstances might easily have occupied fifty--the
+aeroplane of to-day; for, as already remarked, there was a deadlock,
+and any survey that may be made of the years 1912-1914, no matter how
+superficial, must take it into account with a view to retaining correct
+perspective in regard to the development of the aeroplane.
+
+There is one story of 1914 that must be included, however briefly,
+in any record of aeronautical achievement, since it demonstrates past
+question that to Professor Langley really belongs the honour of having
+achieved a design which would ensure actual flight, although the series
+of accidents which attended his experiments gave to the Wright Brothers
+the honour of first leaving the earth and descending without accident in
+a power-driven heavier-than-air machine. In March, 1914, Glenn Curtiss
+was invited to send a flying boat to Washington for the celebration
+of 'Langley Day,' when he remarked, 'I would like to put the Langley
+aeroplane itself in the air.' In consequence of this remark, Secretary
+Walcot of the Smithsonian Institution authorised Curtiss to re-canvas
+the original Langley aeroplane and launch it either under its own power
+or with a more recent engine and propeller. Curtiss completed this, and
+had the machine ready on the shores of Lake Keuka, Hammondsport, N.Y.,
+by May. The main object of these renewed trials was to show whether the
+original Langley machine was capable of sustained free flight with a
+pilot, and a secondary object was to determine more fully the advantages
+of the tandem monoplane type; thus the aeroplane was first flown
+as nearly as possible in its original condition, and then with such
+modifications as seemed desirable. The only difference made for the
+first trials consisted in fitting floats with connecting trusses;
+the steel main frame, wings, rudders, engine, and propellers were
+substantially as they had been in 1903. The pilot had the same seat
+under the main frame and the same general system of control. He could
+raise or lower the craft by moving the rear rudder up and down; he could
+steer right or left by moving the vertical rudder. He had no ailerons
+nor wing-warping mechanism, but for lateral balance depended on the
+dihedral angle of the wings and upon suitable movements of his weight or
+of the vertical rudder.
+
+After the adjustments for actual flight had been made in the Curtiss
+factory, according to the minute descriptions contained in the Langley
+Memoir on Mechanical Flight, the aeroplane was taken to the shore of
+Lake Keuka, beside the Curtiss hangars, and assembled for launching. On
+a clear morning (May 28th) and in a mild breeze, the craft was lifted
+on to the water by a dozen men and set going, with Mr Curtiss at the
+steering wheel, esconced in the little boat-shaped car under the forward
+part of the frame. The four-winged craft, pointed somewhat across the
+wind, went skimming over the waveless, then automatically headed into
+the wind, rose in level poise, soared gracefully for 150 feet, and
+landed softly on the water near the shore. Mr Curtiss asserted that he
+could have flown farther, but, being unused to the machine, imagined
+that the left wings had more resistance than the right. The truth is
+that the aeroplane was perfectly balanced in wing resistance, but turned
+on the water like a weather vane, owing to the lateral pressure on
+its big rear rudder. Hence in future experiments this rudder was made
+turnable about a vertical axis, as well as about the horizontal axis
+used by Langley. Henceforth the little vertical rudder under the frame
+was kept fixed and inactive.[*]
+
+That the Langley aeroplane was subsequently fitted with an 80
+horse-power Curtiss engine and successfully flown is of little interest
+in such a record as this, except for the fact that with the weight
+nearly doubled by the new engine and accessories the machine flew
+successfully, and demonstrated the perfection of Langley's design by
+standing the strain. The point that is of most importance is that the
+design itself proved a success and fully vindicated Langley's work.
+At the same time, it would be unjust to pass by the fact of the flight
+without according to Curtiss due recognition of the way in which he paid
+tribute to the genius of the pioneer by these experiments.
+
+[*] Smithsonian Publications No. 2329.
+
+
+
+
+XIX. THE WAR PERIOD--I
+
+Full record of aeronautical progress and of the accomplishments of
+pilots in the years of the War would demand not merely a volume, but a
+complete library, and even then it would be barely possible to pay full
+tribute to the heroism of pilots of the war period. There are names
+connected with that period of which the glory will not fade, names such
+as Bishop, Guynemer, Boelcke, Ball, Fonck, Immelmann, and many others
+that spring to mind as one recalls the 'Aces' of the period. In
+addition to the pilots, there is the stupendous development of the
+machines--stupendous when the length of the period in which it was
+achieved is considered.
+
+The fact that Germany was best prepared in the matter of
+heavier-than-air service machines in spite of the German faith in the
+dirigible is one more item of evidence as to who forced hostilities.
+The Germans came into the field with well over 600 aeroplanes, mainly
+two-seaters of standardised design, and with factories back in the
+Fatherland turning out sufficient new machines to make good the
+losses. There were a few single-seater scouts built for speed, and the
+two-seater machines were all fitted with cameras and bomb-dropping gear.
+Manoeuvres had determined in the German mind what should be the uses of
+the air fleet; there was photography of fortifications and field works;
+signalling by Very lights; spotting for the guns, and scouting for news
+of enemy movements. The methodical German mind had arranged all this
+beforehand, but had not allowed for the fact that opponents might take
+counter-measures which would upset the over-perfect mechanism of the air
+service just as effectually as the great march on Paris was countered by
+the genius of Joffre.
+
+The French Air Force at the beginning of the War consisted of upwards of
+600 machines. These, unlike the Germans, were not standardised, but were
+of many and diverse types. In order to get replacements quickly enough,
+the factories had to work on the designs they had, and thus for a
+long time after the outbreak of hostilities standardisation was an
+impossibility. The versatility of a Latin race in a measure compensated
+for this; from the outset, the Germans tried to overwhelm the French
+Air Force, but failed, since they had not the numerical superiority,
+nor--this equally a determining factor--the versatility and resource
+of the French pilots. They calculated on a 50 per cent superiority to
+ensure success; they needed more nearly 400 per cent, for the German
+fought to rule, avoiding risks whenever possible, and definitely
+instructed to save both machines and pilots wherever possible. French
+pilots, on the other hand, ran all the risks there were, got news
+of German movements, bombed the enemy, and rapidly worked up a very
+respectable antiaircraft force which, whatever it may have accomplished
+in the way of hitting German planes, got on the German pilots' nerves.
+
+It has already been detailed how Britain sent over 82 planes as its
+contribution to the military aerial force of 1914. These consisted of
+Farman, Caudron, and Short biplanes, together with Bleriot, Deperdussin
+and Nieuport monoplanes, certain R.A.F. types, and other machines of
+which even the name barely survives--the resourceful Yankee entitles
+them 'orphans.' It is on record that the work of providing spares might
+have been rather complicated but for the fact that there were none.
+
+There is no doubt that the Germans had made study of aerial
+military needs just as thoroughly as they had perfected their ground
+organisation. Thus there were 21 illuminated aircraft stations in
+Germany before the War, the most powerful being at Weimar, where a
+revolving electric flash of over 27 million candle-power was located.
+Practically all German aeroplane tests in the period immediately
+preceding the War were of a military nature, and quite a number of
+reliability tests were carried out just on the other side of the French
+frontier. Night flying and landing were standardised items in the German
+pilot's course of instruction while they were still experimental in
+other countries, and a system of signals was arranged which rendered the
+instructional course as perfect as might be.
+
+The Belgian contribution consisted of about twenty machines fit for
+active service and another twenty which were more or less useful as
+training machines. The material was mainly French, and the Belgian
+pilots used it to good account until German numbers swamped them.
+France, and to a small extent England, kept Belgian aviators supplied
+with machines throughout the War.
+
+The Italian Air Fleet was small, and consisted of French machines
+together with a percentage of planes of Italian origin, of which the
+design was very much a copy of French types. It was not until the War
+was nearing its end that the military and naval services relied more
+on the home product than on imports. This does not apply to engines,
+however, for the F.I.A.T. and S.C.A.T. were equal to practically any
+engine of Allied make, both in design and construction.
+
+Russia spent vast sums in the provision of machines: the giant Sikorsky
+biplane, carrying four 100 horsepower Argus motors, was designed by
+a young Russian engineer in the latter part of 1913, and in its early
+trials it created a world's record by carrying seven passengers for
+1 hour 54 minutes. Sikorsky also designed several smaller machines,
+tractor biplanes on the lines of the British B.E. type, which were
+very successful. These were the only home productions, and the imports
+consisted mainly of French aeroplanes by the hundred, which got as
+far as the docks and railway sidings and stayed there, while German
+influence and the corruption that ruined the Russian Army helped to lose
+the War. A few Russian aircraft factories were got into operation as
+hostilities proceeded, but their products were negligible, and it is not
+on record that Russia ever learned to manufacture a magneto.
+
+The United States paid tribute to British efficiency by adopting the
+British system of training for its pilots; 500 American cadets were
+trained at the School of Military Aeronautics at oxford, in order to
+form a nucleus for the American aviation schools which were subsequently
+set up in the United States and in France. As regards production of
+craft, the designing of the Liberty engine and building of over 20,000
+aeroplanes within a year proves that America is a manufacturing country,
+even under the strain of war.
+
+There were three years of struggle for aerial supremacy, the combatants
+being England and France against Germany, and the contest was neck
+and neck all the way. Germany led at the outset with the standardised
+two-seater biplanes manned by pilots and observers, whose training
+was superior to that afforded by any other nation, while the machines
+themselves were better equipped and fitted with accessories. All the
+early German aeroplanes were designated Taube by the uninitiated, and
+were formed with swept-back, curved wings very much resembling the wings
+of a bird. These had obvious disadvantages, but the standardisation
+of design and mass production of the German factories kept them in the
+field for a considerable period, and they flew side by side with tractor
+biplanes of improved design. For a little time, the Fokker monoplane
+became a definite threat both to French and British machines. It was
+an improvement on the Morane French monoplane, and with a high-powered
+engine it climbed quickly and flew fast, doing a good deal of damage for
+a brief period of 1915. Allied design got ahead of it and finally drove
+it out of the air.
+
+German equipment at the outset, which put the Allies at a disadvantage,
+included a hand-operated magneto engine-starter and a small independent
+screw which, mounted on one of the main planes, drove the dynamo used
+for the wireless set. Cameras were fitted on practically every machine;
+equipment included accurate compasses and pressure petrol gauges, speed
+and height recording instruments, bomb-dropping fittings and sectional
+radiators which facilitated repairs and gave maximum engine efficiency
+in spite of variations of temperature. As counter to these, the Allied
+pilots had resource amounting to impudence. In the early days they
+carried rifles and hand grenades and automatic pistols. They loaded
+their machines down, often at their own expense, with accessories and
+fittings until their aeroplanes earned their title of Christmas trees.
+They played with death in a way that shocked the average German pilot
+of the War's early stages, declining to fight according to rule and
+indulging in the individual duels of the air which the German hated.
+As Sir John French put it in one of his reports, they established a
+personal ascendancy over the enemy, and in this way compensated for
+their inferior material.
+
+French diversity of design fitted in well with the initiative and
+resource displayed by the French pilots. The big Caudron type was the
+ideal bomber of the early days; Farman machines were excellent for
+reconnaissance and artillery spotting; the Bleriots proved excellent
+as fighting scouts and for aerial photography; the Nieuports made good
+fighters, as did the Spads, both being very fast craft, as were the
+Morane-Saulnier monoplanes, while the big Voisin biplanes rivalled the
+Caudron machines as bombers.
+
+The day of the Fokker ended when the British B.E.2.C. aeroplane came
+to France in good quantities, and the F.E. type, together with the De
+Havilland machines, rendered British aerial superiority a certainty.
+Germany's best reply--this was about 1916--was the Albatross biplane,
+which was used by Captain Baron von Richthofen for his famous travelling
+circus, manned by German star pilots and sent to various parts of the
+line to hearten up German troops and aviators after any specially bad
+strafe. Then there were the Aviatik biplane and the Halberstadt fighting
+scout, a cleanly built and very fast machine with a powerful engine with
+which Germany tried to win back superiority in the third year of the
+War, but Allied design kept about three months ahead of that of the
+enemy, once the Fokker had been mastered, and the race went on. Spads
+and Bristol fighters, Sopwith scouts and F.E.'s played their part in the
+race, and design was still advancing when peace came.
+
+The giant twin-engined Handley-Page bomber was tried out, proved
+efficient, and justly considered better than anything of its kind that
+had previously taken the field. Immediately after the conclusion of its
+trials, a specimen of the type was delivered intact at Lille for the
+Germans to copy, the innocent pilot responsible for the delivery doing
+some great disservice to his own cause. The Gotha Wagon-Fabrik Firm
+immediately set to work and copied the Handley-Page design, producing
+the great Gotha bombing machine which was used in all the later raids on
+England as well as for night work over the Allied lines.
+
+How the War advanced design may be judged by comparison of the military
+requirements given for the British Military Trials of 1912, with
+performances of 1916 and 1917, when the speed of the faster machines had
+increased to over 150 miles an hour and Allied machines engaged enemy
+aircraft at heights ranging up to 22,000 feet. All pre-war records of
+endurance, speed, and climb went by the board, as the race for aerial
+superiority went on.
+
+Bombing brought to being a number of crude devices in the first year of
+the War. Allied pilots of the very early days carried up bombs packed
+in a small box and threw them over by hand, while, a little later, the
+bombs were strung like apples on wings and undercarriage, so that
+the pilot who did not get rid of his load before landing risked an
+explosion. Then came a properly designed carrying apparatus, crude but
+fairly efficient, and with 1916 development had proceeded as far as the
+proper bomb-racks with releasing gear.
+
+Reconnaissance work developed, so that fighting machines went as escort
+to observing squadrons and scouting operations were undertaken up to 100
+miles behind the enemy lines; out of this grew the art of camouflage,
+when ammunition dumps were painted to resemble herds of cows, guns were
+screened by foliage or painted to merge into a ground scheme, and many
+other schemes were devised to prevent aerial observation. Troops were
+moved by night for the most part, owing to the keen eyes of the air
+pilots and the danger of bombs, though occasionally the aviator had his
+chance. There is one story concerning a British pilot who, on returning
+from a reconnaissance flight, observed a German Staff car on the road
+under him; he descended and bombed and machine--gunned the car until the
+German General and his chauffeur abandoned it, took to their heels, and
+ran like rabbits. Later still, when Allied air superiority was assured,
+there came the phase of machine-gunning bodies of enemy troops from the
+air. Disregarding all antiaircraft measures, machines would sweep down
+and throw battalions into panic or upset the military traffic along a
+road, demoralising a battery or a transport train and causing as much
+damage through congestion of traffic as with their actual machine-gun
+fire. Aerial photography, too, became a fine art; the ordinary long
+focus cameras were used at the outset with automatic plate changers, but
+later on photographing aeroplanes had cameras of wide angle lens type
+built into the fuselage. These were very simply operated, one lever
+registering the exposure and changing the plate. In many cases, aerial
+photographs gave information which the human eye had missed, and it is
+noteworthy that photographs of ground showed when troops had marched
+over it, while the aerial observer was quite unable to detect the marks
+left by their passing.
+
+Some small mention must be made of seaplane activities, which, round
+the European coasts involved in the War, never ceased. The submarine
+campaign found in the spotting seaplane its greatest deterrent, and it
+is old news now how even the deeply submerged submarines were easily
+picked out for destruction from a height and the news wirelessed from
+seaplane to destroyer, while in more than one place the seaplane itself
+finished the task by bomb dropping. It was a seaplane that gave Admiral
+Beatty the news that the whole German Fleet was out before the Jutland
+Battle, news which led to a change of plans that very nearly brought
+about the destruction of Germany's naval power. For the most part, the
+seaplanes of the War period were heavier than the land machines and, in
+the opinion of the land pilots, were slow and clumsy things to fly. This
+was inevitable, for their work demanded more solid building and greater
+reliability. To put the matter into Hibernian phrase, a forced landing
+at sea is a much more serious matter than on the ground. Thus there was
+need for greater engine power, bigger wingspread to support the floats,
+and fuel tanks of greater capacity. The flying boats of the later
+War period carried considerable crews, were heavily armed, capable of
+withstanding very heavy weather, and carried good loads of bombs on
+long cruises. Their work was not all essentially seaplane work, for the
+R.N.A.S. was as well known as hated over the German airship sheds in
+Belgium and along the Flanders coast. As regards other theatres of War,
+they rendered valuable service from the Dardanelles to the Rufiji River,
+at this latter place forming a principal factor in the destruction of
+the cruiser Konigsberg. Their spotting work at the Dardanelles for
+the battleships was responsible for direct hits from 15 in. guns on
+invisible targets at ranges of over 12,000 yards. Seaplane pilots were
+bombing specialists, including among their targets army headquarters,
+ammunition dumps, railway stations, submarines and their bases, docks,
+shipping in German harbours, and the German Fleet at Wilhelmshaven.
+Dunkirk, a British seaplane base, was a sharp thorn in the German side.
+
+Turning from consideration of the various services to the exploits of
+the men composing them, it is difficult to particularise. A certain
+inevitable prejudice even at this length of time leads one to discount
+the valour of pilots in the German Air Service, but the names of
+Boelcke, von Richthofen, and Immelmann recur as proof of the courage
+that was not wanting in the enemy ranks, while, however much we may
+decry the Gotha raids over the English coast and on London, there is no
+doubt that the men who undertook these raids were not deficient in the
+form of bravery that is of more value than the unthinking valour of
+a minute which, observed from the right quarter, wins a military
+decoration.
+
+Yet the fact that the Allied airmen kept the air at all in the early
+days proved on which side personal superiority lay, for they were
+outnumbered, out-manoeuvred, and faced by better material than any
+that they themselves possessed; yet they won their fights or died. The
+stories of their deeds are endless; Bishop, flying alone and meeting
+seven German machines and crashing four; the battle of May 5th, 1915,
+when five heroes fought and conquered twenty-seven German machines,
+ranging in altitude between 12,000 and 3,000 feet, and continuing the
+extraordinary struggle from five until six in the evening. Captain
+Aizlewood, attacking five enemy machines with such reckless speed that
+he rammed one and still reached his aerodrome safely--these are items in
+a long list of feats of which the character can only be realised when
+it is fully comprehended that the British Air Service accounted for some
+8,000 enemy machines in the course of the War. Among the French there
+was Captain Guynemer, who at the time of his death had brought down
+fifty-four enemy machines, in addition to many others of which the
+destruction could not be officially confirmed. There was Fonck, who
+brought down six machines in one day, four of them within two minutes.
+
+There are incredible stories, true as incredible, of shattered men
+carrying on with their work in absolute disregard of physical injury.
+Major Brabazon Rees, V.C., engaged a big German battle-plane in
+September of 1915 and, single-handed, forced his enemy out of action.
+Later in his career, with a serious wound in the thigh from which blood
+was pouring, he kept up a fight with an enemy formation until he had not
+a round of ammunition left, and then returned to his aerodrome to get
+his wound dressed. Lieutenants Otley and Dunning, flying in the Balkans,
+engaged a couple of enemy machines and drove them off, but not until
+their petrol tank had got a hole in it and Dunning was dangerously
+wounded in the leg. Otley improvised a tourniquet, passed it to Dunning,
+and, when the latter had bandaged himself, changed from the observer's
+to the pilot's seat, plugged the bullet hole in the tank with his thumb
+and steered the machine home.
+
+These are incidents; the full list has not been, and can never be
+recorded, but it goes to show that in the pilot of the War period there
+came to being a new type of humanity, a product of evolution which
+fitted a certain need. Of such was Captain West, who, engaging hostile
+troops, was attacked by seven machines. Early in the engagement, one of
+his legs was partially severed by an explosive bullet and fell powerless
+into the controls, rendering the machine for the time unmanageable.
+Lifting his disabled leg, he regained control of the machine, and
+although wounded in the other leg, he manoeuvred his machine so
+skilfully that his observer was able to get several good bursts into the
+enemy machines, driving them away. Then, desperately wounded as he
+was, Captain West brought the machine over to his own lines and landed
+safely. He fainted from loss of blood and exhaustion, but on regaining
+consciousness, insisted on writing his report. Equal to this was the
+exploit of Captain Barker, who, in aerial combat, was wounded in the
+right and left thigh and had his left arm shattered, subsequently
+bringing down an enemy machine in flames, and then breaking through
+another hostile formation and reaching the British lines.
+
+In recalling such exploits as these, one is tempted on and on, for it
+seems that the pilots rivalled each other in their devotion to duty,
+this not confined to British aviators, but common practically to all
+services. Sufficient instances have been given to show the nature of the
+work and the character of the men who did it.
+
+The rapid growth of aerial effort rendered it necessary in January of
+1915 to organise the Royal Flying Corps into separate wings, and in
+October of the same year it was constituted in Brigades. In 1916 the
+Air Board was formed, mainly with the object of co-ordinating effort
+and ensuring both to the R.N.A.S. and to the R.F.C. adequate supplies of
+material as far as construction admitted. Under the presidency of Lord
+Cowdray, the Air Board brought about certain reforms early in 1917,
+and in November of that year a separate Air Ministry was constituted,
+separating the Air Force from both Navy and Army, and rendering it an
+independent force. On April 1st, 1918, the Royal Air Force came into
+existence, and unkind critics in the Royal Flying Corps remarked on the
+appropriateness of the date. At the end of the War, the personnel of the
+Royal Air Force amounted to 27,906 officers, and 263,842 other ranks.
+Contrast of these figures with the number of officers and men who took
+the field in 1914 is indicative of the magnitude of British aerial
+effort in the War period.
+
+
+
+
+XX. THE WAR PERIOD--II
+
+There was when War broke out no realisation on the part of the British
+Government of the need for encouraging the enterprise of private
+builders, who carried out their work entirely at their-own cost. The
+importance of a supply of British-built engines was realised before the
+War, it is true, and a competition was held in which a prize of L5,000
+was offered for the best British engine, but this awakening was so late
+that the R.F.C. took the field without a single British power plant.
+Although Germany woke up equally late to the need for home produced
+aeroplane engines, the experience gained in building engines for
+dirigibles sufficed for the production of aeroplane power plants. The
+Mercedes filled all requirements together with the Benz and the Maybach.
+There was a 225 horsepower Benz which was very popular, as were the 100
+horse-power and 170 horse-power Mercedes, the last mentioned fitted to
+the Aviatik biplane of 1917. The Uberursel was a copy of the Gnome and
+supplied the need for rotary engines.
+
+In Great Britain there were a number of aeroplane constructing firms
+that had managed to emerge from the lean years 1912-1913 with
+sufficient manufacturing plant to give a hand in making up the leeway of
+construction when War broke out. Gradually the motor-car firms came
+in, turning their body-building departments to plane and fuselage
+construction, which enabled them to turn out the complete planes engined
+and ready for the field. The coach-building trade soon joined in and
+came in handy as propeller makers; big upholstering and furniture firms
+and scores of concerns that had never dreamed of engaging in aeroplane
+construction were busy on supplying the R.F.C. By 1915 hundreds of
+different firms were building aeroplanes and parts; by 1917 the number
+had increased to over 1,000, and a capital of over a million pounds for
+a firm that at the outbreak of War had employed a score or so of hands
+was by no means uncommon. Women and girls came into the work, more
+especially in plane construction and covering and doping, though they
+took their place in the engine shops and proved successful at acetylene
+welding and work at the lathes. It was some time before Britain was able
+to provide its own magnetos, for this key industry had been left in
+the hands of the Germans up to the outbreak of War, and the 'Bosch' was
+admittedly supreme--even now it has never been beaten, and can only be
+equalled, being as near perfection as is possible for a magneto.
+
+One of the great inventions of the War was the synchronisation of
+engine-timing and machine gun, which rendered it possible to fire
+through the blades of a propeller without damaging them, though the
+growing efficiency of the aeroplane as a whole and of its armament is
+a thing to marvel at on looking back and considering what was actually
+accomplished. As the efficiency of the aeroplane increased, so
+anti-aircraft guns and range-finding were improved. Before the War an
+aeroplane travelling at full speed was reckoned perfectly safe at 4,000
+feet, but, by the first month of 1915, the safe height had gone up to
+9,000 feet, 7,000 feet being the limit of rifle and machine gun bullet
+trajectory; the heavier guns were not sufficiently mobile to tackle
+aircraft. At that time, it was reckoned that effective aerial
+photography ceased at 6,000 feet, while bomb-dropping from 7,000-8,000
+feet was reckoned uncertain except in the case of a very large target.
+The improvement in anti-aircraft devices went on, and by May of 1916, an
+aeroplane was not safe under 15,000 feet, while anti-aircraft shells had
+fuses capable of being set to over 20,000 feet, and bombing from 15,000
+and 16,000 feet was common. It was not till later that Allied pilots
+demonstrated the safety that lies in flying very near the ground, this
+owing to the fact that, when flying swiftly at a very low altitude, the
+machine is out of sight almost before it can be aimed at.
+
+The Battle of the Somme and the clearing of the air preliminary to that
+operation brought the fighting aeroplane pure and simple with them.
+Formations of fighting planes preceded reconnaissance craft in order
+to clear German machines and observation balloons out of the sky and to
+watch and keep down any further enemy formations that might attempt
+to interfere with Allied observation work. The German reply to this
+consisted in the formation of the Flying Circus, of which Captain Baron
+von Richthofen's was a good example. Each circus consisted of a large
+formation of speedy machines, built specially for fighting and manned
+by the best of the German pilots. These were sent to attack at any point
+along the line where the Allies had got a decided superiority.
+
+The trick flying of pre-war days soon became an everyday matter; Pegoud
+astonished the aviation world before the War by first looping the loop,
+but, before three years of hostilities had elapsed, looping was part of
+the training of practically every pilot, while the spinning nose dive,
+originally considered fatal, was mastered, and the tail slide, which
+consisted of a machine rising nose upward in the air and falling back on
+its tail, became one of the easiest 'stunts' in the pilot's repertoire.
+Inherent stability was gradually improved, and, from 1916 onward,
+practically every pilot could carry on with his machine-gun or camera
+and trust to his machine to fly itself until he was free to attend to
+it. There was more than one story of a machine coming safely to earth
+and making good landing on its own account with the pilot dead in his
+cock-pit.
+
+Toward the end of the War, the Independent Air Force was formed as a
+branch of the R.A.F. with a view to bombing German bases and devoting
+its attention exclusively to work behind the enemy lines. Bombing
+operations were undertaken by the R.N.A.S. as early as 1914-1915 against
+Cuxhaven, Dusseldorf, and Friedrichshavn, but the supply of material was
+not sufficient to render these raids continuous. A separate Brigade,
+the 8th, was formed in 1917 to harass the German chemical and iron
+industries, the base being in the Nancy area, and this policy was found
+so fruitful that the Independent Force was constituted on the 8th June,
+1918. The value of the work accomplished by this force is demonstrated
+by the fact that the German High Command recalled twenty fighting
+squadrons from the Western front to counter its activities, and, in
+addition, took troops away from the fighting line in large numbers for
+manning anti-aircraft batteries and searchlights. The German press of
+the last year of the War is eloquent of the damage done in manufacturing
+areas by the Independent Force, which, had hostilities continued a
+little longer, would have included Berlin in its activities.
+
+Formation flying was first developed by the Germans, who made use of it
+in the daylight raids against England in 1917. Its value was very soon
+realised, and the V formation of wild geese was adopted, the leader
+taking the point of the V and his squadron following on either side at
+different heights. The air currents set up by the leading machines were
+thus avoided by those in the rear, while each pilot had a good view
+of the leader's bombs, and were able to correct their own aim by
+the bursts, while the different heights at which they flew rendered
+anti-aircraft gun practice less effective. Further, machines were able
+to afford mutual protection to each other and any attacker would be
+met by machine-gun fire from three or four machines firing on him from
+different angles and heights. In the later formations single-seater
+fighters flew above the bombers for the purpose of driving off hostile
+craft. Formation flying was not fully developed when the end of the War
+brought stagnation in place of the rapid advance in the strategy and
+tactics of military air work.
+
+
+
+
+XXI. RECONSTRUCTION
+
+The end of the War brought a pause in which the multitude of aircraft
+constructors found themselves faced with the possible complete
+stagnation of the industry, since military activities no longer demanded
+their services and the prospects of commercial flying were virtually
+nil. That great factor in commercial success, cost of plant and upkeep,
+had received no consideration whatever in the War period, for armies do
+not count cost. The types of machines that had evolved from the War
+were very fast, very efficient, and very expensive, although the bombers
+showed promise of adaptation to commercial needs, and, so far as other
+machines were concerned, America had already proved the possibilities of
+mail-carrying by maintaining a mail service even during the War period.
+
+A civil aviation department of the Air Ministry was formed in February
+of 1919 with a Controller General of Civil Aviation at the head. This
+was organised into four branches, one dealing with the survey and
+preparation of air routes for the British Empire, one organising
+meteorological and wireless telegraphy services, one dealing with the
+licensing of aerodromes, machines for passenger or goods carrying and
+civilian pilots, and one dealing with publicity and transmission of
+information generally. A special Act of Parliament 264 entitled 'The Air
+Navigation Acts, 1911-1919,' was passed on February 27th, and commercial
+flying was officially permitted from May 1st, 1919.
+
+Meanwhile the great event of 1919, the crossing of the Atlantic by air,
+was gradually ripening to performance. In addition to the rigid airship,
+R.34, eight machines entered for this flight, these being a Short
+seaplane, Handley-Page, Martinsyde, Vickers-Vimy, and Sopwith
+aeroplanes, and three American flying boats, N.C.1, N.C.3, and N.C.4.
+The Short seaplane was the only one of the eight which proposed to make
+the journey westward; in flying from England to Ireland, before starting
+on the long trip to Newfoundland, it fell into the sea off the coast of
+Anglesey, and so far as it was concerned the attempt was abandoned.
+
+The first machines to start from the Western end were the three American
+seaplanes, which on the morning of May 6th left Trepassy, Newfoundland,
+on the 1,380 mile stage to Horta in the Azores. N.C.1 and N.C.3 gave
+up the attempt very early, but N.C.4, piloted by Lieut.-Commander Read,
+U.S.N., made Horta on May 17th and made a three days' halt. On the 20th
+the second stage of the journey to Ponta Delgada, a further 190 miles,
+was completed and a second halt of a week was made. On the 27th, the
+machine left for Lisbon, 900 miles distant, and completed the journey in
+a day. On the 30th a further stage of 340 miles took N.C.4 on to
+Ferrol, and the next day the last stage of 420 miles to Plymouth was
+accomplished.
+
+Meanwhile, H. G. Hawker, pilot of the Sopwith biplane, together with
+Commander Mackenzie Grieve, R.N., his navigator, found the weather
+sufficiently auspicious to set out at 6.48 p.m. On Sunday, May 18th, in
+the hope of completing the trip by the direct route before N.C.4 could
+reach Plymouth. They set out from Mount Pearl aerodrome, St John's,
+Newfoundland, and vanished into space, being given up as lost, as Hamel
+was lost immediately before the War in attempting to fly the North
+Sea. There was a week of dead silence regarding their fate, but on the
+following Sunday morning there was world-wide relief at the news that
+the plucky attempt had not ended in disaster, but both aviators had been
+picked up by the steamer Mary at 9.30 a.m. on the morning of the 19th,
+while still about 750 miles short of the conclusion of their journey.
+Engine failure brought them down, and they planed down to the sea close
+to the Mary to be picked up; as the vessel was not fitted with wireless,
+the news of their rescue could not be communicated until land was
+reached. An equivalent of half the L10,000 prize offered by the Daily
+Mail for the non-stop flight was presented by the paper in recognition
+of the very gallant attempt, and the King conferred the Air Force Cross
+on both pilot and navigator.
+
+Raynham, pilot of the Martinsyde competing machine, had the bad luck to
+crash his craft twice in attempting to start before he got outside the
+boundary of the aerodrome. The Handley-Page machine was withdrawn from
+the competition, and, attempting to fly to America, was crashed on the
+way.
+
+The first non-stop crossing was made on June 14th-15th in 16 hours 27
+minutes, the speed being just over 117 miles per hour. The machine was a
+Vickers-Vimy bomber, engined with two Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII's, piloted
+by Captain John Alcock, D.S.C., with Lieut. Arthur Whitten-Brown as
+navigator. The journey was reported to be very rough, so much so at
+times that Captain Alcock stated that they were flying upside down, and
+for the greater part of the time they were out of sight of the sea. Both
+pilot and navigator had the honour of knighthood conferred on them at
+the conclusion of the journey.
+
+Meanwhile, commercial flying opened on May 8th (the official date
+was May 1st) with a joy-ride service from Hounslow of Avro training
+machines. The enterprise caught on remarkably, and the company extended
+their activities to coastal resorts for the holiday season--at Blackpool
+alone they took up 10,000 passengers before the service was two months
+old. Hendon, beginning passenger flights on the same date, went in for
+exhibition and passenger flying, and on June 21st the aerial Derby
+was won by Captain Gathergood on an Airco 4R machine with a Napier 450
+horse-power 'Lion' engine; incidentally the speed of 129.3 miles per
+hour was officially recognised as constituting the world's record for
+speed within a closed circuit. On July 17th a Fiat B.R. biplane with a
+700 horse-power engine landed at Kenley aerodrome after having made a
+non-stop flight of 1,100 miles. The maximum speed of this machine was
+160 miles per hour, and it was claimed to be the fastest machine in
+existence. On August 25th a daily service between London and Paris was
+inaugurated by the Aircraft Manufacturing Company, Limited, who ran a
+machine each way each day, starting at 12.30 and due to arrive at 2.45
+p.m. The Handley-Page Company began a similar service in September
+of 1919, but ran it on alternate days with machines capable of
+accommodating ten passengers. The single fare in each case was fixed at
+15 guineas and the parcel rate at 7s. 6d. per pound.
+
+Meanwhile, in Germany, a number of passenger services had been in
+operation from the early part of the year; the Berlin-Weimar service was
+established on February 5th and Berlin-Hamburg on March 1st, both for
+mail and passenger carrying. Berlin-Breslau was soon added, but the
+first route opened remained most popular, 538 flights being made between
+its opening and the end of April, while for March and April combined,
+the Hamburg-Berlin route recorded only 262 flights. All three routes
+were operated by a combine of German aeronautical firms entitled the
+Deutsch Luft Rederie. The single fare between Hamburg and Berlin was
+450 marks, between Berlin and Breslau 500 marks, and between Berlin
+and Weimar 450 marks. Luggage was carried free of charge, but varied
+according to the weight of the passenger, since the combined weight of
+both passenger and luggage was not allowed to exceed a certain limit.
+
+In America commercial flying had begun in May of 1918 with the mail
+service between Washington, Philadelphia, and New York, which proved
+that mail carrying is a commercial possibility, and also demonstrated
+the remarkable reliability of the modern aeroplane by making 102
+complete flights out of a possible total of 104 in November, 1918, at a
+cost of 0.777 of a dollar per mile. By March of 1919 the cost per mile
+had gone up to 1.28 dollars; the first annual report issued at the
+end of May showed an efficiency of 95.6 per cent and the original
+six aeroplanes and engines with which the service began were still in
+regular use.
+
+In June of 1919 an American commercial firm chartered an aeroplane for
+emergency service owing to a New York harbour strike and found it so
+useful that they made it a regular service. The Travellers Company
+inaugurated a passenger flying boat service between New York and
+Atlantic City on July 25th, the fare, inclusive of 35 lbs. of luggage,
+being fixed at L25 each way.
+
+Five flights on the American continent up to the end of 1919 are worthy
+of note. On December 13th, 1918, Lieut. D. Godoy of the Chilian army
+left Santiago, Chili, crossed the Andes at a height of 19,700 feet
+and landed at Mendoza, the capital of the wine-growing province of
+Argentina. On April 19th, 1919, Captain E. F. White made the first
+non-stop flight between New York and Chicago in 6 hours 50 minutes on
+a D.H.4 machine driven by a twelve-cylinder Liberty engine. Early in
+August Major Schroeder, piloting a French Lepere machine flying at a
+height of 18,400 feet, reached a speed of 137 miles per hour with a
+Liberty motor fitted with a super-charger. Toward the end of August, Rex
+Marshall, on a Thomas-Morse biplane, starting from a height of 17,000
+feet, made a glide of 35 miles with his engine cut off, restarting it
+when at a height of 600 feet above the ground. About a month later R.
+Rohlfe, piloting a Curtiss triplane, broke the height record by reaching
+34,610 feet.
+
+
+
+
+XXII. 1919-20
+
+Into the later months of 1919 comes the flight by Captain Ross-Smith
+from England to Australia and the attempt to make the Cape to Cairo
+voyage by air. The Australian Government had offered a prize of L10,000
+for the first flight from England to Australia in a British machine, the
+flight to be accomplished in 720 consecutive hours. Ross-Smith, with his
+brother, Lieut. Keith Macpherson Smith, and two mechanics, left Hounslow
+in a Vickers-Vimy bomber with Rolls-Royce engine on November 12th and
+arrived at Port Darwin, North Australia, on the 10th December, having
+completed the flight in 27 days 20 hours 20 minutes, thus having 51
+hours 40 minutes to spare out of the 720 allotted hours.
+
+Early in 1920 came a series of attempts at completing the journey by air
+between Cairo and the Cape. Out of four competitors Colonel Van Ryneveld
+came nearest to making the journey successfully, leaving England on
+a standard Vickers-Vimy bomber with Rolls-Royce engines, identical in
+design with the machine used by Captain Ross-Smith on the England
+to Australia flight. A second Vickers-Vimy was financed by the Times
+newspaper and a third flight was undertaken with a Handley-Page machine
+under the auspices of the Daily Telegraph. The Air Ministry had already
+prepared the route by means of three survey parties which cleared the
+aerodromes and landing grounds, dividing their journey into stages of
+200 miles or less. Not one of the competitors completed the course, but
+in both this and Ross-Smith's flight valuable data was gained in
+respect of reliability of machines and engines, together with a mass of
+meteorological information.
+
+The Handley-Page Company announced in the early months of 1920 that they
+had perfected a new design of wing which brought about a twenty to forty
+per cent improvement in lift rate in the year. When the nature of the
+design was made public, it was seen to consist of a division of the
+wing into small sections, each with its separate lift. A few days later,
+Fokker, the Dutch inventor, announced the construction of a machine in
+which all external bracing wires are obviated, the wings being of a
+very deep section and self-supporting. The value of these two inventions
+remains to be seen so far as commercial flying is concerned.
+
+The value of air work in war, especially so far as the Colonial
+campaigns in which British troops are constantly being engaged is in
+question, was very thoroughly demonstrated in a report issued early
+in 1920 with reference to the successful termination of the Somaliland
+campaign through the intervention of the Royal Air Force, which between
+January 21st and the 31st practically destroyed the Dervish force under
+the Mullah, which had been a thorn in the side of Britain since 1907.
+Bombs and machine-guns did the work, destroying fortifications and
+bringing about the surrender of all the Mullah's following, with the
+exception of about seventy who made their escape.
+
+Certain records both in construction and performance had characterised
+the post-war years, though as design advances and comes nearer to
+perfection, it is obvious that records must get fewer and farther
+between. The record aeroplane as regards size at the time of its
+construction was the Tarrant triplane, which made its first--and
+last--flight on May 28th, 1919. The total loaded weight was 30 tons,
+and the machine was fitted with six 400 horse-power engines; almost
+immediately after the trial flight began, the machine pitched forward
+on its nose and was wrecked, causing fatal injuries to Captains Dunn
+and Rawlings, who were aboard the machine. A second accident of
+similar character was that which befell the giant seaplane known as the
+Felixstowe Fury, in a trial flight. This latter machine was intended to
+be flown to Australia, but was crashed over the water.
+
+On May 4th, 1920, a British record for flight duration and useful
+load was established by a commercial type Handley-Page biplane, which,
+carrying a load of 3,690 lbs., rose to a height of 13,999 feet and
+remained in the air for 1 hour 20 minutes. On May 27th the French pilot,
+Fronval, flying at Villacoublay in a Morane-Saulnier type of biplane
+with Le Rhone motor, put up an extraordinary type of record by looping
+the loop 962 times in 3 hours 52 minutes 10 seconds. Another record of
+the year of similar nature was that of two French fliers, Boussotrot
+and Bernard, who achieved a continuous flight of 24 hours 19 minutes 7
+seconds, beating the pre-war record of 21 hours 48 3/4 seconds set up
+by the German pilot, Landemann. Both these records are likely to stand,
+being in the nature of freaks, which demonstrate little beyond the
+reliability of the machine and the capacity for endurance on the part of
+its pilots.
+
+Meanwhile, on February 14th, Lieuts. Masiero and Ferrarin left Rome on
+S.V.A. Ansaldo V. machines fitted with 220 horse-power S.V.A. motors. On
+May 30th they arrived at Tokio, having flown by way of Bagdad, Karachi,
+Canton, Pekin, and Osaka. Several other competitors started, two of whom
+were shot down by Arabs in Mesopotamia.
+
+Considered in a general way, the first two years after the termination
+of the Great European War form a period of transition in which the
+commercial type of aeroplane was gradually evolved from the fighting
+machine which was perfected in the four preceding years. There was about
+this period no sense of finality, but it was as experimental, in its
+own way, as were the years of progressing design which preceded the war
+period. Such commercial schemes as were inaugurated call for no more
+note than has been given here; they have been experimental, and, with
+the possible exception of the United States Government mail service,
+have not been planned and executed on a sufficiently large scale to
+furnish reliable data on which to forecast the prospects of commercial
+aviation. And there is a school rapidly growing up which asserts that
+the day of aeroplanes is nearly over. The construction of the giant
+airships of to-day and the successful return flight of R34 across
+the Atlantic seem to point to the eventual triumph, in spite of its
+disadvantages, of the dirigible airship.
+
+This is a hard saying for such of the aeroplane industry as survived
+the War period and consolidated itself, and it is but the saying of a
+section which bases its belief on the fact that, as was noted in the
+very early years of the century, the aeroplane is primarily a war
+machine. Moreover, the experience of the War period tended to discredit
+the dirigible, since, before the introduction of helium gas,
+the inflammability of its buoyant factor placed it at an immense
+disadvantage beside the machine dependent on the atmosphere itself for
+its lift.
+
+As life runs to-day, it is a long time since Kipling wrote his story of
+the airways of a future world and thrust out a prophecy that the bulk
+of the world's air traffic would be carried by gas-bag vessels. If the
+school which inclines to belief in the dirigible is right in its belief,
+as it well may be, then the foresight was uncannily correct, not only
+in the matter of the main assumption, but in the detail with which the
+writer embroidered it.
+
+On the constructional side, the history of the aeroplane is still so
+much in the making that any attempt at a critical history would be
+unwise, and it is possible only to record fact, leaving it to the future
+for judgment to be passed. But, in a general way, criticism may
+be advanced with regard to the place that aeronautics takes in
+civilisation. In the past hundred years, the world has made miraculously
+rapid strides materially, but moral development has not kept abreast.
+Conception of the responsibilities of humanity remains virtually in a
+position of a hundred years ago; given a higher conception of life and
+its responsibilities, the aeroplane becomes the crowning achievement
+of that long series which James Watt inaugurated, the last step in
+intercommunication, the chain with which all nations are bound in
+a growing prosperity, surely based on moral wellbeing. Without such
+conception of the duties as well as the rights of life, this last
+achievement of science may yet prove the weapon that shall end
+civilisation as men know it to-day, and bring this ultra-material age to
+a phase of ruin on which saner people can build a world more reasonable
+and less given to groping after purely material advancement.
+
+
+
+
+PART II. 1903-1920: PROGRESS IN DESIGN
+
+By Lieut.-Col. W. Lockwood Marsh
+
+
+
+
+I. THE BEGINNINGS
+
+Although the first actual flight of an aeroplane was made by the Wrights
+on December 17th 1903, it is necessary, in considering the progress
+of design between that period and the present day, to go back to
+the earlier days of their experiments with 'gliders,' which show the
+alterations in design made by them in their step-bystep progress to a
+flying machine proper, and give a clear idea of the stage at which they
+had arrived in the art of aeroplane design at the time of their first
+flights.
+
+They started by carefully surveying the work of previous experimenters,
+such as Lilienthal and Chanute, and from the lesson of some of the
+failures of these pioneers evolved certain new principles which were
+embodied in their first glider, built in 1900. In the first place,
+instead of relying upon the shifting of the operator's body to obtain
+balance, which had proved too slow to be reliable, they fitted in front
+of the main supporting surfaces what we now call an 'elevator,' which
+could be flexed, to control the longitudinal balance, from where the
+operator lay prone upon the main supporting surfaces. The second
+main innovation which they incorporated in this first glider, and the
+principle of which is still used in every aeroplane in existence, was
+the attainment of lateral balance by warping the extremities of the main
+planes. The effect of warping or pulling down the extremity of the wing
+on one side was to increase its lift and so cause that side to rise. In
+the first two gliders this control was also used for steering to right
+and left. Both these methods of control were novel for other than model
+work, as previous experimenters, such as Lilienthal and Pilcher, had
+relied entirely upon moving the legs or shifting the position of the
+body to control the longitudinal and lateral motions of their gliders.
+For the main supporting surfaces of the glider the biplane system of
+Chanute's gliders was adopted with certain modifications, while the
+curve of the wings was founded upon the calculations of Lilienthal as to
+wind pressure and consequent lift of the plane.
+
+This first glider was tested on the Kill Devil Hill sand-hills in North
+Carolina in the summer of 1900 and proved at any rate the correctness
+of the principles of the front elevator and warping wings, though its
+designers were puzzled by the fact that the lift was less than they
+expected; whilst the 'drag'(as we call it), or resistance, was also
+considerably lower than their predictions. The 1901 machine was, in
+consequence, nearly doubled in area--the lifting surface being increased
+from 165 to 308 square feet--the first trial taking place on July 27th,
+1901, again at Kill Devil Hill. It immediately appeared that something
+was wrong, as the machine dived straight to the ground, and it was only
+after the operator's position had been moved nearly a foot back from
+what had been calculated as the correct position that the machine would
+glide--and even then the elevator had to be used far more strongly than
+in the previous year's glider. After a good deal of thought the apparent
+solution of the trouble was finally found.
+
+This consisted in the fact that with curved surfaces, while at large
+angles the centre of pressure moves forward as the angle decreases, when
+a certain limit of angle is reached it travels suddenly backwards and
+causes the machine to dive. The Wrights had known of this tendency from
+Lilienthal's researches, but had imagined that the phenomenon would
+disappear if they used a fairly lightly cambered--or curved--surface
+with a very abrupt curve at the front. Having discovered what appeared
+to be the cause they surmounted the difficulty by 'trussing down' the
+camber of the wings, with the result that they at once got back to
+the old conditions of the previous year and could control the machine
+readily with small movements of the elevator, even being able to follow
+undulations in the ground. They still found, however, that the lift was
+not as great as it should have been; while the drag remained, as in
+the previous glider, surprisingly small. This threw doubt on previous
+figures as to wind resistance and pressure on curved surfaces; but
+at the same time confirmed (and this was a most important result)
+Lilienthal's previously questioned theory that at small angles the
+pressure on a curved surface instead of being normal, or at right angles
+to, the chord is in fact inclined in front of the perpendicular. The
+result of this is that the pressure actually tends to draw the machine
+forward into the wind--hence the small amount of drag, which had puzzled
+Wilbur and Orville Wright.
+
+Another lesson which was learnt from these first two years of
+experiment, was that where, as in a biplane, two surfaces are superposed
+one above the other, each of them has somewhat less lift than it would
+have if used alone. The experimenters were also still in doubt as to the
+efficiency of the warping method of controlling the lateral balance
+as it gave rise to certain phenomena which puzzled them, the machine
+turning towards the wing having the greater angle, which seemed also to
+touch the ground first, contrary to their expectations. Accordingly,
+on returning to Dayton towards the end of 1901, they set themselves to
+solve the various problems which had appeared and started on a
+lengthy series of experiments to check the previous figures as to wind
+resistance and lift of curved surfaces, besides setting themselves
+to grapple with the difficulty of lateral control. They accordingly
+constructed for themselves at their home in Dayton a wind tunnel 16
+inches square by 6 feet long in which they measured the lift and 'drag'
+of more than two hundred miniature wings. In the course of these tests
+they for the first time produced comparative results of the lift of
+oblong and square surfaces, with the result that they re-discovered the
+importance of 'aspect ratio'--the ratio of length to breadth of planes.
+As a result, in the next year's glider the aspect ration of the wings
+was increased from the three to one of the earliest model to about six
+to one, which is approximately the same as that used in the machines
+of to-day. Further than that, they discussed the question of lateral
+stability, and came to the conclusion that the cause of the trouble was
+that the effect of warping down one wing was to increase the resistance
+of, and consequently slow down, that wing to such an extent that its
+lift was reduced sufficiently to wipe out the anticipated increase in
+lift resulting from the warping. From this they deduced that if the
+speed of the warped wing could be controlled the advantage of increasing
+the angle by warping could be utilised as they originally intended.
+They therefore decided to fit a vertical fin at the rear which, if the
+machine attempted to turn, would be exposed more and more to the wind
+and so stop the turning motion by offering increased resistance.
+
+As a result of this laboratory research work the third Wright glider,
+which was taken to Kill Devil Hill in September, 1902, was far more
+efficient aerodynamically than either of its two predecessors, and was
+fitted with a fixed vertical fin at the rear in addition to the movable
+elevator in front. According to Mr Griffith Brewer,[*] this third glider
+contained 305 square feet of surface; though there may possibly be a
+mistake here, as he states[**] the surface of the previous year's glider
+to have been only 290 square feet, whereas Wilbur Wright himself[***]
+states it to have been 308 square feet. The matter is not, perhaps, save
+historically, of much importance, except that the gliders are believed
+to have been progressively larger, and therefore if we accept Wilbur
+Wright's own figure of the surface of the second glider, the third
+must have had a greater area than that given by Mr Griffith Brewer.
+Unfortunately, no evidence of the Wright Brothers themselves on this
+point is available.
+
+[*] Fourth Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, Aeronautical Journal, Vol.
+XX, No. 79, page 75.
+
+[**] Ibid. page 73.
+
+[***] Ibid. pp. 91 and 102.
+
+The first glide of the 1902, season was made on September 17th of that
+year, and the new machine at once showed itself an improvement on its
+predecessors, though subsequent trials showed that the difficulty
+of lateral balance had not been entirely overcome. It was decided,
+therefore, to turn the vertical fin at the rear into a rudder by making
+it movable. At the same time it was realised that there was a definite
+relation between lateral balance and directional control, and the rudder
+controls and wing-warping wires were accordingly connected This ended
+the pioneer gliding experiments of Wilbur and Orville Wright--though
+further glides were made in subsequent years--as the following year,
+1903, saw the first power-driven machine leave the ground.
+
+To recapitulate--in the course of these original experiments the Wrights
+confirmed Lilienthal's theory of the reversal of the centre of pressure
+on cambered surfaces at small angles of incidence: they confirmed the
+importance of high aspect ratio in respect to lift: they had evolved new
+and more accurate tables of lift and pressure on cambered surfaces:
+they were the first to use a movable horizontal elevator for controlling
+height: they were the first to adjust the wings to different angles of
+incidence to maintain lateral balance: and they were the first to use
+the movable rudder and adjustable wings in combination.
+
+They now considered that they had gone far enough to justify them in
+building a power-driven 'flier,' as they called their first aeroplane.
+They could find no suitable engine and so proceeded to build for
+themselves an internal combustion engine, which was designed to give
+8 horse-power, but when completed actually developed about 12-15
+horse-power and weighed 240 lbs. The complete machine weighed about
+750 lbs. Further details of the first Wright aeroplane are difficult to
+obtain, and even those here given should be received with some caution.
+The first flight was made on December 17th 1903, and lasted 12 seconds.
+Others followed immediately, and the fourth lasted 59 seconds, a
+distance of 852 feet being covered against a 20-mile wind.
+
+The following year they transferred operations to a field outside
+Dayton, Ohio (their home), and there they flew a somewhat larger and
+heavier machine with which on September 20th 1904, they completed the
+first circle in the air. In this machine for the first time the pilot
+had a seat; all the previous experiments having been carried out with
+the operator lying prone on the lower wing. This was followed next
+year by another still larger machine, and on it they carried out many
+flights. During the course of these flights they satisfied themselves as
+to the cause of a phenomenon which had puzzled them during the previous
+year and caused them to fear that they had not solved the problem
+of lateral control. They found that on occasions--always when on a
+turn--the machine began to slide down towards the ground and that no
+amount of warping could stop it. Finally it was found that if the nose
+of the machine was tilted down a recovery could be effected; from which
+they concluded that what actually happened was that the machine, 'owing
+to the increased load caused by centrifugal force,' had insufficient
+power to maintain itself in the air and therefore lost speed until a
+point was reached at which the controls became inoperative. In other
+words, this was the first experience of 'stalling on a turn,' which is a
+danger against which all embryo pilots have to guard in the early stages
+of their training.
+
+The 1905 machine was, like its predecessors, a biplane with a biplane
+elevator in front and a double vertical rudder in rear. The span was 40
+feet, the chord of the wings being 6 feet and the gap between them about
+the same. The total area was about 600 square feet which supported
+a total weight of 925 lbs.; while the motor was 12 to 15 horse-power
+driving two propellers on each side behind the main planes through
+chains and giving the machine a speed of about 30 m.p.h. one of
+these chains was crossed so that the propellers revolved in opposite
+directions to avoid the torque which it was feared would be set up
+if they both revolved the same way. The machine was not fitted with a
+wheeled undercarriage but was carried on two skids, which also acted as
+outriggers to carry the elevator. Consequently, a mechanical method of
+launching had to be evolved and the machine received initial velocity
+from a rail, along which it was drawn by the impetus provided by the
+falling of a weight from a wooden tower or 'pylon.' As a result of this
+the Wright aeroplane in its original form had to be taken back to its
+starting rail after each flight, and could not restart from the point of
+alighting. Perhaps, in comparison with French machines of more or less
+contemporary date (evolved on independent lines in ignorance of the
+Americans' work), the chief feature of the Wright biplane of 1905
+was that it relied entirely upon the skill of the operator for its
+stability; whereas in France some attempt was being made, although
+perhaps not very successfully, to make the machine automatically stable
+laterally. The performance of the Wrights in carrying a loading of some
+60 lbs. per horse-power is one which should not be overlooked. The wing
+loading was about 1 1/2 lbs. per square foot.
+
+About the same time that the Wrights were carrying out their
+power-driven experiments, a band of pioneers was quite independently
+beginning to approach success in France. In practically every case,
+however, they started from a somewhat different standpoint and took
+as their basic idea the cellular (or box) kite. This form of kite,
+consisting of two superposed surfaces connected at each end by a
+vertical panel or curtain of fabric, had proved extremely successful for
+man-carrying purposes, and, therefore, it was little wonder that several
+minds conceived the idea of attempting to fly by fitting a series
+of box-kites with an engine. The first to achieve success was M.
+Santos-Dumont, the famous Brazilian pioneer-designer of airships, who,
+on November 12th, 1906, made several flights, the last of which covered
+a little over 700 feet. Santos-Dumont's machine consisted essentially of
+two box-kites, forming the main wings, one on each side of the body, in
+which the pilot stood, and at the front extremity of which was another
+movable box-kite to act as elevator and rudder. The curtains at the ends
+were intended to give lateral stability, which was further ensured by
+setting the wings slightly inclined upwards from the centre, so that
+when seen from the front they formed a wide V. This feature is still
+to be found in many aeroplanes to-day and has come to be known as the
+'dihedral.' The motor was at first of 24 horse-power, for which later a
+50 horse-power Antoinette engine was substituted; whilst a three-wheeled
+undercarriage was provided, so that the machine could start without
+external mechanical aid. The machine was constructed of bamboo and
+steel, the weight being as low as 352 lbs. The span was 40 feet, the
+length being 33 feet, with a total surface of main planes of 860 square
+feet. It will thus be seen--for comparison with the Wright machine--that
+the weight per horse-power (with the 50 horse-power engine) was only 7
+lbs., while the wing loading was equally low at 1/2 lb. per square foot.
+
+The main features of the Santos-Dumont machine were the box-kite form of
+construction, with a dihedral angle on the main planes, and the forward
+elevator which could be moved in any direction and therefore acted in
+the same way as the rudder at the rear of the Wright biplane. It had a
+single propeller revolving in the centre behind the wings and was fitted
+with an undercarriage incorporated in the machine.
+
+The other chief French experimenters at this period were the Voisin
+Freres, whose first two machines--identical in form--were sold to
+Delagrange and H. Farman, which has sometimes caused confusion, the two
+purchasers being credited with the design they bought. The Voisins, like
+the Wrights, based their designs largely on the experimental work of
+Lilienthal, Langley, Chanute, and others, though they also carried out
+tests on the lifting properties of aerofoils in a wind tunnel of their
+own. Their first machines, like those of Santos-Dumont, showed the
+effects of experimenting with box-kites, some of which they had built
+for M. Ernest Archdeacon in 1904. In their case the machine, which was
+again a biplane, had, like both the others previously mentioned, an
+elevator in front--though in this case of monoplane form--and, as in
+the Wright, a rudder was fitted in rear of the main planes. The Voisins,
+however, fitted a fixed biplane horizontal 'tail'--in an effort to
+obtain a measure of automatic longitudinal stability--between the two
+surfaces of which the single rudder worked. For lateral stability they
+depended entirely on end curtains between the upper and lower
+surfaces of both the main planes and biplane tail surfaces. They, like
+Santos-Dumont, fitted a wheeled undercarriage, so that the machine
+was self-contained. The Voisin machine, then, was intended to be
+automatically stable in both senses; whereas the Wrights deliberately
+produced a machine which was entirely dependent upon the pilot's
+skill for its stability. The dimensions of the Voisin may be given for
+comparative purposes, and were as follows: Span 33 feet with a chord
+(width from back to front) of main planes of 6 1/2 feet, giving a total
+area of 430 square feet. The 50 horse-power Antoinette engine, which
+was enclosed in the body (or 'nacelle ') in the front of which the pilot
+sat, drove a propeller behind, revolving between the outriggers carrying
+the tail. The total weight, including Farman as pilot, is given as 1,540
+lbs., so that the machine was much heavier than either of the others;
+the weight per horse-power being midway between the Santos-Dumont
+and the Wright at 31 lbs. per square foot, while the wing loading was
+considerably greater than either at 3 1/2 lbs. per square foot. The
+Voisin machine was experimented with by Farman and Delagrange from about
+June 1907 onwards, and was in the subsequent years developed by Farman;
+and right up to the commencement of the War upheld the principles of
+the box-kite method of construction for training purposes. The chief
+modification of the original design was the addition of flaps (or
+ailerons) at the rear extremities of the main planes to give lateral
+control, in a manner analogous to the wing-warping method invented by
+the Wrights, as a result of which the end curtains between the planes
+were abolished. An additional elevator was fitted at the rear of the
+fixed biplane tail, which eventually led to the discarding of the front
+elevator altogether. During the same period the Wright machine came into
+line with the others by the fitting of a wheeled undercarriage integral
+with the machine. A fixed horizontal tail was also added to the rear
+rudder, to which a movable elevator was later attached; and, finally,
+the front elevator was done away with. It will thus be seen that having
+started from the very different standpoints of automatic stability and
+complete control by the pilot, the Voisin (as developed in the Farman)
+and Wright machines, through gradual evolution finally resulted in
+aeroplanes of similar characteristics embodying a modicum of both
+features.
+
+Before proceeding to the next stage of progress mention should be made
+of the experimental work of Captain Ferber in France. This officer
+carried out a large number of experiments with gliders contemporarily
+with the Wrights, adopting--like them--the Chanute biplane principle. He
+adopted the front elevator from the Wrights, but immediately went a step
+farther by also fitting a fixed tail in rear, which did not become a
+feature of the Wright machine until some seven or eight years later. He
+built and appeared to have flown a machine fitted with a motor in 1905,
+and was commissioned to go to America by the French War Office on a
+secret mission to the Wrights. Unfortunately, no complete account of his
+experiments appears to exist, though it can be said that his work was at
+least as important as that of any of the other pioneers mentioned.
+
+
+
+
+II. MULTIPLICITY OF IDEAS
+
+In a review of progress such as this, it is obviously impossible, when
+a certain stage of development has been reached, owing to the very
+multiplicity of experimenters, to continue dealing in anything
+approaching detail with all the different types of machines; and it is
+proposed, therefore, from this point to deal only with tendencies, and
+to mention individuals merely as examples of a class of thought rather
+than as personalities, as it is often difficult fairly to allocate the
+responsibility for any particular innovation.
+
+During 1907 and 1908 a new type of machine, in the monoplane, began to
+appear from the workshops of Louis Bleriot, Robert Esnault-Pelterie, and
+others, which was destined to give rise to long and bitter controversies
+on the relative advantages of the two types, into which it is not
+proposed to enter here; though the rumblings of the conflict are still
+to be heard by discerning ears. Bleriot's early monoplanes had certain
+new features, such as the location of the pilot, and in some cases the
+engine, below the wing; but in general his monoplanes, particularly the
+famous No. XI on which the first Channel crossing was made on July
+25th, 1909, embodied the main principles of the Wright and Voisin
+types, except that the propeller was in front of instead of behind the
+supporting surfaces, and was, therefore, what is called a 'tractor' in
+place of the then more conventional 'pusher.' Bleriot aimed at lateral
+balance by having the tip of each wing pivoted, though he soon fell into
+line with the Wrights and adopted the warping system. The main features
+of the design of Esnault-Pelterie's monoplane was the inverted dihedral
+(or kathedral as this was called in Mr S. F. Cody's British Army Biplane
+of 1907) on the wings, whereby the tips were considerably lower than
+the roots at the body. This was designed to give automatic lateral
+stability, but, here again, conventional practice was soon adopted and
+the R.E.P. monoplanes, which became well-known in this country through
+their adoption in the early days by Messrs Vickers, were of the ordinary
+monoplane design, consisting of a tractor propeller with wire-stayed
+wings, the pilot being in an enclosed fuselage containing the engine in
+front and carrying at its rear extremity fixed horizontal and vertical
+surfaces combined with movable elevators and rudder. Constructionally,
+the R.E.P. monoplane was of extreme interest as the body was constructed
+of steel. The Antoinette monoplane, so ably flown by Latham, was another
+very famous machine of the 1909-1910 period, though its performance were
+frequently marred by engine failure; which was indeed the bugbear of all
+these early experimenters, and it is difficult to say, after this lapse
+of time, how far in many cases the failures which occurred, both in
+performances and even in the actual ability to rise from the ground,
+were due to defects in design or merely faults in the primitive engines
+available. The Antoinette aroused admiration chiefly through its
+graceful, birdlike lines, which have probably never been equalled; but
+its chief interest for our present purpose lies in the novel method of
+wing-staying which was employed. Contemporary monoplanes practically
+all had their wings stayed by wires to a post in the centre above the
+fuselage, and, usually, to the undercarriage below. In the Antoinette,
+however, a king post was introduced half-way along the wing, from which
+wires were carried to the ends of the wings and the body. This
+was intended to give increased strength and permitted of a greater
+wing-spread and consequently improved aspect ratio. The same system of
+construction was adopted in the British Martinsyde monoplanes of two or
+three years later.
+
+This period also saw the production of the first triplane, which was
+built by A. V. Roe in England and was fitted with a J.A.P. engine of
+only 9 horse-power--an amazing performance which remains to this day
+unequalled. Mr Roe's triplane was chiefly interesting otherwise for
+the method of maintaining longitudinal control, which was achieved
+by pivoting the whole of the three main planes so that their angle
+of incidence could be altered. This was the direct converse of the
+universal practice of elevating by means of a subsidiary surface either
+in front or rear of the main planes.
+
+Recollection of the various flying meetings and exhibitions which one
+attended during the years from 1909 to 1911, or even 1912 are chiefly
+notable for the fact that the first thought on seeing any new type of
+machine was not as to what its 'performance'--in speed, lift, or what
+not--would be; but speculation as to whether it would leave the ground
+at all when eventually tried. This is perhaps the best indication of the
+outstanding characteristic of that interim period between the time of
+the first actual flights and the later period, commencing about 1912,
+when ideas had become settled and it was at last becoming possible to
+forecast on the drawing-board the performance of the completed machine
+in the air. Without going into details, for which there is no space
+here, it is difficult to convey the correct impression of the chaotic
+state which existed as to even the elementary principles of aeroplane
+design. All the exhibitions contained large numbers--one had almost
+written a majority--of machines which embodied the most unusual features
+and which never could, and in practice never did, leave the ground.
+At the same time, there were few who were sufficiently hardy to say
+certainly that this or that innovation was wrong; and consequently
+dozens of inventors in every country were conducting isolated
+experiments on both good and bad lines. All kinds of devices, mechanical
+and otherwise, were claimed as the solution of the problem of stability,
+and there was even controversy as to whether any measure of stability
+was not undesirable; one school maintaining that the only safety lay
+in the pilot having the sole say in the attitude of the machine at any
+given moment, and fearing danger from the machine having any mind of
+its own, so to speak. There was, as in most controversies, some right
+on both sides, and when we come to consider the more settled period from
+1912 to the outbreak of the War in 1914 we shall find how a compromise
+was gradually effected.
+
+At the same time, however, though it was at the time difficult to pick
+out, there was very real progress being made, and, though a number of
+'freak' machines fell out by the wayside, the pioneer designers of those
+days learnt by a process of trial and error the right principles to
+follow and gradually succeeded in getting their ideas crystallised.
+
+In connection with stability mention must be made of a machine which
+was evolved in the utmost secrecy by Mr J. W. Dunne in a remote part
+of Scotland under subsidy from the War office. This type, which was
+constructed in both monoplane and biplane form, showed that it was
+in fact possible in 1910 and 1911 to design an aeroplane which could
+definitely be left to fly itself in the air. One of the Dunne machines
+was, for example flown from Farnborough to Salisbury Plain without any
+control other than the rudder being touched; and on another occasion it
+flew a complete circle with all controls locked automatically assuming
+the correct bank for the radius of turn. The peculiar form of wing used,
+the camber of which varied from the root to the tip, gave rise however,
+to a certain loss in efficiency, and there was also a difficulty in the
+pilot assuming adequate control when desired. Other machines designed to
+be stable--such as the German Etrich and the British Weiss gliders and
+Handley-Page monoplanes--were based on the analogy of a wing attached
+to a certain seed found in Nature (the 'Zanonia' leaf), on the righting
+effect of back-sloped wings combined with upturned (or 'negative') tips.
+Generally speaking, however, the machines of the 1909-1912 period relied
+for what automatic stability they had on the principle of the dihedral
+angle, or flat V, both longitudinally and laterally. Longitudinally this
+was obtained by setting the tail at a slightly smaller angle than the
+main planes.
+
+The question of reducing the resistance by adopting 'stream-line' forms,
+along which the air could flow uninterruptedly without the formation
+of eddies, was not at first properly realised, though credit should be
+given to Edouard Nieuport, who in 1909 produced a monoplane with a
+very large body which almost completely enclosed the pilot and made the
+machine very fast, for those days, with low horse-power. On one of these
+machines C. T. Weyman won the Gordon-Bennett Cup for America in 1911
+and another put up a fine performance in the same race with only a 30
+horse-power engine. The subject, was however, early taken up by the
+British Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, which was established by
+the Government in 1909, and designers began to realise the importance
+of streamline struts and fuselages towards the end of this transition
+period. These efforts were at first not always successful and showed at
+times a lack of understanding of the problems involved, but there was
+a very marked improvement during the year 1912. At the Paris Aero Salon
+held early in that year there was a notable variety of ideas on the
+subject; whereas by the time of the one held in October designs had
+considerably settled down, more than one exhibitor showing what were
+called 'monocoque' fuselages completely circular in shape and having
+very low resistance, while the same show saw the introduction of
+rotating cowls over the propeller bosses, or 'spinners,' as they came to
+be called during the War. A particularly fine example of stream-lining
+was to be found in the Deperdussin monoplane on which Vedrines won
+back the Gordon-Bennett Aviation Cup from America at a speed of 105.5
+m.p.h.--a considerable improvement on the 78 m.p.h. of the preceding
+year, which was by no means accounted for by the mere increase in engine
+power from 100 horse-power to 140 horse-power. This machine was the
+first in which the refinement of 'stream-lining' the pilot's head, which
+became a feature of subsequent racing machines, was introduced. This
+consisted of a circular padded excresence above the cockpit immediately
+behind the pilot's head, which gradually tapered off into the top
+surface of the fuselage. The object was to give the air an uninterrupted
+flow instead of allowing it to be broken up into eddies behind the
+head of the pilot, and it also provided a support against the enormous
+wind-pressure encountered. This true stream-line form of fuselage owed
+its introduction to the Paulhan-Tatin 'Torpille' monoplane of the Paris
+Salon of early 1917. Altogether the end of the year 1912 began to see
+the disappearance of 'freak' machines with all sorts of original ideas
+for the increase of stability and performance. Designs had by then
+gradually become to a considerable extent standardised, and it had
+become unusual to find a machine built which would fail to fly. The
+Gnome engine held the field owing to its advantages, as the first of
+the rotary type, in lightness and ease of fitting into the nose of a
+fuselage. The majority of machines were tractors (propeller in front)
+although a preference, which died down subsequently, was still shown for
+the monoplane over the biplane. This year also saw a great increase
+in the number of seaplanes, although the 'flying boat' type had only
+appeared at intervals and the vast majority were of the ordinary
+aeroplane type fitted with floats in place of the land undercarriage;
+which type was at that time commonly called 'hydro-aeroplane.' The usual
+horse power was 50--that of the smallest Gnome engine--although engines
+of 100 to 140 horse-power were also fitted occasionally. The average
+weight per horse-power varied from 18 to 25 lbs., while the wing-loading
+was usually in the neighbourhood of 5 to 6 lbs. per square foot. The
+average speed ranged from 65-75 miles per hour.
+
+
+
+
+III. PROGRESS ON STANDARDISED LINES
+
+In the last section an attempt has been made to show how, during what
+was from the design standpoint perhaps the most critical period, order
+gradually became evident out of chaos, ill-considered ideas dropped out
+through failure to make good, and, though there was still plenty of room
+for improvement in details, the bulk of the aeroplanes showed a general
+similarity in form and conception. There was still a great deal to be
+learnt in finding the best form of wing section, and performances were
+still low; but it had become definitely possible to say that flying had
+emerged from the chrysalis stage and had become a science. The period
+which now began was one of scientific development and improvement--in
+performance, manoeuvrability, and general airworthiness and stability.
+
+The British Military Aeroplane Competition held in the summer of 1912
+had done much to show the requirements in design by giving possibly
+the first opportunity for a definite comparison of the performance
+of different machines as measured by impartial observers on standard
+lines--albeit the methods of measuring were crude. These showed that a
+high speed--for those days--of 75 miles an hour or so was attended by
+disadvantages in the form of an equally fast low speed, of 50 miles per
+hour or more, and generally may be said to have given designers an idea
+what to aim for and in what direction improvements were required. In
+fact, the most noticeable point perhaps of the machines of this time was
+the marked manner in which a machine that was good in one respect
+would be found to be wanting in others. It had not yet been possible
+to combine several desirable attributes in one machine. The nearest
+approach to this was perhaps to be found in the much discussed
+Government B.E.2 machine, which was produced from the Royal Aircraft
+Factory at Farnborough, in the summer of 1912. Though considerably
+criticized from many points of view it was perhaps the nearest approach
+to a machine of all-round efficiency that had up to that date appeared.
+The climbing rate, which subsequently proved so important for military
+purposes, was still low, seldom, if ever, exceeding 400 feet per minute;
+while gliding angles (ratio of descent to forward travel over the ground
+with engine stopped) little exceeded 1 in 8.
+
+The year 1912 and 1913 saw the subsequently all-conquering tractor
+biplane begin to come into its own. This type, which probably originated
+in England, and at any rate attained to its greatest excellence prior to
+the War from the drawing offices of the Avro Bristol and Sopwith firms,
+dealt a blow at the monoplane from which the latter never recovered.
+
+The two-seater tractor biplane produced by Sopwith and piloted by H. G.
+Hawker, showed that it was possible to produce a biplane with at least
+equal speed to the best monoplanes, whilst having the advantage of
+greater strength and lower landing speeds. The Sopwith machine had a top
+speed of over 80 miles an hour while landing as slowly as little more
+than 30 miles an hour; and also proved that it was possible to carry 3
+passengers with fuel for 4 hours' flight with a motive power of only 80
+horse-power. This increase in efficiency was due to careful attention to
+detail in every part, improved wing sections, clean fuselage-lines, and
+simplified undercarriages. At the same time, in the early part of 1913
+a tendency manifested itself towards the four-wheeled undercarriage,
+a pair of smaller wheels being added in front of the main wheels to
+prevent overturning while running on the ground; and several designs of
+oleo-pneumatic and steel-spring undercarriages were produced in place
+of the rubber shock-absorber type which had up till then been almost
+universal.
+
+These two statements as to undercarriage designs may appear to be
+contradictory, but in reality they do not conflict as they both showed
+a greater attention to the importance of good springing, combined with
+a desire to avoid complication and a mass of struts and wires which
+increased head resistance.
+
+The Olympia Aero Show of March, 1913, also produced a machine which,
+although the type was not destined to prove the best for the purpose for
+which it was designed, was of interest as being the first to be designed
+specially for war purposes. This was the Vickers 'Gun-bus,' a 'pusher'
+machine, with the propeller revolving behind the main planes between the
+outriggers carrying the tail, with a seat right in front for a gunner
+who was provided with a machine gun on a swivelling mount which had a
+free field of fire in every direction forward. The device which proved
+the death-blow for this type of aircraft during the war will be dealt
+with in the appropriate place later, but the machine should not go
+unrecorded.
+
+As a result of a number of accidents to monoplanes the Government
+appointed a Committee at the end of 1912 to inquire into the causes of
+these. The report which was presented in March, 1913, exonerated the
+monoplane by coming to the conclusion that the accidents were not caused
+by conditions peculiar to monoplanes, but pointed out certain
+desiderata in aeroplane design generally which are worth recording. They
+recommended that the wings of aeroplanes should be so internally braced
+as to have sufficient strength in themselves not to collapse if the
+external bracing wires should give way. The practice, more common in
+monoplanes than biplanes, of carrying important bracing wires from
+the wings to the undercarriage was condemned owing to the liability of
+damage from frequent landings. They also pointed out the desirability of
+duplicating all main wires and their attachments, and of using stranded
+cable for control wires. Owing to the suspicion that one accident at
+least had been caused through the tearing of the fabric away from the
+wing, it was recommended that fabric should be more securely fastened to
+the ribs of the wings, and that devices for preventing the spreading of
+tears should be considered. In the last connection it is interesting to
+note that the French Deperdussin firm produced a fabric wing-covering
+with extra strong threads run at right-angles through the fabric at
+intervals in order to limit the tearing to a defined area.
+
+In spite, however, of the whitewashing of the monoplane by the
+Government Committee just mentioned, considerable stir was occasioned
+later in the year by the decision of the War office not to order any
+more monoplanes; and from this time forward until the War period the
+British Army was provided exclusively with biplanes. Even prior to this
+the popularity of the monoplane had begun to wane. At the Olympia
+Aero Show in March, 1913, biplanes for the first time outnumbered the
+'single-deckers'(as the Germans call monoplanes); which had the effect
+of reducing the wing-loading. In the case of the biplanes exhibited
+this averaged about 4 1/2 lbs. per square foot, while in the case of
+the monoplanes in the same exhibition the lowest was 5 1/2 lbs., and
+the highest over 8 1/2 lbs. per square foot of area. It may here be
+mentioned that it was not until the War period that the importance
+of loading per horse-power was recognised as the true criterion of
+aeroplane efficiency, far greater interest being displayed in the amount
+of weight borne per unit area of wing.
+
+An idea of the state of development arrived at about this time may be
+gained from the fact that the Commandant of the Military Wing of the
+Royal Flying Corps in a lecture before the Royal Aeronautical Society
+read in February, 1913, asked for single-seater scout aeroplanes with
+a speed of 90 miles an hour and a landing speed of 45 miles an hour--a
+performance which even two years later would have been considered modest
+in the extreme. It serves to show that, although higher performances
+were put up by individual machines on occasion, the general development
+had not yet reached the stage when such performances could be obtained
+in machines suitable for military purposes. So far as seaplanes were
+concerned, up to the beginning of 1913 little attempt had been made to
+study the novel problems involved, and the bulk of the machines at the
+Monaco Meeting in April, 1913, for instance, consisted of land machines
+fitted with floats, in many cases of a most primitive nature, without
+other alterations. Most of those which succeeded in leaving the water
+did so through sheer pull of engine power; while practically all were
+incapable of getting off except in a fair sea, which enabled the pilot
+to jump the machine into the air across the trough between two waves.
+Stability problems had not yet been considered, and in only one or two
+cases was fin area added at the rear high up, to counterbalance the
+effect of the floats low down in front. Both twin and single-float
+machines were used, while the flying boat was only just beginning
+to come into being from the workshops of Sopwith in Great Britain,
+Borel-Denhaut in France, and Curtiss in America. In view of the
+approaching importance of amphibious seaplanes, mention should be made
+of the flying boat (or 'bat boat' as it was called, following
+Rudyard Kipling) which was built by Sopwith in 1913 with a wheeled
+landing-carriage which could be wound up above the bottom surface of the
+boat so as to be out of the way when alighting on water.
+
+During 1913 the (at one time almost universal) practice originated by
+the Wright Brothers, of warping the wings for lateral stability, began
+to die out and the bulk of aeroplanes began to be fitted with flaps
+(or 'ailerons') instead. This was a distinct change for the better, as
+continually warping the wings by bending down the extremities of the
+rear spars was bound in time to produce 'fatigue' in that member and
+lead to breakage; and the practice became completely obsolete during the
+next two or three years.
+
+The Gordon-Bennett race of September, 1913, was again won by a
+Deperdussin machine, somewhat similar to that of the previous year, but
+with exceedingly small wings, only 107 square feet in area. The shape
+of these wings was instructive as showing how what, from the general
+utility point of view, may be disadvantageous can, for a special
+purpose, be turned to account. With a span of 21 feet, the chord was
+5 feet, giving the inefficient 'aspect ratio' of slightly over 4 to
+1 only. The object of this was to reduce the lift, and therefore the
+resistance, to as low a point as possible. The total weight was 1,500
+lbs., giving a wing-loading of 14 lbs. per square foot--a hitherto
+undreamt-of figure. The result was that the machine took an enormously
+long run before starting; and after touching the ground on landing ran
+for nearly a mile before stopping; but she beat all records by attaining
+a speed of 126 miles per hour. Where this performance is mainly
+interesting is in contrast to the machines of 1920, which with an even
+higher speed capacity would yet be able to land at not more than 40 or
+50 miles per hour, and would be thoroughly efficient flying machines.
+
+The Rheims Aviation Meeting, at which the Gordon-Bennett race was flown,
+also saw the first appearance of the Morane 'Parasol' monoplane. The
+Morane monoplane had been for some time an interesting machine as being
+the only type which had no fixed surface in rear to give automatic
+stability, the movable elevator being balanced through being hinged
+about one-third of the way back from the front edge. This made the
+machine difficult to fly except in the hands of experts, but it was
+very quick and handy on the controls and therefore useful for racing
+purposes. In the 'Parasol' the modification was introduced of raising
+the wing above the body, the pilot looking out beneath it, in order to
+give as good a view as possible.
+
+Before passing to the year 1914 mention should be made of the feat
+performed by Nesteroff, a Russian, and Pegoud, a French pilot, who were
+the first to demonstrate the possibilities of flying upside-down and
+looping the loop. Though perhaps not coming strictly within the purview
+of a chapter on design (though certain alterations were made to the top
+wing-bracing of the machine for this purpose) this performance was
+of extreme importance to the development of aviation by showing the
+possibility of recovering, given reasonable height, from any position in
+the air; which led designers to consider the extra stresses to which an
+aeroplane might be subjected and to take steps to provide for them by
+increasing strength where necessary.
+
+When the year 1914 opened a speed of 126 miles per hour had been
+attained and a height of 19,600 feet had been reached. The Sopwith and
+Avro (the forerunner of the famous training machine of the War period)
+were probably the two leading tractor biplanes of the world, both
+two-seaters with a speed variation from 40 miles per hour up to some
+90 miles per hour with 80 horse-power engines. The French were still
+pinning their faith mainly to monoplanes, while the Germans were
+beginning to come into prominence with both monoplanes and biplanes of
+the 'Taube' type. These had wings swept backward and also upturned
+at the wing-tips which, though it gave a certain measure of automatic
+stability, rendered the machine somewhat clumsy in the air, and their
+performances were not on the whole as high as those of either France or
+Great Britain.
+
+Early in 1914 it became known that the experimental work of Edward
+Busk--who was so lamentably killed during an experimental flight later
+in the year--following upon the researches of Bairstow and others had
+resulted in the production at the Royal Aircraft Factory at Farnborough
+of a truly automatically stable aeroplane. This was the 'R.E.'
+(Reconnaissance Experimental), a development of the B.E. which has
+already been referred to. The remarkable feature of this design was that
+there was no particular device to which one could point out as the cause
+of the stability. The stable result was attained simply by detailed
+design of each part of the aeroplane, with due regard to its relation
+to, and effect on, other parts in the air. Weights and areas were so
+nicely arranged that under practically any conditions the machine tended
+to right itself. It did not, therefore, claim to be a machine which it
+was impossible to upset, but one which if left to itself would tend
+to right itself from whatever direction a gust might come. When the
+principles were extended to the 'B.E. 2c' type (largely used at the
+outbreak of the War) the latter machine, if the engine were switched of
+f at a height of not less than 1,000 feet above the ground, would after
+a few moments assume its correct gliding angle and glide down to the
+ground.
+
+The Paris Aero Salon of December, 1913, had been remarkable chiefly for
+the large number of machines of which the chassis and bodywork had been
+constructed of steel-tubing; for the excess of monoplanes over biplanes;
+and (in the latter) predominance of 'pusher' machines (with propeller
+in rear of the main planes) compared with the growing British preference
+for 'tractors' (with air screw in front). Incidentally, the Maurice
+Farman, the last relic of the old type box-kite with elevator in front
+appeared shorn of this prefix, and became known as the 'short-horn' in
+contradistinction to its front-elevatored predecessor which, owing to
+its general reliability and easy flying capabilities, had long been
+affectionately called the 'mechanical cow.' The 1913 Salon also saw
+some lingering attempts at attaining automatic stability by pendulum and
+other freak devices.
+
+Apart from the appearance of 'R.E.1,' perhaps the most notable
+development towards the end of 1913 was the appearance of the Sopwith
+'Tabloid 'tractor biplane. This single-seater machine, evolved from
+the two-seater previously referred to, fitted with a Gnome engine of 80
+horse-power, had the, for those days, remarkable speed of 92 miles an
+hour; while a still more notable feature was that it could remain in
+level flight at not more than 37 miles per hour. This machine is of
+particular importance because it was the prototype and forerunner of the
+successive designs of single-seater scout fighting machines which were
+used so extensively from 1914 to 1918. It was also probably the first
+machine to be capable of reaching a height of 1,000 feet within one
+minute. It was closely followed by the 'Bristol Bullet,' which was
+exhibited at the Olympia Aero Show of March, 1914. This last pre-war
+show was mainly remarkable for the good workmanship displayed--rather
+than for any distinct advance in design. In fact, there was a notable
+diversity in the types displayed, but in detailed design considerable
+improvements were to be seen, such as the general adoption of stranded
+steel cable in place of piano wire for the mail bracing.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE WAR PERIOD
+
+Up to this point an attempt has been made to give some idea of the
+progress that was made during the eleven years that had elapsed since
+the days of the Wrights' first flights. Much advance had been made and
+aeroplanes had settled down, superficially at any rate, into more or
+less standardised forms in three main types--tractor monoplanes, tractor
+biplanes, and pusher biplanes. Through the application of the results
+of experiments with models in wind tunnels to full-scale machines,
+considerable improvements had been made in the design of wing sections,
+which had greatly increased the efficiency of aeroplanes by raising the
+amount of 'lift' obtained from the wing compared with the 'drag' (or
+resistance to forward motion) which the same wing would cause. In the
+same way the shape of bodies, interplane struts, etc., had been
+improved to be of better stream-line shape, for the further reduction
+of resistance; while the problems of stability were beginning to be
+tolerably well understood. Records (for what they are worth) stood
+at 21,000 feet as far as height was concerned, 126 miles per hour for
+speed, and 24 hours duration. That there was considerable room for
+development is, however, evidenced by a statement made by the late B.
+C. Hucks (the famous pilot) in the course of an address delivered before
+the Royal Aeronautical Society in July, 1914. 'I consider,' he said,
+'that the present day standard of flying is due far more to the
+improvement in piloting than to the improvement in machines.... I
+consider those (early 1914) machines are only slight improvements on
+the machines of three years ago, and yet they are put through evolutions
+which, at that time, were not even dreamed of. I can take a good example
+of the way improvement in piloting has outdistanced improvement in
+machines--in the case of myself, my 'looping' Bleriot. Most of you know
+that there is very little difference between that machine and the 50
+horse-power Bleriot of three years ago.' This statement was, of course,
+to some extent an exaggeration and was by no means agreed with by
+designers, but there was at the same time a germ of truth in it. There
+is at any rate little doubt that the theory and practice of aeroplane
+design made far greater strides towards becoming an exact science during
+the four years of War than it had done during the six or seven years
+preceding it.
+
+It is impossible in the space at disposal to treat of this development
+even with the meagre amount of detail that has been possible while
+covering the 'settling down' period from 1911 to 1914, and it is
+proposed, therefore, to indicate the improvements by sketching briefly
+the more noticeable difference in various respects between the average
+machine of 1914 and a similar machine of 1918.
+
+In the first place, it was soon found that it was possible to obtain
+greater efficiency and, in particular, higher speeds, from tractor
+machines than from pusher machines with the air screw behind the main
+planes. This was for a variety of reasons connected with the efficiency
+of propellers and the possibility of reducing resistance to a greater
+extent in tractor machines by using a 'stream-line' fuselage (or body)
+to connect the main planes with the tail. Full advantage of this could
+not be taken, however, owing to the difficulty of fixing a machine-gun
+in a forward direction owing to the presence of the propeller. This was
+finally overcome by an ingenious device (known as an 'Interrupter gear')
+which allowed the gun to fire only when none of the propeller blades
+was passing in front of the muzzle. The monoplane gradually fell into
+desuetude, mainly owing to the difficulty of making that type adequately
+strong without it becoming prohibitively heavy, and also because of its
+high landing speed and general lack of manoeuvrability. The triplane
+was also little used except in one or two instances, and, practically
+speaking, every machine was of the biplane tractor type.
+
+A careful consideration of the salient features leading to maximum
+efficiency in aeroplanes--particularly in regard to speed and climb,
+which were the two most important military requirements--showed that
+a vital feature was the reduction in the amount of weight lifted per
+horse-power employed; which in 1914 averaged from 20 to 25 lbs. This was
+effected both by gradual increase in the power and size of the engines
+used and by great improvement in their detailed design (by increasing
+compression ratio and saving weight whenever possible); with the result
+that the motive power of single-seater aeroplanes rose from 80 and 100
+horse-power in 1914 to an average of 200 to 300 horse-power, while the
+actual weight of the engine fell from 3 1/2-4 lbs. per horse-power to an
+average of 2 1/2 lbs. per horse-power. This meant that while a pre-war
+engine of 100 horse-power would weigh some 400 lbs., the 1918 engine
+developing three times the power would have less than double the weight.
+The result of this improvement was that a scout aeroplane at the time
+of the Armistice would have 1 horse-power for every 8 lbs. of weight
+lifted, compared with the 20 or 25 lbs. of its 1914 predecessors. This
+produced a considerable increase in the rate of climb, a good postwar
+machine being able to reach 10,000 feet in about 5 minutes and 20,000
+feet in under half an hour. The loading per square foot was also
+considerably increased; this being rendered possible both by improvement
+in the design of wing sections and by more scientific construction
+giving increased strength. It will be remembered that in the machine
+of the very early period each square foot of surface had only to lift
+a weight of some 1 1/2 to 2 lbs., which by 1914 had been increased to
+about 4 lbs. By 1918 aeroplanes habitually had a loading of 8 lbs. or
+more per square foot of area; which resulted in great increase in speed.
+Although a speed of 126 miles per hour had been attained by a specially
+designed racing machine over a short distance in 1914, the average at
+that period little exceeded, if at all, 100 miles per hour; whereas in
+1918 speeds of 130 miles per hour had become a commonplace, and shortly
+afterwards a speed of over 166 miles an hour was achieved.
+
+In another direction, also, that of size, great developments were made.
+Before the War a few machines fitted with more than one engine had been
+built (the first being a triple Gnome-engined biplane built by Messrs
+Short Bros. at Eastchurch in 1913), but none of large size had been
+successfully produced, the total weight probably in no case exceeding
+about 2 tons. In 1916, however, the twin engine Handley-Page biplane
+was produced, to be followed by others both in this country and abroad,
+which represented a very great increase in size and, consequently,
+load-carrying capacity. By the end of the War period several types were
+in existence weighing a total of 10 tons when fully loaded, of which
+some 4 tons or more represented 'useful load' available for crew,
+fuel, and bombs or passengers. This was attained through very careful
+attention to detailed design, which showed that the material could be
+employed more efficiently as size increased, and was also due to the
+fact that a large machine was not liable to be put through the same
+evolutions as a small machine, and therefore could safely be built with
+a lower factor of safety. Owing to the fact that a wing section which is
+adopted for carrying heavy loads usually has also a somewhat low lift
+to drag ratio, and is not therefore productive of high speed, these
+machines are not as fast as light scouts; but, nevertheless, they proved
+themselves capable of achieving speeds of 100 miles an hour or more in
+some cases; which was faster than the average small machine of 1914.
+
+In one respect the development during the War may perhaps have proved
+to be somewhat disappointing, as it might have been expected that great
+improvements would be effected in metal construction, leading almost to
+the abolition of wooden structures. Although, however, a good deal of
+experimental work was done which resulted in overcoming at any rate the
+worst of the difficulties, metal-built machines were little used (except
+to a certain extent in Germany) chiefly on account of the need for rapid
+production and the danger of delay resulting from switching over from
+known and tried methods to experimental types of construction.
+The Germans constructed some large machines, such as the giant
+Siemens-Schukhert machine, entirely of metal except for the wing
+covering, while the Fokker and Junker firms about the time of the
+Armistice in 1918 both produced monoplanes with very deep all-metal
+wings (including the covering) which were entirely unstayed externally,
+depending for their strength on internal bracing. In Great Britain cable
+bracing gave place to a great extent to 'stream-line wires,' which are
+steel rods rolled to a more or less oval section, while tie-rods were
+also extensively used for the internal bracing of the wings. Great
+developments in the economical use of material were also made in the
+direction of using built-up main spars for the wings and interplane
+struts; spars composed of a series of layers (or 'laminations') of
+different pieces of wood also being used.
+
+Apart from the metallic construction of aeroplanes an enormous amount
+of work was done in the testing of different steels and light alloys for
+use in engines, and by the end of the War period a number of aircraft
+engines were in use of which the pistons and other parts were of such
+alloys; the chief difficulty having been not so much in the design as in
+the successful heat-treatment and casting of the metal.
+
+An important development in connection with the inspection and
+testing of aircraft parts, particularly in the case of metal, was the
+experimental application of X-ray photography, which showed up latent
+defects, both in the material and in manufacture, which would otherwise
+have passed unnoticed. This method was also used to test the penetration
+of glue into the wood on each side of joints, so giving a measure of the
+strength; and for the effect of 'doping' the wings, dope being a film
+(of cellulose acetate dissolved in acetone with other chemicals)
+applied to the covering of wings and bodies to render the linen taut and
+weatherproof, besides giving it a smooth surface for the lessening of
+'skin friction' when passing rapidly through the air.
+
+An important result of this experimental work was that it in many cases
+enabled designers to produce aeroplane parts from less costly material
+than had previously been considered necessary, without impairing the
+strength. It may be mentioned that it was found undesirable to use
+welded joints on aircraft in any part where the material is subjectto
+a tensile or bending load, owing to the danger resulting from bad
+workmanship causing the material to become brittle--an effect which
+cannot be discovered except by cutting through the weld, which, of
+course, involves a test to destruction. Written, as it has been, in
+August, 1920, it is impossible in this chapter to give any conception of
+how the developments of War will be applied to commercial aeroplanes,
+as few truly commercial machines have yet been designed, and even those
+still show distinct traces of the survival of war mentality. When,
+however, the inevitable recasting of ideas arrives, it will become
+evident, whatever the apparent modification in the relative importance
+of different aspects of design, that enormous advances were made under
+the impetus of War which have left an indelible mark on progress.
+
+We have, during the seventeen years since aeroplanes first took the air,
+seen them grow from tentative experimental structures of unknown and
+unknowable performance to highly scientific products, of which not
+only the performances (in speed, load-carrying capacity, and climb) are
+known, but of which the precise strength and degree of stability can be
+forecast with some accuracy on the drawing board. For the rest, with
+the future lies--apart from some revolutionary change in fundamental
+design--the steady development of a now well-tried and well-found
+engineering structure.
+
+
+
+
+PART III. AEROSTATICS
+
+
+
+
+I. BEGINNINGS
+
+Francesco Lana, with his 'aerial ship,' stands as one of the first great
+exponents of aerostatics; up to the time of the Montgolfier and
+Charles balloon experiments, aerostatic and aerodynamic research are so
+inextricably intermingled that it has been thought well to treat of them
+as one, and thus the work of Lana, Veranzio and his parachute, Guzman's
+frauds, and the like, have already been sketched. In connection with
+Guzman, Hildebrandt states in his Airships Past and Present, a
+fairly exhaustive treatise on the subject up to 1906, the year of its
+publication, that there were two inventors--or charlatans--Lorenzo de
+Guzman and a monk Bartolemeo Laurenzo, the former of whom constructed
+an unsuccessful airship out of a wooden basket covered with paper,
+while the latter made certain experiments with a machine of which no
+description remains. A third de Guzman, some twenty-five years later,
+announced that he had constructed a flying machine, with which he
+proposed to fly from a tower to prove his success to the public. The
+lack of record of any fatal accident overtaking him about that time
+seems to show that the experiment was not carried out.
+
+Galien, a French monk, published a book L'art de naviguer dans l'air
+in 1757, in which it was conjectured that the air at high levels was
+lighter than that immediately over the surface of the earth. Galien
+proposed to bring down the upper layers of air and with them fill a
+vessel, which by Archimidean principle would rise through the heavier
+atmosphere. If one went high enough, said Galien, the air would be two
+thousand times as light as water, and it would be possible to construct
+an airship, with this light air as lifting factor, which should be as
+large as the town of Avignon, and carry four million passengers with
+their baggage. How this high air was to be obtained is matter for
+conjecture--Galien seems to have thought in a vicious circle, in which
+the vessel that must rise to obtain the light air must first be filled
+with it in order to rise.
+
+Cavendish's discovery of hydrogen in 1776 set men thinking, and soon a
+certain Doctor Black was suggesting that vessels might be filled with
+hydrogen, in order that they might rise in the air. Black, however, did
+not get beyond suggestion; it was Leo Cavallo who first made experiments
+with hydrogen, beginning with filling soap bubbles, and passing on to
+bladders and special paper bags. In these latter the gas escaped,
+and Cavallo was about to try goldbeaters' skin at the time that the
+Montgolfiers came into the field with their hot air balloon.
+
+Joseph and Stephen Montgolfier, sons of a wealthy French paper
+manufacturer, carried out many experiments in physics, and Joseph
+interested himself in the study of aeronautics some time before the
+first balloon was constructed by the brothers--he is said to have made
+a parachute descent from the roof of his house as early as 1771, but
+of this there is no proof. Galien's idea, together with study of the
+movement of clouds, gave Joseph some hope of achieving aerostation
+through Galien's schemes, and the first experiments were made by passing
+steam into a receiver, which, of course, tended to rise--but the
+rapid condensation of the steam prevented the receiver from more than
+threatening ascent. The experiments were continued with smoke, which
+produced only a slightly better effect, and, moreover, the paper bag
+into which the smoke was induced permitted of escape through its pores;
+finding this method a failure the brothers desisted until Priestley's
+work became known to them, and they conceived the use of hydrogen as
+a lifting factor. Trying this with paper bags, they found that the
+hydrogen escaped through the pores of the paper.
+
+Their first balloon, made of paper, reverted to the hot-air principle;
+they lighted a fire of wool and wet straw under the balloon--and as a
+matter of course the balloon took fire after very little experiment;
+thereupon they constructed a second, having a capacity of 700 cubic
+feet, and this rose to a height of over 1,000 feet. Such a success gave
+them confidence, and they gave their first public exhibition on June
+5th, 1783, with a balloon constructed of paper and of a circumference of
+112 feet. A fire was lighted under this balloon, which, after rising to
+a height of 1,000 feet, descended through the cooling of the air inside
+a matter of ten minutes. At this the Academie des Sciences invited the
+brothers to conduct experiments in Paris.
+
+The Montgolfiers were undoubtedly first to send up balloons, but other
+experimenters were not far behind them, and before they could get to
+Paris in response to their invitation, Charles, a prominent physicist of
+those days, had constructed a balloon of silk, which he proofed against
+escape of gas with rubber--the Roberts had just succeeded in dissolving
+this substance to permit of making a suitable coating for the silk. With
+a quarter of a ton of sulphuric acid, and half a ton of iron filings
+and turnings, sufficient hydrogen was generated in four days to fill
+Charles's balloon, which went up on August 28th, 1783. Although the day
+was wet, Paris turned out to the number of over 300,000 in the Champs de
+Mars, and cannon were fired to announce the ascent of the balloon. This,
+rising very rapidly, disappeared amid the rain clouds, but, probably
+bursting through no outlet being provided to compensate for the
+escape of gas, fell soon in the neighbourhood of Paris. Here peasants,
+ascribing evil supernatural influence to the fall of such a thing from
+nowhere, went at it with the implements of their craft--forks, hoes, and
+the like--and maltreated it severely, finally attaching it to a horse's
+tail and dragging it about until it was mere rag and scrap.
+
+Meanwhile, Joseph Montgolfier, having come to Paris, set about the
+construction of a balloon out of linen; this was in three diverse
+sections, the top being a cone 30 feet in depth, the middle a cylinder
+42 feet in diameter by 26 feet in depth, and the bottom another cone 20
+feet in depth from junction with the cylindrical portion to its point.
+The balloon was both lined and covered with paper, decorated in blue and
+gold. Before ever an ascent could be attempted this ambitious balloon
+was caught in a heavy rainstorm which reduced its paper covering to pulp
+and tore the linen at its seams, so that a supervening strong wind tore
+the whole thing to shreds.
+
+Montgolfier's next balloon was spherical, having a capacity of 52,000
+cubic feet. It was made from waterproofed linen, and on September 19th,
+1783, it made an ascent for the palace courtyard at Versailles, taking
+up as passengers a cock, a sheep, and a duck. A rent at the top of the
+balloon caused it to descend within eight minutes, and the duck and
+sheep were found none the worse for being the first living things to
+leave the earth in a balloon, but the cock, evidently suffering, was
+thought to have been affected by the rarefaction of the atmosphere at
+the tremendous height reached--for at that time the general opinion was
+that the atmosphere did not extend more than four or five miles above
+the earth's surface. It transpired later that the sheep had trampled on
+the cock, causing more solid injury than any that might be inflicted by
+rarefied air in an eight-minute ascent and descent of a balloon.
+
+For achieving this flight Joseph Montgolfier received from the King
+of France a pension of of L40, while Stephen was given the order of St
+Michael, and a patent of nobility was granted to their father. They were
+made members of the Legion d'Honneur, and a scientific deputation,
+of which Faujas de Saint-Fond, who had raised the funds with which
+Charles's hydrogen balloon was constructed, presented to Stephen
+Montgolfier a gold medal struck in honour of his aerial conquest.
+Since Joseph appears to have had quite as much share in the success
+as Stephen, the presentation of the medal to one brother only was in
+questionable taste, unless it was intended to balance Joseph's pension.
+
+Once aerostation had been proved possible, many people began the
+construction of small balloons--the wholehole thing was regarded as a
+matter of spectacles and a form of amusement by the great majority. A
+certain Baron de Beaumanoir made the first balloon of goldbeaters' skin,
+this being eighteen inches in diameter, and using hydrogen as a lifting
+factor. Few people saw any possibilities in aerostation, in spite of
+the adventures of the duck and sheep and cock; voyages to the moon were
+talked and written, and there was more of levity than seriousness over
+ballooning as a rule. The classic retort of Benjamin Franklin stands
+as an exception to the general rule: asked what was the use of
+ballooning--'What's the use of a baby?' he countered, and the spirit of
+that reply brought both the dirigible and the aeroplane to being, later.
+
+The next noteworthy balloon was one by Stephen Montgolfier, designed to
+take up passengers, and therefore of rather large dimensions, as these
+things went then. The capacity was 100,000 cubic feet, the depth being
+85 feet, and the exterior was very gaily decorated. A short, cylindrical
+opening was made at the lower extremity, and under this a fire-pan was
+suspended, above the passenger car of the balloon. On October 15th,
+1783, Pilatre de Rozier made the first balloon ascent--but the balloon
+was held captive, and only allowed to rise to a height of 80 feet. But,
+a little later in 1783, Rozier secured the honour of making the first
+ascent in a free balloon, taking up with him the Marquis d'Arlandes.
+It had been originally intended that two criminals, condemned to death,
+should risk their lives in the perilous venture, with the prospect of
+a free pardon if they made a safe descent, but d'Arlandes got the royal
+consent to accompany Rozier, and the criminals lost their chance. Rozier
+and d'Arlandes made a voyage lasting for twenty-five minutes, and, on
+landing, the balloon collapsed with such rapidity as almost to suffocate
+Rozier, who, however, was dragged out to safety by d'Arlandes. This
+first aerostatic journey took place on November 21st, 1783.
+
+Some seven months later, on June 4th, 1784, a Madame Thible ascended in
+a free balloon, reaching a height of 9,000 feet, and making a journey
+which lasted for forty-five minutes--the great King Gustavus of Sweden
+witnessed this ascent. France grew used to balloon ascents in the course
+of a few months, in spite of the brewing of such a storm as might
+have been calculated to wipe out all but purely political interests.
+Meanwhile, interest in the new discovery spread across the Channel,
+and on September 15th, 1784, one Vincent Lunardi made the first balloon
+voyage in England, starting from the Artillery Ground at Chelsea, with
+a cat and dog as passengers, and landing in a field in the parish of
+Standon, near Ware. There is a rather rare book which gives a very
+detailed account of this first ascent in England, one copy of which
+is in the library of the Royal Aeronautical Society; the venturesome
+Lunardi won a greater measure of fame through his exploit than did
+Cody for his infinitely more courageous and--from a scientific point of
+view--valuable first aeroplane ascent in this country.
+
+The Montgolfier type of balloon, depending on hot air for its lifting
+power, was soon realised as having dangerous limitations. There was
+always a possibility of the balloon catching fire while it was being
+filled, and on landing there was further danger from the hot pan which
+kept up the supply of hot air on the voyage--the collapsing balloon fell
+on the pan, inevitably. The scientist Saussure, observing the filling of
+the balloons very carefully, ascertained that it was rarefaction of the
+air which was responsible for the lifting power, and not the heat in
+itself, and, owing to the rarefaction of the air at normal temperature
+at great heights above the earth, the limit of ascent for a balloon of
+the Montgolfier type was estimated by him at under 9,000 feet. Moreover,
+since the amount of fuel that could be carried for maintaining the
+heat of the balloon after inflation was subject to definite limits,
+prescribed by the carrying capacity of the balloon, the duration of the
+journey was necessarily limited just as strictly.
+
+These considerations tended to turn the minds of those interested
+in aerostation to consideration of the hydrogen balloon evolved by
+Professor Charles. Certain improvements had been made by Charles
+since his first construction; he employed rubber-coated silk in the
+construction of a balloon of 30 feet diameter, and provided a net for
+distributing the pressure uniformly over the surface of the envelope;
+this net covered the top half of the balloon, and from its lower edge
+dependent ropes hung to join on a wooden ring, from which the car of
+the balloon was suspended--apart from the extension of the net so as to
+cover in the whole of the envelope, the spherical balloon of to-day is
+virtually identical with that of Charles in its method of construction.
+He introduced the valve at the top of the balloon, by which escape of
+gas could be controlled, operating his valve by means of ropes which
+depended to the car of the balloon, and he also inserted a tube, of
+about 7 inches diameter, at the bottom of the balloon, not only for
+purposes of inflation, but also to provide a means of escape for gas in
+case of expansion due to atmospheric conditions.
+
+Sulphuric acid and iron filings were used by Charles for filling his
+balloon, which required three days and three nights for the generation
+of its 14,000 cubic feet of hydrogen gas. The inflation was completed on
+December 1st, 1783, and the fittings carried included a barometer and a
+grapnel form of anchor. In addition to this, Charles provided the first
+'ballon sonde' in the form of a small pilot balloon which he handed to
+Montgolfier to launch before his own ascent, in order to determine the
+direction and velocity of the wind. It was a graceful compliment to his
+rival, and indicated that, although they were both working to the one
+end, their rivalry was not a matter of bitterness.
+
+Ascending on December 1st, 1783, Charles took with him one of the
+brothers Robert, and with him made the record journey up to that date,
+covering a period of three and three-quarter hours, in which time they
+journeyed some forty miles. Robert then landed, and Charles ascended
+again alone, reaching such a height as to feel the effects of the
+rarefaction of the air, this very largely due to the rapidity of his
+ascent. Opening the valve at the top of the balloon, he descended
+thirty-five minutes after leaving Robert behind, and came to earth a few
+miles from the point of the first descent. His discomfort over the rapid
+ascent was mainly due to the fact that, when Robert landed, he forgot to
+compensate for the reduction of weight by taking in further ballast,
+but the ascent proved the value of the tube at the bottom of the balloon
+envelope, for the gas escaped very rapidly in that second ascent, and,
+but for the tube, the balloon must inevitably have burst in the air,
+with fatal results for Charles.
+
+As in the case of aeroplane flight, as soon as the balloon was proved
+practicable the flight across the English Channel was talked of, and
+Rozier, who had the honour of the first flight, announced his intention
+of being first to cross. But Blanchard, who had an idea for a 'flying
+car,' anticipated him, and made a start from Dover on January 7th, 1785,
+taking with him an American doctor named Jeffries. Blanchard fitted out
+his craft for the journey very thoroughly, taking provisions, oars, and
+even wings, for propulsion in case of need. He took so much, in fact,
+that as soon as the balloon lifted clear of the ground the whole of the
+ballast had to be jettisoned, lest the balloon should drop into the sea.
+Half-way across the Channel the sinking of the balloon warned Blanchard
+that he had to part with more than ballast to accomplish the journey,
+and all the equipment went, together with certain books and papers that
+were on board the car. The balloon looked perilously like collapsing,
+and both Blanchard and Jeffries began to undress in order further to
+lighten their craft--Jeffries even proposed a heroic dive to save the
+situation, but suddenly the balloon rose sufficiently to clear the
+French coast, and the two voyagers landed at a point near Calais in
+the Forest of Gaines, where a marble column was subsequently erected to
+commemorate the great feat.
+
+Rozier, although not first across, determined to be second, and for
+that purpose he constructed a balloon which was to owe its buoyancy to
+a combination of the hydrogen and hot air principles. There was a
+spherical hydrogen balloon above, and beneath it a cylindrical container
+which could be filled with hot air, thus compensating for the leakage of
+gas from the hydrogen portion of the balloon--regulating the heat of
+his fire, he thought, would give him perfect control in the matter of
+ascending and descending.
+
+On July 6th, 1785, a favourable breeze gave Rozier his opportunity of
+starting from the French coast, and with a passenger aboard he cast off
+in his balloon, which he had named the 'Aero-Montgolfiere.' There was a
+rapid rise at first, and then for a time the balloon remained stationary
+over the land, after which a cloud suddenly appeared round the balloon,
+denoting that an explosion had taken place. Both Rozier and his
+companion were killed in the fall, so that he, first to leave the earth
+by balloon, was also first victim to the art of aerostation.
+
+There followed, naturally, a lull in the enthusiasm with which
+ballooning had been taken up, so far as France was concerned. In Italy,
+however, Count Zambeccari took up hot-air ballooning, using a spirit
+lamp to give him buoyancy, and on the first occasion when the balloon
+car was set on fire Zambeccari let down his passenger by means of the
+anchor rope, and managed to extinguish the fire while in the air. This
+reduced the buoyancy of the balloon to such an extent that it fell
+into the Adriatic and was totally wrecked, Zambeccari being rescued by
+fishermen. He continued to experiment up to 1812, when he attempted to
+ascend at Bologna; the spirit in his lamp was upset by the collision
+of the car with a tree, and the car was again set on fire. Zambeccari
+jumped from the car when it was over fifty feet above level ground, and
+was killed. With him the Rozier type of balloon, combining the hydrogen
+and hot air principles, disappeared; the combination was obviously too
+dangerous to be practical.
+
+The brothers Robert were first to note how the heat of the sun acted on
+the gases within a balloon envelope, and it has since been ascertained
+that sun rays will heat the gas in a balloon to as much as 80 degrees
+Fahrenheit greater temperature than the surrounding atmosphere;
+hydrogen, being less affected by change of temperature than coal gas, is
+the most suitable filling element, and coal gas comes next as the medium
+of buoyancy. This for the free and non-navigable balloon, though for the
+airship, carrying means of combustion, and in military work liable to
+ignition by explosives, the gas helium seems likely to replace hydrogen,
+being non-combustible.
+
+In spite of the development of the dirigible airship, there remains
+work for the free, spherical type of balloon in the scientific field.
+Blanchard's companion on the first Channel crossing by balloon, Dr
+Jeffries, was the first balloonist to ascend for purely scientific
+purposes; as early as 1784 he made an ascent to a height of 9,000 feet,
+and observed a fall in temperature of from degrees--at the level of
+London, where he began his ascent--to 29 degrees at the maximum
+height reached. He took up an electrometer, a hydrometer, a compass, a
+thermometer, and a Toricelli barometer, together with bottles of water,
+in order to collect samples of the air at different heights. In 1785 he
+made a second ascent, when trigonometrical observations of the height of
+the balloon were made from the French coast, giving an altitude of 4,800
+feet.
+
+The matter was taken up on its scientific side very early in America,
+experiments in Philadelphia being almost simultaneous with those of the
+Montgolfiers in France. The flight of Rozier and d'Arlandes inspired two
+members of the Philadelphia Philosophical Academy to construct a balloon
+or series of balloons of their own design; they made a machine which
+consisted of no less than 47 small hydrogen balloons attached to a
+wicker car, and made certain preliminary trials, using animals as
+passengers. This was followed by a captive ascent with a man as
+passenger, and eventually by the first free ascent in America, which
+was undertaken by one James Wilcox, a carpenter, on December 28th,
+1783. Wilcox, fearful of falling into a river, attempted to regulate his
+landing by cutting slits in some of the supporting balloons, which was
+the method adopted for regulating ascent or descent in this machine.
+He first cut three, and then, finding that the effect produced was not
+sufficient, cut three more, and then another five--eleven out of the
+forty-seven. The result was so swift a descent that he dislocated his
+wrist on landing.
+
+ A NOTE ON BALLONETS OR AIR BAGS.
+
+Meusnier, toward the end of the eighteenth century, was first to
+conceive the idea of compensating for the loss of gas due to expansion
+by fitting to the interior of a free balloon a ballonet, or air bag,
+which could be pumped full of air so as to retain the shape and rigidity
+of the envelope.
+
+The ballonet became particularly valuable as soon as airship
+construction became general, and it was in the course of advance
+in Astra Torres design that the project was introduced of using the
+ballonets in order to give inclination from the horizontal. In the
+earlier Astra Torres, trimming was accomplished by moving the car fore
+and aft--this in itself was an advance on the separate 'sliding weigh'
+principle--and this was the method followed in the Astra Torres bought
+by the British Government from France in 1912 for training airship
+pilots. Subsequently, the two ballonets fitted inside the envelope were
+made to serve for trimming by the extent of their inflation, and this
+method of securing inclination proved the best until exterior rudders,
+and greater engine power, supplanted it, as in the Zeppelin and, in
+fact, all rigid types.
+
+In the kite balloon, the ballonet serves the purpose of a rudder,
+filling itself through the opening being kept pointed toward the
+wind--there is an ingenious type of air scoop with non-return valve
+which assures perfect inflation. In the S.S. type of airship, two
+ballonets are provided, the supply of air being taken from the propeller
+draught by a slanting aluminium tube to the underside of the envelope,
+where it meets a longitudinal fabric hose which connects the two
+ballonet air inlets. In this hose the non-return air valves, known
+as 'crab-pots,' are fitted, on either side of the junction with the
+air-scoop. Two automatic air valves, one for each ballonet, are fitted
+in the underside of the envelope, and, as the air pressure tends to
+open these instead of keeping them shut, the spring of the valve is set
+inside the envelope. Each spring is set to open at a pressure of 25 to
+28 mm.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE FIRST DIRIGIBLES
+
+Having got off the earth, the very early balloonists set about the task
+of finding a means of navigating the air but, lacking steam or other
+accessory power to human muscle, they failed to solve the problem.
+Joseph Montgolfier speedily exploded the idea of propelling a balloon
+either by means of oars or sails, pointing out that even in a dead
+calm a speed of five miles an hour would be the limit achieved. Still,
+sailing balloons were constructed, even up to the time of Andree, the
+explorer, who proposed to retard the speed of the balloon by ropes
+dragging on the ground, and then to spread a sail which should catch
+the wind and permit of deviation of the course. It has been proved that
+slight divergences from the course of the wind can be obtained by this
+means, but no real navigation of the air could be thus accomplished.
+
+Professor Wellner, of Brunn, brought up the idea of a sailing balloon
+in more practical fashion in 1883. He observed that surfaces inclined to
+the horizontal have a slight lateral motion in rising and falling, and
+deduced that by alternate lowering and raising of such surfaces he would
+be able to navigate the air, regulating ascent and descent by increasing
+or decreasing the temperature of his buoyant medium in the balloon. He
+calculated that a balloon, 50 feet in diameter and 150 feet in length,
+with a vertical surface in front and a horizontal surface behind, might
+be navigated at a speed of ten miles per hour, and in actual tests at
+Brunn he proved that a single rise and fall moved the balloon three
+miles against the wind. His ideas were further developed by Lebaudy in
+the construction of the early French dirigibles.
+
+According to Hildebrandt,[*] the first sailing balloon was built in 1784
+by Guyot, who made his balloon egg-shaped, with the smaller end at the
+back and the longer axis horizontal; oars were intended to propel the
+craft, and naturally it was a failure. Carra proposed the use of paddle
+wheels, a step in the right direction, by mounting them on the sides
+of the car, but the improvement was only slight. Guyton de Morveau,
+entrusted by the Academy of Dijon with the building of a sailing
+balloon, first used a vertical rudder at the rear end of his
+construction--it survives in the modern dirigible. His construction
+included sails and oars, but, lacking steam or other than human
+propulsive power, the airship was a failure equally with Guyot's.
+
+[*] Airships Past and Present.
+
+Two priests, Miollan and Janinet, proposed to drive balloons through the
+air by the forcible expulsion of the hot air in the envelope from the
+rear of the balloon. An opening was made about half-way up the envelope,
+through which the hot air was to escape, buoyancy being maintained by a
+pan of combustibles in the car. Unfortunately, this development of the
+Montgolfier type never got a trial, for those who were to be spectators
+of the first flight grew exasperated at successive delays, and in the
+end, thinking that the balloon would never rise, they destroyed it.
+
+Meusnier, a French general, first conceived the idea of compensating
+for loss of gas by carrying an air bag inside the balloon, in order
+to maintain the full expansion of the envelope. The brothers Robert
+constructed the first balloon in which this was tried and placed the
+air bag near the neck of the balloon which was intended to be driven
+by oars, and steered by a rudder. A violent swirl of wind which was
+encountered on the first ascent tore away the oars and rudder and broke
+the ropes which held the air bag in position; the bag fell into the
+opening of the neck and stopped it up, preventing the escape of gas
+under expansion. The Duc de Chartres, who was aboard, realised the
+extreme danger of the envelope bursting as the balloon ascended, and at
+16,000 feet he thrust a staff through the envelope--another account says
+that he slit it with his sword--and thus prevented disaster. The descent
+after this rip in the fabric was swift, but the passengers got off
+without injury in the landing.
+
+Meusnier, experimenting in various ways, experimented with regard to
+the resistance offered by various shapes to the air, and found that an
+elliptical shape was best; he proposed to make the car boat--shaped, in
+order further to decrease the resistance, and he advocated an entirely
+rigid connection between the car and the body of the balloon, as
+indispensable to a dirigible.[*] He suggested using three propellers,
+which were to be driven by hand by means of pulleys, and calculated that
+a crew of eighty would be required to furnish sufficient motive power.
+Horizontal fins were to be used to assure stability, and Meusnier
+thoroughly investigated the pressures exerted by gases, in order to
+ascertain the stresses to which the envelope would be subjected. More
+important still, he went into detail with regard to the use of air bags,
+in order to retain the shape of the balloon under varying pressures of
+gas due to expansion and consequent losses; he proposed two separate
+envelopes, the inner one containing gas, and the space between it and
+the outer one being filled with air. Further, by compressing the air
+inside the air bag, the rate of ascent or descent could be regulated.
+Lebaudy, acting on this principle, found it possible to pump air at the
+rate of 35 cubic feet per second, thus making good loss of ballast which
+had to be thrown overboard.
+
+[*] Hildebrandt.
+
+Meusnier's balloon, of course, was never constructed, but his ideas have
+been of value to aerostation up to the present time. His career ended
+in the revolutionary army in 1793, when he was killed in the fighting
+before Mayence, and the King of Prussia ordered all firing to cease
+until Meusnier had been buried. No other genius came forward to carry
+on his work, and it was realised that human muscle could not drive a
+balloon with certainty through the air; experiment in this direction
+was abandoned for nearly sixty years, until in 1852 Giffard brought the
+first practicable power-driven dirigible to being.
+
+Giffard, inventor of the steam injector, had already made balloon
+ascents when he turned to aeronautical propulsion, and constructed a
+steam engine of 5 horsepower with a weight of only 100 lbs.--a great
+achievement for his day. Having got his engine, he set about making the
+balloon which it was to drive; this he built with the aid of two other
+enthusiasts, diverging from Meusnier's ideas by making the ends pointed,
+and keeping the body narrowed from Meusnier's ellipse to a shape more
+resembling a rather fat cigar. The length was 144 feet, and the greatest
+diameter only 40 feet, while the capacity was 88,000 cubic feet. A net
+which covered the envelope of the balloon supported a spar, 66 feet in
+length, at the end of which a triangular sail was placed vertically to
+act as rudder. The car, slung 20 feet below the spar, carried the engine
+and propeller. Engine and boiler together weighed 350 lbs., and drove
+the 11 foot propeller at 110 revolutions per minute.
+
+As precaution against explosion, Giffard arranged wire gauze in front
+of the stoke-hole of his boiler, and provided an exhaust pipe which
+discharged the waste gases from the engine in a downward direction. With
+this first dirigible he attained to a speed of between 6 and 8 feet per
+second, thus proving that the propulsion of a balloon was a possibility,
+now that steam had come to supplement human effort.
+
+Three years later he built a second dirigible, reducing the diameter and
+increasing the length of the gas envelope, with a view to reducing air
+resistance. The length of this was 230 feet, the diameter only 33 feet,
+and the capacity was 113,000 cubic feet, while the upper part of the
+envelope, to which the covering net was attached, was specially covered
+to ensure a stiffening effect. The car of this dirigible was dropped
+rather lower than that of the first machine, in order to provide more
+thoroughly against the danger of explosions. Giffard, with a companion
+named Yon as passenger, took a trial trip on this vessel, and made a
+journey against the wind, though slowly. In commencing to descend, the
+nose of the envelope tilted upwards, and the weight of the car and
+its contents caused the net to slip, so that just before the dirigible
+reached the ground, the envelope burst. Both Giffard and his companion
+escaped with very slight injuries.
+
+Plans were immediately made for the construction of a third dirigible,
+which was to be 1,970 feet in length, 98 feet in extreme diameter, and
+to have a capacity of 7,800,000 cubic feet of gas. The engine of this
+giant was to have weighed 30 tons, and with it Giffard expected to
+attain a speed of 40 miles per hour. Cost prevented the scheme being
+carried out, and Giffard went on designing small steam engines until his
+invention of the steam injector gave him the funds to turn to dirigibles
+again. He built a captive balloon for the great exhibition in London
+in 1868, at a cost of nearly L30,000, and designed a dirigible balloon
+which was to have held a million and three quarters cubic feet of gas,
+carry two boilers, and cost about L40,000. The plans were thoroughly
+worked out, down to the last detail, but the dirigible was never
+constructed. Giffard went blind, and died in 1882--he stands as the
+great pioneer of dirigible construction, more on the strength of the
+two vessels which he actually built than on that of the ambitious later
+conceptions of his brain.
+
+In 1872 Dupuy de Lome, commissioned by the French government, built a
+dirigible which he proposed to drive by man-power--it was anticipated
+that the vessel would be of use in the siege of Paris, but it was not
+actually tested till after the conclusion of the war. The length of
+this vessel was 118 feet, its greatest diameter 49 feet, the ends being
+pointed, and the motive power was by a propeller which was revolved by
+the efforts of eight men. The vessel attained to about the same speed as
+Giffard's steam-driven airship; it was capable of carrying fourteen
+men, who, apart from these engaged in driving the propeller, had to
+manipulate the pumps which controlled the air bags inside the gas
+envelope.
+
+In the same year Paul Haenlein, working in Vienna, produced an airship
+which was a direct forerunner of the Lebaudy type, 164 feet in length,
+30 feet greatest diameter, and with a cubic capacity of 85,000 feet.
+Semi-rigidity was attained by placing the car as close to the envelope
+as possible, suspending it by crossed ropes, and the motive power was
+a gas engine of the Lenoir type, having four horizontal cylinders, and
+giving about 5 horse-power with a consumption of about 250 cubic feet
+of gas per hour. This gas was sucked from the envelope of the balloon,
+which was kept fully inflated by pumping in compensating air to the air
+bags inside the main envelope. A propeller, 15 feet in diameter, was
+driven by the Lenoir engine at 40 revolutions per minute. This was the
+first instance of the use of an internal combustion engine in connection
+with aeronautical experiments.
+
+The envelope of this dirigible was rendered airtight by means of
+internal rubber coating, with a thinner film on the outside. Coal gas,
+used for inflation, formed a suitable fuel for the engine, but limited
+the height to which the dirigible could ascend. Such trials as were made
+were carried out with the dirigible held captive, and a speed of I 5
+feet per second was attained. Full experiment was prevented through
+funds running low, but Haenlein's work constituted a distinct advance on
+all that had been done previously.
+
+Two brothers, Albert and Gaston Tissandier, were next to enter the field
+of dirigible construction; they had experimented with balloons during
+the Franc-Prussian War, and had attempted to get into Paris by balloon
+during the siege, but it was not until 1882 that they produced their
+dirigible.
+
+This was 92 feet in length and 32 feet in greatest diameter, with
+a cubic capacity of 37,500 feet, and the fabric used was varnished
+cambric. The car was made of bamboo rods, and in addition to its crew
+of three, it carried a Siemens dynamo, with 24 bichromate cells, each
+of which weighed 17 lbs. The motor gave out 1 1/2 horse-power, which was
+sufficient to drive the vessel at a speed of up to 10 feet per second.
+This was not so good as Haenlein's previous attempt and, after L2,000
+had been spent, the Tissandier abandoned their experiments, since a
+5-mile breeze was sufficient to nullify the power of the motor.
+
+Renard, a French officer who had studied the problem of dirigible
+construction since 1878, associated himself first with a brother officer
+named La Haye, and subsequently with another officer, Krebs, in the
+construction of the second dirigible to be electrically-propelled. La
+Haye first approached Colonel Laussedat, in charge of the Engineers of
+the French Army, with a view to obtaining funds, but was refused, in
+consequence of the practical failure of all experiments since 1870.
+Renard, with whom Krebs had now associated himself, thereupon went to
+Gambetta, and succeeded in getting a promise of a grant of L8,000 for
+the work; with this promise Renard and Krebs set to work.
+
+They built their airship in torpedo shape, 165 feet in length, and of
+just over 27 feet greatest diameter--the greatest diameter was at the
+front, and the cubic capacity was 66,000 feet. The car itself was 108
+feet in length, and 4 1/2 feet broad, covered with silk over the bamboo
+framework. The 23 foot diameter propeller was of wood, and was driven
+by an electric motor connected to an accumulator, and yielding 8.5
+horsepower. The sweep of the propeller, which might have brought it in
+contact with the ground in landing, was counteracted by rendering it
+possible to raise the axis on which the blades were mounted, and a guide
+rope was used to obviate damage altogether, in case of rapid descent.
+There was also a 'sliding weight' which was movable to any required
+position to shift the centre of gravity as desired. Altogether, with
+passengers and ballast aboard, the craft weighed two tons.
+
+In the afternoon of August 8th, 1884, Renard and Krebs ascended in
+the dirigible--which they had named 'La France,' from the military
+ballooning ground at Chalais-Meudon, making a circular flight of about
+five miles, the latter part of which was in the face of a slight
+wind. They found that the vessel answered well to her rudder, and
+the five-mile flight was made successfully in a period of 23 minutes.
+Subsequent experimental flights determined that the air speed of the
+dirigible was no less than 14 1/2 miles per hour, by far the best that
+had so far been accomplished in dirigible flight. Seven flights in all
+were made, and of these five were completely successful, the dirigible
+returning to its starting point with no difficulty. On the other two
+flights it had to be towed back.
+
+Renard attempted to repeat his construction on a larger scale, but funds
+would not permit, and the type was abandoned; the motive power was not
+sufficient to permit of more than short flights, and even to the present
+time electric motors, with their necessary accumulators, are far too
+cumbrous to compete with the self-contained internal combustion engine.
+France had to wait for the Lebaudy brothers, just as Germany had to wait
+for Zeppelin and Parseval.
+
+Two German experimenters, Baumgarten and Wolfert, fitted a Daimler motor
+to a dirigible balloon which made its first ascent at Leipzig in 1880.
+This vessel had three cars, and placing a passenger in one of the outer
+cars[*] distributed the load unevenly, so that the whole vessel tilted
+over and crashed to the earth, the occupants luckily escaping without
+injury. After Baumgarten's death, Wolfert determined to carry on with
+his experiments, and, having achieved a certain measure of success, he
+announced an ascent to take place on the Tempelhofer Field, near Berlin,
+on June 12th, 1897. The vessel, travelling with the wind, reached a
+height of 600 feet, when the exhaust of the motor communicated flame to
+the envelope of the balloon, and Wolfert, together with a passenger he
+carried, was either killed by the fall or burnt to death on the ground.
+Giffard had taken special precautions to avoid an accident of this
+nature, and Wolfert, failing to observe equal care, paid the full
+penalty.
+
+[*] Hildebrandt.
+
+Platz, a German soldier, attempting an ascent on the Tempelhofer Field
+in the Schwartz airship in 1897, merely proved the dirigible a failure.
+The vessel was of aluminium, 0.008 inch in thickness, strengthened by an
+aluminium lattice work; the motor was two-cylindered petrol-driven; at
+the first trial the metal developed such leaks that the vessel came
+to the ground within four miles of its starting point. Platz, who was
+aboard alone as crew, succeeded in escaping by jumping clear before the
+car touched earth, but the shock of alighting broke up the balloon, and
+a following high wind completed the work of full destruction. A second
+account says that Platz, finding the propellers insufficient to drive
+the vessel against the wind, opened the valve and descended too rapidly.
+
+The envelope of this dirigible was 156 feet in length, and the method
+of filling was that of pushing in bags, fill them with gas, and then
+pulling them to pieces and tearing them out of the body of the balloon.
+A second contemplated method of filling was by placing a linen envelope
+inside the aluminium casing, blowing it out with air, and then admitting
+the gas between the linen and the aluminium outer casing. This would
+compress the air out of the linen envelope, which was to be withdrawn
+when the aluminium casing had been completely filled with gas.
+
+All this, however, assumes that the Schwartz type--the first rigid
+dirigible, by the way--would prove successful. As it proved a failure on
+the first trial, the problem of filling it did not arise again.
+
+By this time Zeppelin, retired from the German army, had begun to
+devote himself to the study of dirigible construction, and, a year
+after Schwartz had made his experiment and had failed, he got together
+sufficient funds for the formation of a limitedliability company, and
+started on the construction of the first of his series of airships. The
+age of tentative experiment was over, and, forerunner of the success of
+the heavier-than-air type of flying machine, successful dirigible flight
+was accomplished by Zeppelin in Germany, and by Santos-Dumont in France.
+
+
+
+
+III. SANTOS-DUMONT
+
+A Brazilian by birth, Santos-Dumont began in Paris in the year 1898 to
+make history, which he subsequently wrote. His book, My Airships, is a
+record of his eight years of work on lighter-than-air machines, a
+period in which he constructed no less than fourteen dirigible balloons,
+beginning with a cubic capacity of 6,350 feet, and an engine of 3
+horse-power, and rising to a cubic capacity of 71,000 feet on the tenth
+dirigible he constructed, and an engine of 60 horse-power, which was
+fitted to the seventh machine in order of construction, the one which he
+built after winning the Deutsch Prize.
+
+The student of dirigible construction is recommended to Santos-Dumont's
+own book not only as a full record of his work, but also as one of the
+best stories of aerial navigation that has ever been written. Throughout
+all his experiments, he adhered to the non-rigid type; his first
+dirigible made its first flight on September 18th, 1898, starting from
+the Jardin d'Acclimatation to the west of Paris; he calculated that his
+3 horse-power engine would yield sufficient power to enable him to steer
+clear of the trees with which the starting-point was surrounded, but,
+yielding to the advice of professional aeronauts who were present,
+with regard to the placing of the dirigible for his start, he tore the
+envelope against the trees. Two days later, having repaired the balloon,
+he made an ascent of 1,300 feet. In descending, the hydrogen left in
+the balloon contracted, and Santos-Dumont narrowly escaped a serious
+accident in coming to the ground.
+
+His second machine, built in the early spring of 1899, held over 7,000
+cubic feet of gas and gave a further 44 lbs. of ascensional force. The
+balloon envelope was very long and very narrow; the first attempt at
+flight was made in wind and rain, and the weather caused sufficient
+contraction of the hydrogen for a wind gust to double the machine up and
+toss it into the trees near its starting-point. The inventor immediately
+set about the construction of 'Santos-Dumont No. 3,' on which he made a
+number of successful flights, beginning on November 13th, 1899. On
+the last of his flights, he lost the rudder of the machine and made a
+fortunate landing at Ivry. He did not repair the balloon, considering
+it too clumsy in form and its motor too small. Consequently No. 4 was
+constructed, being finished on the 1st, August, 1900. It had a cubic
+capacity of 14,800 feet, a length of 129 feet and greatest diameter
+of 16.7 feet, the power plant being a 7 horse-power Buchet motor.
+Santos-Dumont sat on a bicycle saddle fixed to the long bar suspended
+under the machine, which also supported motor propeller, ballast; and
+fuel. The experiment of placing the propeller at the stem instead of at
+the stern was tried, and the motor gave it a speed of 100 revolutions
+per minute. Professor Langley witnessed the trials of the machine, which
+proved before the members of the International Congress of Aeronautics,
+on September 19th, that it was capable of holding its own against a
+strong wind.
+
+Finding that the cords with which his dirigible balloon cars were
+suspended offered almost as much resistance to the air as did the
+balloon itself, Santos-Dumont substituted piano wire and found that the
+alteration constituted greater progress than many a more showy device.
+He altered the shape and size of his No. 4 to a certain extent and
+fitted a motor of 12 horse-power. Gravity was controlled by shifting
+weights worked by a cord; rudder and propeller were both placed at the
+stern. In Santos-Dumont's book there is a certain amount of confusion
+between the No. 4 and No. 5 airships, until he explains that 'No. 5'
+is the reconstructed 'No. 4.' It was with No. 5 that he won the
+Encouragement Prize presented by the Scientific Commission of the Paris
+Aero Club. This he devoted to the first aeronaut who between May and
+October of 1900 should start from St Cloud, round the Eiffel Tower,
+and return. If not won in that year, the prize was to remain open the
+following year from May 1st to October 1st, and so on annually until
+won. This was a simplification of the conditions of the Deutsch Prize
+itself, the winning of which involved a journey of 11 kilometres in 30
+minutes.
+
+The Santos-Dumont No. 5, which was in reality the modified No. 4 with
+new keel, motor, and propeller, did the course of the Deutsch Prize,
+but with it Santos-Dumont made no attempt to win the prize until July of
+1901, when he completed the course in 40 minutes, but tore his balloon
+in landing. On the 8th August, with his balloon leaking, he made
+a second attempt, and narrowly escaped disaster, the airship being
+entirely wrecked. Thereupon he built No. 6 with a cubic capacity of
+22,239 feet and a lifting power of 1,518 lbs.
+
+With this machine he won the Deutsch Prize on October 19th, 1901,
+starting with the disadvantage of a side wind of 20 feet per second. He
+reached the Eiffel Tower in 9 minutes and, through miscalculating his
+turn, only just missed colliding with it. He got No. 6 under control
+again and succeeded in getting back to his starting-point in 29 1/2
+minutes, thus winning the 125,000 francs which constituted the Deutsch
+Prize, together with a similar sum granted to him by the Brazilian
+Government for the exploit. The greater part of this money was given by
+Santos-Dumont to charities.
+
+He went on building after this until he had made fourteen non-rigid
+dirigibles; of these No. 12 was placed at the disposal of the military
+authorities, while the rest, except for one that was sold to an American
+and made only one trip, were matters of experiment for their maker. His
+conclusions from his experiments may be gathered from his own work:--
+
+'On Friday, 31st July, 1903, Commandant Hirschauer and
+Lieutenant-Colonel Bourdeaux spent the afternoon with me at my airship
+station at Neuilly St James, where I had my three newest airships--the
+racing 'No. 7,' the omnibus 'No. 10,' and the runabout 'No. 9'--ready
+for their study. Briefly, I may say that the opinions expressed by the
+representatives of the Minister of War were so unreservedly favourable
+that a practical test of a novel character was decided to be made.
+Should the airship chosen pass successfully through it the result will
+be conclusive of its military value.
+
+'Now that these particular experiments are leaving my exclusively
+private control I will say no more of them than what has been already
+published in the French press. The test will probably consist of an
+attempt to enter one of the French frontier towns, such as Belfort or
+Nancy, on the same day that the airship leaves Paris. It will not,
+of course, be necessary to make the whole journey in the airship. A
+military railway wagon may be assigned to carry it, with its balloon
+uninflated, with tubes of hydrogen to fill it, and with all the
+necessary machinery and instruments arranged beside it. At some station
+a short distance from the town to be entered the wagon may be uncoupled
+from the train, and a sufficient number of soldiers accompanying the
+officers will unload the airship and its appliances, transport the whole
+to the nearest open space, and at once begin inflating the balloon.
+Within two hours from quitting the train the airship may be ready for
+its flight to the interior of the technically-besieged town.
+
+'Such may be the outline of the task--a task presented imperiously to
+French balloonists by the events of 1870-1, and which all the devotion
+and science of the Tissandier brothers failed to accomplish. To-day
+the problem may be set with better hope of success. All the essential
+difficulties may be revived by the marking out of a hostile zone around
+the town that must be entered; from beyond the outer edge of this zone,
+then, the airship will rise and take its flight--across it.
+
+'Will the airship be able to rise out of rifle range? I have always
+been the first to insist that the normal place of the airship is in low
+altitudes, and I shall have written this book to little purpose if
+I have not shown the reader the real dangers attending any brusque
+vertical mounting to considerable heights. For this we have the terrible
+Severo accident before our eyes. In particular, I have expressed
+astonishment at hearing of experimenters rising to these altitudes
+without adequate purpose in their early stages of experience with
+dirigible balloons. All this is very different, however, from a
+reasoned, cautious mounting, whose necessity has been foreseen and
+prepared for.'
+
+Probably owing to the fact that his engines were not of sufficient
+power, Santos-Dumont cannot be said to have solved the problem of the
+military airship, although the French Government bought one of his
+vessels. At the same time, he accomplished much in furthering and
+inciting experiment with dirigible airships, and he will always rank
+high among the pioneers of aerostation. His experiments might have
+gone further had not the Wright brothers' success in America and French
+interest in the problem of the heavier-than-air machine turned him from
+the study of dirigibles to that of the aeroplane, in which also he takes
+high rank among the pioneers, leaving the construction of a successful
+military dirigible to such men as the Lebaudy brothers, Major Parseval,
+and Zeppelin.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE MILITARY DIRIGIBLE
+
+Although French and German experiment in connection with the production
+of an airship which should be suitable for military purposes proceeded
+side by side, it is necessary to outline the development in the two
+countries separately, owing to the differing character of the work
+carried out. So far as France is concerned, experiment began with the
+Lebaudy brothers, originally sugar refiners, who turned their energies
+to airship construction in 1899. Three years of work went to the
+production of their first vessel, which was launched in 1902, having
+been constructed by them together with a balloon manufacturer named
+Surcouf and an engineer, Julliot. The Lebaudy airships were what is
+known as semi-rigids, having a spar which ran practically the full
+length of the gas bag to which it was attached in such a way as to
+distribute the load evenly. The car was suspended from the spar, at
+the rear end of which both horizontal and vertical rudders were fixed,
+whilst stabilising fins were provided at the stern of the gas envelope
+itself. The first of the Lebaudy vessels was named the 'Jaune'; its
+length was 183 feet and its maximum diameter 30 feet, while the cubic
+capacity was 80,000 feet. The power unit was a 40 horse-power Daimler
+motor, driving two propellers and giving a maximum speed of 26 miles
+per hour. This vessel made 29 trips, the last of which took place in
+November, 1902, when the airship was wrecked through collision with a
+tree.
+
+The second airship of Lebaudy construction was 7 feet longer than the
+first, and had a capacity of 94,000 cubic feet of gas with a triple air
+bag of 17,500 cubic feet to compensate for loss of gas; this latter was
+kept inflated by a rotary fan. The vessel was eventually taken over by
+the French Government and may be counted the first dirigible airship
+considered fit on its tests for military service.
+
+Later vessels of the Lebaudy type were the 'Patrie' and 'Republique,'
+in which both size and method of construction surpassed those of the
+two first attempts. The 'Patrie' was fitted with a 60 horse-power engine
+which gave a speed of 28 miles an hour, while the vessel had a radius of
+280 miles, carrying a crew of nine. In the winter of 1907 the 'Patrie'
+was anchored at Verdun, and encountered a gale which broke her hold
+on her mooring-ropes. She drifted derelict westward across France, the
+Channel, and the British Isles, and was lost in the Atlantic.
+
+The 'Republique' had an 80 horse-power motor, which, however, only gave
+her the same speed as the 'Patrie.' She was launched in July, 1908,
+and within three months came to an end which constituted a tragedy
+for France. A propeller burst while the vessel was in the air, and one
+blade, flying toward the envelope, tore in it a great gash; the airship
+crashed to earth, and the two officers and two non-commissioned officers
+who were in the car were instantaneously killed.
+
+The Clement Bayard, and subsequently the Astra-Torres, non-rigids,
+followed on the early Lebaudys and carried French dirigible construction
+up to 1912. The Clement Bayard was a simple non-rigid having four lobes
+at the stern end to assist stability. These were found to retard
+the speed of the airship, which in the second and more successful
+construction was driven by a Clement Bayard motor of 100 horse-power at
+a speed of 30 miles an hour. On August 23rd, 1909, while being tried for
+acceptance by the military authorities, this vessel achieved a record
+by flying at a height of 5,000 feet for two hours. The Astra-Torres
+non-rigids were designed by a Spaniard, Senor Torres, and built by the
+Astra Company. The envelope was of trefoil shape, this being due to the
+interior rigging from the suspension band; the exterior appearance
+is that of two lobes side by side, overlaid by a third. The interior
+rigging, which was adopted with a view to decreasing air resistance,
+supports a low-hung car from the centre of the envelope; steering is
+accomplished by means of horizontal planes fixed on the envelope at the
+stern, and vertical planes depending beneath the envelope, also at the
+stern end.
+
+One of the most successful of French pre-war dirigibles was a Clement
+Bayard built in 1912. In this twin propellers were placed at the front
+and horizontal and vertical rudders in a sort of box formation under the
+envelope at the stern. The envelope was stream-lined, while the car of
+the machine was placed well forward with horizontal controlling planes
+above it and immediately behind the propellers. This airship, which
+was named 'Dupuy de Lome,' may be ranked as about the most successful
+non-rigid dirigible constructed prior to the War.
+
+Experiments with non-rigids in Germany was mainly carried on by Major
+Parseval, who produced his first vessel in 1906. The main feature of
+this airship consisted in variation in length of the suspension cables
+at the will of the operator, so that the envelope could be given an
+upward tilt while the car remained horizontal in order to give the
+vessel greater efficiency in climbing. In this machine, the propeller
+was placed above and forward of the car, and the controlling planes were
+fixed directly to the envelope near the forward end. A second vessel
+differed from the first mainly in the matter of its larger size,
+variable suspension being again employed, together with a similar
+method of control. The vessel was moderately successful, and under Major
+Parseval's direction a third was constructed for passenger carrying,
+with two engines of 120 horsepower, each driving propellers of 13 feet
+diameter. This was the most successful of the early German dirigibles;
+it made a number of voyages with a dozen passengers in addition to its
+crew, as well as proving its value for military purposes by use as
+a scout machine in manoeuvres. Later Parsevals were constructed
+of stream-line form, about 300 feet in length, and with engines
+sufficiently powerful to give them speeds up to 50 miles an hour.
+
+Major Von Gross, commander of a Balloon Battalion, produced semi-rigid
+dirigibles from 1907 onward. The second of these, driven by two 75
+horse-power Daimler motors, was capable of a speed of 27 miles an hour;
+in September of 1908 she made a trip from and back to Berlin which
+lasted 13 hours, in which period she covered 176 miles with four
+passengers and reached a height of 4,000 feet. Her successor, launched
+in April of 1909, carried a wireless installation, and the next to this,
+driven by four motors of 75 horse-power each, reached a speed of 45
+miles an hour. As this vessel was constructed for military purposes,
+very few details either of its speed or method of construction were made
+public.
+
+Practically all these vessels were discounted by the work of Ferdinand
+von Zeppelin, who set out from the first with the idea of constructing
+a rigid dirigible. Beginning in 1898, he built a balloon on an aluminium
+framework covered with linen and silk, and divided into interior
+compartments holding linen bags which were capable of containing nearly
+400,000 cubic feet of hydrogen. The total length of this first Zeppelin
+airship was 420 feet and the diameter 38 feet. Two cars were rigidly
+attached to the envelope, each carrying a 16 horse-power motor, driving
+propellers which were rigidly connected to the aluminium framework of
+the balloon. Vertical and horizontal screws were used for lifting and
+forward driving and a sliding weight was used to raise or lower the stem
+of the vessel out of the horizontal in order to rise or descend without
+altering the load by loss of ballast or the lift by loss of gas.
+
+The first trial of this vessel was made in July of 1900, and was
+singularly unfortunate. The winch by which the sliding weight was
+operated broke, and the balloon was so bent that the working of the
+propellers was interfered with, as was the steering. A speed of 13 feet
+per second was attained, but on descending, the airship ran against
+some piles and was further damaged. Repairs were completed by the end
+of September, 1900, and on a second trial flight made on October 21st a
+speed of 30 feet per second was reached.
+
+Zeppelin was far from satisfied with the performance of this vessel,
+and he therefore set about collecting funds for the construction of
+a second, which was completed in 1905. By this time the internal
+combustion engine had been greatly improved, and without any increase of
+weight, Zeppelin was able to instal two motors of 85 horse-power each.
+The total capacity was 367,000 cubic feet of hydrogen, carried in 16 gas
+bags inside the framework, and the weight of the whole construction
+was 9 tons--a ton less than that of the first Zeppelin airship. Three
+vertical planes at front and rear controlled horizontal steering, while
+rise and fall was controlled by horizontal planes arranged in box form.
+Accident attended the first trial of this second airship, which took
+place over the Bodensee on November 30th, 1905, 'It had been intended to
+tow the raft, to which it was anchored, further from the shore against
+the wind. But the water was too low to allow the use of the raft. The
+balloon was therefore mounted on pontoons, pulled out into the lake, and
+taken in tow by a motor-boat. It was caught by a strong wind which was
+blowing from the shore, and driven ahead at such a rate that it
+overtook the motor-boat. The tow rope was therefore at once cut, but it
+unexpectedly formed into knots and became entangled with the airship,
+pulling the front end down into the water. The balloon was then caught
+by the wind and lifted into the air, when the propellers were set
+in motion. The front end was at this instant pointing in a downward
+direction, and consequently it shot into the water, where it was found
+necessary to open the valves.'[*]
+
+[*] Hildebrandt, Airships Past and Present.
+
+The damage done was repaired within six weeks, and the second trial
+was made on January 17th, 1906. The lifting force was too great for
+the weight, and the dirigible jumped immediately to 1,500 feet. The
+propellers were started, and the dirigible brought to a lower level,
+when it was found possible to drive against the wind. The steering
+arrangements were found too sensitive, and the motors were stopped, when
+the vessel was carried by the wind until it was over land--it had been
+intended that the trial should be completed over water. A descent was
+successfully accomplished and the dirigible was anchored for the night,
+but a gale caused it so much damage that it had to be broken up. It had
+achieved a speed of 30 feet per second with the motors developing only
+36 horse-power and, gathering from this what speed might have been
+accomplished with the full 170 horse-power, Zeppelin set about the
+construction of No. 3, with which a number of successful voyages were
+made, proving the value of the type for military purposes.
+
+No. 4 was the most notable of the early Zeppelins, as much on account of
+its disastrous end as by reason of any superior merit in comparison with
+No. 3. The main innovation consisted in attaching a triangular keel to
+the under side of the envelope, with two gaps beneath which the cars
+were suspended. Two Daimler Mercedes motors of 110 horse-power each were
+placed one in each car, and the vessel carried sufficient fuel for a
+60-hour cruise with the motors running at full speed. Each motor drove a
+pair of three-bladed metal propellers rigidly attached to the framework
+of the envelope and about 15 feet in diameter. There was a vertical
+rudder at the stern of the envelope and horizontal controlling planes
+were fixed on the sides of the envelope. The best performances and the
+end of this dirigible were summarised as follows by Major Squier:--
+
+'Its best performances were two long trips performed during the summer
+of 1908. The first, on July 4th, lasted exactly 12 hours, during which
+time it covered a distance of 235 miles, crossing the mountains
+to Lucerne and Zurich, and returning to the balloon-house near
+Friedrichshafen, on Lake Constance. The average speed on this trip
+was 32 miles per hour. On August 4th, this airship attempted a 24-hour
+flight, which was one of the requirements made for its acceptance by the
+Government. It left Friedrichshafen in the morning with the intention
+of following the Rhine as far as Mainz, and then returning to its
+starting-point, straight across the country. A stop of 3 hours 30
+minutes was made in the afternoon of the first day on the Rhine, to
+repair the engine. On the return, a second stop was found necessary near
+Stuttgart, due to difficulties with the motors, and some loss of gas.
+While anchored to the ground, a storm arose which broke loose the
+anchorage, and, as the balloon rose in the air, it exploded and took
+fire (due to causes which have never been actually determined and
+published) and fell to the ground, where it was completely destroyed. On
+this journey, which lasted in all 31 hours 15 minutes, the airship was
+in the air 20 hours 45 minutes, and covered a total distance of 378
+miles.
+
+'The patriotism of the German nation was aroused. Subscriptions were
+immediately started, and in a short space of time a quarter of a million
+pounds had been raised. A Zeppelin Society was formed to direct the
+expenditure of this fund. Seventeen thousand pounds has been expended in
+purchasing land near Friedrichshafen; workshops were erected, and it was
+announced that within one year the construction of eight airships of the
+Zeppelin type would be completed. Since the disaster to 'Zeppelin IV.'
+the Crown Prince of Germany made a trip in 'Zeppelin No. 3,' which had
+been called back into service, and within a very few days the German
+Emperor visited Friedrichshafen for the purpose of seeing the airship in
+flight. He decorated Count Zeppelin with the order of the Black Eagle.
+German patriotism and enthusiasm has gone further, and the "German
+Association for an Aerial Fleet" has been organised in sections
+throughout the country. It announces its intention of building 50
+garages (hangars) for housing airships.'
+
+By January of 1909, with well over a quarter of a million in hand for
+the construction of Zeppelin airships, No. 3 was again brought out,
+probably in order to maintain public enthusiasm in respect of the
+possible new engine of war. In March of that year No. 3 made a voyage
+which lasted for 4 hours over and in the vicinity of Lake Constance; it
+carried 26 passengers for a distance of nearly 150 miles.
+
+Before the end of March, Count Zeppelin determined to voyage from
+Friedrichshafen to Munich, together with the crew of the airship and
+four military officers. Starting at four in the morning and ascertaining
+their route from the lights of railway stations and the ringing of bells
+in the towns passed over, the journey was completed by nine o'clock, but
+a strong south-west gale prevented the intended landing. The airship
+was driven before the wind until three o'clock in the afternoon, when it
+landed safely near Dingolfing; by the next morning the wind had fallen
+considerably and the airship returned to Munich and landed on the parade
+ground as originally intended. At about 3.30 in the afternoon, the
+homeward journey was begun, Friedrichshafen being reached at about 7.30.
+
+These trials demonstrated that sufficient progress had been made to
+justify the construction of Zeppelin airships for use with the German
+army. No. 3 had been manoeuvred safely if not successfully in half a
+gale of wind, and henceforth it was known as 'SMS. Zeppelin I.,' at the
+bidding of the German Emperor, while the construction of 'SMS. Zeppelin
+II.' was rapidly proceeded with. The fifth construction of Count
+Zeppelin's was 446 feet in length, 42 1/2 feet in diameter,
+and contained 530,000 cubic feet of hydrogen gas in 17 separate
+compartments. Trial flights were made on the 26th May, 1909, and a week
+later she made a record voyage of 940 miles, the route being from Lake
+Constance over Ulm, Nuremberg, Leipzig, Bitterfeld, Weimar, Heilbronn,
+and Stuttgart, descending near Goppingen; the time occupied in the
+flight was upwards of 38 hours.
+
+In landing, the airship collided with a pear-tree, which damaged the
+bows and tore open two sections of the envelope, but repairs on the
+spot enabled the return journey to Friedrichshafen to be begun 24 hours
+later. In spite of the mishap the Zeppelin had once more proved itself
+as a possible engine of war, and thenceforth Germany pinned its faith
+to the dirigible, only developing the aeroplane to such an extent as
+to keep abreast of other nations. By the outbreak of war, nearly 30
+Zeppelins had been constructed; considerably more than half of these
+were destroyed in various ways, but the experiments carried on with
+each example of the type permitted of improvements being made. The first
+fatality occurred in September, 1913, when the fourteenth Zeppelin to be
+constructed, known as Naval Zeppelin L.1, was wrecked in the North Sea
+by a sudden storm and her crew of thirteen were drowned. About three
+weeks after this, Naval Zeppelin L.2, the eighteenth in order of
+building, exploded in mid-air while manoeuvring over Johannisthal. She
+was carrying a crew of 25, who were all killed.
+
+By 1912 the success of the Zeppelin type brought imitators. Chief among
+them was the Schutte-Lanz, a Mannheim firm, which produced a rigid
+dirigible with a wooden framework, wire braced. This was not a cylinder
+like the Zeppelin, but reverted to the cigar shape and contained about
+the same amount of gas as the Zeppelin type. The Schutte-Lanz was made
+with two gondolas rigidly attached to the envelope in which the gas bags
+were placed. The method of construction involved greater weight than was
+the case with the Zeppelin, but the second of these vessels, built with
+three gondolas containing engines, and a navigating cabin built into
+the hull of the airship itself, proved quite successful as a naval scout
+until wrecked on the islands off the coast of Denmark late in 1914. The
+last Schutte-Lanz to be constructed was used by the Germans for raiding
+England, and was eventually brought down in flames at Cowley.
+
+
+
+
+V. BRITISH AIRSHIP DESIGN
+
+As was the case with the aeroplane, Great Britain left France and
+Germany to make the running in the early days of airship construction;
+the balloon section of the Royal Engineers was compelled to confine
+its energies to work with balloons pure and simple until well after
+the twentieth century had dawned, and such experiments as were made
+in England were done by private initiative. As far back as 1900 Doctor
+Barton built an airship at the Alexandra Palace and voyaged across
+London in it. Four years later Mr E. T. Willows of Cardiff produced the
+first successful British dirigible, a semi-rigid 74 feet in length and
+18 feet in diameter, engined with a 7 horse-power Peugot twin-cylindered
+motor. This drove a two-bladed propeller at the stern for propulsion,
+and also actuated a pair of auxiliary propellers at the front which
+could be varied in their direction so as to control the right and left
+movements of the airship. This device was patented and the patent was
+taken over by the British Government, which by 1908 found Mr Willow's
+work of sufficient interest to regard it as furnishing data for
+experiment at the balloon factory at Farnborough. In 1909, Willows
+steered one of his dirigibles to London from Cardiff in a little less
+than ten hours, making an average speed of over 14 miles an hour. The
+best speed accomplished was probably considerably greater than this,
+for at intervals of a few miles, Willows descended near the earth to
+ascertain his whereabouts with the help of a megaphone. It must be added
+that he carried a compass in addition to his megaphone. He set out for
+Paris in November of 1910, reached the French coast, and landed near
+Douai. Some damage was sustained in this landing, but, after repair, the
+trip to Paris was completed.
+
+Meanwhile the Government balloon factory at Farnborough began airship
+construction in 1907; Colonel Capper, R.E., and S. F. Cody were jointly
+concerned in the production of a semi-rigid. Fifteen thicknesses of
+goldbeaters' skin--about the most expensive covering obtainable--were
+used for the envelope, which was 25 feet in diameter. A slight shower of
+rain in which the airship was caught led to its wreckage, owing to the
+absorbent quality of the goldbeaters' skin, whereupon Capper and Cody
+set to work to reproduce the airship and its defects on a larger scale.
+The first had been named 'Nulli Secundus' and the second was named
+'Nulli Secundus II.' Punch very appropriately suggested that the first
+vessel ought to have been named 'Nulli Primus,' while a possible third
+should be christened 'Nulli Tertius.' 'Nulli Secundus II.' was fitted
+with a 100 horse-power engine and had an envelope of 42 feet in
+diameter, the goldbeaters' skin being covered in fabric and the car
+being suspended by four bands which encircled the balloon envelope.
+In October of 1907, 'Nulli Secundus II.' made a trial flight from
+Farnborough to London and was anchored at the Crystal Palace. The wind
+sprung up and took the vessel away from its mooring ropes, wrecking it
+after the one flight.
+
+Stagnation followed until early in 1909, when a small airship fitted
+with two 12 horse-power motors and named the 'Baby' was turned out from
+the balloon factory. This was almost egg-shaped, the blunt end being
+forward, and three inflated fins being placed at the tail as control
+members. A long car with rudder and elevator at its rear-end carried
+the engines and crew; the 'Baby' made some fairly successful flights and
+gave a good deal of useful data for the construction of later vessels.
+
+Next to this was 'Army Airship 2A 'launched early in 1910 and larger,
+longer, and narrower in design than the Baby. The engine was an 80
+horse-power Green motor which drove two pairs of propellers; small
+inflated control members were fitted at the stern end of the envelope,
+which was 154 feet in length. The suspended car was 84 feet long,
+carrying both engines and crew, and the Willows idea of swivelling
+propellers for governing the direction was used in this vessel. In June
+of that year a new, small-type dirigible, the 'Beta,' was produced,
+driven by a 30 horse-power Green engine with which she flew over 3,000
+miles. She was the most successful British dirigible constructed up to
+that time, and her successor, the 'Gamma,' was built on similar lines.
+The 'Gamma' was a larger vessel, however, produced in 1912, with flat,
+controlling fins and rudder at the rear end of the envelope, and with
+the conventional long car suspended at some distance beneath the gas
+bag. By this time, the mooring mast, carrying a cap of which the concave
+side fitted over the convex nose of the airship, had been originated.
+The cap was swivelled, and, when attached to it, an airship was held
+nose on to the wind, thus reducing by more than half the dangers
+attendant on mooring dirigibles in the open.
+
+Private subscription under the auspices of the Morning Post got together
+sufficient funds in 1910 for the purchase of a Lebaudy airship, which
+was built in France, flown across the Channel, and presented to the Army
+Airship Fleet. This dirigible was 337 feet long, and was driven by two
+135 horse-power Panhard motors, each of which actuated two propellers.
+The journey from Moisson to Aldershot was completed at a speed of 36
+miles an hour, but the airship was damaged while being towed into its
+shed. On May of the following year, the Lebaudy was brought out for a
+flight, but, in landing, the guide rope fouled in trees and sheds and
+brought the airship broadside on to the wind; she was driven into some
+trees and wrecked to such an exteent that rebuilding was considered an
+impossibility. A Clement Bayard, bought by the army airship section,
+became scrap after even less flying than had been accomplished by the
+Lebaudy.
+
+In April of 1910, the Admiralty determined on a naval air service,
+and set about the production of rigid airships which should be able to
+compete with Zeppelins as naval scouts. The construction was entrusted
+to Vickers, Ltd., who set about the task at their Barrow works and built
+something which, when tested after a year's work, was found incapable
+of lifting its own weight. This defect was remedied by a series of
+alterations, and meanwhile the unofficial title of 'Mayfly' was given to
+the vessel.
+
+Taken over by the Admiralty before she had passed any flying tests,
+the 'Mayfly' was brought out on September 24th, 1911, for a trial trip,
+being towed out from her shed by a tug. When half out from the shed,
+the envelope was caught by a light cross-wind, and, in spite of the pull
+from the tug, the great fabric broke in half, nearly drowning the crew,
+who had to dive in order to get clear of the wreckage.
+
+There was considerable similarity in form, though not in performance,
+between the Mayfly and the prewar Zeppelin. The former was 510 feet in
+length, cylindrical in form, with a diameter of 48 feet, and divided
+into 19 gas-bag compartments. The motive power consisted of two 200
+horse-power Wolseley engines. After its failure, the Naval Air Service
+bought an Astra-Torres airship from France and a Parseval from Germany,
+both of which proved very useful in the early days of the War, doing
+patrol work over the Channel before the Blimps came into being.
+
+Early in 1915 the 'Blimp' or 'S.S.' type of coastal airship was evolved
+in response to the demand for a vessel which could be turned out quickly
+and in quantities. There was urgent demand, voiced by Lord Fisher, for
+a type of vessel capable of maintaining anti-submarine patrol off the
+British coasts, and the first S.S. airships were made by combining a
+gasbag with the most available type of aeroplane fuselage and engine,
+and fitting steering gear. The 'Blimp' consisted of a B.E. fuselage with
+engine and geared-down propeller, and seating for pilot and observer,
+attached to an envelope about 150 feet in length. With a speed of
+between 35 and 40 miles an hour, the 'Blimp' had a cruising capacity of
+about ten hours; it was fitted with wireless set, camera, machine-gun,
+and bombs, and for submarine spotting and patrol work generally it
+proved invaluable, though owing to low engine power and comparatively
+small size, its uses were restricted to reasonably fair weather. For
+work farther out at sea and in all weathers, airships known as the coast
+patrol type, and more commonly as 'coastals,' were built, and later
+the 'N.S.' or North Sea type, still larger and more weather-worthy,
+followed. By the time the last year of the War came, Britain led the
+world in the design of non-rigid and semi-rigid dirigibles. The 'S.S.'
+or 'Blimp' had been improved to a speed of 50 miles an hour, carrying a
+crew of three, and the endurance record for the type was 18 1/2 hours,
+while one of them had reached a height of 10,000 feet. The North Sea
+type of non-rigid was capable of travelling over 20 hours at full speed,
+or forty hours at cruising speed, and the number of non-rigids belonging
+to the British Navy exceeded that of any other country.
+
+It was owing to the incapacity--apparent or real--of the British
+military or naval designers to produce a satisfactory rigid airship that
+the 'N.S.' airship was evolved. The first of this type was produced
+in 1916, and on her trials she was voted an unqualified success, in
+consequence of which the building of several more was pushed on. The
+envelope, of 360,000 cubic feet capacity, was made on the Astra-Torres
+principle of three lobes, giving a trefoil section. The ship carried
+four fins, to three of which the elevator and rudder flaps were
+attached; petrol tanks were placed inside the envelope, under which
+was rigged a long covered-in car, built up of a light steel tubular
+framework 35 feet in length. The forward portion was covered with
+duralumin sheeting, an aluminium alloy which, unlike aluminium itself,
+is not affected by the action of sea air and water, and the remainder
+with fabric laced to the framework. Windows and port-holes were provided
+to give light to the crew, and the controls and navigating instruments
+were placed forward, with the sleeping accommodation aft. The engines
+were mounted in a power unit structure, separate from the car and
+connected by wooden gang ways supported by wire cables. A complete
+electrical installation of two dynamos and batteries for lights,
+signalling lamps, wireless, telephones, etc., was carried, and the
+motive power consisted of either two 250 horse-power Rolls-Royce engines
+or two 240 horse-power Fiat engines. The principal dimensions of this
+type are length 262 feet, horizontal diameter 56 feet 9 inches, vertical
+diameter 69 feet 3 inches. The gross lift is 24,300 lbs. and the
+disposable lift without crew, petrol, oil, and ballast 8,500 lbs. The
+normal crew carried for patrol work was ten officers and men. This type
+holds the record of 101 hours continuous flight on patrol duty.
+
+In the matter of rigid design it was not until 1913 that the British
+Admiralty got over the fact that the 'Mayfly' would not, and decided on
+a further attempt at the construction of a rigid dirigible. The
+contract for this was signed in March of 1914; work was suspended in the
+following February and begun again in July, 1915, but it was not until
+January of 1917 that the ship was finished, while her trials were not
+completed until March of 1917, when she was taken over by the Admiralty.
+The details of the construction and trial of this vessel, known as 'No.
+9,' go to show that she did not quite fill the contract requirements in
+respect of disposable lift until a number of alterations had been made.
+The contract specified that a speed of at least 45 miles per hour was to
+be attained at full engine power, while a minimum disposable lift of 5
+tons was to be available for movable weights, and the airship was to
+be capable of rising to a height of 2,000 feet. Driven by four Wolseley
+Maybach engines of 180 horse-power each, the lift of the vessel was not
+sufficient, so it was decided to remove the two engines in the after
+car and replace them by a single engine of 250 horsepower. With this the
+vessel reached the contract speed of 45 miles per hour with a cruising
+radius of 18 hours, equivalent to 800 miles when the engines were
+running at full speed. The vessel served admirably as a training
+airship, for, by the time she was completed, the No. 23 class of rigid
+airship had come to being, and thus No. 9 was already out of date.
+
+Three of the 23 class were completed by the end of 1917; it was
+stipulated that they should be built with a speed of at least 55 miles
+per hour, a minimum disposable lift of 8 tons, and a capability of
+rising at an average rate of not less than 1,000 feet per minute to a
+height of 3,000 feet. The motive power consisted of four 250 horse-power
+Rolls-Royce engines, one in each of the forward and after cars and two
+in a centre car. Four-bladed propellers were used throughout the ship.
+
+A 23X type followed on the 23 class, but by the time two ships had been
+completed, this was practically obsolete. The No. 31 class followed the
+23X; it was built on Schutte-Lanz lines, 615 feet in length, 66 feet
+diameter, and a million and a half cubic feet capacity. The hull was
+similar to the later types of Zeppelin in shape, with a tapering stern
+and a bluff, rounded bow. Five cars each carrying a 250 horse-power
+Rolls-Royce engine, driving a single fixed propeller, were fitted, and
+on her trials R.31 performed well, especially in the matter of speed.
+But the experiment of constructing in wood in the Schutte-Lanz way
+adopted with this vessel resulted in failure eventually, and the type
+was abandoned.
+
+Meanwhile, Germany had been pushing forward Zeppelin design
+and straining every nerve in the improvement of rigid dirigible
+construction, until L.33 was evolved; she was generally known as
+a super-Zeppelin, and on September 24th, 1916, six weeks after her
+launching, she was damaged by gun-fire in a raid over London, being
+eventually compelled to come to earth at Little Wigborough in Essex. The
+crew gave themselves up after having set fire to the ship, and though
+the fabric was totally destroyed, the structure of the hull remained
+intact, so that just as Germany was able to evolve the Gotha bomber from
+the Handley-Page delivered at Lille, British naval constructors were able
+to evolve the R.33 type of airship from the Zeppelin framework delivered
+at Little Wigborough. Two vessels, R.33 and R.34, were laid down for
+completion; three others were also put down for construction, but, while
+R.33 and R.34 were built almost entirely from the data gathered from
+the wrecked L.33, the three later vessels embody more modern design,
+including a number of improvements, and more especially greater
+disposable lift. It has been commented that while the British
+authorities were building R.33 and R.34, Germany constructed 30
+Zeppelins on 4 slips, for which reason it may be reckoned a matter for
+congratulation that the rigid airship did not decide the fate of the
+War. The following particulars of construction of the R.33 and R.34
+types are as given by Major Whale in his survey of British Airships:--
+
+'In all its main features the hull structure of R.33 and R.34 follows
+the design of the wrecked German Zeppelin airship L.33. 'The hull
+follows more nearly a true stream-line shape than in the previous ships
+constructed of duralumin, in which a greater proportion of the greater
+length was parallel-sided. The Germans adopted this new shape from
+the Schutte-Lanz design and have not departed from this practice. This
+consists of a short, parallel body with a long, rounded bow and a long
+tapering stem culminating in a point. The overall length of the ship is
+643 feet with a diameter of 79 feet and an extreme height of 92 feet.
+
+'The type of girders in this class has been much altered from those
+in previous ships. The hull is fitted with an internal triangular keel
+throughout practically the entire length. This forms the main corridor
+of the ship, and is fitted with a footway down the centre for its entire
+length. It contains water ballast and petrol tanks, bomb storage and
+crew accommodation, and the various control wires, petrol pipes, and
+electric leads are carried along the lower part.
+
+'Throughout this internal corridor runs a bridge girder, from which
+the petrol and water ballast tanks are supported. These tanks are so
+arranged that they can be dropped clear of the ship. Amidships is the
+cabin space with sufficient room for a crew of twenty-five. Hammocks can
+be swung from the bridge girder before mentioned.
+
+'In accordance with the latest Zeppelin practice, monoplane rudders and
+elevators are fitted to the horizontal and vertical fins.
+
+'The ship is supported in the air by nineteen gas bags, which give a
+total capacity of approximately two million cubic feet of gas. The gross
+lift works out at approximately 59 1/2 tons, of which the total fixed
+weight is 33 tons, giving a disposable lift of 26 1/2 tons.
+
+'The arrangement of cars is as follows: At the forward end the control
+car is slung, which contains all navigating instruments and the various
+controls. Adjoining this is the wireless cabin, which is also fitted
+for wireless telephony. Immediately aft of this is the forward power car
+containing one engine, which gives the appearance that the whole is one
+large car.
+
+'Amidships are two wing cars, each containing a single engine. These
+are small and just accommodate the engines with sufficient room for
+mechanics to attend to them. Further aft is another larger car which
+contains an auxiliary control position and two engines.
+
+'It will thus be seen that five engines are installed in the ship;
+these are all of the same type and horsepower, namely, 250 horse-power
+Sunbeam. R.33 was constructed by Messrs Armstrong, Whitworth, Ltd.;
+while her sister ship R.34 was built by Messrs Beardmore on the Clyde.'
+
+Of the two vessels, R.34 appeared rather more airworthy than her sister
+ship; the lift of the ship justified the carrying of a greater quantity
+of fuel than had been provided for, and, as she was considered suitable
+for making a Transatlantic crossing, extra petrol tanks were fitted in
+the hull and a new type of outer cover was fitted with a view to her
+making the Atlantic crossing. She made a 21-hour cruise over the North
+of England and the South of Scotland at the end of May, 1919, and
+subsequently went for a longer cruise over Denmark, the Baltic, and the
+north coast of Germany, remaining in the air for 56 hours in spite
+of very bad weather conditions. Finally, July 2nd was selected as the
+starting date for the cross Atlantic flight; the vessel was commanded
+by Major G. H. Scott, A.F.C., with Captain G. S. Greenland as first
+officer, Second-Lieut. H. F. Luck as second officer, and Lieut. J. D.
+Shotter as engineer officer. There were also on board Brig.-Gen. E.
+P. Maitland, representing the Air Ministry, Major J. E. M. Pritchard,
+representing the Admiralty, and Lieut.-Col. W. H. Hemsley of the Army
+Aviation Department. In addition to eight tons of petrol, R.34 carried a
+total number of 30 persons from East Fortune to Long Island, N.Y.
+
+There being no shed in America capable of accommodating the airship,
+she had to be moored in the open for refilling with fuel and gas, and to
+make the return journey almost immediately.
+
+Brig.-Gen. Maitland's account of the flight, in itself a record as
+interesting as valuable, divides the outward journey into two main
+stages, the first from East Fortune to Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, a
+distance of 2,050 sea miles, and the second and more difficult stage
+to Mineola Field, Long Island, 1,080 sea miles. An easy journey
+was experienced until Newfoundland was reached, but then storms and
+electrical disturbances rendered it necessary to alter the course, in
+consequence of which petrol began to run short. Head winds rendered the
+shortage still more acute, and on Saturday, July 5th, a wireless signal
+was sent out asking for destroyers to stand by to tow. However, after an
+anxious night, R.33 landed safely at Mineola Field at 9.55 a.m. on July
+6th, having accomplished the journey in 108 hours 12 minutes.
+
+She remained at Mineola until midnight of July 9th, when, although
+it had been intended that a start should be made by daylight for the
+benefit of New York spectators, an approaching storm caused preparations
+to be advanced for immediate departure. She set out at 5.57 a.m.
+by British summer time, and flew over New York in the full glare
+of hundreds of searchlights before heading out over the Atlantic. A
+following wind assisted the return voyage, and on July 13th, at 7.57
+a.m., R.34 anchored at Pulham, Norfolk, having made the return journey
+in 75 hours 3 minutes, and proved the suitability of the dirigible
+for Transatlantic commercial work. R.80, launched on July 19th, 1920,
+afforded further proof, if this were needed.
+
+It is to be noted that nearly all the disasters to airships have been
+caused by launching and landing--the type is safe enough in the air,
+under its own power, but its bulk renders it unwieldy for ground
+handling. The German system of handling Zeppelins in and out of their
+sheds is, so far, the best devised: this consists of heavy trucks
+running on rails through the sheds and out at either end; on descending,
+the trucks are run out, and the airship is securely attached to them
+outside the shed; the trucks are then run back into the shed, taking the
+airship with them, and preventing any possibility of the wind driving
+the envelope against the side of the shed before it is safely housed;
+the reverse process is adopted in launching, which is thus rendered as
+simple as it is safe.
+
+
+
+
+VI. THE AIRSHIP COMMERCIALLY
+
+Prior to the war period, between the years 1910 and 1914, a German
+undertaking called the Deutsche Luftfahrt Actien Gesellschaft conducted
+a commercial Zeppelin service in which four airships known as the
+Sachsan, Hansa, Victoria Louise, and Schwaben were used. During the four
+years of its work, the company carried over 17,000 passengers, and over
+100,000 miles were flown without incurring one fatality and with only
+minor and unavoidable accidents to the vessels composing the service.
+Although a number of English notabilities made voyages in these
+airships, the success of this only experiment in commercial aerostation
+seems to have been forgotten since the war. There was beyond doubt a
+military aim in this apparently peaceful use of Zeppelin airships; it is
+past question now that all Germany's mechanical development in respect
+of land sea, and air transport in the years immediately preceding the
+war, was accomplished with the ulterior aim of military conquest, but,
+at the same time, the running of this service afforded proof of the
+possibility of establishing a dirigible service for peaceful ends, and
+afforded proof too, of the value of the dirigible as a vessel of purely
+commercial utility.
+
+In considering the possibility of a commercial dirigible service, it
+is necessary always to bear in mind the disadvantages of first cost and
+upkeep as compared with the aeroplane. The building of a modern rigid
+is an exceedingly costly undertaking, and the provision of an efficient
+supply of hydrogen gas to keep its compartments filled is a very large
+item in upkeep of which the heavier-than-air machine goes free. Yet
+the future of commercial aeronautics so far would seem to lie with the
+dirigible where very long voyages are in question. No matter how the
+aeroplane may be improved, the possibility of engine failure always
+remains as a danger for work over water. In seaplane or flying boat
+form, the danger is still present in a rough sea, though in the American
+Transatlantic flight, N.C.3, taxi-ing 300 miles to the Azores after
+having fallen to the water, proved that this danger is not so acute as
+is generally assumed. Yet the multiple-engined rigid, as R.34 showed on
+her return voyage, may have part of her power plant put out of action
+altogether and still complete her voyage very successfully, which, in
+the case of mail carrying and services run strictly to time, gives her
+an enormous advantage over the heavier-than-air machine.
+
+'For commercial purposes,' General Sykes has remarked, 'the airship is
+eminently adapted for long distance journeys involving non-stop flights.
+It has this inherent advantage over the aeroplane, that while there
+appears to be a limit to the range of the aeroplane as at present
+constructed, there is practically no limit whatever to that of the
+airship, as this can be overcome by merely increasing the size. It thus
+appears that for such journeys as crossing the Atlantic, or crossing
+the Pacific from the west coast of America to Australia or Japan, the
+airship will be peculiarly suitable. It having been conceded that the
+scope of the airship is long distance travel, the only type which need
+be considered for this purpose is the rigid. The rigid airship is still
+in an embryonic state, but sufficient has already been accomplished
+in this country, and more particularly in Germany, to show that with
+increased capacity there is no reason why, within a few years' time,
+airships should not be built capable of completing the circuit of the
+globe and of conveying sufficient passengers and merchandise to render
+such an undertaking a paying proposition.'
+
+The British R.38 class, embodying the latest improvements in airship
+design outside Germany, gives a gross lift per airship of 85 tons and a
+net lift of about 45 tons. The capacity of the gas bags is about two
+and three-quarter million cubic feet, and, travelling at the rate of
+45 miles per hour, the cruising range of the vessel is estimated at 8.8
+days. Six engines, each of 350 horse-power, admit of an extreme speed of
+70 miles per hour if necessary.
+
+The last word in German design is exemplified in the rigids L.70 and
+L.71, together with the commercial airship 'Bodensee.' Previous to the
+construction of these, the L.65 type is noteworthy as being the first
+Zeppelin in which direct drive of the propeller was introduced, together
+with an improved and lighter type of car. L.70 built in 1918 and
+destroyed by the British naval forces, had a speed of about 75 miles per
+hour; L.71 had a maximum speed of 72 miles per hour, a gas bag capacity
+of 2,420,000 cubic feet, and a length of 743 feet, while the total lift
+was 73 tons. Progress in design is best shown by the progress in useful
+load; in the L.70 and L.71 class, this has been increased to 58.3 per
+cent, while in the Bodensee it was ever higher.
+
+As was shown in R.34's American flight, the main problem in connection
+with the commercial use of dirigibles is that of mooring in the open.
+The nearest to a solution of this problem, so far, consists in the mast
+carrying a swivelling cap; this has been tried in the British service
+with a non-rigid airship, which was attached to a mast in open country
+in a gale of 52 miles an hour without the slightest damage to the
+airship. In its commercial form, the mast would probably take the
+form of a tower, at the top of which the cap would revolve so that
+the airship should always face the wind, the tower being used for
+embarkation and disembarkation of passengers and the provision of fuel
+and gas. Such a system would render sheds unnecessary except in case of
+repairs, and would enormously decrease the establishment charges of any
+commercial airship.
+
+All this, however, is hypothetical. Remains the airship of to-day,
+developed far beyond the promise of five years ago, capable, as has
+been proved by its achievements both in Britain and in Germany, of
+undertaking practically any given voyage with success.
+
+
+
+
+VII. KITE BALLOONS
+
+As far back as the period of the Napoleonic wars, the balloon was
+given a place in warfare, but up to the Franco-Prussian Prussian War
+of 1870-71 its use was intermittent. The Federal forces made use of
+balloons to a small extent in the American Civil War; they came to great
+prominence in the siege of Paris, carrying out upwards of three million
+letters and sundry carrier pigeons which took back messages into the
+besieged city. Meanwhile, as captive balloons, the German and other
+armies used them for observation and the direction of artillery fire. In
+this work the ordinary spherical balloon was at a grave disadvantage; if
+a gust of wind struck it, the balloon was blown downward and down
+wind, generally twirling in the air and upsetting any calculations and
+estimates that might be made by the observers, while in a wind of 25
+miles an hour it could not rise at all. The rotatory movement caused by
+wind was stopped by an experimenter in the Russo-Japanese war, who fixed
+to the captive observation balloons a fin which acted as a rudder. This
+did not stop the balloon from being blown downward and away from its
+mooring station, but this tendency was overcome by a modification
+designed in Germany by the Parseval-Siegsfield Company, which originated
+what has since become familiar as the 'Sausage' or kite balloon. This
+is so arranged that the forward end is tilted up into the wind, and the
+underside of the gas bag, acting as a plane, gives the balloon a lifting
+tendency in a wind, thus counteracting the tendency of the wind to blow
+it downward and away from its mooring station. Smaller bags are fitted
+at the lower and rear end of the balloon with openings that face into
+the wind; these are thus kept inflated, and they serve the purpose of a
+rudder, keeping the kite balloon steady in the air.
+
+Various types of kite balloon have been introduced; the original German
+Parseval-Siegsfield had a single air bag at the stern end, which was
+modified to two, three, or more lobes in later varieties, while an
+American experimental design attempted to do away with the attached
+lobes altogether by stringing out a series of small air bags, kite
+fashion, in rear of the main envelope. At the beginning of the War,
+Germany alone had kite balloons, for the authorities of the Allied
+armies con-sidered that the bulk of such a vessel rendered it too
+conspicuous a mark to permit of its being serviceable. The Belgian
+arm alone possessed two which, on being put into service, were found
+extremely useful. The French followed by constructing kite balloons at
+Chalais Meudon, and then, after some months of hostilities and with the
+example of the Royal Naval Air Service to encourage them, the British
+military authorities finally took up the construction and use of kite
+balloons for artillery-spotting and general observation purposes.
+Although many were brought down by gun-fire, their uses far outweighed
+their disadvantages, and toward the end of the War, hardly a mile of
+front was without its 'Sausage.'
+
+For naval work, kite balloons were carried in a specially constructed
+hold in the forepart of certain vessels; when required for use, the
+covering of the hold was removed, the kite balloon inflated and released
+to the required height by means of winches as in the case of the
+land work. The perfecting of the 'Coastal' and N.S. types of airship,
+together with the extension of wireless telephony between airship and
+cruiser or other warship, in all probability will render the use of the
+kite balloon unnecessary in connection with naval scouting. But, during
+the War, neither wireless telephony nor naval airships had developed
+sufficiently to render the Navy independent of any means that might come
+to hand, and the fitting of kite balloons in this fashion filled a need
+of the times.
+
+A necessary accessory of the kite balloon is the parachute, which has
+a long history. Da Vinci and Veranzio appear to have been the first
+exponents, the first in the theory and the latter in the practice of
+parachuting. Montgolfier experimented at Annonay before he constructed
+his first hot air-balloon, and in 1783 a certain Lenormand dropped from
+a tree in a parachute. Blanchard the balloonist made a spectacle
+of parachuting, and made it a financial success; Cocking, in 1836,
+attempted to use an inverted form of parachute; taken up to a height
+of 3,000 feet, he was cut adrift, when the framework of the parachute
+collapsed and Cocking was killed.
+
+The rate of fall is slow in parachuting to the ground. Frau Poitevin,
+making a descent from a height of 6,000 feet, took 45 minutes to reach
+the ground, and, when she alighted, her husband, who had taken her up,
+had nearly got his balloon packed up. Robertson, another parachutist is
+said to have descended from a height of 10,000 feet in 35 minutes, or
+at a rate of nearly 5 feet per second. During the War Brigadier-General
+Maitland made a parachute descent from a height of 10,000 feet, the time
+taken being about 20 minutes.
+
+The parachute was developed considerably during the War period, the main
+requirement, that of certainty in opening, being considerably developed.
+Considered a necessary accessory for kite balloons, the parachute was
+also partially adopted for use with aeroplanes in the later War period,
+when it was contended that if a machine were shot down in flames, its
+occupants would be given a far better chance of escape if they had
+parachutes. Various trials were made to demonstrate the extreme
+efficiency of the parachute in modern form, one of them being a descent
+from the upper ways of the Tower Bridge to the waters of the Thames, in
+which short distance the 'Guardian Angel' type of parachute opened and
+cushioned the descent for its user.
+
+For dirigibles, balloons, and kite balloons the parachute is an
+essential. It would seem to be equally essential in the case of
+heavier-than-air machines, but this point is still debated. Certainly
+it affords the occupant of a falling aeroplane a chance, no matter how
+slender, of reaching the ground in safety, and, for that reason, it
+would seem to have a place in aviation as well as in aerostation.
+
+
+
+
+PART IV. ENGINE DEVELOPMENT
+
+
+
+
+I. THE VERTICAL TYPE
+
+The balloon was but a year old when the brothers Robert, in 1784
+attempted propulsion of an aerial vehicle by hand-power, and succeeded,
+to a certain extent, since they were able to make progress when there
+was only a slight wind to counteract their work. But, as may be easily
+understood, the manual power provided gave but a very slow speed, and in
+any wind it all the would-be airship became an uncontrolled balloon.
+
+Henson and Stringfellow, with their light steam engines, were first to
+attempt conquest of the problem of mechanical propulsion in the
+air; their work in this direction is so fully linked up with their
+constructed models that it has been outlined in the section dealing
+with the development of the aeroplane. But, very shortly after these
+two began, there came into the field a Monsieur Henri Giffard, who first
+achieved success in the propulsion by mechanical means of dirigible
+balloons, for his was the first airship to fly against the wind.
+He employed a small steam-engine developing about 3 horse-power and
+weighing 350 lbs. with boiler, fitting the whole in a car suspended from
+the gas-bag of his dirigible. The propeller which this engine worked
+was 11 feet in diameter, and the inventor, who made several flights,
+obtained a speed of 6 miles an hour against a slight wind. The power
+was not sufficient to render the invention practicable, as the dirigible
+could only be used in calm weather, but Giffard was sufficiently
+encouraged by his results to get out plans for immense dirigibles,
+which through lack of funds he was unable to construct. When, later, his
+invention of the steam-injector gave him the means he desired, he became
+blind, and in 1882 died, having built but the one famous dirigible.
+
+This appears to have been the only instance of a steam engine being
+fitted to a dirigible; the inherent disadvantage of this form of motive
+power is that a boiler to generate the steam must be carried, and this,
+together with the weight of water and fuel, renders the steam engine
+uneconomical in relation to the lift either of plane or gas-bag. Again,
+even if the weight could be brought down to a reasonable amount, the
+attention required by steam plant renders it undesirable as a motive
+power for aircraft when compared with the internal combustion engine.
+
+Maxim, in Artificial and Natural Flight, details the engine which he
+constructed for use with his giant experimental flying machine, and his
+description is worthy of reproduction since it is that of the only steam
+engine besides Giffard's, and apart from those used for the propulsion
+of models, designed for driving an aeroplane. 'In 1889,' Maxim says,
+'I had my attention drawn to some very thin, strong, and comparatively
+cheap tubes which were being made in France, and it was only after I had
+seen these tubes that I seriously considered the question of making a
+flying machine. I obtained a large quantity of them and found that they
+were very light, that they would stand enormously high pressures, and
+generate a very large quantity of steam. Upon going into a mathematical
+calculation of the whole subject, I found that it would be possible to
+make a machine on the aeroplane system, driven by a steam engine, which
+would be sufficiently strong to lift itself into the air. I first made
+drawings of a steam engine, and a pair of these engines was afterwards
+made. These engines are constructed, for the most part, of a very high
+grade of cast steel, the cylinders being only 3/32 of an inch thick,
+the crank shafts hollow, and every part as strong and light as possible.
+They are compound, each having a high-pressure piston with an area of
+20 square inches, a low-pressure piston of 50.26 square inches, and a
+common stroke of 1 foot. When first finished they were found to weigh
+300 lbs. each; but after putting on the oil cups, felting, painting, and
+making some slight alterations, the weight was brought up to 320 lbs.
+each, or a total of 640 lbs. for the two engines, which have since
+developed 362 horsepower with a steam pressure of 320 lbs. per square
+inch.'
+
+The result is remarkable, being less than 2 lbs. weight per horse-power,
+especially when one considers the state of development to which the
+steam engine had attained at the time these experiments were made. The
+fining down of the internal combustion engine, which has done so much to
+solve the problems of power in relation to weight for use with aircraft,
+had not then been begun, and Maxim had nothing to guide him, so far
+as work on the part of his predecessors was concerned, save the
+experimental engines of Stringfellow, which, being constructed on so
+small a scale in comparison with his own, afforded little guidance.
+Concerning the factor of power, he says: 'When first designing this
+engine, I did not know how much power I might require from it. I thought
+that in some cases it might be necessary to allow the high-pressure
+steam to enter the low-pressure cylinder direct, but as this would
+involve a considerable loss, I constructed a species of injector. This
+injector may be so adjusted that when the steam in the boiler rises
+above a certain predetermined point, say 300 lbs., to the square inch,
+it opens a valve and escapes past the high-pressure cylinder instead of
+blowing off at the safety valve. In escaping through this valve, a fall
+of about 200 lbs. pressure per square inch is made to do work on the
+surrounding steam and drive it forward in the pipe, producing a pressure
+on the low-pressure piston considerably higher than the back-pressure on
+the high-pressure piston. In this way a portion of the work which would
+otherwise be lost is utilised, and it is possible, with an unlimited
+supply of steam, to cause the engines to develop an enormous amount of
+power.'
+
+With regard to boilers, Maxim writes,
+
+'The first boiler which I made was constructed something on the
+Herreshof principle, but instead of having one simple pipe in one very
+long coil, I used a series of very small and light pipes, connected in
+such a manner that there was a rapid circulation through the whole--the
+tubes increasing in size and number as the steam was generated. I
+intended that there should be a pressure of about 100 lbs. more on the
+feed water end of the series than on the steam end, and I believed that
+this difference in pressure would be sufficient to ensure direct and
+positive circulation through every tube in the series. The first boiler
+was exceedingly light, but the workmanship, as far as putting the tubes
+together was concerned, was very bad, and it was found impossible to so
+adjust the supply of water as to make dry steam without overheating and
+destroying the tubes.
+
+'Before making another boiler I obtained a quantity of copper tubes,
+about 8 feet long, 3/8 inch external diameter, and 1/50 of an inch
+thick. I subjected about 100 of these tubes to an internal pressure of
+1 ton per square inch of cold kerosene oil, and as none of them leaked
+I did not test any more, but commenced my experiments by placing some
+of them in a white-hot petroleum fire. I found that I could evaporate
+as much as 26 1/2 lbs. of water per square foot of heating surface per
+hour, and that with a forced circulation, although the quantity of water
+passing was very small but positive, there was no danger of overheating.
+I conducted many experiments with a pressure of over 400 lbs. per square
+inch, but none of the tubes failed. I then mounted a single tube in a
+white-hot furnace, also with a water circulation, and found that it only
+burst under steam at a pressure of 1,650 lbs. per square inch. A large
+boiler, having about 800 square feet of heating surface, including the
+feed-water heater, was then constructed. This boiler is about 4 1/2 feet
+wide at the bottom, 8 feet long and 6 feet high. It weighs, with the
+casing, the dome, and the smoke stack and connections, a little less
+than 1,000 lbs. The water first passes through a system of small
+tubes--1/4 inch in diameter and 1/60 inch thick--which were placed at
+the top of the boiler and immediately over the large tubes.... This
+feed-water heater is found to be very effective. It utilises the heat
+of the products of combustion after they have passed through the boiler
+proper and greatly reduces their temperature, while the feed-water
+enters the boiler at a temperature of about 250 F. A forced circulation
+is maintained in the boiler, the feed-water entering through a spring
+valve, the spring valve being adjusted in such a manner that the
+pressure on the water is always 30 lbs. per square inch in excess of
+the boiler pressure. This fall of 30 lbs. in pressure acts upon the
+surrounding hot water which has already passed through the tubes, and
+drives it down through a vertical outside tube, thus ensuring a positive
+and rapid circulation through all the tubes. This apparatus is found to
+act extremely well.'
+
+Thus Maxim, who with this engine as power for his large aeroplane
+achieved free flight once, as a matter of experiment, though for what
+distance or time the machine was actually off the ground is matter for
+debate, since it only got free by tearing up the rails which were to
+have held it down in the experiment. Here, however, was a steam engine
+which was practicable for use in the air, obviously, and only the rapid
+success of the internal combustion engine prevented the steam-producing
+type from being developed toward perfection.
+
+The first designers of internal combustion engines, knowing nothing
+of the petrol of these days, constructed their examples with a view to
+using gas as fuel. As far back as 1872 Herr Paul Haenlein obtained a
+speed of about 10 miles an hour with a balloon propelled by an internal
+combustion engine, of which the fuel was gas obtained from the balloon
+itself. The engine in this case was of the Lenoir type, developing
+some 6 horse-power, and, obviously, Haenlein's flights were purely
+experimental and of short duration, since he used the gas that sustained
+him and decreased the lifting power of his balloon with every stroke of
+the piston of his engine. No further progress appears to have been made
+with the gas-consuming type of internal combustion engine for work
+with aircraft; this type has the disadvantage of requiring either a
+gas-producer or a large storage capacity for the gas, either of which
+makes the total weight of the power plant much greater than that of
+a petrol engine. The latter type also requires less attention when
+working, and the fuel is more convenient both for carrying and in the
+matter of carburation.
+
+The first airship propelled by the present-day type of internal
+combustion engine was constructed by Baumgarten and Wolfert in 1879
+at Leipzig, the engine being made by Daimler with a view to working on
+benzine--petrol as a fuel had not then come to its own. The construction
+of this engine is interesting since it was one of the first of Daimler's
+make, and it was the development brought about by the experimental
+series of which this engine was one that led to the success of the
+motor-car in very few years, incidentally leading to that fining down of
+the internal combustion engine which has facilitated the development
+of the aeroplane with such remarkable rapidity. Owing to the faulty
+construction of the airship no useful information was obtained from
+Daimler's pioneer installation, as the vessel got out of control
+immediately after it was first launched for flight, and was wrecked.
+Subsequent attempts at mechanically-propelled flight by Wolfert ended,
+in 1897, in the balloon being set on fire by an explosion of benzine
+vapour, resulting in the death of both the aeronauts.
+
+Daimler, from 1882 onward, devoted his attention to the perfecting of
+the small, high-speed petrol engine for motor-car work, and owing to
+his efforts, together with those of other pioneer engine-builders, the
+motorcar was made a success. In a few years the weight of this type of
+engine was reduced from near on a hundred pounds per horse-power to less
+than a tenth of that weight, but considerable further improvement had to
+be made before an engine suitable for use with aircraft was evolved.
+
+The increase in power of the engines fitted to airships has made
+steady progress from the outset; Haenlein's engine developed about 6
+horse-power; the Santos-Dumont airship of 1898 was propelled by a motor
+of 4 horse-power; in 1902 the Lebaudy airship was fitted with an engine
+of 40 horse-power, while, in 1910, the Lebaudy brothers fitted an
+engine of nearly 300 horsepower to the airship they were then
+constructing--1,400 horse-power was common in the airships of the War
+period, and the later British rigids developed yet more.
+
+Before passing on to consideration of the petrol-driven type of engine,
+it is necessary to accord brief mention to the dirigible constructed in
+1884 by Gaston and Albert Tissandier, who at Grenelle, France, achieved
+a directed flight in a wind of 8 miles an hour, obtaining their power
+for the propeller from 1 1/3 horse-power Siemens electric motor, which
+weighed 121 lbs. and took its current from a bichromate battery weighing
+496 lbs. A two-bladed propeller, 9 feet in diameter, was used, and
+the horse-power output was estimated to have run up to 1 1/2 as the
+dirigible successfully described a semicircle in a wind of 8 miles an
+hour, subsequently making headway transversely to a wind of 7 miles
+an hour. The dirigible with which this motor was used was of the
+conventional pointed-end type, with a length of 92 feet, diameter of 30
+feet, and capacity of 37,440 cubic feet of gas. Commandant Renard, of
+the French army balloon corps, followed up Tissandier's attempt in
+the next year--1885--making a trip from Chalais-Meudon to Paris and
+returning to the point of departure quite successfully. In this case the
+motive power was derived from an electric plant of the type used by
+the Tissandiers, weighing altogether 1,174 lbs., and developing
+9 horsepower. A speed of 14 miles an hour was attained with this
+dirigible, which had a length of 165 feet, diameter of 27 feet, and
+capacity of 65,836 cubic feet of gas.
+
+Reverting to the petrol-fed type again, it is to be noted that
+Santos-Dumont was practically the first to develop the use of the
+ordinary automobile engine for air work--his work is of such importance
+that it has been considered best to treat of it as one whole, and
+details of the power plants are included in the account of his
+experiments. Coming to the Lebaudy brothers and their work, their engine
+of 1902 was a 40 horse-power Daimler, four-cylindered; it was virtually
+a large edition of the Daimler car engine, the arrangement of the
+various details being on the lines usually adopted for the standard
+Daimler type of that period. The cylinders were fully water-jacketed,
+and no special attempt toward securing lightness for air work appears to
+have been made.
+
+The fining down of detail that brought weight to such limits as would
+fit the engine for work with heavier-than-air craft appears to have
+waited for the brothers Wright. Toward the end of 1903 they fitted
+to their first practicable flying machine the engine which made the
+historic first aeroplane flight; this engine developed 30 horse-power,
+and weighed only about 7 lbs. per horse-power developed, its design and
+workmanship being far ahead of any previous design in this respect, with
+the exception of the remarkable engine, designed by Manly, installed in
+Langley's ill-fated aeroplane--or 'aerodrome,' as he preferred to call
+it--tried in 1903.
+
+The light weight of the Wright brothers' engine did not necessitate a
+high number of revolutions per minute to get the requisite power; the
+speed was only 1,300 revolutions per minute, which, with a piston
+stroke of 3.94 inches, was quite moderate. Four cylinders were used,
+the cylinder diameter being 4.42 inches; the engine was of the
+vertical type, arranged to drive two propellers at a rate of about 350
+revolutions per minute, gearing being accomplished by means of chain
+drive from crank-shaft end to propeller spindle.
+
+The methods adopted by the Wrights for obtaining a light-weight engine
+were of considerable interest, in view of the fact that the honour
+of first achieving flight by means of the driven plane belongs to
+them--unless Ader actually flew as he claimed. The cylinders of this
+first Wright engine were separate castings of steel, and only the
+barrels were jacketed, this being done by fixing loose, thin aluminium
+covers round the outside of each cylinder. The combustion head and valve
+pockets were cast together with the cylinder barrel, and were not water
+cooled. The inlet valves were of the automatic type, arranged on the
+tops of the cylinders, while the exhaust valves were also overhead,
+operated by rockers and push-rods. The pistons and piston rings were
+of the ordinary type, made of cast-iron, and the connecting rods were
+circular in form, with a hole drilled down the middle of each to reduce
+the weight.
+
+Necessity for increasing power and ever lighter weight in relation to
+the power produced has led to the evolution of a number of different
+designs of internal combustion engines. It was quickly realised that
+increasing the number of cylinders on an engine was a better way of
+getting more power than that of increasing the cylinder diameter, as the
+greater number of cylinders gives better torque-even turning effect--as
+well as keeping down the weight--this latter because the bigger
+cylinders must be more stoutly constructed than the small sizes; this
+fact has led to the construction of engines having as many as eighteen
+cylinders, arranged in three parallel rows in order to keep the length
+of crankshaft within reasonable limits. The aero engine of to-day may,
+roughly, be divided into four classes: these are the V type, in which
+two rows of cylinders are set parallel at a certain angle to each other;
+the radial type, which consists of cylinders arranged radially and
+remaining stationary while the crankshaft revolves; the rotary, where
+the cylinders are disposed round a common centre and revolve round
+a stationary shaft, and the vertical type, of four or six
+cylinders--seldom more than this--arranged in one row. A modification of
+the V type is the eighteen-cylindered engine--the Sunbeam is one of the
+best examples--in which three rows of cylinders are set parallel to each
+other, working on a common crankshaft. The development these four types
+started with that of the vertical--the simplest of all; the V, radial,
+and rotary types came after the vertical, in the order given.
+
+The evolution of the motor-car led to the adoption of the vertical
+type of internal combustion engine in preference to any other, and
+it followed naturally that vertical engines should be first used for
+aeroplane propulsion, as by taking an engine that had been developed to
+some extent, and adapting it to its new work, the problem of mechanical
+flight was rendered easier than if a totally new type had had to be
+evolved. It was quickly realised--by the Wrights, in fact-that the
+minimum of weight per horse-power was the prime requirement for the
+successful development of heavier-than-air machines, and at the same
+time it was equally apparent that the utmost reliability had to be
+obtained from the engine, while a third requisite was economy, in order
+to reduce the weight of petrol necessary for flight.
+
+Daimler, working steadily toward the improvement of the internal
+combustion engine, had made considerable progress by the end of
+last century. His two-cylinder engine of 1897 was approaching to
+the present-day type, except as regards the method of ignition; the
+cylinders had 3.55 inch diameter, with a 4.75 inch piston stroke,
+and the engine was rated at 4.5 brake horse-power, though it probably
+developed more than this in actual running at its rated speed of 800
+revolutions per minute. Power was limited by the inlet and exhaust
+passages, which, compared with present-day practice, were very small.
+The heavy castings of which the engine was made up are accounted for by
+the necessity for considering foundry practice of the time, for in 1897
+castings were far below the present-day standard. The crank-case of
+this two-cylinder vertical Daimler engine was the only part made of
+aluminium, and even with this no attempt was made to attain lightness,
+for a circular flange was cast at the bottom to form a stand for the
+engine during machining and erection. The general design can be followed
+from the sectional views, and these will show, too, that ignition was by
+means of a hot tube on the cylinder head, which had to be heated with a
+blow-lamp before starting the engine. With all its well known and hated
+troubles, at that time tube ignition had an advantage over the magneto,
+and the coil and accumulator system, in reliability; sparking plugs,
+too, were not so reliable then as they are now. Daimler fitted a very
+simple type of carburettor to this engine, consisting only of a float
+with a single jet placed in the air passage. It may be said that this
+twin-cylindered vertical was the first of the series from which has been
+evolved the Mercedes-Daimler car and airship engines, built in sizes up
+to and even beyond 240 horse-power.
+
+In 1901 the development of the petrol engine was still so slight that it
+did not admit of the construction, by any European maker, of an engine
+weighing less than 12 lbs. per horse-power. Manly, working at the
+instance of Professor Langley, produced a five-cylindered radial type
+engine, in which both the design and workmanship showed a remarkable
+advance in construction. At 950 revolutions per minute it developed 52.4
+horse-power, weighing only 2.4 pounds per horse-power; it was a very
+remarkable achievement in engine design, considering the power developed
+in relation to the total weight, and it was, too, an interruption in
+the development of the vertical type which showed that there were other
+equally great possibilities in design.
+
+In England, the first vertical aero-engine of note was that designed
+by Green, the cylinder dimensions being 4.15 inch diameter by 4.75
+stroke--a fairly complete idea of this engine can be obtained from the
+accompanying diagrams. At a speed of 1,160 revolutions per minute
+it developed 35 brake horse-power, and by accelerating up to 1,220
+revolutions per minute a maximum of 40 brake horse-power could be
+obtained--the first-mentioned was the rated working speed of the engine
+for continuous runs. A flywheel, weighing 23.5 lbs., was fitted to the
+engine, and this, together with the ignition system, brought the weight
+up to 188 lbs., giving 5.4 lbs. per horse-power. In comparison with the
+engine fitted to the Wrights' aeroplane a greater power was obtained
+from approximately the same cylinder volume, and an appreciable saving
+in weight had also been effected. The illustration shows the arrangement
+of the vertical valves at the top of the cylinder and the overhead cam
+shaft, while the position of the carburettor and inlet pipes can be
+also seen. The water jackets were formed by thin copper casings, each
+cylinder being separate and having its independent jacket rigidly
+fastened to the cylinder at the top only, thus allowing for free
+expansion of the casing; the joint at the bottom end was formed by
+sliding the jacket over a rubber ring. Each cylinder was bolted to the
+crank-case and set out of line with the crankshaft, so that the crank
+has passed over the upper dead centre by the time that the piston is at
+the top of its stroke when receiving the full force of fuel explosion.
+The advantage of this desaxe setting is that the pressure in the
+cylinder acts on the crank-pin with a more effective leverage during
+that part of the stroke when that pressure is highest, and in addition
+the side pressure of the piston on the cylinder wall, due to the thrust
+of the connecting rod, is reduced. Possibly the charging of the cylinder
+is also more complete by this arrangement, owing to the slower movement
+of the piston at the bottom of its stroke allowing time for an increased
+charge of mixture to enter the cylinder.
+
+A 60 horse-power engine was also made, having four vertical cylinders,
+each with a diameter of 5.5 inches and stroke of 5.75 inches, developing
+its rated power at 1,100 revolutions per minute. By accelerating up to
+1,200 revolutions per minute 70 brake horsepower could be obtained, and
+a maximum of 80 brake horse-power was actually attained with the type.
+The flywheel, fitted as with the original 35 horse-power engine, weighed
+37 lbs.; with this and with the ignition system the total weight of
+the engine was only 250 lbs., or 4.2 lbs. per horse-power at the normal
+rating. In this design, however, low weight in relation to power was
+not the ruling factor, for Green gave more attention to reliability and
+economy of fuel consumption, which latter was approximately 0.6 pint of
+petrol per brake horse-power per hour. Both the oil for lubricating
+the bearings and the water for cooling the cylinders were circulated by
+pumps, and all parts of the valve gear, etc., were completely enclosed
+for protection from dust.
+
+A later development of the Green engine was a six-cylindered vertical,
+cylinder dimensions being 5.5 inch diameter by 6 inch stroke, developing
+120 brake horsepower when running at 1,250 revolutions per minute. The
+total weight of the engine with ignition system 398 was 440 lbs., or
+3.66 lbs. per horse-power. One of these engines was used on the machine
+which, in 1909, won the prize of L1,000 for the first circular mile
+flight, and it may be noted, too, that S. F. Cody, making the circuit
+of England in 1911, used a four-cylinder Green engine. Again, it was a
+Green engine that in 1914 won the L5,000 prize offered for the best aero
+engine in the Naval and Military aeroplane engine competition.
+
+Manufacture of the Green engines, in the period of the War, had
+standardised to the production of three types. Two of these were
+six-cylinder models, giving respectively 100 and 150 brake horse-power,
+and the third was a twelve-cylindered model rated at 275 brake
+horse-power.
+
+In 1910 J. S. Critchley compiled a list showing the types of engine then
+being manufactured; twenty-two out of a total of seventy-six were of the
+four-cylindered vertical type, and in addition to these there were two
+six-cylindered verticals. The sizes of the four-cylinder types ranged
+from 26 up to 118 brake horse-power; fourteen of them developed less
+than 50 horse-power, and only two developed over 100 horse-power.
+
+It became apparent, even in the early stages of heavier-than-air flying,
+that four-cylinder engines did not produce the even torque that was
+required for the rotation of the power shaft, even though a flywheel
+was fitted to the engine. With this type of engine the breakage of
+air-screws was of frequent occurrence, and an engine having a more
+regular rotation was sought, both for this and to avoid the excessive
+vibration often experienced with the four-cylinder type. Another, point
+that forced itself on engine builders was that the increased power which
+was becoming necessary for the propulsion of aircraft made an increase
+in the number of cylinders essential, in order to obtain a light engine.
+An instance of the weight reduction obtainable in using six cylinders
+instead of four is shown in Critchley's list, for one of the
+four-cylinder engines developed 118.5 brake horse-power and weighed
+1,100 lbs., whereas a six-cylinder engine by the same manufacturer
+developed 117.5 brake horse-power with a weight of 880 lbs., the
+respective cylinder dimensions being 7.48 diameter by 9.06 stroke
+for the four-cylinder engine, and 6.1 diameter by 7.28 stroke for the
+six-cylinder type.
+
+A list of aeroplane engines, prepared in 1912 by Graham Clark, showed
+that, out of the total number of 112 engines then being manufactured,
+forty-two were of the vertical type, and of this number twenty-four had
+four-cylinders while sixteen were six-cylindered. The German aeroplane
+engine trials were held a year later, and sixty-six engines entered the
+competition, fourteen of these being made with air-cooled cylinders.
+All of the ten engines that were chosen for the final trials were of the
+water-cooled type, and the first place was won by a Benz four-cylinder
+vertical engine which developed 102 brake horse-power at 1,288
+revolutions per minute. The cylinder dimensions of this engine were 5.1
+inch diameter by 7.1 inch stroke, and the weight of the engine worked
+out at 3.4 lbs. per brake horse-power. During the trials the full-load
+petrol consumption was 0.53 pint per horse-power per hour, and the
+amount of lubricating oil used was 0.0385 pint per brake horse-power per
+hour. In general construction this Benz engine was somewhat similar to
+the Green engine already described; the overhead valves, fitted in the
+tops of the cylinders, were similarly arranged, as was the cam-shaft;
+two springs were fitted to each of the valves to guard against the
+possibility of the engine being put out of action by breakage of one
+of the springs, and ignition was obtained by two high-tension magnetos
+giving simultaneous sparks in each cylinder by means of two sparking
+plugs--this dual ignition reduced the possibility of ignition troubles.
+The cylinder jackets were made of welded sheet steel so fitted around
+the cylinder that the head was also water-cooled, and the jackets were
+corrugated in the middle to admit of independent expansion. Even the
+lubrication system was duplicated, two sets of pumps being used, one to
+circulate the main supply of lubricating oil, and the other to give a
+continuous supply of fresh oil to the bearings, so that if the
+supply from one pump failed the other could still maintain effective
+lubrication.
+
+Development of the early Daimler type brought about the four-cylinder
+vertical Mercedes-Daimler engine of 85 horse-power, with cylinders
+of 5.5 diameter with 5.9 inch stroke, the cylinders being cast in two
+pairs. The overhead arrangement of valves was adopted, and in later
+designs push-rods were eliminated, the overhead cam-shaft being adopted
+in their place. By 1914 the four-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler had been
+partially displaced from favour by a six-cylindered model, made in two
+sizes; the first of these gave a nominal brake horse-power of 80, having
+cylinders of 4.1 inches diameter by 5.5 inches stroke; the second type
+developed 100 horse-power with cylinders 4.7 inches in diameter and 5.5
+inches stroke, both types being run at 1,200 revolutions per minute. The
+cylinders of both these types were cast in pairs, and, instead of the
+water jackets forming part of the casting, as in the design of the
+original four-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler engine, they were made of steel
+welded to flanges on the cylinders. Steel pistons, fitted with cast-iron
+rings, were used, and the overhead arrangement of valves and cam-shaft
+was adopted. About 0.55 pint per brake horse-power per hour was the
+usual fuel consumption necessary to full load running, and the engine
+was also economical as regards the consumption of lubricating oil,
+the lubricating system being 'forced' for all parts, including the
+cam-shaft. The shape of these engines was very well suited for work
+with aircraft, being narrow enough to admit of a streamline form being
+obtained, while all the accessories could be so mounted as to produce
+little or no wind resistance, and very little obstruction to the pilot's
+view.
+
+The eight-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler engine, used for airship propulsion
+during the War, developed 240 brake horse-power at 1,100 revolutions per
+minute; the cylinder dimensions were 6.88 diameter by 6.5 stroke--one
+of the instances in which the short stroke in relation to bore was very
+noticeable.
+
+Other instances of successful vertical design-the types already detailed
+are fully sufficient to give particulars of the type generally--are
+the Panhard, Chenu, Maybach, N.A.G., Argus, Mulag, and the well-known
+Austro-Daimler, which by 1917 was being copied in every combatant
+country. There are also the later Wright engines, and in America
+the Wisconsin six-cylinder vertical, weighing well under 4 lbs. per
+horse-power, is evidence of the progress made with this first type of
+aero engine to develop.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE VEE TYPE
+
+An offshoot from the vertical type, doubling the power of this with only
+a very slight--if any--increase in the length of crankshaft, the Vee
+or diagonal type of aero engine leaped to success through the insistent
+demand for greater power. Although the design came after that of the
+vertical engine, by 1910, according to Critchley's list of aero engines,
+there were more Vee type engines being made than any other type,
+twenty-five sizes being given in the list, with an average rating of
+57.4 brake horse-power.
+
+The arrangement of the cylinders in Vee form over the crankshaft,
+enabling the pistons of each pair of opposite cylinders to act upon the
+same crank pin, permits of a very short, compact engine being built, and
+also permits of reduction of the weight per horsepower, comparing this
+with that of the vertical type of engine, with one row of cylinders.
+Further, at the introduction of this type of engine it was seen that
+crankshaft vibration, an evil of the early vertical engines, was
+practically eliminated, as was the want of longitudinal stiffness that
+characterised the higher-powered vertical engines.
+
+Of the Vee type engines shown in Critchley's list in 1910 nineteen
+different sizes were constructed with eight cylinders, and with
+horse-powers ranging from thirty to just over the hundred; the lightest
+of these weighed 2.9 lbs. per horse-power--a considerable advance in
+design on the average vertical engine, in this respect of weight per
+horse-power. There were also two sixteen-cylinder engines of Vee design,
+the larger of which developed 134 horse-power with a weight of only 2
+lbs. per brake horse-power. Subsequent developments have indicated that
+this type, with the further development from it of the double-Vee, or
+engine with three rows of cylinders, is likely to become the standard
+design of aero engine where high powers are required. The construction
+permits of placing every part so that it is easy of access, and the
+form of the engine implies very little head resistance, while it can be
+placed on the machine--supposing that machine to be of the single-engine
+type--in such a way that the view of the pilot is very little obstructed
+while in flight.
+
+An even torque, or great uniformity of rotation, is transmitted to the
+air-screw by these engines, while the design also permits of such good
+balance of the engine itself that vibration is practically eliminated.
+The angle between the two rows of cylinders is varied according to the
+number of cylinders, in order to give working impulses at equal angles
+of rotation and thus provide even torque; this angle is determined by
+dividing the number of degrees in a circle by the number of cylinders
+in either row of the engine. In an eight-cylindered Vee type engine, the
+angle between the cylinders is 90 degrees; if it is a twelve-cylindered
+engine, the angle drops to 60 degrees.
+
+One of the earliest of the British-built Vee type engines was an
+eight-cylinder 50 horse-power by the Wolseley Company, constructed in
+1908 with a cylinder bore of 3.75 inches and stroke of 5 inches, running
+at a normal speed of 1,350 revolutions per minute. With this engine, a
+gearing was introduced to enable the propeller to run at a lower speed
+than that of the engine, the slight loss of efficiency caused by the
+friction of the gearing being compensated by the slower speed of the
+air-screw, which had higher efficiency than would have been the case if
+it had been run at the engine speed. The ratio of the gearing--that is,
+the speed of the air-screw relatively to that of the engine, could be
+chosen so as to suit exactly the requirements of the air-screw, and the
+gearing itself, on this engine, was accomplished on the half-speed shaft
+actuating the valves.
+
+Very soon after this first design had been tried out, a second Vee type
+engine was produced which, at 1,200 revolutions per minute, developed 60
+horse-power; the size of this engine was practically identical with that
+of its forerunner, the only exception being an increase of half an inch
+in the cylinder stroke--a very long stroke of piston in relation to
+the bore of the cylinder. In the first of these two engines, which was
+designed for airship propulsion, the weight had been about 8 lbs. per
+brake horse-power, no special attempt appearing to have been made to
+fine down for extreme lightness; in this 60 horse-power design, the
+weight was reduced to 6.1 lbs. per horse-power, counting the latter
+as normally rated; the engine actually gave a maximum of 75 brake
+horse-power, reducing the ratio of weight to power very considerably
+below the figure given.
+
+The accompanying diagram illustrates a later Wolseley model, end
+elevation, the eight-cylindered 120 horse-power Vee type aero engine
+of the early war period. With this engine, each crank pin has two
+connecting rods bearing on it, these being placed side by side and
+connected to the pistons of opposite cylinders and the two cylinders of
+the pair are staggered by an amount equal to the width of the connecting
+rod bearing, to afford accommodation for the rods. The crankshaft was a
+nickel chrome steel forging, machined hollow, with four crank pins set
+at 180 degrees to each other, and carried in three bearings lined with
+anti-friction metal. The connecting rods were made of tubular nickel
+chrome steel, and the pistons of drawn steel, each being fitted with
+four piston rings. Of these the two rings nearest to the piston head
+were of the ordinary cast-iron type, while the others were of phosphor
+bronze, so arranged as to take the side thrust of the piston. The
+cylinders were of steel, arranged in two groups or rows of four, the
+angular distance between them being 90 degrees. In the space above the
+crankshaft, between the cylinder rows, was placed the valve-operating
+mechanism, together with the carburettor and ignition system, thus
+rendering this a very compact and accessible engine. The combustion
+heads of the cylinders were made of cast-iron, screwed into the steel
+cylinder barrels; the water-jacket was of spun aluminium, with one end
+fitting over the combustion head and the other free to slide on the
+cylinder; the water-joint at the lower end was made tight by a Dermatine
+ring carried between small flanges formed on the cylinder barrel.
+Overhead valves were adopted, and in order to make these as large as
+possible the combustion chamber was made slightly larger in diameter
+than the cylinder, and the valves set at an angle. Dual ignition was
+fitted in each cylinder, coil and accumulator being used for starting
+and as a reserve in case of failure of the high-tension magneto system
+fitted for normal running. There was a double set of lubricating pumps,
+ensuring continuity of the oil supply to all the bearings of the engine.
+
+The feature most noteworthy in connection with the running of this type
+of engine was its flexibility; the normal output of power was
+obtained with 1,150 revolutions per minute of the crankshaft, but, by
+accelerating up to 1,400 revolutions, a maximum of 147 brake horse-power
+could be obtained. The weight was about 5 lbs. per horse-power, the
+cylinder dimensions being 5 inches bore by 7 inches stroke. Economy in
+running was obtained, the fuel consumption being 0.58 pint per brake
+horse-power per hour at full load, with an expenditure of about 0.075
+pint of lubricating oil per brake horse-power per hour.
+
+Another Wolseley Vee type that was standardised was a 90 horse-power
+eight-cylinder engine running at 1,800 revolutions per minute, with
+a reducing gear introduced by fitting the air screw on the half-speed
+shaft. First made semi-cooled--the exhaust valve was left air-cooled,
+and then entirely water-jacketed--this engine demonstrated the advantage
+of full water cooling, for under the latter condition the same power was
+developed with cylinders a quarter of an inch less in diameter than in
+the semi-cooled pattern; at the same time the weight was brought down to
+4 1/2 lbs. per horsepower.
+
+A different but equally efficient type of Vee design was the Dorman
+engine, of which an end elevation is shown; this developed 80 brake
+horse-power at a speed of 1,300 revolutions per minute, with a cylinder
+bore of 5 inches; each cylinder was made in cast-iron in one piece with
+the combustion chamber, the barrel only being water-jacketed. Auxiliary
+exhaust ports were adopted, the holes through the cylinder wall being
+uncovered by the piston at the bottom of its stroke--the piston, 4.75
+inches in length, was longer than its stroke, so that these ports were
+covered when it was at the top of the cylinder. The exhaust discharged
+through the ports into a belt surrounding the cylinder, the belts on the
+cylinders being connected so that the exhaust gases were taken through
+a single pipe. The air was drawn through the crank case, before reaching
+the carburettor, this having the effect of cooling the oil in the crank
+case as well as warming the air and thus assisting in vaporising the
+petrol for each charge of the cylinders. The inlet and exhaust valves
+were of the overhead type, as may be gathered from the diagram, and in
+spite of cast-iron cylinders being employed a light design was obtained,
+the total weight with radiator, piping, and water being only 5.5 lbs.
+per horse-power.
+
+Here was the antithesis of the Wolseley type in the matter of bore in
+relation to stroke; from about 1907 up to the beginning of the war, and
+even later, there was controversy as to which type--that in which the
+bore exceeded the stroke, or vice versa--gave greater efficiency.
+The short-stroke enthusiasts pointed to the high piston speed of the
+long-stroke type, while those who favoured the latter design contended
+that full power could not be obtained from each explosion in the
+short-stroke type of cylinder. It is now generally conceded that the
+long-stroke engine yields higher efficiency, and in addition to this,
+so far as car engines are concerned, the method of rating horse-power
+in relation to bore without taking stroke into account has given the
+long-stroke engine an advantage, actual horse-power with a long stroke
+engine being in excess of the nominal rating. This may have had some
+influence on aero engine design, but, however this may have been, the
+long-stroke engine has gradually come to favour, and its rival has taken
+second place.
+
+For some time pride of place among British Vee type engines was held
+by the Sunbeam Company, which, owing to the genius of Louis Coatalen,
+together with the very high standard of construction maintained by the
+firm, achieved records and fame in the middle and later periods of the
+war. Their 225 horse-power twelve-cylinder engine ran at a normal
+speed of 2,000 revolutions per minute; the air screw was driven through
+gearing at half this speed, its shaft being separate from the timing
+gear and carried in ball-bearings on the nose-piece of the engine. The
+cylinders were of cast-iron, entirely water-cooled; a thin casing formed
+the water-jacket, and a very light design was obtained, the weight being
+only 3.2 lbs. per horse-power. The first engine of Sunbeam design had
+eight cylinders and developed 150 horse-power at 2,000 revolutions
+per minute; the final type of Vee design produced during the war was
+twelve-cylindered, and yielded 310 horse-power with cylinders 4.3 inches
+bore by 6.4 inches stroke. Evidence in favour of the long-stroke engine
+is afforded in this type as regards economy of working; under full load,
+working at 2,000 revolutions per minute, the consumption was 0.55 pints
+of fuel per brake horse-power per hour, which seems to indicate that the
+long stroke permitted of full use being made of the power resulting from
+each explosion, in spite of the high rate of speed of the piston.
+
+Developing from the Vee type, the eighteen-cylinder 475 brake
+horse-power engine, designed during the war, represented for a time
+the limit of power obtainable from a single plant. It was water-cooled
+throughout, and the ignition to each cylinder was duplicated; this
+engine proved fully efficient, and economical in fuel consumption.
+It was largely used for seaplane work, where reliability was fully as
+necessary as high power.
+
+The abnormal needs of the war period brought many British firms into the
+ranks of Vee-type engine-builders, and, apart from those mentioned,
+the most notable types produced are the Rolls-Royce and the Napier.
+The first mentioned of these firms, previous to 1914 had concentrated
+entirely on car engines, and their very high standard of production in
+this department of internal combustion engine work led, once they took
+up the making of aero engines, to extreme efficiency both of design and
+workmanship. The first experimental aero engine, of what became known
+as the 'Eagle' type, was of Vee design--it was completed in March
+of 1915--and was so successful that it was standardised for quantity
+production. How far the original was from the perfection subsequently
+ascertained is shown by the steady increase in developed horse-power
+of the type; originally designed to develop 200 horse-power, it was
+developed and improved before its first practical trial in October of
+1915, when it developed 255 horsepower on a brake test. Research
+and experiment produced still further improvements, for, without any
+enlargement of the dimensions, or radical alteration in design, the
+power of the engine was brought up to 266 horse-power by March of 1916,
+the rate of revolutions of 1,800 per minute being maintained throughout.
+July, 1916 gave 284 horse-power; by the cud of the year this had been
+increased to 322 horse-power; by September of 1917 the increase was to
+350 horse-power, and by February of 1918 then 'Eagle' type of engine was
+rated at 360 horse-power, at which standard it stayed. But there is no
+more remarkable development in engine design than this, a 75 per cent
+increase of power in the same engine in a period of less than three
+years.
+
+To meet the demand for a smaller type of engine for use on training
+machines, the Rolls-Royce firm produced the 'Hawk' Vee-type engine of
+100 horsepower, and, intermediately between this and the 'Eagle,' the
+'Falcon' engine came to being with an original rated horse-power of 205
+at 1,800 revolutions per minute, in April of 1916. Here was another case
+of growth of power in the same engine through research, almost similar
+to that of the 'Eagle' type, for by July of 1918 the 'Falcon' was
+developing 285 horse-power with no radical alteration of design.
+Finally, in response to the constant demand for increase of power in a
+single plant, the Rolls-Royce company designed and produced the 'Condor'
+type of engine, which yielded 600 horse-power on its first test in
+August of 1918. The cessation of hostilities and consequent falling off
+in the demand for extremely high-powered plants prevented the 'Condor'
+being developed to its limit, as had been the 'Falcon' and 'Eagle'
+types.
+
+The 'Eagle 'engine was fitted to the two Handley-Page aeroplanes--which
+made flights from England to India--it was virtually standard on the
+Handley-Page bombers of the later War period, though to a certain extent
+the American 'Liberty' engine was also used. Its chief record, however,
+is that of being the type fitted to the Vickers-Vimy aeroplane which
+made the first Atlantic flight, covering the distance of 1,880 miles at
+a speed averaging 117 miles an hour.
+
+The Napier Company specialised on one type of engine from the outset,
+a power plant which became known as the 'Lion' engine, giving 450
+horse-power with twelve cylinders arranged in three rows of four each.
+Considering the engine as 'dry,' or without fuel and accessories, an
+abnormally light weight per horse-power--only 1.89 lbs.--was attained
+when running at the normal rate of revolution. The cylinders and
+water-jackets are of steel, and there is fitted a detachable aluminium
+cylinder head containing inlet and exhaust valves and valve actuating
+mechanism; pistons are of aluminium alloy, and there are two inlet and
+two exhaust valves to each cylinder, the whole of the valve mechanism
+being enclosed in an oil-tight aluminium case. Connecting rods and
+crankshaft are of steel, the latter being machined from a solid steel
+forging and carried in five roller bearings and one plain bearing at the
+forward end. The front end of the crank-case encloses reduction gear for
+the propeller shaft, together with the shaft and bearings. There are
+two suction and one pressure type oil pumps driven through gears at
+half-engine speed, and two 12 spark magnetos, giving 2 sparks in each
+cylinder.
+
+The cylinders are set with the central row vertical, and the two side
+rows at angles of 60 degrees each; cylinder bore is 5 1/2 inches, and
+stroke 5 1/8 inches; the normal rate of revolution is 1,350 per minute,
+and the reducing gear gives one revolution of the propeller shaft to
+1.52 revolutions of crankshaft. Fuel consumption is 0.48lbs. of fuel per
+brake horse-power hour at full load, and oil consumption is 0.020 lbs.
+per brake horsepower hour. The dry weight of the engine, complete with
+propeller boss, carburettors, and induction pipes, is 850 lbs., and the
+gross weight in running order, with fuel and oil for six hours working,
+is 2,671 lbs., exclusive of cooling water.
+
+To this engine belongs an altitude record of 30,500 feet, made at
+Martlesham, near Ipswich, on January 2nd, 1919, by Captain Lang, R.A.F.,
+the climb being accomplished in 66 minutes 15 seconds. Previous to this,
+the altitude record was held by an Italian pilot, who made 25,800 feet
+in an hour and 57 minutes in 1916. Lang's climb was stopped through
+the pressure of air, at the altitude he reached, being insufficient for
+driving the small propellers on the machine which worked the petrol and
+oil pumps, or he might have made the height said to have been attained
+by Major Schroeder on February 27th, 1920, at Dayton, Ohio. Schroeder
+is said to have reached an altitude of 36,020 feet on a Napier biplane,
+and, owing to failure of the oxygen supply, to have lost consciousness,
+fallen five miles, righted his machine when 2,000 feet in the air, and
+alighted successfully. Major Schroeder is an American.
+
+Turning back a little, and considering other than British design of Vee
+and double-Vee or 'Broad arrow' type of engine, the Renault firm from
+the earliest days devoted considerable attention to the development of
+this type, their air-cooled engines having been notable examples from
+the earliest days of heavier-than-air machines. In 1910 they were making
+three sizes of eight-cylindered Vee-type engines, and by 1915 they had
+increased to the manufacture of five sizes, ranging from 25 to 100 brake
+horse-power, the largest of the five sizes having twelve cylinders but
+still retaining the air-cooled principle. The De Dion firm, also,
+made Vee-type engines in 1914, being represented by an 80 horse-power
+eight-cylindered engine, air-cooled, and a 150 horse-power, also
+of eight cylinders, water-cooled, running at a normal rate of 1,600
+revolutions per minute. Another notable example of French construction
+was the Panhard and Levassor 100 horse-power eight-cylinder Vee engine,
+developing its rated power at 1,500 revolutions per minute, and having
+the--for that time--low weight of 4.4 lbs. per horse-power.
+
+American Vee design has followed the British fairly cclosely; the
+Curtiss Company produced originally a 75 horse-power eight-cylinder Vee
+type running at 1,200 revolutions per minute, supplementing this with
+a 170 horse-power engine running at 1,600 revolutions per minute, and
+later with a twelve-cylinder model Vee type, developing 300 horse-power
+at 1,500 revolutions per minute, with cylinder bore of 5 inches and
+stroke of 7 inches. An exceptional type of American design was the Kemp
+Vee engine of 80 horse-power in which the cylinders were cooled by a
+current of air obtained from a fan at the forward end of the engine.
+With cylinders of 4.25 inches bore and 4.75 inches stroke, the rater
+power was developed at 1,150 revolutions per minute, and with the engine
+complete the weight was only 4.75 lbs. per horse-power.
+
+
+
+
+III. THE RADIAL TYPE
+
+The very first successful design of internal combustion aero engine made
+was that of Charles Manly, who built a five-cylinder radial engine in
+1901 for use with Langley's 'aerodrome,' as the latter inventor decided
+to call what has since become known as the aeroplane. Manly made a
+number of experiments, and finally decided on radial design, in which
+the cylinders are so rayed round a central crank-pin that the pistons
+act successively upon it; by this arrangement a very short and compact
+engine is obtained, with a minimum of weight, and a regular crankshaft
+rotation and perfect balance of inertia forces.
+
+When Manly designed his radial engine, high speed internal combustion
+engines were in their infancy, and the difficulties in construction
+can be partly realised when the lack of manufacturing methods for this
+high-class engine work, and the lack of experimental data on the various
+materials, are taken into account. During its tests, Manly's engine
+developed 52.4 brake horsepower at a speed of 950 revolutions per
+minute, with the remarkably low weight of only 2.4 lbs. per horsepower;
+this latter was increased to 3.6 lbs. when the engine was completed
+by the addition of ignition system, radiator, petrol tank, and all
+accessories, together with the cooling water for the cylinders.
+
+In Manly's engine, the cylinders were of steel, machined outside and
+inside to 1/16 of an inch thickness; on the side of cylinder, at the top
+end, the valve chamber was brazed, being machined from a solid forging,
+The casing which formed the water-jacket was of sheet steel, 1/50 of an
+inch in thickness, and this also was brazed on the cylinder and to
+the valve chamber. Automatic inlet valves were fitted, and the exhaust
+valves were operated by a cam which had two points, 180 degrees
+apart; the cam was rotated in the opposite direction to the engine at
+one-quarter engine speed. Ignition was obtained by using a one-spark
+coil and vibrator for all cylinders, with a distributor to select
+the right cylinder for each spark--this was before the days of the
+high-tension magneto and the almost perfect ignition systems that makers
+now employ. The scheme of ignition for this engine was originated by
+Manly himself, and he also designed the sparking plugs fitted in the
+tops of the cylinders. Through fear of trouble resulting if the steel
+pistons worked on the steel cylinders, cast iron liners were introduced
+in the latter, 1/16 of an inch thick.
+
+The connecting rods of this engine were of virtually the same type as is
+employed on nearly all modern radial engines. The rod for one cylinder
+had a bearing along the whole of the crank pin, and its end enclosed the
+pin; the other four rods had bearings upon the end of the first rod,
+and did not touch the crank pin. The accompanying diagram shows this
+construction, together with the means employed for securing the ends of
+the four rods--the collars were placed in position after the rods had
+been put on. The bearings of these rods did not receive any of the
+rubbing effect due to the rotation of the crank pin, the rubbing on them
+being only that of the small angular displacement of the rods during
+each revolution; thus there was no difficulty experienced with the
+lubrication.
+
+Another early example of the radial type of engine was the French
+Anzani, of which type one was fitted to the machine with which Bleriot
+first crossed the English Channel--this was of 25 horse-power. The
+earliest Anzani engines were of the three-cylinder fan type, one
+cylinder being vertical, and the other two placed at an angle of 72
+degrees on each side, as the possibility of over-lubrication of the
+bottom cylinders was feared if a regular radial construction were
+adopted. In order to overcome the unequal balance of this type, balance
+weights were fitted inside the crank case.
+
+The final development of this three-cylinder radial was the 'Y' type of
+engine, in which the cylinders were regularly disposed at 120 degrees
+apart, the bore was 4.1, stroke 4.7 inches, and the power developed was
+30 brake horse-power at 1,300 revolutions per minute.
+
+Critchley's list of aero engines being constructed in 1910 shows twelve
+of the radial type, with powers of between 14 and 100 horse-power, and
+with from three to ten cylinder--this last is probably the greatest
+number of cylinders that can be successfully arranged in circular form.
+Of the twelve types of 1910, only two were water-cooled, and it is to be
+noted that these two ran at the slowest speeds and had the lowest weight
+per horse-power of any.
+
+The Anzani radial was considerably developed special attention being
+paid to this type by its makers and by 1914 the Anzani list comprised
+seven different sizes of air-cooled radials. Of these the largest had
+twenty cylinders, developing 200 brake horse-power--it was virtually
+a double radial--and the smallest was the original 30 horse-power
+three-cylinder design. A six-cylinder model was formed by a combination
+of two groups of three cylinders each, acting upon a double-throw
+crankshaft; the two crank pins were set at 180 degrees to each other,
+and the cylinder groups were staggered by an amount equal to the
+distance between the centres of the crank pins. Ten-cylinder radial
+engines are made with two groups of five cylinders acting upon two
+crank pins set at 180 degrees to each other, the largest Anzani 'ten'
+developed 125 horsepower at 1,200 revolutions per minute, the ten
+cylinders being each 4.5 inches in bore with stroke of 5.9 inches, and
+the weight of the engine being 3.7 lbs. per horse-power. In the 200
+horse-power Anzani radial the cylinders are arranged in four groups of
+five each, acting on two crank pins. The bore of the cylinders in this
+engine is the same as in the three-cylinder, but the stroke is increased
+to 5.5 inches. The rated power is developed at 1,300 revolutions per
+minute, and the engine complete weighs 3.4 lbs. per horse-power.
+
+With this 200 horse-power Anzani, a petrol consumption of as low as 0.49
+lbs. of fuel per brake horse-power per hour has been obtained, but
+the consumption of lubricating oil is compensatingly high, being up to
+one-fifth of the fuel used. The cylinders are set desaxe with the
+crank shaft, and are of cast-iron, provided with radiating ribs for
+air-cooling; they are attached to the crank case by long bolts passing
+through bosses at the top of the cylinders, and connected to other bolts
+at right angles through the crank case. The tops of the cylinders are
+formed flat, and seats for the inlet and exhaust valves are formed on
+them. The pistons are cast-iron, fitted with ordinary cast-iron spring
+rings. An aluminium crank case is used, being made in two halves
+connected together by bolts, which latter also attach the engine to the
+frame of the machine. The crankshaft is of nickel steel, made hollow,
+and mounted on ball-bearings in such a manner that practically a
+combination of ball and plain bearings is obtained; the central web
+of the shaft is bent to bring the centres of the crank pins as close
+together as possible, leaving only room for the connecting rods, and
+the pins are 180 degrees apart. Nickel steel valves of the cone-seated,
+poppet type are fitted, the inlet valves being automatic, and those for
+the exhaust cam-operated by means of push-rods. With an engine having
+such a number of cylinders a very uniform rotation of the crankshaft is
+obtained, and in actual running there are always five of the cylinders
+giving impulses to the crankshaft at the same time.
+
+An interesting type of pioneer radial engine was the Farcot, in which
+the cylinders were arranged in a horizontal plane, with a vertical
+crankshaft which operated the air-screw through bevel gearing. This was
+an eight-cylinder engine, developing 64 horse-power at 1,200 revolutions
+per minute. The R.E.P. type,in the early days, was a 'fan' engine,
+but the designer, M. Robert Pelterie, turned from this design to a
+seven-cylinder radial, which at 1,100 revolutions per minute gave 95
+horse-power. Several makers entered into radial engine development in
+the years immediately preceding the War, and in 1914 there were
+some twenty-two different sizes and types, ranging from 30 to 600
+horse-power, being made, according to report; the actual construction of
+the latter size at this time, however, is doubtful.
+
+Probably the best example of radial construction up to the outbreak of
+War was the Salmson (Canton-Unne) water-cooled, of which in 1914
+six sizes were listed as available. Of these the smallest was a
+seven-cylinder 90 horse-power engine, and the largest, rated at 600
+horse-power, had eighteen cylinders. These engines, during the War, were
+made under license by the Dudbridge Ironworks in Great Britain.
+
+The accompanying diagram shows the construction of the cylinders in the
+200 horse-power size, showing the method of cooling, and the arrangement
+of the connecting rods. A patent planetary gear, also shown in the
+diagram, gives exactly the same stroke to all the pistons. The complete
+engine has fourteen cylinders, of forged steel machined all over, and
+so secured to the crank case that any one can be removed without parting
+the crank case. The water-jackets are of spun copper, brazed on to the
+cylinder, and corrugated so as to admit of free expansion; the water is
+circulated by means of a centrifugal pump. The pistons are of cast-iron,
+each fitted with three rings, and the connecting rods are of high grade
+steel, machined all over and fitted with bushes of phosphor bronze;
+these rods are connected to a central collar, carried on the crank pin
+by two ball-bearings. The crankshaft has a single throw, and is made
+in two parts to allow the cage for carrying the big end-pins of the
+connecting rods to be placed in position.
+
+The casing is in two parts, on one of which the brackets for fixing the
+engine are carried, while the other part carries the valve-gear. Bolts
+secure the two parts together. The mechanically-operated steel valves
+on the cylinders are each fitted with double springs and the valves are
+operated by rods and levers. Two Zenith carburettors are fitted on the
+rear half of the crank case, and short induction pipes are led to each
+cylinder; each of the carburettors is heated by the exhaust gases.
+Ignition is by two high-tension magnetos, and a compressed air
+self-starting arrangement is provided. Two oil pumps are fitted for
+lubricating purposes, one of which forces oil to the crankshaft and
+connecting-rod bearings, while the second forces oil to the valve gear,
+the cylinders being so arranged that the oil which flows along the walls
+cannot flood the lower cylinders. This engine operates upon a six-stroke
+cycle, a rather rare arrangement for internal combustion engines of the
+electrical ignition type; this is done in order to obtain equal angular
+intervals for the working impulses imparted to the rotating crankshaft,
+as the cylinders are arranged in groups of seven, and all act upon the
+one crankshaft. The angle, therefore, between the impulses is 77 1/7
+degrees. A diagram is inset giving a side view of the engine, in order
+to show the grouping of the cylinders.
+
+The 600 horse-power Salmson engine was designed with a view to fitting
+to airships, and was in reality two nine-cylindered engines, with a
+gear-box connecting them; double air-screws were fitted, and these were
+so arranged that either or both of them might be driven by either or
+both engines; in addition to this, the two engines were complete and
+separate engines as regards carburation and ignition, etc., so that
+they could be run independently of each other. The cylinders were
+exceptionally 'long stroke,' being 5.9 inches bore to 8.27 inches
+stroke, and the rated power was developed at 1,200 revolutions per
+minute, the weight of the complete engine being only 4.1 lbs. per
+horse-power at the normal rating.
+
+A type of engine specially devised for airship propulsion is that in
+which the cylinders are arranged horizontally instead of vertically, the
+main advantages of this form being the reduction of head resistance and
+less obstruction to the view of the pilot. A casing, mounted on the top
+of the engine, supports the air-screw, which is driven through bevel
+gearing from the upper end of the crankshaft. With this type of engine
+a better rate of air-screw efficiency is obtained by gearing the screw
+down to half the rate of revolution of the engine, this giving a more
+even torque. The petrol consumption of the type is very low, being only
+0.48 lbs. per horse-power per hour, and equal economy is claimed as
+regards lubricating oil, a consumption of as little as 0.04 lbs. per
+horse-power per hour being claimed.
+
+Certain American radial engines were made previous to 1914, the
+principal being the Albatross six-cylinder engines of 50 and 100
+horse-powers. Of these the smaller size was air-cooled, with cylinders
+of 4.5 inches bore and 5 inches stroke, developing the rated power
+at 1,230 revolutions per minute, with a weight of about 5 lbs. per
+horse-power. The 100 horse-power size had cylinders of 5.5 inches bore,
+developing its rated power at 1,230 revolutions per minute, and weighing
+only 2.75 lbs. per horse-power. This engine was markedly similar to the
+six-cylindered Anzani, having all the valves mechanically operated, and
+with auxiliary exhaust ports at the bottoms of the cylinders, overrun
+by long pistons. These Albatross engines had their cylinders arranged in
+two groups of three, with each group of three pistons operating on one
+of two crank pins, each 180 degrees apart.
+
+The radial type of engine, thanks to Charles Manly, had the honour of
+being first in the field as regards aero work. Its many advantages,
+among which may be specially noted the very short crankshaft as compared
+with vertical, Vee, or 'broad arrow' type of engine, and consequent
+greater rigidity, ensure it consideration by designers of to-day, and
+render it certain that the type will endure. Enthusiasts claim that the
+'broad arrow' type, or Vee with a third row of cylinders inset between
+the original two, is just as much a development from the radial engine
+as from the vertical and resulting Vee; however this may be, there is
+a place for the radial type in air-work for as long as the internal
+combustion engine remains as a power plant.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE ROTARY TYPE
+
+M. Laurent Seguin, the inventor of the Gnome rotary aero engine,
+provided as great a stimulus to aviation as any that was given anterior
+to the war period, and brought about a great advance in mechanical
+flight, since these well-made engines gave a high-power output for their
+weight, and were extremely smooth in running. In the rotary design the
+crankshaft of the engine is stationary, and the cylinders, crank
+case, and all their adherent parts rotate; the working is thus exactly
+opposite in principle to that of the radial type of aero engine, and
+the advantage of the rotary lies in the considerable flywheel effect
+produced by the revolving cylinders, with consequent evenness of torque.
+Another advantage is that air-cooling, adopted in all the Gnome engines,
+is rendered much more effective by the rotation of the cylinders, though
+there is a tendency to distortion through the leading side of each
+cylinder being more efficiently cooled than the opposite side; advocates
+of other types are prone to claim that the air resistance to the
+revolving cylinders absorbs some 10 per cent of the power developed by
+the rotary engine, but that has not prevented the rotary from attaining
+to great popularity as a prime mover.
+
+There were, in the list of aero engines compiled in 1910, five rotary
+engines included, all air-cooled. Three of these were Gnome engines, and
+two of the make known as 'International.' They ranged from 21.5 to 123
+horse-power, the latter being rated at only 1.8 lbs. weight per brake
+horse-power, and having fourteen cylinders, 4.33 inches in diameter
+by 4.7 inches stroke. By 1914 forty-three different sizes and types
+of rotary engine were being constructed, and in 1913 five rotary type
+engines were entered for the series of aeroplane engine trials held
+in Germany. Minor defects ruled out four of these, and only the
+German Bayerischer Motoren Flugzeugwerke completed the seven-hour test
+prescribed for competing engines. Its large fuel consumption barred this
+engine from the final trials, the consumption being some 0.95 pints
+per horse-power per hour. The consumption of lubricating oil, also was
+excessive, standing at 0.123 pint per horse-power per hour. The engine
+gave 37.5 effective horse-power during its trial, and the loss due to
+air resistance was 4.6 horse-power, about 11 per cent. The accompanying
+drawing shows the construction of the engine, in which the seven
+cylinders are arranged radially on the crank case; the method of
+connecting the pistons to the crank pins can be seen. The mixture is
+drawn through the crank chamber, and to enter the cylinder it passes
+through the two automatic valves in the crown of the piston; the exhaust
+valves are situated in the tops of the cylinders, and are actuated by
+cams and push-rods. Cooling of the cylinder is assisted by the radial
+rings, and the diameter of these rings is increased round the hottest
+part of the cylinder. When long flights are undertaken the advantage of
+the light weight of this engine is more than counterbalanced by its high
+fuel and lubricating oil consumption, but there are other makes which
+are much better than this seven-cylinder German in respect of this.
+
+Rotation of the cylinders in engines of this type is produced by the
+side pressure of the pistons on the cylinder walls, and in order to
+prevent this pressure from becoming abnormally large it is necessary
+to keep the weight of the piston as low as possible, as the pressure is
+produced by the tangential acceleration and retardation of the piston.
+On the upward stroke the circumferential velocity of the piston is
+rapidly increased, which causes it to exert a considerable tangential
+pressure on the side of the cylinder, and on the return stroke there
+is a corresponding retarding effect due to the reduction of the
+circumferential velocity of the piston. These side pressures cause an
+appreciable increase in the temperatures of the cylinders and pistons,
+which makes it necessary to keep the power rating of the engines fairly
+low.
+
+Seguin designed his first Gnome rotary as a 34 horse-power engine when
+run at a speed of 1,300 revolutions per minute. It had five cylinders,
+and the weight was 3.9 lbs. per horse-power. A seven-cylinder model soon
+displaced this first engine, and this latter, with a total weight of 165
+lbs., gave 61.5 horse-power. The cylinders were machined out of solid
+nickel chrome-steel ingots, and the machining was carried out so that
+the cylinder walls were under 1/6 of an inch in thickness. The pistons
+were cast-iron, fitted each with two rings, and the automatic inlet
+valve to the cylinder was placed in the crown of the piston. The
+connecting rods, of 'H' section, were of nickel chrome-steel, and the
+large end of one rod, known as the 'master-rod' embraced the crank pin;
+on the end of this rod six hollow steel pins were carried, and to these
+the remaining six connecting-rods were attached. The crankshaft of the
+engine was made of nickel chrome-steel, and was in two parts connected
+together at the crank pin; these two parts, after the master-rod had
+been placed in position and the other connecting rods had been attached
+to it, were firmly secured. The steel crank case was made in five parts,
+the two central ones holding the cylinders in place, and on one side
+another of the five castings formed a cam-box, to the outside of which
+was secured the extension to which the air-screw was attached. On the
+other side of the crank case another casting carried the thrust-box, and
+the whole crank case, with its cylinders and gear, was carried on the
+fixed crank shaft by means of four ball-bearings, one of which also took
+the axial thrust of the air-screw.
+
+For these engines, castor oil is the lubricant usually adopted, and it
+is pumped to the crankshaft by means of a gear-driven oil pump; from
+this shaft the other parts of the engine are lubricated by means of
+centrifugal force, and in actual practice sufficient unburnt oil passes
+through the cylinders to lubricate the exhaust valve, which partly
+accounts for the high rate of consumption of lubricating oil. A very
+simple carburettor of the float less, single-spray type was used, and
+the mixture was passed along the hollow crankshaft to the interior of
+the crank case, thence through the automatic inlet valves in the tops of
+the pistons to the combustion chambers of the cylinders. Ignition was
+by means of a high-tension magneto specially geared to give the correct
+timing, and the working impulses occurred at equal angular intervals of
+102.85 degrees. The ignition was timed so that the firing spark occurred
+when the cylinder was 26 degrees before the position in which the piston
+was at the outer end of its stroke, and this timing gave a maximum
+pressure in the cylinder just after the piston had passed this position.
+
+By 1913, eight different sizes of the Gnome engine were being
+constructed, ranging from 45 to 180 brake horse-power; four of these
+were single-crank engines one having nine and the other three having
+seven cylinders. The remaining four were constructed with two cranks;
+three of them had fourteen cylinders apiece, ranged in groups of seven,
+acting on the cranks, and the one other had eighteen cylinders ranged in
+two groups of nine, acting on its two cranks. Cylinders of the two-crank
+engines are so arranged (in the fourteen-cylinder type) that fourteen
+equal angular impulses occur during each cycle; these engines are
+supported on bearings on both sides of the engine, the air-screw being
+placed outside the front support. In the eighteen-cylinder model the
+impulses occur at each 40 degrees of angular rotation of the cylinders,
+securing an extremely even rotation of the air-screw.
+
+In 1913 the Gnome Monosoupape engine was introduced, a model in which
+the inlet valve to the cylinder was omitted, while the piston was of the
+ordinary cast-iron type. A single exhaust valve in the cylinder head was
+operated in a manner similar to that on the previous Gnome engines, and
+the fact of this being the only valve on the cylinder gave the engine
+its name. Each cylinder contained ports at the bottom which communicated
+with the crank chamber, and were overrun by the piston when this was
+approaching the bottom end of its stroke. During the working cycle of
+the engine the exhaust valve was opened early to allow the exhaust gases
+to escape from the cylinder, so that by the time the piston overran the
+ports at the bottom the pressure within the cylinder was approximately
+equal to that in the crank case, and practically no flow of gas took
+place in either direction through the ports. The exhaust valve remained
+open as usual during the succeeding up-stroke of the piston, and
+the valve was held open until the piston had returned through about
+one-third of its downward stroke, thus permitting fresh air to enter the
+cylinder. The exhaust valve then closed, and the downward motion of the
+piston, continuing, caused a partial vacuum inside the cylinder; when
+the piston overran the ports, the rich mixture from the crank case
+immediately entered. The cylinder was then full of the mixture, and the
+next upward stroke of the piston compressed the charge; upon ignition
+the working cycle was repeated. The speed variation of this engine
+was obtained by varying the extent and duration of the opening of the
+exhaust valves, and was controlled by the pilot by hand-operated levers
+acting on the valve tappet rollers. The weight per horsepower of these
+engines was slightly less than that of the two-valve type, while the
+lubrication of the gudgeon pin and piston showed an improvement, so that
+a lower lubricating oil consumption was obtained. The 100 horse-power
+Gnome Monosoupape was built with nine cylinders, each 4.33 inches
+bore by 5.9 inches stroke, and it developed its rated power at 1,200
+revolutions per minute.
+
+An engine of the rotary type, almost as well known as the Gnome, is the
+Clerget, in which both cylinders and crank case are made of steel, the
+former having the usual radial fins for cooling. In this type the
+inlet and exhaust valves are both located in the cylinder head, and
+mechanically operated by push-rods and rockers. Pipes are carried from
+the crank case to the inlet valve casings to convey the mixture to the
+cylinders, a carburettor of the central needle type being used. The
+carburetted mixture is taken into the crank case chamber in a manner
+similar to that of the Gnome engine. Pistons of aluminium alloy, with
+three cast-iron rings, are fitted, the top ring being of the obturator
+type. The large end of one of the nine connecting rods embraces the
+crank pin and the pressure is taken on two ball-bearings housed in the
+end of the rod. This carries eight pins, to which the other rods are
+attached, and the main rod being rigid between the crank pin and piston
+pin determines the position of the pistons. Hollow connecting-rods
+are used, and the lubricating oil for the piston pins passes from the
+crankshaft through the centres of the rods. Inlet and exhaust valves
+can be set quite independently of one another--a useful point, since
+the correct timing of the opening of these valves is of importance. The
+inlet valve opens 4 degrees from top centre and closes after the bottom
+dead centre of the piston; the exhaust valve opens 68 degrees before
+the bottom centre and closes 4 degrees after the top dead centre of the
+piston. The magnetos are set to give the spark in the cylinder at 25
+degrees before the end of the compression stroke--two high-tension
+magnetos are used: if desired, the second one can be adjusted to give
+a later spark for assisting the starting of the engine. The lubricating
+oil pump is of the valveless two-plunger type, so geared that it runs
+at seven revolutions to 100 revolutions of the engine; by counting
+the pulsations the speed of the engine can be quickly calculated by
+multiplying the pulsations by 100 and dividing by seven. In the 115
+horse-power nine-cylinder Clerget the cylinders are 4.7 bore with a 6.3
+inches stroke, and the rated power of the engine is obtained at
+1,200 revolutions per minute. The petrol consumption is 0.75 pint per
+horse-power per hour.
+
+A third rotary aero engine, equally well known with the foregoing two,
+is the Le Rhone, made in four different sizes with power outputs of from
+50 to 160 horse-power; the two smaller sizes are single crank engines
+with seven and nine cylinders respectively, and the larger sizes are
+of double-crank design, being merely the two smaller sizes
+doubled--fourteen and eighteen-cylinder engines. The inlet and
+exhaust valves are located in the cylinder head, and both valves are
+mechanically operated by one push-rod and rocker, radial pipes from
+crank case to inlet valve casing taking the mixture to the cylinders.
+The exhaust valves are placed on the leading, or air-screw side, of the
+engine, in order to get the fullest possible cooling effect. The rated
+power of each type of engine is obtained at 1,200 revolutions per
+minute, and for all four sizes the cylinder bore is 4.13 inches, with
+a 5.5 inches piston stroke. Thin cast-iron liners are shrunk into
+the steel cylinders in order to reduce the amount of piston friction.
+Although the Le Rhone engines are constructed practically throughout
+of steel, the weight is only 2.9 lbs. per horse-power in the
+eighteen-cylinder type.
+
+American enterprise in the construction of the rotary type is perhaps
+best illustrated in the 'Gyro 'engine; this was first constructed with
+inlet valves in the heads of the pistons, after the Gnome pattern, the
+exhaust valves being in the heads of the cylinders. The inlet valve in
+the crown of each piston was mechanically operated in a very ingenious
+manner by the oscillation of the connecting-rod. The Gyro-Duplex engine
+superseded this original design, and a small cross-section illustration
+of this is appended. It is constructed in seven and nine-cylinder sizes,
+with a power range of from 50 to 100 horse-power; with the largest size
+the low weight of 2.5 lbs.. per horse-power is reached. The design is
+of considerable interest to the internal combustion engineer, for it
+embodies a piston valve for controlling auxiliary exhaust ports, which
+also acts as the inlet valve to the cylinder. The piston uncovers the
+auxiliary ports when it reaches the bottom of its stroke, and at the end
+of the power stroke the piston is in such a position that the exhaust
+can escape over the top of it. The exhaust valve in the cylinder head is
+then opened by means of the push-rod and rocker, and is held open until
+the piston has completed its upward stroke and returned through more
+than half its subsequent return stroke. When the exhaust valve closes,
+the cylinder has a charge of fresh air, drawn in through the exhaust
+valve, and the further motion of the piston causes a partial vacuum;
+by the time the piston reaches bottom dead centre the piston-valve has
+moved up to give communication between the cylinder and the crank case,
+therefore the mixture is drawn into the cylinder. Both the piston valve
+and exhaust valve are operated by cams formed on the one casting, which
+rotates at seven-eighths engine speed for the seven-cylinder type, and
+nine-tenths engine speed for the nine-cylinder engines. Each of these
+cams has four or five points respectively, to suit the number of
+cylinders.
+
+The steel cylinders are machined from solid forgings and provided with
+webs for air-cooling as shown. Cast-iron pistons are used, and are
+connected to the crankshaft in the same manner as with the Gnome and Le
+Rhone engines. Petrol is sprayed into the crank case by a small geared
+pump and the mixture is taken from there to the piston valves by radial
+pipes. Two separate pumps are used for lubrication, one forcing oil to
+the crank-pin bearing and the other spraying the cylinders.
+
+Among other designs of rotary aero engines the E.J.C. is noteworthy,
+in that the cylinders and crank case of this engine rotate in opposite
+directions, and two air-screws are used, one being attached to the end
+of the crankshaft, and the other to the crank case. Another interesting
+type is the Burlat rotary, in which both the cylinders and crankshaft
+rotate in the same direction, the rotation of the crankshaft being twice
+that of the cylinders as regards speed. This engine is arranged to
+work on the four-stroke cycle with the crankshaft making four, and the
+cylinders two, revolutions per cycle.
+
+It would appear that the rotary type of engine is capable of but little
+more improvement--save for such devices as these of the last two engines
+mentioned, there is little that Laurent Seguin has not already done in
+the Gnome type. The limitation of the rotary lies in its high fuel and
+lubricating oil consumption, which renders it unsuited for long-distance
+aero work; it was, in the war period, an admirable engine for such
+short runs as might be involved in patrol work 'over the lines,' and
+for similar purposes, but the watercooled Vee or even vertical, with
+its much lower fuel consumption, was and is to be preferred for distance
+work. The rotary air-cooled type has its uses, and for them it will
+probably remain among the range of current types for some time to come.
+Experience of matters aeronautical is sufficient to show, however, that
+prophecy in any direction is most unsafe.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE HORIZONTALLY-OPPOSED ENGINE
+
+Among the first internal combustion engines to be taken into use with
+aircraft were those of the horizontally-opposed four-stroke cycle type,
+and, in every case in which these engines were used, their excellent
+balance and extremely even torque rendered them ideal-until the
+tremendous increase in power requirements rendered the type too long and
+bulky for placing in the fuselage of an aeroplane. As power increased,
+there came a tendency toward placing cylinders radially round a central
+crankshaft, and, as in the case of the early Anzani, it may be said that
+the radial engine grew out of the horizontal opposed piston type. There
+were, in 1910--that is, in the early days of small power units,
+ten different sizes of the horizontally opposed engine listed for
+manufacture, but increase in power requirements practically ruled out
+the type for air work.
+
+The Darracq firm were the leading makers of these engines in 1910; their
+smallest size was a 24 horsepower engine, with two cylinders each of 5.1
+inches bore by 4.7 inches stroke. This engine developed its rated power
+at 1,500 revolutions per minute, and worked out at a weight of 5 lbs.
+per horse-power. With these engines the cranks are so placed that two
+regular impulses are given to the crankshaft for each cycle of working,
+an arrangement which permits of very even balancing of the inertia
+forces of the engine. The Darracq firm also made a four-cylindered
+horizontal opposed piston engine, in which two revolutions were given to
+the crankshaft per revolution, at equal angular intervals.
+
+The Dutheil-Chambers was another engine of this type, and had
+the distinction of being the second largest constructed. At 1,000
+revolutions per minute it developed 97 horse-power; its four cylinders
+were each of 4.93 inches bore by 11.8 inches stroke--an abnormally long
+stroke in comparison with the bore. The weight--which owing to the build
+of the engine and its length of stroke was bound to be rather high,
+actually amounted to 8.2 lbs. per horse-power. Water cooling was
+adopted, and the engine was, like the Darracq four-cylinder type,
+so arranged as to give two impulses per revolution at equal angular
+intervals of crankshaft rotation.
+
+One of the first engines of this type to be constructed in England was
+the Alvaston, a water-cooled model which was made in 20, 30, and 50
+brake horse-power sizes, the largest being a four-cylinder engine. All
+three sizes were constructed to run at 1,200 revolutions per minute. In
+this make the cylinders were secured to the crank case by means of
+four long tie bolts passing through bridge pieces arranged across the
+cylinder heads, thus relieving the cylinder walls of all longitudinal
+explosion stresses. These bridge pieces were formed from chrome
+vanadium steel and milled to an 'H' section, and the bearings for the
+valve-tappet were forged solid with them. Special attention was given
+to the machining of the interiors of the cylinders and the combustion
+heads, with the result that the exceptionally high compression of 95
+lbs. per square inch was obtained, giving a very flexible engine. The
+cylinder heads were completely water-jacketed, and copper water-jackets
+were also fitted round the cylinders. The mechanically operated valves
+were actuated by specially shaped cams, and were so arranged that only
+two cams were required for the set of eight valves. The inlet valves at
+both ends of the engine were connected by a single feed-pipe to which
+the carburettor was attached, the induction piping being arranged above
+the engine in an easily accessible position. Auxiliary air ports were
+provided in the cylinder walls so that the pistons overran them at the
+end of their stroke. A single vertical shaft running in ball-bearings
+operated the valves and water circulating pump, being driven by spiral
+gearing from the crankshaft at half speed. In addition to the excellent
+balance obtained with this engine, the makers claimed with justice that
+the number of working parts was reduced to an absolute minimum.
+
+In the two-cylinder Darracq, the steel cylinders were machined from
+solid, and auxiliary exhaust ports, overrun by the piston at the inner
+end of its stroke, were provided in the cylinder walls, consisting of a
+circular row of drilled holes--this arrangement was subsequently adopted
+on some of the Darracq racing car engines. The water jackets were of
+copper, soldered to the cylinder walls; both the inlet and exhaust
+valves were located in the cylinder heads, being operated by rockers and
+push-rods actuated by cams on the halftime shaft driven from one end
+of the crankshaft. Ignition was by means of a high-tension magneto,
+and long induction pipes connected the-ends of the cylinders to the
+carburettor, the latter being placed underneath the engine. Lubrication
+was effected by spraying oil into the crank case by means of a pump, and
+a second pump circulated the cooling water.
+
+Another good example of this type of engine was the Eole, which had
+eight opposed pistons, each pair of which was actuated by a common
+combustion chamber at the centre of the engine, two crankshafts being
+placed at the outer ends of the engine. This reversal of the ordinary
+arrangement had two advantages; it simplified induction, and further
+obviated the need for cylinder heads, since the explosion drove at two
+piston heads instead of at one piston head and the top of the cylinder;
+against this, however, the engine had to be constructed strongly enough
+to withstand the longitudinal stresses due to the explosions, as the
+cranks are placed on the outer ends and the cylinders and crank-cases
+take the full force of each explosion. Each crankshaft drove a separate
+air-screw.
+
+This pattern of engine was taken up by the Dutheil-Chambers firm in
+the pioneer days of aircraft, when the firm in question produced seven
+different sizes of horizontal engines. The Demoiselle monoplane used
+by Santos-Dumont in 1909 was fitted with a two-cylinder,
+horizontally-opposed Dutheil-Chambers engine, which developed 25 brake
+horse-power at a speed of 1,100 revolutions per minute, the cylinders
+being of 5 inches bore by 5.1 inches stroke, and the total weight of the
+engine being some 120 lbs. The crankshafts of these engines were usually
+fitted with steel flywheels in order to give a very even torque,
+the wheels being specially constructed with wire spokes. In all the
+Dutheil-Chambers engines water cooling was adopted, and the cylinders
+were attached to the crank cases by means of long bolts passing through
+the combustion heads.
+
+For their earliest machines, the Clement-Bayard firm constructed
+horizontal engines of the opposed piston type. The best known of these
+was the 30 horse-power size, which had cylinders of 4.7 inches diameter
+by 5.1 inches stroke, and gave its rated power at 1,200 revolutions per
+minute. In this engine the steel cylinders were secured to the crank
+case by flanges, and radiating ribs were formed around the barrel
+to assist the air-cooling. Inlet and exhaust valves were actuated by
+push-rods and rockers actuated from the second motion shaft mounted
+above the crank case; this shaft also drove the high-tension magneto
+with which the engine was fitted. A ring of holes drilled round each
+cylinder constituted auxiliary ports which the piston uncovered at the
+inner end of its stroke, and these were of considerable assistance not
+only in expelling exhaust gases, but also in moderating the temperature
+of the cylinder and of the main exhaust valve fitted in the cylinder
+head. A water-cooled Clement-Bayard horizontal engine was also made, and
+in this the auxiliary exhaust ports were not embodied; except in this
+particular, the engine was very similar to the water-cooled Darracq.
+
+The American Ashmusen horizontal engine, developing 100 horse-power, is
+probably the largest example of this type constructed. It was made with
+six cylinders arranged on each side of a common crank case, with long
+bolts passing through the cylinder heads to assist in holding them down.
+The induction piping and valve-operating gear were arranged below the
+engine, and the half-speed shaft carried the air-screw.
+
+Messrs Palons and Beuse, Germans, constructed a light-weight,
+air-cooled, horizontally-opposed engine, two-cylindered. In this the
+cast-iron cylinders were made very thin, and were secured to the
+crank case by bolts passing through lugs cast on the outer ends of
+the cylinders; the crankshaft was made hollow, and holes were drilled
+through the webs of the connecting-rods in order to reduce the weight.
+The valves were fitted to the cylinder heads, the inlet valves being of
+the automatic type, while the exhaust valves were mechanically operated
+from the cam-shaft by means of rockers and push-rods. Two carburettors
+were fitted, to reduce the induction piping to a minimum; one was
+attached to each combustion chamber, and ignition was by the normal
+high-tension magneto driven from the halftime shaft.
+
+There was also a Nieuport two-cylinder air-cooled horizontal engine,
+developing 35 horse-power when running at 1,300 revolutions per minute,
+and being built at a weight of 5.1 lbs. per horse-power. The cylinders
+were of 5.3 inches diameter by 5.9 inches stroke; the engine followed
+the lines of the Darracq and Dutheil-Chambers pretty closely, and thus
+calls for no special description.
+
+The French Kolb-Danvin engine of the horizontal type, first constructed
+in 1905, was probably the first two-stroke cycle engine designed to
+be applied to the propulsion of aircraft; it never got beyond the
+experimental stage, although its trials gave very good results. Stepped
+pistons were adopted, and the charging pump at one end was used to
+scavenge the power cylinder at the other ends of the engine, the
+transfer ports being formed in the main casting. The openings of these
+ports were controlled at both ends by the pistons, and the location of
+the ports appears to have made it necessary to take the exhaust from the
+bottom of one cylinder and from the top of the other. The carburetted
+mixture was drawn into the scavenging cylinders, and the usual
+deflectors were cast on the piston heads to assist in the scavenging and
+to prevent the fresh gas from passing out of the exhaust ports.
+
+
+
+
+VI. THE TWO-STROKE CYCLE ENGINE
+
+Although it has been little used for aircraft propulsion, the
+possibilities of the two-stroke cycle engine render some study of
+it desirable in this brief review of the various types of internal
+combustion engine applicable both to aeroplanes and airships.
+Theoretically the two-stroke cycle engine--or as it is more commonly
+termed, the 'two-stroke,' is the ideal power producer; the doubling of
+impulses per revolution of the crankshaft should render it of very much
+more even torque than the four-stroke cycle types, while, theoretically,
+there should be a considerable saving of fuel, owing to the doubling of
+the number of power strokes per total of piston strokes. In practice,
+however, the inefficient scavenging of virtually every two-stroke cycle
+engine produced nullifies or more than nullifies its advantages over the
+four-stroke cycle engine; in many types, too, there is a waste of fuel
+gases through the exhaust ports, and much has yet to be done in the way
+of experiment and resulting design before the two-stroke cycle engine
+can be regarded as equally reliable, economical, and powerful with its
+elder brother.
+
+The first commercially successful engine operating on the two-stroke
+cycle was invented by Mr Dugald Clerk, who in 1881 proved the design
+feasible. As is more or less generally understood, the exhaust gases of
+this engine are discharged from the cylinder during the time that
+the piston is passing the inner dead centre, and the compression,
+combustion, and expansion of the charge take place in similar manner
+to that of the four-stroke cycle engine. The exhaust period is usually
+controlled by the piston overrunning ports in the cylinder at the end
+of its working stroke, these ports communicating direct with the outer
+air--the complication of an exhaust valve is thus obviated; immediately
+after the escape of the exhaust gases, charging of the cylinder occurs,
+and the fresh gas may be introduced either through a valve in the
+cylinder head or through ports situated diametrically opposite to the
+exhaust ports. The continuation of the outward stroke of the piston,
+after the exhaust ports have been closed, compresses the charge into
+the combustion chamber of the cylinder, and the ignition of the mixture
+produces a recurrence of the working stroke.
+
+Thus, theoretically, is obtained the maximum of energy with the minimum
+of expenditure; in practice, however, the scavenging of the power
+cylinder, a matter of great importance in all internal combustion
+engines, is often imperfect, owing to the opening of the exhaust ports
+being of relatively short duration; clearing the exhaust gases out of
+the cylinder is not fully accomplished, and these gases mix with the
+fresh charge and detract from its efficiency. Similarly, owing to the
+shorter space of time allowed, the charging of the cylinder with the
+fresh mixture is not so efficient as in the four-stroke cycle type; the
+fresh charge is usually compressed slightly in a separate chamber--crank
+case, independent cylinder, or charging pump, and is delivered to
+the working cylinder during the beginning of the return stroke of the
+piston, while in engines working on the four-stroke cycle principle a
+complete stroke is devoted to the expulsion of the waste gases of the
+exhaust, and another full stroke to recharging the cylinder with fresh
+explosive mixture.
+
+Theoretically the two-stroke and the four-stroke cycle engines possess
+exactly the same thermal efficiency, but actually this is modified by a
+series of practical conditions which to some extent tend to neutralise
+the very strong case in favour of the two-stroke cycle engine. The
+specific capacity of the engine operating on the two-stroke principle is
+theoretically twice that of one operating on the four-stroke cycle, and
+consequently, for equal power, the former should require only about half
+the cylinder volume of the latter; and, owing to the greater superficial
+area of the smaller cylinder, relatively, the latter should be far more
+easily cooled than the larger four-stroke cycle cylinder; thus it should
+be possible to get higher compression pressures, which in turn should
+result in great economy of working. Also the obtaining of a working
+impulse in the cylinder for each revolution of the crankshaft should
+give a great advantage in regularity of rotation--which it undoubtedly
+does--and the elimination of the operating gear for the valves, inlet
+and exhaust, should give greater simplicity of design.
+
+In spite of all these theoretical--and some practical--advantages the
+four-stroke cycle engine was universally adopted for aircraft work;
+owing to the practical equality of the two principles of operation, so
+far as thermal efficiency and friction losses are concerned, there is no
+doubt that the simplicity of design (in theory) and high power output
+to weight ratio (also in theory) ought to have given the 'two-stroke'
+a place on the aeroplane. But this engine has to be developed so as to
+overcome its inherent drawbacks; better scavenging methods have yet to
+be devised--for this is the principal drawback--before the two-stroke
+can come to its own as a prime mover for aircraft.
+
+Mr Dugald Clerk's original two-stroke cycle engine is indicated roughly,
+as regards principle, by the accompanying diagram, from which it will
+be seen that the elimination of the ordinary inlet and exhaust valves
+of the four-stroke type is more than compensated by a separate cylinder
+which, having a piston worked from the connecting-rod of the power
+cylinder, was used to charging, drawing the mixture from the carburettor
+past the valve in the top of the charging cylinder, and then forcing it
+through the connecting pipe into the power cylinder. The inlet valves
+both on the charging and the power cylinders are automatic; when the
+power piston is near the bottom of its stroke the piston in the charging
+cylinder is compressing the carburetted air, so that as soon as the
+pressure within the power cylinder is relieved by the exit of the burnt
+gases through the exhaust ports the pressure in the charging cylinder
+causes the valve in the head of the power cylinder to open, and fresh
+mixture flows into the cylinder, replacing the exhaust gases. After
+the piston has again covered the exhaust ports the mixture begins to be
+compressed, thus automatically closing the inlet valve. Ignition
+occurs near the end of the compression stroke, and the working stroke
+immediately follows, thus giving an impulse to the crankshaft on every
+down stroke of the piston. If the scavenging of the cylinder were
+complete, and the cylinder were to receive a full charge of fresh
+mixture for every stroke, the same mean effective pressure as is
+obtained with four-stroke cycle engines ought to be realised, and at
+an equal speed of rotation this engine should give twice the power
+obtainable from a four-stroke cycle engine of equal dimensions. This
+result was not achieved, and, with the improvements in construction
+brought about by experiment up to 1912, the output was found to be only
+about fifty per cent more than that of a four-stroke cycle engine of the
+same size, so that, when the charging cylinder is included, this engine
+has a greater weight per horse-power, while the lowest rate of fuel
+consumption recorded was 0.68 lb. per horse-power per hour.
+
+In 1891 Mr Day invented a two-stroke cycle engine which used the crank
+case as a scavenging chamber, and a very large number of these engines
+have been built for industrial purposes. The charge of carburetted air
+is drawn through a non-return valve into the crank chamber during the
+upstroke of the piston, and compressed to about 4 lbs. pressure per
+square inch on the down stroke. When the piston approaches the bottom
+end of its stroke the upper edge first overruns an exhaust port, and
+almost immediately after uncovers an inlet port on the opposite side of
+the cylinder and in communication with the crank chamber; the entering
+charge, being under pressure, assists in expelling the exhaust gases
+from the cylinder. On the next upstroke the charge is compressed into
+the combustion space of the cylinder, a further charge simultaneously
+entering the crank case to be compressed after the ignition for the
+working stroke. To prevent the incoming charge escaping through the
+exhaust ports of the cylinder a deflector is formed on the top of the
+piston, causing the fresh gas to travel in an upward direction, thus
+avoiding as far as possible escape of the mixture to the atmosphere.
+From experiments conducted in 1910 by Professor Watson and Mr Fleming
+it was found that the proportion of fresh gases which escaped unburnt
+through the exhaust ports diminished with increase of speed; at 600
+revolutions per minute about 36 per cent of the fresh charge was lost;
+at 1,200 revolutions per minute this was reduced to 20 per cent, and at
+1,500 revolutions it was still farther reduced to 6 per cent.
+
+So much for the early designs. With regard to engines of this type
+specially constructed for use with aircraft, three designs call for
+special mention. Messrs A. Gobe and H. Diard, Parisian engineers,
+produced an eight-cylindered two-stroke cycle engine of rotary design,
+the cylinders being co-axial. Each pair of opposite pistons was secured
+together by a rigid connecting rod, connected to a pin on a rotating
+crankshaft which was mounted eccentrically to the axis of rotation
+of the cylinders. The crankshaft carried a pinion gearing with an
+internally toothed wheel on the transmission shaft which carried the
+air-screw. The combustible mixture, emanating from a common supply pipe,
+was led through conduits to the front ends of the cylinders, in which
+the charges were compressed before being transferred to the working
+spaces through ports in tubular extensions carried by the pistons.
+These extensions had also exhaust ports, registering with ports in the
+cylinder which communicated with the outer air, and the extensions slid
+over depending cylinder heads attached to the crank case by long studs.
+The pump charge was compressed in one end of each cylinder, and the
+pump spaces each delivered into their corresponding adjacent combustion
+spaces. The charges entered the pump spaces during the suction period
+through passages which communicated with a central stationary supply
+passage at one end of the crank case, communication being cut off when
+the inlet orifice to the passage passed out of register with the port
+in the stationary member. The exhaust ports at the outer end of the
+combustion space opened just before and closed a little later than the
+air ports, and the incoming charge assisted in expelling the exhaust
+gases in a manner similar to that of the earlier types of two-stroke
+cycle engine; The accompanying rough diagram assists in showing the
+working of this engine.
+
+Exhibited in the Paris Aero Exhibition of 1912, the Laviator two-stroke
+cycle engine, six-cylindered, could be operated either as a radial or
+as a rotary engine, all its pistons acting on a single crank. Cylinder
+dimensions of this engine were 3.94 inches bore by 5.12 inches stroke,
+and a power output of 50 horse-power was obtained when working at a rate
+of 1,200 revolutions per minute. Used as a radial engine, it developed
+65 horse-power at the same rate of revolution, and, as the total weight
+was about 198 lbs., the weight of about 3 lbs. per horse-power was
+attained in radial use. Stepped pistons were employed, the annular space
+between the smaller or power piston and the walls of the larger cylinder
+being used as a charging pump for the power cylinder situated 120
+degrees in rear of it. The charging cylinders were connected by short
+pipes to ports in the crank case which communicated with the hollow
+crankshaft through which the fresh gas was supplied, and once in each
+revolution each port in the case registered with the port in the
+hollow shaft. The mixture which then entered the charging cylinder was
+transferred to the corresponding working cylinder when the piston of
+that cylinder had reached the end of its power stroke, and immediately
+before this the exhaust ports diametrically opposite the inlet ports
+were uncovered; scavenging was thus assisted in the usual way. The very
+desirable feature of being entirely valveless was accomplished with this
+engine, which is also noteworthy for exceedingly compact design.
+
+The Lamplough six-cylinder two-stroke cycle rotary, shown at the Aero
+Exhibition at Olympia in 1911, had several innovations, including a
+charging pump of rotary blower type. With the six cylinders, six power
+impulses at regular intervals were given on each rotation; otherwise,
+the cycle of operations was carried out much as in other two-stroke
+cycle engines. The pump supplied the mixture under slight pressure to
+an inlet port in each cylinder, which was opened at the same time as the
+exhaust port, the period of opening being controlled by the piston. The
+rotary blower sucked the mixture from the carburettor and delivered it
+to a passage communicating with the inlet ports in the cylinder walls.
+A mechanically-operated exhaust valve was placed in the centre of each
+cylinder head, and towards the end of the working stroke this valve
+opened, allowing part of the burnt gases to escape to the atmosphere;
+the remainder was pushed out by the fresh mixture going in through the
+ports at the bottom end of the cylinder. In practice, one or other of
+the cylinders was always taking fresh mixture while working, therefore
+the delivery from the pump was continuous and the mixture had not to be
+stored under pressure.
+
+The piston of this engine was long enough to keep the ports covered
+when it was at the top of the stroke, and a bottom ring was provided
+to prevent the mixture from entering the crank case. In addition to
+preventing leakage, this ring no doubt prevented an excess of oil
+working up the piston into the cylinder. As the cylinder fired with
+every revolution, the valve gear was of the simplest construction, a
+fixed cam lifting each valve as the cylinder came into position. The
+spring of the exhaust valve was not placed round the stem in the usual
+way, but at the end of a short lever, away from the heat of the exhaust
+gases. The cylinders were of cast steel, the crank case of aluminium,
+and ball-bearings were fitted to the crankshaft, crank pins, and the
+rotary blower pump. Ignition was by means of a high-tension magneto of
+the two-spark pattern, and with a total weight of 300 lbs. the maximum
+output was 102 brake horse-power, giving a weight of just under 3 lbs.
+per horse-power.
+
+One of the most successful of the two-stroke cycle engines was that
+designed by Mr G. F. Mort and constructed by the New Engine Company.
+With four cylinders of 3.69 inches bore by 4.5 inches stroke, and
+running at 1,250 revolutions per minute, this engine developed 50 brake
+horse-power; the total weight of the engine was 155 lbs., thus giving a
+weight of 3.1 lbs. per horse-power. A scavenging pump of the rotary type
+was employed, driven by means of gearing from the engine crankshaft, and
+in order to reduce weight to a minimum the vanes were of aluminium. This
+engine was tried on a biplane, and gave very satisfactory results.
+
+American design yields two apparently successful two-stroke cycle aero
+engines. A rotary called the Fredericson engine was said to give an
+output of 70 brake horse-power with five cylinders 4.5 inches diameter
+by 4.75 inches stroke, running at 1,000 revolutions per minute. Another,
+the Roberts two-stroke cycle engine, yielded 100 brake horse-power
+from six cylinders of the stepped piston design; two carburettors, each
+supplying three cylinders, were fitted to this engine. Ignition was
+by means of the usual high-tension magneto, gear-driven from the
+crankshaft, and the engine, which was water-cooled, was of compact
+design.
+
+It may thus be seen that the two-stroke cycle type got as far as actual
+experiment in air work, and that with considerable success. So far,
+however, the greater reliability of the four-stroke cycle has rendered
+it practically the only aircraft engine, and the two-stroke has yet some
+way to travel before it becomes a formidable competitor, in spite of its
+admitted theoretical and questioned practical advantages.
+
+
+
+
+VII. ENGINES OF THE WAR PERIOD
+
+The principal engines of British, French, and American design used in
+the war period and since are briefly described under the four distinct
+types of aero engine; such notable examples as the Rolls-Royce,
+Sunbeam, and Napier engines have been given special mention, as they
+embodied--and still embody--all that is best in aero engine practice. So
+far, however, little has been said about the development of German aero
+engine design, apart from the early Daimler and other pioneer makes.
+
+At the outbreak of hostilities in 1914, thanks to subsidies to
+contractors and prizes to aircraft pilots, the German aeroplane
+industry was in a comparatively flourishing condition. There were about
+twenty-two establishments making different types of heavier-than-air
+machines, monoplane and biplane, engined for the most part with the
+four-cylinder Argus or the six-cylinder Mercedes vertical type engines,
+each of these being of 100 horse-power--it was not till war brought
+increasing demands on aircraft that the limit of power began to rise.
+Contemporary with the Argus and Mercedes were the Austro-Daimler,
+Benz, and N.A.G., in vertical design, while as far as rotary types were
+concerned there were two, the Oberursel and the Stahlhertz; of these the
+former was by far the most promising, and it came to virtual monopoly
+of the rotary-engined plane as soon as the war demand began. It was
+practically a copy of the famous Gnome rotary, and thus deserves little
+description.
+
+Germany, from the outbreak of war, practically, concentrated on the
+development of the Mercedes engine; and it is noteworthy that, with one
+exception, increase of power corresponding with the increased demand
+for power was attained without increasing the number of cylinders. The
+various models ranged between 75 and 260 horse-power, the latter being
+the most recent production of this type. The exception to the rule
+was the eight-cylinder 240 horse-power, which was replaced by the 260
+horse-power six-cylinder model, the latter being more reliable and but
+very slightly heavier. Of the other engines, the 120 horsepower Argus
+and the 160 and 225 horse-power Benz were the most used, the Oberursel
+being very largely discarded after the Fokker monoplane had had its day,
+and the N.A.G. and Austro-Daimler Daimler also falling to comparative
+disuse. It may be said that the development of the Mercedes engine
+contributed very largely to such success as was achieved in the war
+period by German aircraft, and, in developing the engine, the builders
+were careful to make alterations in such a way as to effect the least
+possible change in the design of aeroplane to which they were to be
+fitted. Thus the engine base of the 175 horse-power model coincided
+precisely with that of the 150 horse-power model, and the 200 and 240
+horse-power models retained the same base dimensions. It was estimated,
+in 1918, that well over eighty per cent of German aircraft was engined
+with the Mercedes type.
+
+In design and construction, there was nothing abnormal about the
+Mercedes engine, the keynote throughout being extreme reliability and
+such simplification of design as would permit of mass production in
+different factories. Even before the war, the long list of records set
+up by this engine formed practical application of the wisdom of this
+policy; Bohn's flight of 24 hours 10 minutes, accomplished on July 10th
+and 11th, 1914, 9is an instance of this--the flight was accomplished on
+an Albatross biplane with a 75 horsepower Mercedes engine. The radial
+type, instanced in other countries by the Salmson and Anzani makes, was
+not developed in Germany; two radial engines were made in that country
+before the war, but the Germans seemed to lose faith in the type under
+war conditions, or it may have been that insistence on standardisation
+ruled out all but the proved examples of engine.
+
+Details of one of the middle sizes of Mercedes motor, the 176
+horse-power type, apply very generally to the whole range; this size was
+in use up to and beyond the conclusion of hostilities, and it may still
+be regarded as characteristic of modern (1920) German practice. The
+engine is of the fixed vertical type, has six cylinders in line, not
+off-set, and is water-cooled. The cam shaft is carried in a special
+bronze casing, seated on the immediate top of the cylinders, and a
+vertical shaft is interposed between crankshaft and camshaft, the latter
+being driven by bevel gearing.
+
+On this vertical connecting-shaft the water pump is located, serving to
+steady the motion of the shaft. Extending immediately below the camshaft
+is another vertical shaft, driven by bevel gears from the crank-shaft,
+and terminating in a worm which drives the multiple piston oil pumps.
+
+The cylinders are made from steel forgings, as are the valve chamber
+elbows, which are machined all over and welded together. A jacket of
+light steel is welded over the valve elbows and attached to a flange
+on the cylinders, forming a water-cooling space with a section of about
+7/16 of an inch. The cylinder bore is 5.5 inches, and the stroke 6.29
+inches. The cylinders are attached to the crank case by means of dogs
+and long through bolts, which have shoulders near their lower ends and
+are bolted to the lower half of the crank chamber. A very light and
+rigid structure is thus obtained, and the method of construction won the
+flattery of imitation by makers of other nationality.
+
+The cooling system for the cylinders is extremely efficient. After
+leaving the water pump, the water enters the top of the front cylinders
+and passes successively through each of the six cylinders of the row;
+short tubes, welded to the tops of the cylinders, serve as connecting
+links in the system. The Panhard car engines for years were fitted with
+a similar cooling system, and the White and Poppe lorry engines were
+also similarly fitted; the system gives excellent cooling effect where
+it is most needed, round the valve chambers and the cylinder heads.
+
+The pistons are built up from two pieces; a dropped forged steel piston
+head, from which depend the piston pin bosses, is combined with a
+cast-iron skirt, into which the steel head is screwed. Four rings are
+fitted, three at the upper and one at the lower end of the piston skirt,
+and two lubricating oil grooves are cut in the skirt, in addition to the
+ring grooves. Two small rivets retain the steel head on the piston skirt
+after it has been screwed into position, and it is also welded at two
+points. The coefficient of friction between the cast-iron and steel is
+considerably less than that which would exist between two steel parts,
+and there is less tendency for the skirt to score the cylinder walls
+than would be the case if all steel were used--so noticeable is this
+that many makers, after giving steel pistons a trial, discarded them in
+favour of cast-iron; the Gnome is an example of this, being originally
+fitted with a steel piston carrying a brass ring, discarded in favour of
+a cast-iron piston with a percentage of steel in the metal mixture. In
+the Le Rhone engine the difficulty is overcome by a cast-iron liner to
+the cylinders.
+
+The piston pin of the Mercedes is of chrome nickel steel, and is
+retained in the piston by means of a set screw and cotter pin. The
+connecting rods, of I section, are very short and rigid, carrying
+floating bronze bushes which fit the piston pins at the small end, and
+carrying an oil tube on each for conveying oil from the crank pin to the
+piston pin.
+
+The crankshaft is of chrome nickel steel, carried on seven bearings.
+Holes are drilled through each of the crank pins and main bearings, for
+half the diameter of the shaft, and these are plugged with pressed brass
+studs. Small holes, drilled through the crank cheeks, serve to convey
+lubricant from the main bearings to the crank pins. The propeller thrust
+is taken by a simple ball thrust bearing at the propeller end of the
+crankshaft, this thrust bearing being seated in a steel retainer which
+is clamped between the two halves of the crank case. At the forward end
+of the crankshaft there is mounted a master bevel gear on six splines;
+this bevel floats on the splines against a ball thrust bearing, and,
+in turn, the thrust is taken by the crank case cover. A stuffing
+box prevents the loss of lubricant out of the front end of the crank
+chamber, and an oil thrower ring serves a similar purpose at the
+propeller end of the crank chamber.
+
+With a motor speed of 1,450 r.p.m., the vertical shaft at the forward
+end of the motor turns at 2,175 r.p.m., this being the speed of the two
+magnetos and the water pump. The lower vertical shaft bevel gear and the
+magneto driving gear are made integral with the vertical driving shaft,
+which is carried in plain bearings in an aluminium housing. This housing
+is clamped to the upper half of the crank case by means of three studs.
+The cam-shaft carries eighteen cams, these being the inlet and exhaust
+cams, and a set of half compression cams which are formed with the
+exhaust cams and are put into action when required by means of a lever
+at the forward end of the cam-shaft. The cam-shaft is hollow, and
+serves as a channel for the conveyance of lubricating oil to each of
+the camshaft bearings. At the forward end of this shaft there is also
+mounted an air pump for maintaining pressure on the fuel supply tank,
+and a bevel gear tachometer drive.
+
+Lubrication of the engine is carried out by a full pressure system.
+The oil is pumped through a single manifold, with seven branches to the
+crankshaft main bearings, and then in turn through the hollow crankshaft
+to the connecting-rod big ends and thence through small tubes, already
+noted, to the small end bearings. The oil pump has four pistons and two
+double valves driven from a single eccentric shaft on which are mounted
+four eccentrics. The pump is continuously submerged in oil; in order to
+avoid great variations in pressure in the oil lines there is a piston
+operated pressure regulator, cut in between the pump and the oil lines.
+The two small pistons of the pump take fresh oil from a tank located in
+the fuselage of the machine; one of these delivers oil to the cam shaft,
+and one delivers to the crankshaft; this fresh oil mixes with the used
+oil, returns to the base, and back to the main large oil pump cylinders.
+By means of these small pump pistons a constant quantity of oil is kept
+in the motor, and the oil is continually being freshened by means of the
+new oil coming in. All the oil pipes are very securely fastened to the
+lower half of the crank case, and some cooling of the oil is effected
+by air passing through channels cast in the crank case on its way to the
+carburettor.
+
+A light steel manifold serves to connect the exhaust ports of the
+cylinders to the main exhaust pipe, which is inclined about 25 degrees
+from vertical and is arranged to give on to the atmosphere just over the
+top of the upper wing of the aeroplane.
+
+As regards carburation, an automatic air valve surrounds the throat of
+the carburettor, maintaining normal composition of mixture. A small jet
+is fitted for starting and running without load. The channels cast in
+the crank chamber, already alluded to in connection with oil-cooling,
+serve to warm the air before it reaches the carburettor, of which the
+body is water-jacketed.
+
+Ignition of the engine is by means of two Bosch ZH6 magnetos, driven at
+a speed of 2,175 revolutions per minute when the engine is running at
+its normal speed of 1,450 revolutions. The maximum advance of spark is
+12 mm., or 32 degrees before the top dead centre, and the firing order
+of the cylinders is 1,5,3,6,2,4.
+
+The radiator fitted to this engine, together with the water-jackets,
+has a capacity of 25 litres of water, it is rectangular in shape, and is
+normally tilted at an angle of 30 degrees from vertical. Its weight is
+26 kg., and it offers but slight head resistance in flight.
+
+The radial type of engine, neglected altogether in Germany, was brought
+to a very high state of perfection at the end of the War period by
+British makers. Two makes, the Cosmos Engineering Company's 'Jupiter'
+and 'Lucifer,' and the A.B.C. 'Wasp II' and 'Dragon Fly 1A' require
+special mention for their light weight and reliability on trials.
+
+The Cosmos 'Jupiter' was--for it is no longer being made--a 450
+horse-power nine-cylinder radial engine, air-cooled, with the cylinders
+set in one single row; it was made both geared to reduce the propeller
+revolutions relatively to the crankshaft revolutions, and ungeared;
+the normal power of the geared type was 450 horse-power, and the total
+weight of the engine, including carburettors, magnetos, etc., was only
+757 lbs.; the engine speed was 1,850 revolutions per minute, and the
+propeller revolutions were reduced by the gearing to 1,200. Fitted to a
+'Bristol Badger' aeroplane, the total weight was 2,800 lbs., including
+pilot, passenger, two machine-guns, and full military load; at 7,000
+feet the registered speed, with corrections for density, was 137 miles
+per hour; in climbing, the first 2,000 feet was accomplished in 1 minute
+4 seconds; 4,000 feet was reached in 2 minutes 10 seconds; 6,000 feet
+was reached in 3 minutes 33 seconds, and 7,000 feet in 4 minutes 15
+seconds. It was intended to modify the plane design and fit a new
+propeller, in order to attain even better results, but, if trials were
+made with these modifications, the results are not obtainable.
+
+The Cosmos 'Lucifer' was a three-cylinder radial type engine of 100
+horse-power, inverted Y design, made on the simplest possible principles
+with a view to quantity production and extreme reliability. The rated
+100 horse-power was attained at 1,600 revolutions per minute, and the
+cylinder dimensions were 5.75 bore by 6.25 inches stroke. The cylinders
+were of aluminium and steel mixture, with aluminium heads; overhead
+valves, operated by push rods on the front side of the cylinders, were
+fitted, and a simple reducing gear ran them at half engine speed. The
+crank case was a circular aluminium casting, the engine being attached
+to the fuselage of the aeroplane by a circular flange situated at the
+back of the case; propeller shaft and crankshaft were integral. Dual
+ignition was provided, the generator and distributors being driven off
+the back end of the engine and the distributors being easily accessible.
+Lubrication was by means of two pumps, one scavenging and one suction,
+oil being fed under pressure from the crankshaft. A single carburettor
+fed all three cylinders, the branch pipe from the carburettor to the
+circular ring being provided with an exhaust heater. The total weight of
+the engine, 'all on,' was 280 lbs.
+
+The A.B.C. 'Wasp II,' made by Walton Motors, Limited, is a
+seven-cylinder radial, air-cooled engine, the cylinders having a bore
+of 4.75 inches and stroke 6.25 inches. The normal brake horse-power
+at 1,650 revolutions is 160, and the maximum 200 at a speed of 1,850
+revolutions per minute. Lubrication is by means of two rotary pumps,
+one feeding through the hollow crankshaft to the crank pin, giving
+centrifugal feed to big end and thence splash oiling, and one feeding to
+the nose of the engine, dropping on to the cams and forming a permanent
+sump for the gears on the bottom of the engine nose. Two carburettors
+are fitted, and two two-spark magnetos, running at one and
+three-quarters engine speed. The total weight of this engine is 350
+lbs., or 1.75 lbs. per horse-power. Oil consumption at 1,850 revolutions
+is.03 pints per horse-power per hour, and petrol consumption is.56 pints
+per horsepower per hour. The engine thus shows as very economical in
+consumption, as well as very light in weight.
+
+The A.B.C. 'Dragon Fly 1A 'is a nine-cylinder radial engine having
+one overhead inlet and two overhead exhaust valves per cylinder. The
+cylinder dimensions are 5.5 inches bore by 6.5 inches stroke, and
+the normal rate of speed, 1,650 revolutions per minute, gives 340
+horse-power. The oiling is by means of two pumps, the system being
+practically identical with that of the 'Wasp II.' Oil consumption
+is.021 pints per brake horse-power per hour, and petrol consumption.56
+pints--the same as that of the 'Wasp II.' The weight of the complete
+engine, including propeller boss, is 600 lbs., or 1,765 lbs. per
+horse-power.
+
+These A.B.C. radials have proved highly satisfactory on tests, and their
+extreme simplicity of design and reliability commend them as engineering
+products and at the same time demonstrate the value, for aero work, of
+the air-cooled radial design--when this latter is accompanied by sound
+workmanship. These and the Cosmos engines represent the minimum of
+weight per horse-power yet attained, together with a practicable degree
+of reliability, in radial and probably any aero engine design.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A
+
+GENERAL MENSIER'S REPORT ON THE TRIALS OF CLEMENT ADER'S AVION.
+
+ Paris, October 21, 1897.
+
+Report on the trials of M. Clement Ader's aviation apparatus.
+
+M. Ader having notified the Minister of War by letter, July 21, 1897,
+that the Apparatus of Aviation which he had agreed to build under the
+conditions set forth in the convention of July 24th, 1894, was ready,
+and therefore requesting that trials be undertaken before a Committee
+appointed for this purpose as per the decision of August 4th, the
+Committee was appointed as follows:--
+
+Division General Mensier, Chairman; Division General Delambre, Inspector
+General of the Permanent Works of Coast Defence, Member of the Technical
+Committee of the Engineering Corps; Colonel Laussedat, Director of the
+Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers; Sarrau, Member of the Institute,
+Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the Polytechnic School; Leaute,
+Member of the Institute, Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the
+Polytechnique School.
+
+Colonel Laussedat gave notice at once that his health and work as
+Director of the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers did not permit him
+to be a member of the Committee; the Minister therefore accepted his
+resignation on September 24th, and decided not to replace him.
+
+Later on, however, on the request of the Chairman of the Committee, the
+Minister appointed a new member General Grillon, commanding the Engineer
+Corps of the Military Government of Paris.
+
+To carry on the trials which were to take place at the camp of Satory,
+the Minister ordered the Governor of the Military Forces of Paris to
+requisition from the Engineer Corps, on the request of the Chairman of
+the Committee, the men necessary to prepare the grounds at Satory.
+
+After an inspection made on the 16th an aerodrome was chosen. M. Ader's
+idea was to have it of circular shape with a width of 40 metres and an
+average diameter of 450 metres. The preliminary work, laying out the
+grounds, interior and exterior circumference, etc., was finished at the
+end of August; the work of smoothing off the grounds began September 1st
+with forty-five men and two rollers, and was finished on the day of the
+first tests, October 12th.
+
+The first meeting of the Committee was held August 18th in M. Ader's
+workshop; the object being to demonstrate the machine to the Committee
+and give all the information possible on the tests that were to be held.
+After a careful examination and after having heard all the explanations
+by the inventor which were deemed useful and necessary, the Committee
+decided that the apparatus seemed to be built with a perfect
+understanding of the purpose to be fulfilled as far as one could judge
+from a study of the apparatus at rest; they therefore authorised M. Ader
+to take the machine apart and carry it to the camp at Satory so as to
+proceed with the trials.
+
+By letter of August 19th the Chairman made report to the Minister of the
+findings of the Committee.
+
+The work on the grounds having taken longer than was anticipated, the
+Chairman took advantage of this delay to call the Committee together
+for a second meeting, during which M. Ader was to run the two propulsive
+screws situated at the forward end of the apparatus.
+
+The meeting was held October 2nd. It gave the Committee an opportunity
+to appreciate the motive power in all its details; firebox, boiler,
+engine, under perfect control, absolute condensation, automatic fuel
+and feed of the liquid to be vaporised, automatic lubrication and
+scavenging; everything, in a word, seemed well designed and executed.
+
+The weights in comparison with the power of the engine realised a
+considerable advance over anything made to date, since the two engines
+weighed together realised 42 kg., the firebox and boiler 60 kg., the
+condenser 15 kg., or a total of 117 kg. for approximately 40 horse-power
+or a little less than 3 kg. per horse-power.
+
+One of the members summed up the general opinion by saying: 'Whatever
+may be the result from an aviation point of view, a result which could
+not be foreseen for the moment, it was nevertheless proven that from
+a mechanical point of view M. Ader's apparatus was of the greatest
+interest and real ingeniosity. He expressed a hope that in any case the
+machine would not be lost to science.'
+
+The second experiment in the workshop was made in the presence of the
+Chairman, the purpose being to demonstrate that the wings, having a
+spread of 17 metres, were sufficiently strong to support the weight of
+the apparatus. With this object in view, 14 sliding supports were placed
+under each one of these, representing imperfectly the manner in which
+the wings would support the machine in the air; by gradually raising the
+supports with the slides, the wheels on which the machine rested were
+lifted from the ground. It was evident at that time that the members
+composing the skeleton of the wings supported the apparatus, and it was
+quite evident that when the wings were supported by the air on every
+point of their surface, the stress would be better equalised than when
+resting on a few supports, and therefore the resistance to breakage
+would be considerably greater.
+
+After this last test, the work on the ground being practically finished,
+the machine was transported to Satory, assembled and again made ready
+for trial.
+
+At first M. Ader was to manoeuvre the machine on the ground at a
+moderate speed, then increase this until it was possible to judge
+whether there was a tendency for the machine to rise; and it was only
+after M. Ader had acquired sufficient practice that a meeting of the
+Committee was to be called to be present at the first part of the
+trials; namely, volutions of the apparatus on the ground.
+
+The first test took place on Tuesday, October 12th, in the presence
+of the Chairman of the Committee. It had rained a good deal during the
+night and the clay track would have offered considerable resistance to
+the rolling of the machine; furthermore, a moderate wind was blowing
+from the south-west, too strong during the early part of the afternoon
+to allow of any trials.
+
+Toward sunset, however, the wind having weakened, M. Ader decided to
+make his first trial; the machine was taken out of its hangar, the wings
+were mounted and steam raised. M. Ader in his seat had, on each side of
+him, one man to the right and one to the left, whose duty was to rectify
+the direction of the apparatus in the event that the action of the
+rear wheel as a rudder would not be sufficient to hold the machine in a
+straight course.
+
+At 5.25 p.m. the machine was started, at first slowly and then at an
+increased speed; after 250 or 300 metres, the two men who were being
+dragged by the apparatus were exhausted and forced to fall flat on
+the ground in order to allow the wings to pass over them, and the
+trip around the track was completed, a total of 1,400 metres, without
+incident, at a fair speed, which could be estimated to be from 300 to
+400 metres per minute. Notwithstanding M. Ader's inexperience, this
+being the first time that he had run his apparatus, he followed
+approximately the chalk line which marked the centre of the track and he
+stopped at the exact point from which he started.
+
+The marks of the wheels on the ground, which was rather soft, did not
+show up very much, and it was clear that a part of the weight of the
+apparatus had been supported by the wings, though the speed was only
+about one-third of what the machine could do had M. Ader used all its
+motive power; he was running at a pressure of from 3 to 4 atmospheres,
+when he could have used 10 to 12.
+
+This first trial, so fortunately accomplished, was of great importance;
+it was the first time that a comparatively heavy vehicle (nearly 400
+kg., including the weight of the operator, fuel, and water) had been set
+in motion by a tractive apparatus, using the air solely as a propelling
+medium. The favourable report turned in by the Committee after the
+meeting of October 2nd was found justified by the results demonstrated
+on the grounds, and the first problem of aviation, namely, the creation
+of efficient motive power, could be considered as solved, since the
+propulsion of the apparatus in the air would be a great deal easier
+than the traction on the ground, provided that the second part of the
+problem, the sustaining of the machine in the air, would be realised.
+
+The next day, Wednesday the 13th, no further trials were made on account
+of the rain and wind.
+
+On Thursday the 14th the Chairman requested that General Grillon, who
+had just been appointed a member of the Committee, accompany him so as
+to have a second witness.
+
+The weather was fine, but a fairly strong, gusty wind was blowing from
+the south. M. Ader explained to the two members of the Committee the
+danger of these gusts, since at two points of the circumference the wind
+would strike him sideways. The wind was blowing in the direction A B,
+the apparatus starting from C, and running in the direction shown by the
+arrow. The first dangerous spot would be at B. The apparatus had been
+kept in readiness in the event of the wind dying down. Toward sunset the
+wind seemed to die down, as it had done on the evening of the 12th. M.
+Ader hesitated, which, unfortunately, further events only justified, but
+decided to make a new trial.
+
+At the start, which took place at 5.15 p.m., the apparatus, having
+the wind in the rear, seemed to run at a fairly regular speed; it was,
+nevertheless, easy to note from the marks of the wheels on the ground
+that the rear part of the apparatus had been lifted and that the rear
+wheel, being the rudder, had not been in constant contact with the
+ground. When the machine came to the neighbourhood of B, the two members
+of the Committee saw the machine swerve suddenly out of the track in a
+semicircle, lean over to the right and finally stop. They immediately
+proceeded to the point where the accident had taken place and
+endeavoured to find an explanation for the same. The Chairman finally
+decided as follows:
+
+M. Ader was the victim of a gust of wind which he had feared as he
+explained before starting out; feeling himself thrown out of his course,
+he tried to use the rudder energetically, but at that time the rear
+wheel was not in contact with the ground, and therefore did not
+perform its function; the canvas rudder, which had as its purpose the
+manoeuvring of the machine in the air, did not have sufficient action
+on the ground. It would have been possible without any doubt to react
+by using the propellers at unequal speed, but M. Ader, being still
+inexperienced, had not thought of this. Furthermore, he was thrown
+out of his course so quickly that he decided, in order to avoid a more
+serious accident, to stop both engines. This sudden stop produced the
+half-circle already described and the fall of the machine on its side.
+
+The damage to the machine was serious; consisting at first sight of the
+rupture of both propellers, the rear left wheel and the bending of the
+left wing tip. It will only be possible to determine after the machine
+is taken apart whether the engine, and more particularly the organs of
+transmission, have been put out of line.
+
+Whatever the damage may be, though comparatively easy to repair, it will
+take a certain amount of time, and taking into consideration the time
+of year it is evident that the tests will have to be adjourned for the
+present.
+
+As has been said in the above report, the tests, though prematurely
+interrupted, have shown results of great importance, and though the
+final results are hard to foresee, it would seem advisable to continue
+the trials. By waiting for the return of spring there will be plenty of
+time to finish the tests and it will not be necessary to rush matters,
+which was a partial cause of the accident. The Chairman of the Committee
+personally has but one hope, and that is that a decision be reached
+accordingly.
+
+ Division General,
+
+ Chairman of the Committee,
+
+ Mensier.
+
+Boulogne-sur-Seine, October 21st, 1897.
+
+
+ Annex to the Report of October 21st.
+
+General Grillon, who was present at the trials of the 14th, and who saw
+the report relative to what happened during that day, made the following
+observations in writing, which are reproduced herewith in quotation
+marks. The Chairman of the Committee does not agree with General Grillon
+and he answers these observations paragraph by paragraph.
+
+1. 'If the rear wheel (there is only one of these) left but intermittent
+tracks on the ground, does that prove that the machine has a tendency to
+rise when running at a certain speed?'
+
+Answer.--This does not prove anything in any way, and I was very careful
+not to mention this in my report, this point being exactly what was
+needed and that was not demonstrated during the two tests made on the
+grounds.
+
+'Does not this unequal pressure of the two pair of wheels on the ground
+show that the centre of gravity of the apparatus is placed too far
+forward and that under the impulse of the propellers the machine has a
+tendency to tilt forward, due to the resistance of the air?'
+
+Answer.--The tendency of the apparatus to rise from the rear when it was
+running with the wind seemed to be brought about by the effects of the
+wind on the huge wings, having a spread of 17 metres, and I believe that
+when the machine would have faced the wind the front wheels would have
+been lifted.
+
+During the trials of October 12th, when a complete circuit of the track
+was accomplished without incidents, as I and Lieut. Binet witnessed,
+there was practically no wind. I was therefore unable to verify whether
+during this circuit the two front wheels or the rear wheel were in
+constant contact with the ground, because when the trial was over it was
+dark (it was 5.30) and the next day it was impossible to see anything
+because it had rained during the night and during Wednesday morning. But
+what would prove that the rear wheel was in contact with the ground at
+all times is the fact that M. Ader, though inexperienced, did not swerve
+from the circular track, which would prove that he steered pretty well
+with his rear wheel--this he could not have done if he had been in the
+air.
+
+In the tests of the 12th, the speed was at least as great as on the
+14th.
+
+2. 'It would seem to me that if M. Ader thought that his rear wheels
+were off the ground he should have used his canvas rudder in order to
+regain his proper course; this was the best way of causing the machine
+to rotate, since it would have given an angular motion to the front
+axle.'
+
+Answer.--I state in my report that the canvas rudder whose object was
+the manoeuvre of the apparatus in the air could have no effect on the
+apparatus on the ground, and to convince oneself of this point it is
+only necessary to consider the small surface of this canvas rudder
+compared with the mass to be handled on the ground, a weight of
+approximately 400 kg. According to my idea, and as I have stated in my
+report, M. Ader should have steered by increasing the speed on one of
+his propellers and slowing down the other. He admitted afterward that
+this remark was well founded, but that he did not have time to think of
+it owing to the suddenness of the accident.
+
+3. 'When the apparatus fell on its side it was under the sole influence
+of the wind, since M. Ader had stopped the machine. Have we not a result
+here which will always be the same when the machine comes to the ground,
+since the engines will always have to be stopped or slowed down when
+coming to the ground? Here seems to be a bad defect of the apparatus
+under trial.'
+
+Answer.--I believe that the apparatus fell on its side after coming to
+a stop, not on account of the wind, but because the semicircle described
+was on rough ground and one of the wheels had collapsed.
+
+ Mensier.
+
+October 27th, 1897.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B
+
+Specification and Claims of Wright Patent, No. 821393. Filed March 23rd,
+1903. Issued May 22nd, 1906. Expires May 22nd, 1923.
+
+To all whom it may concern.
+
+Be it known that we, Orville Wright and Wilbur Wright, citizens of the
+United States, residing in the city of Dayton, county of Montgomery,
+and State of Ohio, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in
+Flying Machines, of which the following is a specification.
+
+Our invention relates to that class of flying-machines in which
+the weight is sustained by the reactions resulting when one or more
+aeroplanes are moved through the air edgewise at a small angle of
+incidence, either by the application of mechanical power or by the
+utilisation of the force of gravity.
+
+The objects of our invention are to provide means for maintaining
+or restoring the equilibrium or lateral balance of the apparatus, to
+provide means for guiding the machine both vertically and horizontally,
+and to provide a structure combining lightness, strength, convenience of
+construction and certain other advantages which will hereinafter appear.
+
+To these ends our invention consists in certain novel features, which we
+will now proceed to describe and will then particularly point out in the
+claims. In the accompanying drawings, Figure I 1 is a perspective view
+of an apparatus embodying our invention in one form. Fig. 2 is a plan
+view of the same, partly in horizontal section and partly broken away.
+Fig. 3 is a side elevation, and Figs. 4 and 5 are detail views, of one
+form of flexible joint for connecting the upright standards with the
+aeroplanes.
+
+In flying machines of the character to which this invention relates the
+apparatus is supported in the air by reason of the contact between the
+air and the under surface of one or more aeroplanes, the contact surface
+being presented at a small angle of incidence to the air. The relative
+movements of the air and aeroplane may be derived from the motion of
+the air in the form of wind blowing in the direction opposite to that in
+which the apparatus is travelling or by a combined downward and forward
+movement of the machine, as in starting from an elevated position or
+by combination of these two things, and in either case the operation is
+that of a soaring-machine, while power applied to the machine to propel
+it positively forward will cause the air to support the machine in a
+similar manner. In either case owing to the varying conditions to be
+met there are numerous disturbing forces which tend to shift the machine
+from the position which it should occupy to obtain the desired results.
+It is the chief object of our invention to provide means for remedying
+this difficulty, and we will now proceed to describe the construction by
+means of which these results are accomplished.
+
+In the accompanying drawing we have shown an apparatus embodying our
+invention in one form. In this illustrative embodiment the machine is
+shown as comprising two parallel superposed aeroplanes, 1 and 2, may be
+embodied in a structure having a single aeroplane. Each aeroplane is of
+considerably greater width from side to side than from front to rear.
+The four corners of the upper aeroplane are indicated by the reference
+letters a, b, c, and d, while the corresponding corners of the lower
+aeroplane 2 are indicated by the reference letters e, f, g, and h. The
+marginal lines ab and ef indicate the front edges of the aeroplanes, the
+lateral margins of the upper aeroplane are indicated, respectively,
+by the lines ad and bc, the lateral margins of the lower aeroplane are
+indicated, respectively, by the lines eh and fg, while the rear margins
+of the upper and lower aeroplanes are indicated, respectively, by the
+lines cd and gh.
+
+Before proceeding to a description of the fundamental theory of
+operation of the structure we will first describe the preferred mode of
+constructing the aeroplanes and those portions of the structure which
+serve to connect the two aeroplanes.
+
+Each aeroplane is formed by stretching cloth or other suitable fabric
+over a frame composed of two parallel transverse spars 3, extending
+from side to side of the machine, their ends being connected by bows 4
+extending from front to rear of the machine. The front and rear spars
+3 of each aeroplane are connected by a series of parallel ribs 5, which
+preferably extend somewhat beyond the rear spar, as shown. These spars,
+bows, and ribs are preferably constructed of wood having the necessary
+strength, combined with lightness and flexibility. Upon this framework
+the cloth which forms the supporting surface of the aeroplane is
+secured, the frame being enclosed in the cloth. The cloth for each
+aeroplane previous to its attachment to its frame is cut on the bias
+and made up into a single piece approximately the size and shape of the
+aeroplane, having the threads of the fabric arranged diagonally to the
+transverse spars and longitudinal ribs, as indicated at 6 in Fig. 2.
+Thus the diagonal threads of the cloth form truss systems with the spars
+and ribs, the threads constituting the diagonal members. A hem is formed
+at the rear edge of the cloth to receive a wire 7, which is connected to
+the ends of the rear spar and supported by the rearwardly-extending ends
+of the longitudinal ribs 5, thus forming a rearwardly-extending flap
+or portion of the aeroplane. This construction of the aeroplane gives
+a surface which has very great strength to withstand lateral and
+longitudinal strains, at the same time being capable of being bent or
+twisted in the manner hereinafter described.
+
+When two aeroplanes are employed, as in the construction illustrated,
+they are connected together by upright standards 8. These standards are
+substantially rigid, being preferably constructed of wood and of equal
+length, equally spaced along the front and rear edges of the aeroplane,
+to which they are connected at their top and bottom ends by hinged
+joints or universal joints of any suitable description. We have shown
+one form of connection which may be used for this purpose in Figs. 4 and
+5 of the drawings. In this construction each end of the standard 8
+has secured to it an eye 9 which engages with a hook 10, secured to a
+bracket plate 11, which latter plate is in turn fastened to the spar 3.
+Diagonal braces or stay-wires 12 extend from each end of each standard
+to the opposite ends of the adjacent standards, and as a convenient mode
+of attaching these parts I have shown a hook 13 made integral with the
+hook 10 to receive the end of one of the stay-wires, the other stay-wire
+being mounted on the hook 10. The hook 13 is shown as bent down to
+retain the stay-wire in connection to it, while the hook 10 is shown
+as provided with a pin 14 to hold the staywire 12 and eye 9 in position
+thereon. It will be seen that this construction forms a truss system
+which gives the whole machine great transverse rigidity and strength,
+while at the same time the jointed connections of the parts permit the
+aeroplanes to be bent or twisted in the manner which we will now proceed
+to describe.
+
+15 indicates a rope or other flexible connection extending lengthwise
+of the front of the machine above the lower aeroplane, passing under
+pulleys or other suitable guides 16 at the front corners e and f of the
+lower aeroplane, and extending thence upward and rearward to the upper
+rear corners c and d, of the upper aeroplane, where they are attached,
+as indicated at 17. To the central portion of the rope there is
+connected a laterally-movable cradle 18, which forms a means for moving
+the rope lengthwise in one direction or the other, the cradle being
+movable toward either side of the machine. We have devised this cradle
+as a convenient means for operating the rope 15, and the machine is
+intended to be generally used with the operator lying face downward on
+the lower aeroplane, with his head to the front, so that the operator's
+body rests on the cradle, and the cradle can be moved laterally by the
+movements of the operator's body. It will be understood, however, that
+the rope 15 may be manipulated in any suitable manner.
+
+19 indicates a second rope extending transversely of the machine along
+the rear edge of the body portion of the lower aeroplane, passing under
+suitable pulleys or guides 20 at the rear corners g and h of the lower
+aeroplane and extending thence diagonally upward to the front corners a
+and b of the upper aeroplane, where its ends are secured in any suitable
+manner, as indicated at 21.
+
+Considering the structure so far as we have now described it, and
+assuming that the cradle 18 be moved to the right in Figs. 1 and 2,
+as indicated by the arrows applied to the cradle in Fig. 1 and by the
+dotted lines in Fig. 2, it will be seen that that portion of the rope 15
+passing under the guide pulley at the corner e and secured to the corner
+d will be under tension, while slack is paid out throughout the other
+side or half of the rope 15. The part of the rope 15 under tension
+exercises a downward pull upon the rear upper corner d of the structure
+and an upward pull upon the front lower corner e, as indicated by the
+arrows. This causes the corner d to move downward and the corner e to
+move upward. As the corner e moves upward it carries the corner a upward
+with it, since the intermediate standard 8 is substantially rigid and
+maintains an equal distance between the corners a and e at all times.
+Similarly, the standard 8, connecting the corners d and h, causes the
+corner h to move downward in unison with the corner d. Since the corner
+a thus moves upward and the corner h moves downward, that portion of
+the rope 19 connected to the corner a will be pulled upward through the
+pulley 20 at the corner h, and the pull thus exerted on the rope 19 will
+pull the corner b on the other wise of the machine downward and at the
+same time pull the corner g at said other side of the machine upward.
+This results in a downward movement of the corner b and an upward
+movement of the corner c. Thus it results from a lateral movement of the
+cradle 18 to the right in Fig. 1 that the lateral margins ad and eh at
+one side of the machine are moved from their normal positions in which
+they lie in the normal planes of their respective aeroplanes, into
+angular relations with said normal planes, each lateral margin on this
+side of the machine being raised above said normal plane at its forward
+end and depressed below said normal plane at its rear end, said lateral
+margins being thus inclined upward and forward. At the same time a
+reverse inclination is imparted to the lateral margins bc end fg at the
+other side of the machine, their inclination being downward and forward.
+These positions are indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 1 of the drawings.
+A movement of the cradle 18 in the opposite direction from its normal
+position will reverse the angular inclination of the lateral margins of
+the aeroplanes in an obvious manner. By reason of this construction it
+will be seen that with the particular mode of construction now under
+consideration it is possible to move the forward corner of the lateral
+edges of the aeroplane on one side of the machine either above or below
+the normal planes of the aeroplanes, a reverse movement of the forward
+corners of the lateral margins on the other side of the machine
+occurring simultaneously. During this operation each aeroplane is
+twisted or distorted around a line extending centrally across the same
+from the middle of one lateral margin to the middle of the other lateral
+margin, the twist due to the moving of the lateral margins to different
+angles extending across each aeroplane from side to side, so that each
+aeroplane surface is given a helicoidal warp or twist. We prefer this
+construction and mode of operation for the reason that it gives a
+gradually increasing angle to the body of each aeroplane from the
+centre longitudinal line thereof outward to the margin, thus giving a
+continuous surface on each side of the machine, which has a gradually
+increasing or decreasing angle of incidence from the centre of the
+machine to either side. We wish it to be understood, however, that our
+invention is not limited to this particular construction, since any
+construction whereby the angular relations of the lateral margins of
+the aeroplanes may be varied in opposite directions with respect to
+the normal planes of said aeroplanes comes within the scope of our
+invention. Furthermore, it should be understood that while the lateral
+margins of the aeroplanes move to different angular positions with
+respect to or above and below the normal planes of said aeroplanes,
+it does not necessarily follow that these movements bring the opposite
+lateral edges to different angles respectively above and below a
+horizontal plane since the normal planes of the bodies of the aeroplanes
+are inclined to the horizontal when the machine is in flight, said
+inclination being downward from front to rear, and while the forward
+corners on one side of the machine may be depressed below the
+normal planes of the bodies of the aeroplanes said depression is not
+necessarily sufficient to carry them below the horizontal planes passing
+through the rear corners on that side. Moreover, although we prefer to
+so construct the apparatus that the movements of the lateral margins
+on the opposite sides of the machine are equal in extent and opposite m
+direction, yet our invention is not limited to a construction producing
+this result, since it may be desirable under certain circumstances
+to move the lateral margins on one side of the machine just described
+without moving the lateral margins on the other side of the machine to
+an equal extent in the opposite direction. Turning now to the purpose of
+this provision for moving the lateral margins of the aeroplanes in the
+manner described, it should be premised that owing to various conditions
+of wind pressure and other causes the body of the machine is apt to
+become unbalanced laterally, one side tending to sink and the other side
+tending to rise, the machine turning around its central longitudinal
+axis. The provision which we have just described enables the operator
+to meet this difficulty and preserve the lateral balance of the machine.
+Assuming that for some cause that side of the machine which lies to
+the left of the observer in Figs. 1 and 2 has shown a tendency to drop
+downward, a movement of the cradle 18 to the right of said figures, as
+herein before assumed, will move the lateral margins of the aeroplanes
+in the manner already described, so that the margins ad and eh will be
+inclined downward and rearward, and the lateral margins bc and fg will
+be inclined upward and rearward with respect to the normal planes of the
+bodies of the aeroplanes. With the parts of the machine in this position
+it will be seen that the lateral margins ad and eh present a larger
+angle of incidence to the resisting air, while the lateral margins on
+the other side of the machine present a smaller angle of incidence.
+Owing to this fact, the side of the machine presenting the larger angle
+of incidence will tend to lift or move upward, and this upward movement
+will restore the lateral balance of the machine. When the other side of
+the machine tends to drop, a movement of the cradle 18 in the reverse
+direction will restore the machine to its normal lateral equilibrium. Of
+course, the same effect will be produced in the same way in the case of
+a machine employing only a single aeroplane.
+
+In connection with the body of the machine as thus operated we employ
+a vertical rudder or tail 22, so supported as to turn around a vertical
+axis. This rudder is supported at the rear ends on supports or arms 23,
+pivoted at their forward ends to the rear margins of the upper and lower
+aeroplanes, respectively. These supports are preferably V-shaped, as
+shown, so that their forward ends are comparatively widely separated,
+their pivots being indicated at 24. Said supports are free to swing
+upward at their free rear ends, as indicated in dotted lines in Fig.
+3, their downward movement being limited in any suitable manner. The
+vertical pivots of the rudder 22 are indicated at 25, and one of these
+pivots has mounted thereon a sheave or pulley 26, around which passes a
+tiller-rope 27, the ends of which are extended out laterally and secured
+to the rope 19 on opposite sides of the central point of said rope. By
+reason of this construction the lateral shifting of the cradle 18 serves
+to turn the rudder to one side or the other of the line of flight. It
+will be observed in this connection that the construction is such that
+the rudder will always be so turned as to present its resisting
+surface on that side of the machine on which the lateral margins of the
+aeroplanes present the least angle of resistance. The reason of this
+construction is that when the lateral margins of the aeroplanes are
+so turned in the manner hereinbefore described as to present different
+angles of incidence to the atmosphere, that side presenting the largest
+angle of incidence, although being lifted or moved upward in the manner
+already described, at the same time meets with an increased resistance
+to its forward motion, while at the same time the other side of the
+machine, presenting a smaller angle of incidence, meets with less
+resistance to its forward motion and tends to move forward more rapidly
+than the retarded side. This gives the machine a tendency to turn around
+its vertical axis, and this tendency if not properly met will not only
+change the direction of the front of the machine, but will ultimately
+permit one side thereof to drop into a position vertically below the
+other side with the aero planes in vertical position, thus causing the
+machine to fall. The movement of the rudder, hereinbefore described,
+prevents this action, since it exerts a retarding influence on that side
+of the machine which tends to move forward too rapidly and keeps the
+machine with its front properly presented to the direction of flight and
+with its body properly balanced around its central longitudinal axis.
+The pivoting of the supports 23 so as to permit them to swing upward
+prevents injury to the rudder and its supports in case the machine
+alights at such an angle as to cause the rudder to strike the ground
+first, the parts yielding upward, as indicated in dotted lines in Fig.
+3, and thus preventing injury or breakage. We wish it to be understood,
+however, that we do not limit ourselves to the particular description of
+rudder set forth, the essential being that the rudder shall be vertical
+and shall be so moved as to present its resisting surface on that side
+of the machine which offers the least resistance to the atmosphere, so
+as to counteract the tendency of the machine to turn around a vertical
+axis when the two sides thereof offer different resistances to the air.
+
+From the central portion of the front of the machine struts 28 extend
+horizontally forward from the lower aeroplane, and struts 29 extend
+downward and forward from the central portion of the upper aeroplane,
+their front ends being united to the struts 28, the forward extremities
+of which are turned up, as indicated at 30. These struts 28 and 29 form
+truss-skids projecting in front of the whole frame of the machine
+and serving to prevent the machine from rolling over forward when it
+alights. The struts 29 serve to brace the upper portion of the main
+frame and resist its tendency to move forward after the lower aeroplane
+has been stopped by its contact with the earth, thereby relieving the
+rope 19 from undue strain, for it will be understood that when the
+machine comes into contact with the earth, further forward movement of
+the lower portion thereof being suddenly arrested, the inertia of the
+upper portion would tend to cause it to continue to move forward if
+not prevented by the struts 29, and this forward movement of the upper
+portion would bring a very violent strain upon the rope 19, since it
+is fastened to the upper portion at both of its ends, while its lower
+portion is connected by the guides 20 to the lower portion. The struts
+28 and 29 also serve to support the front or horizontal rudder, the
+construction of which we will now proceed to describe.
+
+The front rudder 31 is a horizontal rudder having a flexible body, the
+same consisting of three stiff crosspieces or sticks 32, 33, and 34, and
+the flexible ribs 35, connecting said cross-pieces and extending from
+front to rear. The frame thus provided is covered by a suitable fabric
+stretched over the same to form the body of the rudder. The rudder is
+supported from the struts 29 by means of the intermediate cross-piece
+32, which is located near the centre of pressure slightly in front of
+a line equidistant between the front and rear edges of the rudder,
+the cross-piece 32 forming the pivotal axis of the rudder, so as to
+constitute a balanced rudder. To the front edge of the rudder there are
+connected springs 36 which springs are connected to the upturned ends 30
+of the struts 28, the construction being such that said springs tend to
+resist any movement either upward or downward of the front edge of the
+horizontal rudder. The rear edge of the rudder lies immediately in front
+of the operator and may be operated by him in any suitable manner. We
+have shown a mechanism for this purpose comprising a roller or shaft 37,
+which may be grasped by the operator so as to turn the same in either
+direction. Bands 38 extend from the roller 37 forward to and around a
+similar roller or shaft 39, both rollers or shafts being supported in
+suitable bearings on the struts 28. The forward roller or shaft has
+rearwardly-extending arms 40, which are connected by links 41 with the
+rear edge of the rudder 31. The normal position of the rudder 31 is
+neutral or substantially parallel with the aeroplanes 1 and 2; but its
+rear edge may be moved upward or downward, so as to be above or below
+the normal plane of said rudder through the mechanism provided for that
+purpose. It will be seen that the springs 36 will resist any tendency of
+the forward edge of the rudder to move in either direction, so that when
+force is applied to the rear edge of said rudder the longitudinal ribs
+35 bend, and the rudder thus presents a concave surface to the action of
+the wind either above or below its normal plane, said surface presenting
+a small angle of incidence at its forward portion and said angle of
+incidence rapidly increasing toward the rear. This greatly increases the
+efficiency of the rudder as compared with a plane surface of equal area.
+By regulating the pressure on the upper and lower sides of the rudder
+through changes of angle and curvature in the manner described a
+turning movement of the main structure around its transverse axis may be
+effected, and the course of the machine may thus be directed upward
+or downward at the will of the operator and the longitudinal balance
+thereof maintained.
+
+Contrary to the usual custom, we place the horizontal rudder in front of
+the aeroplanes at a negative angle and employ no horizontal tail at all.
+By this arrangement we obtain a forward surface which is almost entirely
+free from pressure under ordinary conditions of flight, but which even
+if not moved at all from its original position becomes an efficient
+lifting-surface whenever the speed of the machine is accidentally
+reduced very much below the normal, and thus largely counteracts that
+backward travel of the centre of pressure on the aeroplanes which has
+frequently been productive of serious injuries by causing the machine
+to turn downward and forward and strike the ground head-on. We are aware
+that a forward horizontal rudder of different construction has been used
+in combination with a supporting surface and a rear horizontal-rudder;
+but this combination was not intended to effect and does not effect the
+object which we obtain by the arrangement hereinbefore described.
+
+We have used the term 'aeroplane' in this specification and the appended
+claims to indicate the supporting surface or supporting surfaces by
+means of which the machine is sustained in the air, and by this term we
+wish to be understood as including any suitable supporting surface which
+normally is substantially flat, although. Of course, when constructed
+of cloth or other flexible fabric, as we prefer to construct them, these
+surfaces may receive more or less curvature from the resistance of the
+air, as indicated in Fig. 3.
+
+We do not wish to be understood as limiting ourselves strictly to the
+precise details of construction hereinbefore described and shown in
+the accompanying drawings, as it is obvious that these details may be
+modified without departing from the principles of our invention. For
+instance, while we prefer the construction illustrated in which each
+aeroplane is given a twist along its entire length in order to set its
+opposite lateral margins at different angles, we have already pointed
+out that our invention is not limited to this form of construction,
+since it is only necessary to move the lateral marginal portions, and
+where these portions alone are moved only those upright standards which
+support the movable portion require flexible connections at their ends.
+
+Having thus fully described our invention, what we claim as new, and
+desire to secure by Letters Patent, is:--
+
+1. In a flying machine, a normally flat aeroplane having lateral
+marginal portions capable of movement to different positions above or
+below the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being
+about an axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral
+marginal portions may be moved to different angles relatively to the
+normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, so as to present to the
+atmosphere different angles of incidence, and means for so moving said
+lateral marginal portions, substantially as described.
+
+2. In a flying machine, the combination, with two normally parallel
+aeroplanes, superposed the one above the other, of upright standards
+connecting said planes at their margins, the connections between the
+standards and aeroplanes at the lateral portions of the aeroplanes being
+by means of flexible joints, each of said aeroplanes having lateral
+marginal portions capable of movement to different positions above or
+below the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being
+about an axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral
+marginal portions may be moved to different angles relatively to the
+normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, so as to present to the
+atmosphere different angles of incidence, the standards maintaining
+a fixed distance between the portions of the aeroplanes which they
+connect, and means for imparting such movement to the lateral marginal
+portions of the aeroplanes, substantially as described.
+
+3. In a flying machine, a normally flat aeroplane having lateral
+marginal portions capable of movement to different positions above or
+below the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being
+about an axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral
+marginal portions may be moved to different angles relatively to the
+normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, and also to different angles
+relatively to each other, so as to present to the atmosphere different
+angles of incidence, and means for simultaneously imparting such
+movement to said lateral marginal portions, substantially as described.
+
+4. In a flying machine, the combination, with parallel superposed
+aeroplanes, each having lateral marginal portions capable of movement to
+different positions above or below the normal plane of the body of the
+aeroplane, such movement being about an axis transverse to the line of
+flight, whereby said lateral marginal portions may be moved to different
+angles relatively to the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, and
+to different angles relatively to each other, so as to present to the
+atmosphere different angles of incidence, of uprights connecting said
+aeroplanes at their edges, the uprights connecting the lateral portions
+of the aeroplanes being connected with said aeroplanes by flexible
+joints, and means for simultaneously imparting such movement to said
+lateral marginal portions, the standards maintaining a fixed distance
+between the parts which they connect, whereby the lateral portions on
+the same side of the machine are moved to the same angle, substantially
+as described.
+
+5. In a flying machine, an aeroplane having substantially the form of a
+normally flat rectangle elongated transversely to the line of flight,
+in combination which means for imparting to the lateral margins of said
+aeroplane a movement about an axis lying in the body of the aeroplane
+perpendicular to said lateral margins, and thereby moving said lateral
+margins into different angular relations to the normal plane of the body
+of the aeroplane, substantially as described.
+
+6. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed and
+normally parallel aeroplanes, each having substantially the form of a
+normally flat rectangle elongated transversely to the line of flight,
+of upright standards connecting the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain
+their equidistance, those standards at the lateral portions of said
+aeroplanes being connected therewith by flexible joints, and means for
+simultaneously imparting to both lateral margins of both aeroplanes a
+movement about axes which are perpendicular to said margins and in the
+planes of the bodies of the respective aeroplanes, and thereby moving
+the lateral margins on the opposite sides of the machine into different
+angular relations to the normal planes of the respective aeroplanes, the
+margins on the same side of the machine moving to the same angle, and
+the margins on one side of the machine moving to an angle different from
+the angle to which the margins on the other side of the machine move,
+substantially as described.
+
+7. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, and means
+for simultaneously moving the lateral portions thereof into different
+angular relations to the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane and
+to each other, so as to present to the atmosphere different angles of
+incidence, of a vertical rudder, and means whereby said rudder is
+caused to present to the wind that side thereof nearest the side of the
+aeroplane having the smaller angle of incidence and offering the least
+resistance to the atmosphere, substantially as described.
+
+8. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed and
+normally parallel aeroplanes, upright standards connecting the edges of
+said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance, those standards at
+the lateral portions of said aeroplanes being connected therewith
+by flexible joints, and means for simultaneously moving both lateral
+portions of both aeroplanes into different angular relations to the
+normal planes of the bodies of the respective aeroplanes, the lateral
+portions on one side of the machine being moved to an angle different
+from that to which the lateral portions on the other side of the machine
+are moved, so as to present different angles of incidence at the two
+sides of the machine, of a vertical rudder, and means whereby said
+rudder is caused to present to the wind that side thereof nearest
+the side of the aeroplanes having the smaller angle of incidence and
+offering the least resistance to the atmosphere, substantially as
+described.
+
+9. In a flying machine, an aeroplane normally flat and elongated
+transversely to the line of flight, in combination with means for
+imparting to said aeroplane a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse
+to the line of flight and extending centrally along the body aeroplane
+in the direction of the elongation aeroplane, substantially as
+described.
+
+10. In a flying machine, two aeroplanes, each normally flat and
+elongated transversely to the line of flight, and upright standards
+connecting the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance,
+the connections between said standards and aeroplanes being by means of
+flexible joints, in combination with means for simultaneously imparting
+to each of said aeroplanes a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse
+to the line of flight and extending centrally along the body of the
+aeroplane in the direction of the aeroplane, substantially as described.
+
+11. In a flying machine, two aeroplanes, each normally flat and
+elongated transversely to the line of flight, and upright standards
+connecting the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance,
+the connections between such standards and aeroplanes being by means of
+flexible joints, in combination with means for simultaneously imparting
+to each of said aeroplanes a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse
+to the line of flight and extending centrally along the body of the
+aeroplane in the direction of the elongation of the aeroplane, a
+vertical rudder, and means whereby said rudder is caused to present to
+the wind that side thereof nearest the side of the aeroplanes having
+the smaller angle of incidence and offering the least resistance to the
+atmosphere, substantially as described.
+
+12. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, of a
+normally flat and substantially horizontal flexible rudder, and means
+for curving said rudder rearwardly and upwardly or rearwardly and
+downwardly with respect to its normal plane, substantially as described.
+
+13. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, of a
+normally flat and substantially horizontal flexible rudder pivotally
+mounted on an axis transverse to the line of flight near its centre,
+springs resisting vertical movement of the front edge of said rudder,
+and means for moving the rear edge of said rudder, above or below the
+normal plane thereof, substantially as described.
+
+14. A flying machine comprising superposed connected aeroplanes means
+for moving the opposite lateral portions of said aeroplanes to different
+angles to the normal planes thereof, a vertical rudder, means for moving
+said vertical rudder toward that side of the machine presenting the
+smaller angle of incidence and the least resistance to the atmosphere,
+and a horizontal rudder provided with means for presenting its upper
+or under surface to the resistance of the atmosphere, substantially as
+described.
+
+15. A flying machine comprising superposed connected aeroplanes, means
+for moving the opposite lateral portions of said aeroplanes to different
+angles to the normal planes thereof, a vertical rudder, means for moving
+said vertical rudder toward that side of the machine presenting the
+smaller angle of incidence and the least resistance to the atmosphere,
+and a horizontal rudder provided with means for presenting its upper or
+under surface to the resistance of the atmosphere, said vertical rudder
+being located at the rear of the machine and said horizontal rudder at
+the front of the machine, substantially as described.
+
+16. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed and
+connected aeroplanes, of an arm extending rearward from each aeroplane,
+said arms being parallel and free to swing upward at their rear ends,
+and a vertical rudder pivotally mounted in the rear ends of said arms,
+substantially as described.
+
+17. A flying machine comprising two superposed aeroplanes, normally
+flat but flexible, upright standards connecting the margins of said
+aeroplanes, said standards being connected to said aeroplanes by
+universal joints, diagonal stay-wires connecting the opposite ends of
+the adjacent standards, a rope extending along the front edge of the
+lower aeroplane, passing through guides at the front corners thereof,
+and having its ends secured to the rear corners of the upper aeroplane,
+and a rope extending along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, passing
+through guides at the rear corners thereof, and having its ends secured
+to the front corners of the upper aeroplane, substantially as described.
+
+18. A flying machine comprising two superposed aeroplanes, normally
+flat but flexible, upright standards connecting the margins of said
+aeroplanes, said standards being connected to said aeroplanes by
+universal joints, diagonal stay-wires connecting the opposite ends of
+the adjacent standards, a rope extending along the front edge of the
+lower aeroplane, passing through guides at the front corners thereof,
+and having its ends secured to the rear corners of the upper aeroplane,
+and a rope extending along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, passing
+through guides at the rear corners thereof, and having its ends secured
+to the front corners of the upper aeroplane, in combination with a
+vertical rudder, and a tiller-rope connecting said rudder with the rope
+extending along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, substantially as
+described.
+
+ ORVILLE WRIGHT.
+
+ WILBUR WRIGHT.
+
+Witnesses:
+
+Chas. E. Taylor.
+
+E. Earle Forrer.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C
+
+Proclamation published by the French Government on balloon ascents,
+1783.
+
+ NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC! PARIS, 27TH AUGUST, 1783.
+
+On the Ascent of balloons or globes in the air. The one in question
+has been raised in Paris this day, 27th August, 1783, at 5 p.m., in the
+Champ de Mars.
+
+A Discovery has been made, which the Government deems it right to make
+known, so that alarm be not occasioned to the people.
+
+On calculating the different weights of hot air, hydrogen gas, and
+common air, it has been found that a balloon filled with either of the
+two former will rise toward heaven till it is in equilibrium with the
+surrounding air, which may not happen until it has attained a great
+height.
+
+The first experiment was made at Annonay, in Vivarais, MM. Montgolfier,
+the inventors; a globe formed of canvas and paper, 105 feet in
+circumference, filled with heated air, reached an uncalculated height.
+The same experiment has just been renewed in Paris before a great crowd.
+A globe of taffetas or light canvas covered by elastic gum and filled
+with inflammable air, has risen from the Champ de Mars, and been lost
+to view in the clouds, being borne in a north-westerly direction. One
+cannot foresee where it will descend.
+
+It is proposed to repeat these experiments on a larger scale. Any
+one who shall see in the sky such a globe, which resembles 'la lune
+obscurcie,' should be aware that, far from being an alarming phenomenon,
+it is only a machine that cannot possibly cause any harm, and which will
+some day prove serviceable to the wants of society.
+
+(Signed) DE SAUVIGNY.
+
+LENOIR.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A History of Aeronautics, by E. Charles Vivian
+
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+****The Project Gutenberg Etext of A History of Aeronautics****
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+This etext was prepared by Dianne Bean, Chino Valley, AZ.
+using OmniPage Pro scanning software donated by Caere.
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+
+A History of Aeronautics
+by E. Charles Vivian
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+Although successful heavier-than-air flight is less than two
+decades old, and successful dirigible propulsion antedates it by
+a very short period, the mass of experiment and accomplishment
+renders any one-volume history of the subject a matter of
+selection. In addition to the restrictions imposed by space
+limits, the material for compilation is fragmentary, and, in
+many cases, scattered through periodical and other publications.
+Hitherto, there has been no attempt at furnishing a detailed
+account of how the aeroplane and the dirigible of to-day came to
+being, but each author who has treated the subject has devoted
+his attention to some special phase or section. The principal
+exception to this rule--Hildebrandt--wrote in 1906, and a good
+many of his statements are inaccurate, especially with regard to
+heavier-than-air experiment.
+
+Such statements as are made in this work are, where possible,
+given with acknowledgment to the authorities on which they rest.
+Further acknowledgment is due to Lieut.-Col. Lockwood Marsh,
+not only for the section on aeroplane development which he has
+contributed to the work, but also for his kindly assistance and
+advice in connection with the section on aerostation. The
+author's thanks are also due to the Royal Aeronautical Society
+for free access to its valuable library of aeronautical
+literature, and to Mr A. Vincent Clarke for permission to make
+use of his notes on the development of the aero engine.
+
+In this work is no claim to originality--it has been a matter
+mainly of compilation, and some stories, notably those of the
+Wright Brothers and of Santos Dumont, are better told in the
+words of the men themselves than any third party could tell
+them. The author claims, however, that this is the first
+attempt at recording the facts of development and stating, as
+fully as is possible in the compass of a single volume, how
+flight and aerostation have evolved. The time for a critical
+history of the subject is not yet.
+
+In the matter of illustrations, it has been found very difficult
+to secure suitable material. Even the official series of
+photographs of aeroplanes in the war period is curiously
+incomplete' and the methods of censorship during that period
+prevented any complete series being privately collected.
+Omissions in this respect will probably be remedied in future
+editions of the work, as fresh material is constantly being
+located.
+
+E.C.V. October, 1920.
+
+CONTENTS
+Part I--THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROPLANE
+ I. THE PERIOD OF LEGEND
+ II. EARLY EXPERIMENTS
+ III. SIR GEORGE CAYLEY--THOMAS WALKER
+ IV. THE MIDDLE NINETEENTH CENTURY
+ V. WENHAM, LE BRIS, AND SOME OTHERS
+ VI. THE AGE OF THE GIANTS
+ VII. LILIENTHAL AND PILCHER
+ VIII. AMERICAN GLIDING EXPERIMENTS
+ IX. NOT PROVEN
+ X. SAMUEL PIERPOINT LANGLEY
+ XI. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS
+ XII. THE FIRST YEARS OF CONQUEST
+ XIII. FIRST FLIERS IN ENGLAND
+ XIV. RHEIMS, AND AFTER
+ XV. THE CHANNEL CROSSING
+ XVI. LONDON TO MANCHESTER
+ XVII. A SUMMARY--TO 1911
+XVIII. A SUMMARY--TO 1914
+ XIX. THE WAR PERIOD--I
+ XX. THE WAR PERIOD--II
+ XXI. RECONSTRUCTION
+ XXII. 1919-1920
+
+Part II--1903-1920: PROGRESS IN DESIGN
+ I. THE BEGINNINGS
+ II. MULTIPLICITY OF IDEAS
+ III. PROGRESS ON STANDARDISED LINES
+ IV. THE WAR PERIOD
+
+Part III--AEROSTATICS
+ I. BEGINNINGS
+ II. THE FIRST DIRIGIBLES
+ III. SANTOS-DUMONT
+ IV. THE MILITARY DIRIGIBLE
+ V. BRITISH AIRSHIP DESIGN
+ VI. THE AIRSHIP COMMERCIALLY
+ VII. KITE BALLOONS
+
+PART IV--ENGINE DEVELOPMENT
+ I. THE VERTICAL TYPE
+ II. THE VEE TYPE
+ III. THE RADIAL TYPE
+ IV. THE ROTARY TYPE
+ V. THE HORIZONTALLY-OPPOSED ENGINE
+ VI. THE TWO-STROKE CYCLE ENGINE
+ VII. ENGINES OF THE WAR PERIOD
+
+APPENDICES
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROPLANE
+
+I. THE PERIOD OF LEGEND
+
+The blending of fact and fancy which men call legend reached its
+fullest and richest expression in the golden age of Greece, and
+thus it is to Greek mythology that one must turn for the best
+form of any legend which foreshadows history. Yet the
+prevalence of legends regarding flight, existing in the records
+of practically every race, shows that this form of transit was a
+dream of many peoples--man always wanted to fly, and imagined
+means of flight.
+
+In this age of steel, a very great part of the inventive genius
+of man has gone into devices intended to facilitate transport,
+both of men and goods, and the growth of civilisation is in
+reality the facilitation of transit, improvement of the means of
+communication. He was a genius who first hoisted a sail on a
+boat and saved the labour of rowing; equally, he who first
+harnessed ox or dog or horse to a wheeled vehicle was a
+genius--and these looked up, as men have looked up from the
+earliest days of all, seeing that the birds had solved the
+problem of transit far more completely than themselves. So it
+must have appeared, and there is no age in history in which some
+dreamers have not dreamed of the conquest of the air; if the
+caveman had left records, these would without doubt have showed
+that he, too, dreamed this dream. His main aim, probably, was
+self-preservation; when the dinosaur looked round the corner,
+the prehistoric bird got out of the way in his usual manner, and
+prehistoric manÄ such of him as succeeded in getting out of the
+way after his fashion--naturally envied the bird, and concluded
+that as lord of creation in a doubtful sort of way he ought to
+have equal facilities. He may have tried, like Simon the
+Magician, and other early experimenters, to improvise those
+facilities; assuming that he did, there is the groundwork of
+much of the older legend with regard to men who flew, since,
+when history began, legends would be fashioned out of attempts
+and even the desire to fly, these being compounded of some small
+ingredient of truth and much exaggeration and addition.
+
+In a study of the first beginnings of the art, it is worth while
+to mention even the earliest of the legends and traditions, for
+they show the trend of men's minds and the constancy of this
+dream that has become reality in the twentieth century. In one
+of the oldest records of the world, the Indian classic
+Mahabarata, it is stated that 'Krishna's enemies sought the aid
+of the demons, who built an aerial chariot with sides of iron
+and clad with wings. The chariot was driven through the sky till
+it stood over Dwarakha, where Krishna's followers dwelt, and
+from there it hurled down upon the city missiles that destroyed
+everything on which they fell.' Here is pure fable, not legend,
+but still a curious forecast of twentieth century bombs from a
+rigid dirigible. It is to be noted in this case, as in many,
+that the power to fly was an attribute of evil, not of good--it
+was the demons who built the chariot, even as at Friedrichshavn.
+Mediaeval legend in nearly every cas,attributes flight to the
+aid of evil powers, and incites well-disposed people to stick to
+the solid earth--though, curiously enough, the pioneers of
+medieval times were very largely of priestly type, as witness
+the monk of Malmesbury.
+
+The legends of the dawn of history, however, distribute the
+power of flight with less of prejudice. Egyptian sculpture gives
+the figure of winged men; the British Museum has made the winged
+Assyrian bulls familiar to many, and both the cuneiform records
+of Assyria and the hieroglyphs of Egypt record flights that in
+reality were never made. The desire fathered the story then,
+and until Clement Ader either hopped with his Avion, as is
+persisted by his critics, or flew, as is claimed by his friends.
+
+While the origin of many legends is questionable, that of others
+is easy enough to trace, though not to prove. Among the
+credulous the significance of the name of a people of Asia
+Minor, the Capnobates, 'those who travel by smoke,' gave rise to
+the assertion that Montgolfier was not first in the field--or
+rather in the air--since surely this people must have been
+responsible for the first hot-air balloons. Far less
+questionable is the legend of Icarus, for here it is possible to
+trace a foundation of fact in the story. Such a tribe as
+Daedalus governed could have had hardly any knowledge of the
+rudiments of science, and even their ruler, seeing how easy it
+is for birds to sustain themselves in the air, might be excused
+for believing that he, if he fashioned wings for himself, could
+use them. In that belief, let it be assumed, Daedalus made his
+wings; the boy, Icarus, learning that his father had determined
+on an attempt at flight secured the wings and fastened them to
+his own shoulders. A cliff seemed the likeliest place for a
+'take-off,' and Icarus leaped from the cliff edge only to find
+that the possession of wings was not enough to assure flight to
+a human being. The sea that to this day bears his name
+witnesses that he made the attempt and perished by it.
+
+In this is assumed the bald story, from which might grow the
+legend of a wise king who ruled a peaceful people--'judged,
+sitting in the sun,' as Browning has it, and fashioned for
+himself wings with which he flew over the sea and where he
+would, until the prince, Icarus, desired to emulate him.
+Icarus, fastening the wings to his shoulders with wax, was so
+imprudent as to fly too near the sun, when the wax melted and he
+fell, to lie mourned of water-nymphs on the shores of waters
+thenceforth Icarian. Between what we have assumed to be the
+base of fact, and the legend which has been invested with such
+poetic grace in Greek story, there is no more than a century or
+so of re-telling might give to any event among a people so
+simple and yet so given to imagery.
+
+We may set aside as pure fable the stories of the winged horse
+of Perseus, and the flights of Hermes as messenger of the gods.
+With them may be placed the story of Empedocles, who failed to
+take Etna seriously enough, and found himself caught by an
+eruption while within the crater, so that, flying to safety in
+some hurry, he left behind but one sandal to attest that he had
+sought refuge in space--in all probability, if he escaped at
+all, he flew, but not in the sense that the aeronaut understands
+it. But, bearing in mind the many men who tried to fly in
+historic times, the legend of Icarus and Daedalus, in spite of
+the impossible form in which it is presented, may rank with the
+story of the Saracen of Constantinople, or with that of Simon
+the Magician. A simple folk would naturally idealise the man
+and magnify his exploit, as they magnified the deeds of some
+strong man to make the legends of Hercules, and there,
+full-grown from a mere legend, is the first record of a pioneer
+of flying. Such a theory is not nearly so fantastic as that
+which makes the Capnobates, on the strength of their name, the
+inventors of hot-air balloons. However it may be, both in story
+and in picture, Icarus and his less conspicuous father have
+inspired the Caucasian mind, and the world is the richer for
+them.
+
+Of the unsupported myths--unsupported, that is, by even a shadow
+of probability--there is no end. Although Latin legend
+approaches nearer to fact than the Greek in some cases, in
+others it shows a disregard for possibilities which renders it
+of far less account. Thus Diodorus of Sicily relates that one
+Abaris travelled round the world on an arrow of gold, and
+Cassiodorus and Glycas and their like told of mechanical birds
+that flew and sang and even laid eggs. More credible is the
+story of Aulus Gellius, who in his Attic Nights tells how
+Archytas, four centuries prior to the opening of the Christian
+era, made a wooden pigeon that actually flew by means of a
+mechanism of balancing weights and the breath of a mysterious
+spirit hidden within it. There may yet arise one credulous
+enough to state that the mysterious spirit was precursor of the
+internal combustion engine, but, however that may be, the pigeon
+of Archytas almost certainly existed, and perhaps it actually
+glided or flew for short distances--or else Aulus Gellius was an
+utter liar, like Cassiodorus and his fellows. In far later
+times a certain John Muller, better known as Regiomontanus, is
+stated to have made an artificial eagle which accompanied
+Charles V. on his entry to and exit from Nuremberg, flying above
+the royal procession. But, since Muller died in 1436 and
+Charles was born in 1500, Muller may be ruled out from among the
+pioneers of mechanical flight, and it may be concluded that the
+historian of this event got slightly mixed in his dates.
+
+Thus far, we have but indicated how one may draw from the
+richest stores from which the Aryan mind draws inspiration, the
+Greek and Latin mythologies and poetic adaptations of history.
+The existing legends of flight, however, are not thus to be
+localised, for with two possible exceptions they belong to all
+the world and to every civilisation, however primitive. The two
+exceptions are the Aztec and the Chinese; regarding the first of
+these, the Spanish conquistadores destroyed such civilisation as
+existed in Tenochtitlan so thoroughly that, if legend of flight
+was among the Aztec records, it went with the rest; as to the
+Chinese, it is more than passing strange that they, who claim to
+have known and done everything while the first of history was
+shaping, even to antedating the discovery of gunpowder that was
+not made by Roger Bacon, have not yet set up a claim to
+successful handling of a monoplane some four thousand years ago,
+or at least to the patrol of the Gulf of Korea and the Mongolian
+frontier by a forerunner of the 'blimp.'
+
+The Inca civilisation of Peru yields up a myth akin to that of
+Icarus, which tells how the chieftain Ayar Utso grew wings and
+visited the sun--it was from the sun, too, that the founders of
+the Peruvian Inca dynasty, Manco Capac and his wife Mama Huella
+Capac, flew to earth near Lake Titicaca, to make the only
+successful experiment in pure tyranny that the world has ever
+witnessed. Teutonic legend gives forth Wieland the Smith, who
+made himself a dress with wings and, clad in it, rose and
+descended against the wind and in spite of it. Indian mythology,
+in addition to the story of the demons and their rigid dirigible,
+already quoted, gives the story of Hanouam, who fitted himself
+with wings by means of which he sailed in the air and, according
+to his desire, landed in the sacred Lauka. Bladud, the ninth
+king of Britain, is said to have crowned his feats of wizardry by
+making himself wings and attempting to fly--but the effort cost
+him a broken neck. Bladud may have been as mythic as Uther, and
+again he may have been a very early pioneer. The Finnish epic,
+'Kalevala,' tells how Ilmarinen the Smith 'forged an eagle of
+fire,' with 'boat's walls between the wings,' after which he
+'sat down on the bird's back and bones,' and flew.
+
+Pure myths, these, telling how the desire to fly was
+characteristic of every age and every people, and how, from time
+to time, there arose an experimenter bolder than his fellows,
+who made some attempt to translate desire into achievement. And
+the spirit that animated these pioneers, in a time when things
+new were accounted things accursed, for the most part, has found
+expression in this present century in the utter daring and
+disregard of both danger and pain that stamps the flying man, a
+type of humanity differing in spirit from his earthbound fellows
+as fully as the soldier differs from the priest.
+
+Throughout mediaeval times, records attest that here and there
+some man believed in and attempted flight, and at the same
+time it is clear that such were regarded as in league with the
+powers of evil. There is the half-legend, half-history of
+Simon the Magician, who, in the third year of the reign of Nero
+announced that he would raise himself in the air, in order to
+assert his superiority over St Paul. The legend states that by
+the aid of certain demons whom he had prevailed on to assist
+him, he actually lifted himself in the air-- but St Paul prayed
+him down again. He slipped through the claws of the demons and
+fell headlong on the Forum at Rome, breaking his neck. The
+'demons' may have been some primitive form of hot-air balloon,
+or a glider with which the magician attempted to rise into the
+wind; more probably, however, Simon threatened to ascend and
+made the attempt with apparatus as unsuitable as Bladud's wings,
+paying the inevitable penalty. Another version of the story
+gives St Peter instead of St Paul as the one whose prayers
+foiled Simon --apart from the identity of the apostle, the two
+accounts are similar, and both define the attitude of the age
+toward investigation and experiment in things untried.
+
+Another and later circumstantial story, with similar evidence of
+some fact behind it, is that of the Saracen of Constantinople,
+who, in the reign of the Emperor Comnenus--some little time
+before Norman William made Saxon Harold swear away his crown on
+the bones of the saints at Rouen--attempted to fly round the
+hippodrome at Constantinople, having Comnenus among the great
+throng who gathered to witness the feat. The Saracen chose for
+his starting-point a tower in the midst of the hippodrome, and
+on the top of the tower he stood, clad in a long white robe which
+was stiffened with rods so as to spread and catch the breeze,
+waiting for a favourable wind to strike on him. The wind was so
+long in coming that the spectators grew impatient. 'Fly, O
+Saracen!' they called to him. 'Do not keep us waiting so long
+while you try the wind!' Comnenus, who had present with him the
+Sultan of the Turks, gave it as his opinion that the experiment
+was both dangerous and vain, and, possibly in an attempt to
+controvert such statement, the Saracen leaned into the wind and
+'rose like a bird 'at the outset. But the record of Cousin, who
+tells the story in his Histoire de Constantinople, states that
+'the weight of his body having more power to drag him down than
+his artificial wings had to sustain him, he broke his bones, and
+his evil plight was such that he did not long survive.'
+
+Obviously, the Saracen was anticipating Lilienthal and his
+gliders by some centuries; like Simon, a genuine
+experimenter--both legends bear the impress of fact supporting
+them. Contemporary with him, and belonging to the history
+rather than the legends of flight, was Oliver, the monk of
+Malmesbury, who in the year 1065 made himself wings after the
+pattern of those supposed to have been used by Daedalus,
+attaching them to his hands and feet and attempting to fly with
+them. Twysden, in his Historiae Anglicanae Scriptores X, sets
+forth the story of Oliver, who chose a high tower as his
+starting-point, and launched himself in the air. As a matter of
+course, he fell, permanently injuring himself, and died some
+time later.
+
+After these, a gap of centuries, filled in by impossible stories
+of magical flight by witches, wizards, and the like--imagination
+was fertile in the dark ages, but the ban of the church was on
+all attempt at scientific development, especially in such a
+matter as the conquest of the air. Yet there were observers of
+nature who argued that since birds could raise themselves by
+flapping their wings, man had only to make suitable wings, flap
+them, and he too would fly. As early as the thirteenth century
+Roger Bacon, the scientific friar of unbounded inquisitiveness
+and not a little real genius, announced that there could be made
+'some flying instrument, so that a man sitting in the middle and
+turning some mechanism may put in motion some artificial wings
+which may beat the air like a bird flying.' But being a cautious
+man, with a natural dislike for being burnt at the stake as a
+necromancer through having put forward such a dangerous theory,
+Roger added, 'not that I ever knew a man who had such an
+instrument, but I am particularly acquainted with the man who
+contrived one.' This might have been a lame defence if Roger had
+been brought to trial as addicted to black arts; he seems to
+have trusted to the inadmissibility of hearsay evidence.
+
+Some four centuries later there was published a book entitled
+Perugia Augusta, written by one C. Crispolti of Perugia--the
+date of the work in question is 1648. In it is recorded that
+'one day, towards the close of the fifteenth century, whilst
+many of the principal gentry had come to Perugia to honour the
+wedding of Giovanni Paolo Baglioni, and some lancers were riding
+down the street by his palace, Giovanni Baptisti Danti
+unexpectedly and by means of a contrivance of wings that he had
+constructed proportionate to the size of his body took off from
+the top of a tower near by, and with a horrible hissing sound
+flew successfully across the great Piazza, which was densely
+crowded. But (oh, horror of an unexpected accident!) he had
+scarcely flown three hundred paces on his way to a certain point
+when the mainstay of the left wing gave way, and, being unable to
+support himself with the right alone, he fell on a roof and was
+injured in consequence. Those who saw not only this flight, but
+also the wonderful construction of the framework of the wings,
+said--and tradition bears them out--that he several times flew
+over the waters of Lake Thrasimene to learn how he might
+gradually come to earth. But, notwithstanding his great genius,
+he never succeeded.'
+
+This reads circumstantially enough, but it may be borne in mind
+that the date of writing is more than half a century later than
+the time of the alleged achievement--the story had had time to
+round itself out. Danti, however, is mentioned by a number of
+writers, one of whom states that the failure of his experiment
+was due to the prayers of some individual of a conservative turn
+of mind, who prayed so vigorously that Danti fell appropriately
+enough on a church and injured himself to such an extent as to
+put an end to his flying career. That Danti experimented, there
+is little doubt, in view of the volume of evidence on the point,
+but the darkness of the Middle Ages hides the real truth as to
+the results of his experiments. If he had actually flown over
+Thrasimene, as alleged, then in all probability both Napoleon
+and Wellington would have had air scouts at Waterloo.
+
+Danti's story may be taken as fact or left as fable, and with it
+the period of legend or vague statement may be said to end--the
+rest is history, both of genuine experimenters and of
+charlatans. Such instances of legend as are given here are not a
+tithe of the whole, but there is sufficient in the actual history
+of flight to bar out more than this brief mention of the legends,
+which, on the whole, go farther to prove man's desire to fly than
+his study and endeavour to solve the problems of the air.
+
+
+
+II. EARLY EXPERIMENTS
+
+So far, the stories of the development of flight are either
+legendary or of more or less doubtful authenticity, even
+including that of Danti, who, although a man of remarkable
+attainments in more directions than that of attempted flight,
+suffers--so far as reputation is concerned--from the
+inexactitudes of his chroniclers; he may have soared over
+Thrasimene, as stated, or a mere hop with an ineffectual glider
+may have grown with the years to a legend of gliding flight. So
+far, too, there is no evidence of the study that the conquest of
+the air demanded; such men as made experiments either launched
+themselves in the air from some height with made-up wings or
+other apparatus, and paid the penalty, or else constructed some
+form of machine which would not leave the earth, and then gave
+up. Each man followed his own way, and there was no
+attempt--without the printing press and the dissemination of
+knowledge there was little possibility of attempt--on the part
+of any one to benefit by the failures of others.
+
+Legend and doubtful history carries up to the fifteenth century,
+and then came Leonardo da Vinci, first student of flight whose
+work endures to the present day. The world knows da Vinci as
+artist; his age knew him as architect, engineer, artist, and
+scientist in an age when science was a single study, comprising
+all knowledge from mathematics to medicine. He was, of course,
+in league with the devil, for in no other way could his range of
+knowledge and observation be explained by his contemporaries; he
+left a Treatise on the Flight of Birds in which are statements
+and deductions that had to be rediscovered when the Treatise had
+been forgotten--da Vinci anticipated modern knowledge as Plato
+anticipated modern thought, and blazed the first broad trail
+toward flight.
+
+One Cuperus, who wrote a Treatise on the Excellence of Man,
+asserted that da Vinci translated his theories into practice,
+and actually flew, but the statement is unsupported. That he
+made models, especially on the helicopter principle, is past
+question; these were made of paper and wire, and actuated by
+springs of steel wire, which caused them to lift themselves in
+the air. It is, however, in the theories which he put forward
+that da Vinci's investigations are of greatest interest; these
+prove him a patient as well as a keen student of the principles
+of flight, and show that his manifold activities did not prevent
+him from devoting some lengthy periods to observations of bird
+flight.
+
+'A bird,' he says in his Treatise, 'is an instrument working
+according to mathematical law, which instrument it is within the
+capacity of man to reproduce with all its movements, but not
+with a corresponding degree of strength, though it is deficient
+only in power of maintaining equilibrium. We may say,
+therefore, that such an instrument constructed by man is lacking
+in nothing except the life of the bird, and this life must needs
+be supplied from that of man. The life which resides in the
+bird's members will, without doubt, better conform to their needs
+than will that of a man which is separated from them, and
+especially in the almost imperceptible movements which produce
+equilibrium. But since we see that the bird is equipped for many
+apparent varieties of movement, we are able from this experience
+to deduce that the most rudimentary of these movements will be
+capable of being comprehended by man's understanding, and that he
+will to a great extent be able to provide against the destruction
+of that instrument of which he himself has become the living
+principle and the propeller.'
+
+In this is the definite belief of da Vinci that man is capable
+of flight, together with a far more definite statement of the
+principles by which flight is to be achieved than any which had
+preceded it--and for that matter, than many that have succeeded
+it. Two further extracts from his work will show the exactness
+of his observations:--
+
+'When a bird which is in equilibrium throws the centre of
+resistance of the wings behind the centre of gravity, then such
+a bird will descend with its head downward. This bird which
+finds itself in equilibrium shall have the centre of resistance
+of the wings more forward than the bird's centre of gravity;
+then such a bird will fall with its tail turned toward the
+earth.'
+
+And again: 'A man, when flying, shall be free from the waist
+up, that he may be able to keep himself in equilibrium as he
+does in a boat, so that the centre of his gravity and of the
+instrument may set itself in equilibrium and change when
+necessity requires it to the changing of the centre of its
+resistance.'
+
+Here, in this last quotation, are the first beginnings of the
+inherent stability which proved so great an advance in design,
+in this twentieth century. But the extracts given do not begin
+to exhaust the range of da Vinci's observations and deductions.
+With regard to bird flight, he observed that so long as a bird
+keeps its wings outspread it cannot fall directly to earth, but
+must glide down at an angle to alight--a small thing, now that
+the principle of the plane in opposition to the air is generally
+grasped, but da Vinci had to find it out. From observation he
+gathered how a bird checks its own speed by opposing tail and
+wing surface to the direction of flight, and thus alights at the
+proper 'landing speed.' He proved the existence of upward air
+currents by noting how a bird takes off from level earth with
+wings outstretched and motionless, and, in order to get an
+efficient substitute for the natural wing, he recommended that
+there be used something similar to the membrane of the wing of a
+bat--from this to the doped fabric of an aeroplane wing is but
+a small step, for both are equally impervious to air. Again, da
+Vinci recommended that experiments in flight be conducted at a
+good height from the ground, since, if equilibrium be lost
+through any cause, the height gives time to regain it. This
+recommendation, by the way, received ample support in the
+training areas of war pilots.
+
+Man's muscles, said da Vinci, are fully sufficient to enable him
+to fly, for the larger birds, he noted, employ but a small part
+of their strength in keeping themselves afloat in the air--by
+this theory he attempted to encourage experiment, just as, when
+his time came, Borelli reached the opposite conclusion and
+discouraged it. That Borelli was right--so far--and da Vinci
+wrong, detracts not at all from the repute of the earlier
+investigator, who had but the resources of his age to support
+investigations conducted in the spirit of ages after.
+
+His chief practical contributions to the science of
+flight--apart from numerous drawings which have still a
+value--are the helicopter or lifting screw, and the parachute.
+The former, as already noted, he made and proved effective in
+model form, and the principle which he demonstrated is that of
+the helicopter of to-day, on which sundry experimenters work
+spasmodically, in spite of the success of the plane with its
+driving propeller. As to the parachute, the idea was doubtless
+inspired by observation of the effect a bird produced by
+pressure of its wings against the direction of flight.
+
+Da Vinci's conclusions, and his experiments, were forgotten
+easily by most of his contemporaries; his Treatise lay forgotten
+for nearly four centuries, overshadowed, mayhap, by his other
+work. There was, however, a certain Paolo Guidotti of Lucca,
+who lived in the latter half of the sixteenth century, and who
+attempted to carry da Vinci's theories--one of them, at least,
+into practice. For this Guidotti, who was by profession an
+artist and by inclination an investigator, made for himself
+wings, of which the framework was of whalebone; these he covered
+with feathers, and with them made a number of gliding flights,
+attaining considerable proficiency. He is said in the end to
+have made a flight of about four hundred yards, but this attempt
+at solving the problem ended on a house roof, where Guidotti
+broke his thigh bone. After that, apparently, he gave up the
+idea of flight, and went back to painting.
+
+One other a Venetian architect named Veranzio. studied da
+Vinci's theory of the parachute, and found it correct, if
+contemporary records and even pictorial presentment are correct.
+Da Vinci showed his conception of a parachute as a sort of
+inverted square bag; Veranzio modified this to a 'sort of square
+sail extended by four rods of equal size and having four cords
+attached at the corners,' by means of which 'a man could without
+danger throw himself from the top of a tower or any high place.
+For though at the moment there may be no wind, yet the effort of
+his falling will carry up the wind, which the sail will hold, by
+which means he does not fall suddenly but descends little by
+little. The size of the sail should be measured to the man.' By
+this last, evidently, Veranzio intended to convey that the sheet
+must be of such content as would enclose sufficient air to
+support the weight of the parachutist.
+
+Veranzio made his experiments about 1617-1618, but, naturally,
+they carried him no farther than the mere descent to earth, and
+since a descent is merely a descent, it is to be conjectured that
+he soon got tired of dropping from high roofs, and took to
+designing architecture instead of putting it to such a use. With
+the end of his experiments the work of da Vinci in relation to
+flying became neglected for nearly four centuries.
+
+Apart from these two experimenters, there is little to record in
+the matter either of experiment or study until the seventeenth
+century. Francis Bacon, it is true, wrote about flying in his
+Sylva Sylvarum, and mentioned the subject in the New Atlantis,
+but, except for the insight that he showed even in superficial
+mention of any specific subject, he does not appear to have made
+attempt at serious investigation. 'Spreading of Feathers, thin
+and close and in great breadth will likewise bear up a great
+Weight,' says Francis, 'being even laid without Tilting upon the
+sides.' But a lesser genius could have told as much, even in
+that age, and though the great Sir Francis is sometimes adduced
+as one of the early students of the problems of flight, his
+writings will not sustain the reputation.
+
+The seventeenth century, however, gives us three names, those of
+Borelli, Lana, and Robert Hooke, all of which take definite
+place in the history of flight. Borelli ranks as one of the
+great figures in the study of aeronautical problems, in spite of
+erroneous deductions through which he arrived at a purely
+negative conclusion with regard to the possibility of human
+flight.
+
+Borelli was a versatile genius. Born in 1608, he was
+practically contemporary with Francesco Lana, and there is
+evidence that he either knew or was in correspondence with many
+prominent members of the Royal Society of Great Britain, more
+especially with John Collins, Dr Wallis, and Henry Oldenburgh,
+the then Secretary of the Society. He was author of a long list
+of scientific essays, two of which only are responsible for his
+fame, viz., Theorice Medicaearum Planetarum, published in
+Florence, and the better known posthumous De Motu Animalium. The
+first of these two is an astronomical study in which Borelli
+gives evidence of an instinctive knowledge of gravitation,
+though no definite expression is given of this. The second
+work, De Motu Animalium, deals with the mechanical action of
+the limbs of birds and animals and with a theory of the action
+of the internal organs. A section of the first part of this
+work, called De Volatu, is a study of bird flight; it is quite
+independent of Da Vinci's earlier work, which had been forgotten
+and remained unnoticed until near on the beginning of practical
+flight.
+
+Marey, in his work, La Machine Animale, credits Borelli with the
+first correct idea of the mechanism of flight. He says:
+'Therefore we must be allowed to render to the genius of Borelli
+the justice which is due to him, and only claim for ourselves
+the merit of having furnished the experimental demonstration of
+a truth already suspected.' In fact, all subsequent studies on
+this subject concur in making Borelli the first investigator who
+illustrated the purely mechanical theory of the action of a
+bird's wings.
+
+Borelli's study is divided into a series of propositions in
+which he traces the principles of flight, and the mechanical
+actions of the wings of birds. The most interesting of these
+are the propositions in which he sets forth the method in which
+birds move their wings during flight and the manner in which the
+air offers resistance to the stroke of the wing. With regard to
+the first of these two points he says: 'When birds in repose
+rest on the earth their wings are folded up close against their
+flanks, but when wishing to start on their flight they first
+bend their legs and leap into the air. Whereupon the joints of
+their wings are straightened out to form a straight line at
+right angles to the lateral surface of the breast, so that the
+two wings, outstretched, are placed, as it were, like the arms
+of a cross to the body of the bird. Next, since the wings with
+their feathers attached form almost a plane surface, they are
+raised slightly above the horizontal, and with a most quick
+impulse beat down in a direction almost perpendicular to the
+wing-plane, upon the underlying air; and to so intense a beat
+the air, notwithstanding it to be fluid, offers resistance,
+partly by reason of its natural inertia, which seeks to retain
+it at rest, and partly because the particles of the air,
+compressed by the swiftness of the stroke, resist this
+compression by their elasticity, just like the hard ground.
+Hence the whole mass of the bird rebounds, making a fresh leap
+through the air; whence it follows that flight is simply a
+motion composed of successive leaps accomplished through the
+air. And I remark that a wing can easily beat the air in a
+direction almost perpendicular to its plane surface, although
+only a single one of the corners of the humerus bone is attached
+to the scapula, the whole extent of its base remaining free and
+loose, while the greater transverse feathers are joined to the
+lateral skin of the thorax. Nevertheless the wing can easily
+revolve about its base like unto a fan. Nor are there lacking
+tendon ligaments which restrain the feathers and prevent them
+from opening farther, in the same fashion that sheets hold in
+the sails of ships. No less admirable is nature's cunning in
+unfolding and folding the wings upwards, for she folds them not
+laterally, but by moving upwards edgewise the osseous parts
+wherein the roots of the feathers are inserted; for thus,
+without encountering the air's resistance the upward motion of
+the wing surface is made as with a sword, hence they can be
+uplifted with but small force. But thereafter when the wings
+are twisted by being drawn transversely and by the resistance of
+the air, they are flattened as has been declared and will be
+made manifest hereafter.'
+
+Then with reference to the resistance to the air of the wings he
+explains: 'The air when struck offers resistance by its elastic
+virtue through which the particles of the air compressed by the
+wing-beat strive to expand again. Through these two causes of
+resistance the downward beat of the wing is not only opposed,
+but even caused to recoil with a reflex movement; and these two
+causes of resistance ever increase the more the down stroke of
+the wing is maintained and accelerated. On the other hand, the
+impulse of the wing is continuously diminished and weakened by
+the growing resistance. Hereby the force of the wing and the
+resistance become balanced; so that, manifestly, the air is
+beaten by the wing with the same force as the resistance to the
+stroke.'
+
+He concerns himself also with the most difficult problem that
+confronts the flying man of to-day, namely, landing effectively,
+and his remarks on this subject would be instructive even to an
+air pilot of these days: 'Now the ways and means by which the
+speed is slackened at the end of a flight are these. The bird
+spreads its wings and tail so that their concave surfaces are
+perpendicular to the direction of motion; in this way, the
+spreading feathers, like a ship's sail, strike against the still
+air, check the speed, and so that most of the impetus may be
+stopped, the wings are flapped quickly and strongly forward,
+inducing a contrary motion, so that the bird absolutely or very
+nearly stops.'
+
+At the end of his study Borelli came to a conclusion which
+militated greatly against experiment with any heavier-than-air
+apparatus, until well on into the nineteenth century, for having
+gone thoroughly into the subject of bird flight he states
+distinctly in his last proposition on the subject that 'It is
+impossible that men should be able to fly craftily by their own
+strength.' This statement, of course, remains true up to the
+present day for no man has yet devised the means by which he can
+raise himself in the air and maintain himself there by mere
+muscular effort.
+
+From the time of Borelli up to the development of the steam
+engine it may be said that flight by means of any
+heavier-than-air apparatus was generally regarded as impossible,
+and apart from certain deductions which a little experiment
+would have shown to be doomed to failure, this method of flight
+was not followed up. It is not to be wondered at, when
+Borelli's exaggerated estimate of the strength expended by birds
+in proportion to their weight is borne in mind; he alleged that
+the motive force in birds' wings is 10,000 times greater than
+the resistance of their weight, and with regard to human flight
+he remarks:--
+
+'When, therefore, it is asked whether men may be able to fly by
+their own strength, it must be seen whether the motive power of
+the pectoral muscles (the strength of which is indicated and
+measured by their size) is proportionately great, as it is
+evident that it must exceed the resistance of the weight of the
+whole human body 10,000 times, together with the weight of
+enormous wings which should be attached to the arms. And it is
+clear that the motive power of the pectoral muscles in men is
+much less than is necessary for flight, for in birds the bulk and
+weight of the muscles for flapping the wings are not less than a
+sixth part of the entire weight of the body. Therefore, it would
+be necessary that the pectoral muscles of a man should weigh
+more than a sixth part of the entire weight of his body; so also
+the arms, by flapping with the wings attached, should be able to
+exert a power 10,000 times greater than the weight of the human
+body itself. But they are far below such excess, for the
+aforesaid pectoral muscles do not equal a hundredth part of the
+entire weight of a man. Wherefore either the strength of the
+muscles ought to be increased or the weight of the human body
+must be decreased, so that the same proportion obtains in it as
+exists in birds. Hence it is deducted that the Icarian
+invention is entirely mythical because impossible, for it is not
+possible either to increase a man's pectoral muscles or to
+diminish the weight of the human body; and whatever apparatus is
+used, although it is possible to increase the momentum, the
+velocity or the power employed can never equal the resistance;
+and therefore wing flapping by the contraction of muscles cannot
+give out enough power to carry up the heavy body of a man.'
+
+It may be said that practically all the conclusions which
+Borelli reached in his study were negative. Although
+contemporary with Lana, he perceived the one factor which
+rendered Lana's project for flight by means of vacuum globes an
+impossibility--he saw that no globe could be constructed
+sufficiently light for flight, and at the same time sufficiently
+strong to withstand the pressure of the outside atmosphere. He
+does not appear to have made any experiments in flying on his
+own account, having, as he asserts most definitely, no faith in
+any invention designed to lift man from the surface of the
+earth. But his work, from which only the foregoing short
+quotations can be given, is, nevertheless, of indisputable
+value, for he settled the mechanics of bird flight, and paved
+the way for those later investigators who had, first, the steam
+engine, and later the internal combustion engine--two factors in
+mechanical flight which would have seemed as impossible to
+Borelli as would wireless telegraphy to a student of Napoleonic
+times. On such foundations as his age afforded Borelli built
+solidly and well, so that he ranks as one of the greatest--if
+not actually the greatest--of the investigators into this
+subject before the age of steam.
+
+The conclusion, that 'the motive force in birds' wings is
+apparently ten thousand times greater than the resistance of
+their weight,' is erroneous, of course, but study of the
+translation from which the foregoing excerpt is taken will show
+that the error detracts very little from the value of the work
+itself. Borelli sets out very definitely the mechanism of
+flight, in such fashion that he who runs may read. His
+reference to 'the use of a large vessel,' etc., concerns the
+suggestion made by Francesco Lana, who antedated Borelli's
+publication of De Motu Animalium by some ten years with his
+suggestion for an 'aerial ship,' as he called it. Lana's mind
+shows, as regards flight, a more imaginative twist; Borelli
+dived down into first causes, and reached mathematical
+conclusions; Lana conceived a theory and upheld it--
+theoretically, since the manner of his life precluded experiment.
+
+Francesco Lana, son of a noble family, was born in 1631; in 1647
+he was received as a novice into the Society of Jesus at Rome,
+and remained a pious member of the Jesuit society until the end
+of his life. He was greatly handicapped in his scientific
+investigations by the vows of poverty which the rules of the
+Order imposed on him. He was more scientist than priest all his
+life; for two years he held the post of Professor of Mathematics
+at Ferrara, and up to the time of his death, in 1687, he spent
+by far the greater part of his time in scientific research, He
+had the dubious advantage of living in an age when one man could
+cover the whole range of science, and this he seems to have done
+very thoroughly. There survives an immense work of his entitled,
+Magisterium Naturae et Artis, which embraces the whole field of
+scientific knowledge as that was developed in the period in
+which Lana lived. In an earlier work of his, published in
+Brescia in 1670, appears his famous treatise on the aerial ship,
+a problem which Lana worked out with thoroughness. He was
+unable to make practical experiments, and thus failed to
+perceive the one insuperable drawback to his project--of which
+more anon.
+
+Only extracts from the translation of Lana's work can be given
+here, but sufficient can be given to show fully the means by
+which he designed to achieve the conquest of the air. He begins
+by mention of the celebrated pigeon of Archytas the Philosopher,
+and advances one or two theories with regard to the way in which
+this mechanical bird was constructed, and then he recites,
+apparently with full belief in it, the fable of Regiomontanus
+and the eagle that he is said to have constructed to accompany
+Charles V. on his entry into Nuremberg. In fact, Lana starts
+his work with a study of the pioneers of mechanical flying up to
+his own time, and then outlines his own devices for the
+construction of mechanical birds before proceeding to detail the
+construction of the aerial ship. Concerning primary experiments
+for this he says:--
+
+'I will, first of all, presuppose that air has weight owing to
+the vapours and halations which ascend from the earth and seas
+to a height of many miles and surround the whole of our
+terraqueous globe; and this fact will not be denied by
+philosophers, even by those who may have but a superficial
+knowledge. because it can be proven by exhausting, if not all,
+at any rate the greater part of, the air contained in a glass
+vessel, which, if weighed before and after the air has been
+exhausted, will be found materially reduced in weight. Then I
+found out how much the air weighed in itself in the following
+manner. I procured a large vessel of glass, whose neck could be
+closed or opened by means of a tap, and holding it open I warmed
+it over a fire, so that the air inside it becoming rarified, the
+major part was forced out; then quickly shutting the tap to
+prevent the re-entry I weighed it; which done, I plunged its
+neck in water, resting the whole of the vessel on the surface of
+the water, then on opening the tap the water rose in the vessel
+and filled the greater part of it. I lifted the neck out of the
+water, released the water contained in the vessel, and measured
+and weighed its quantity and density, by which I inferred that a
+certain quantity of air had come out of the vessel equal in bulk
+to the quantity of water which had entered to refill the portion
+abandoned by the air. I again weighed the vessel, after I had
+first of all well dried it free of all moisture, and found it
+weighed one ounce more whilst it was full of air than when it
+was exhausted of the greater part, so that what it weighed more
+was a quantity of air equal in volume to the water which took
+its place. The water weighed 640 ounces, so I concluded that
+the weight of air compared with that of water was 1 to 640--that
+is to say, as the water which filled the vessel weighed 640
+ounces, so the air which filled the same vessel weighed one
+ounce.'
+
+Having thus detailed the method of exhausting air from a vessel,
+Lana goes on to assume that any large vessel can be entirely
+exhausted of nearly all the air contained therein. Then he
+takes Euclid's proposition to the effect that the superficial
+area of globes increases in the proportion of the square of the
+diameter, whilst the volume increases in the proportion of the
+cube of the same diameter, and he considers that if one only
+constructs the globe of thin metal, of sufficient size, and
+exhausts the air in the manner that he suggests, such a globe
+will be so far lighter than the surrounding atmosphere that it
+will not only rise, but will be capable of lifting weights.
+Here is Lana's own way of putting it:--
+
+'But so that it may be enabled to raise heavier weights and to
+lift men in the air, let us take double the quantity of copper,
+1,232 square feet, equal to 308 lbs. of copper; with this double
+quantity of copper we could construct a vessel of not only
+double the capacity, but of four times the capacity of the
+first, for the reason shown by my fourth supposition.
+Consequently the air contained in such a vessel will be 718 lbs.
+4 2/3 ounces, so that if the air be drawn out of the vessel it
+will be 410 lbs. 4 2/3 ounces lighter than the same volume of
+air, and, consequently, will be enabled to lift three men, or at
+least two, should they weigh more than eight pesi each. It is
+thus manifest that the larger the ball or vessel is made, the
+thicker and more solid can the sheets of copper be made, because,
+although the weight will increase, the capacity of the vessel
+will increase to a greater extent and with it the weight of the
+air therein, so that it will always be capable to lift a heavier
+weight. From this it can be easily seen how it is possible to
+construct a machine which, fashioned like unto a ship, will float
+on the air.'
+
+With four globes of these dimensions Lana proposed to make an
+aerial ship of the fashion shown in his quaint illustration. He
+is careful to point out a method by which the supporting globes
+for the aerial ship may be entirely emptied of air; this is to
+be done by connecting to each globe a tube of copper which is
+'at least a length of 47 modern Roman palm).' A small tap is to
+close this tube at the end nearest the globe, and then vessel
+and tube are to be filled with water, after which the tube is to
+be immersed in water and the tap opened, allowing the water to
+run out of the vessel, while no air enters. The tap is then
+closed before the lower end of the tube is removed from the
+water, leaving no air at all in the globe or sphere. Propulsion
+of this airship was to be accomplished by means of sails, and
+also by oars.
+
+Lana antedated the modern propeller, and realised that the air
+would offer enough resistance to oars or paddle to impart motion
+to any vessel floating in it and propelled by these means,
+although he did not realise the amount of pressure on the air
+which would be necessary to accomplish propulsion. As a matter
+of fact, he foresaw and provided against practically all the
+difficulties that would be encountered in the working, as well
+as the making, of the aerial ship, finally coming up against
+what his religious training made an insuperable objection.
+This, again, is best told in his own words:--
+
+'Other difficulties I do not foresee that could prevail against
+this invention, save one only, which to me seems the greatest of
+them all, and that is that God would surely never allow such a
+machine to be successful, since it would create many
+disturbances in the civil and political governments of mankind.'
+
+He ends by saying that no city would be proof against surprise,
+while the aerial ship could set fire to vessels at sea, and
+destroy houses, fortresses, and cities by fire balls and bombs.
+In fact, at the end of his treatise on the subject, he furnishes
+a pretty complete resume of the activities of German Zeppelins.
+
+As already noted, Lana himself, owing to his vows of poverty,
+was unable to do more than put his suggestions on paper, which
+he did with a thoroughness that has procured him a place among
+the really great pioneers of flying.
+
+It was nearly 200 years before any attempt was made to realise
+his project; then, in 1843, M. Marey Monge set out to make the
+globes and the ship as Lana detailed them. Monge's experiments
+cost him the sum of 25,000 francs 75 centimes, which he expended
+purely from love of scientific investigation. He chose to make
+his globes of brass, about .004 in thickness, and weighing 1.465
+lbs. to the square yard. Having made his sphere of this metal,
+he lined it with two thicknesses of tissue paper, varnished it
+with oil, and set to work to empty it of air. This, however, he
+never achieved, for such metal is incapable of sustaining the
+pressure of the outside air, as Lana, had he had the means to
+carry out experiments, would have ascertained. M. Monge's
+sphere could never be emptied of air sufficiently to rise from
+the earth; it ended in the melting-pot, ignominiously enough,
+and all that Monge got from his experiment was the value of the
+scrap metal and the satisfaction of knowing that Lana's theory
+could never be translated into practice.
+
+Robert Hooke is less conspicuous than either Borelli or Lana;
+his work, which came into the middle of the seventeenth century,
+consisted of various experiments with regard to flight, from
+which emerged 'a Module, which by the help of Springs and Wings,
+raised and sustained itself in the air.' This must be reckoned
+as the first model flying machine which actually flew, except
+for da Vinci's helicopters; Hooke's model appears to have been
+of the flapping-wing type--he attempted to copy the motion of
+birds, but found from study and experiment that human muscles
+were not sufficient to the task of lifting the human body. For
+that reason, he says, 'I applied my mind to contrive a way to
+make artificial muscles,' but in this he was, as he expresses
+it, 'frustrated of my expectations.' Hooke's claim to fame
+rests mainly on his successful model; the rest of his work is of
+too scrappy a nature to rank as a serious contribution to the
+study of flight.
+
+Contemporary with Hooke was one Allard, who, in France,
+undertook to emulate the Saracen of Constantinople to a certain
+extent. Allard was a tight-rope dancer who either did or was
+said to have done short gliding flights--the matter is open to
+question--and finally stated that he would, at St Germains, fly
+from the terrace in the king's presence. He made the attempt,
+but merely fell, as did the Saracen some centuries before,
+causing himself serious injury. Allard cannot be regarded as a
+contributor to the development of aeronautics in any way, and is
+only mentioned as typical of the way in which, up to the time of
+the Wright brothers, flying was regarded. Even unto this day
+there are many who still believe that, with a pair of wings, man
+ought to be able to fly, and that the mathematical data
+necessary to effective construction simply do not exist. This
+attitude was reasonable enough in an unlearned age, and Allard
+was one--a little more conspicuous than the majority--among many
+who made experiment in ignorance, with more or less danger to
+themselves and without practical result of any kind.
+
+The seventeenth century was not to end, however, without
+practical experiment of a noteworthy kind in gliding flight.
+Among the recruits to the ranks of pioneers was a certain
+Besnier, a locksmith of Sable, who somewhere between 1675 and
+1680 constructed a glider of which a crude picture has come down
+to modern times. The apparatus, as will be seen, consisted of
+two rods with hinged flaps, and the original designer of the
+picture seems to have had but a small space in which to draw,
+since obviously the flaps must have been much larger than those
+shown. Besnier placed the rods on his shoulders, and worked the
+flaps by cords attached to his hands and feet--the flaps opened
+as they fell, and closed as they rose, so the device as a whole
+must be regarded as a sort of flapping glider. Having by
+experiment proved his apparatus successful, Besnier promptly
+sold it to a travelling showman of the period, and forthwith set
+about constructing a second set, with which he made gliding
+flights of considerable height and distance. Like Lilienthal,
+Besnier projected himself into space from some height, and then,
+according to the contemporary records, he was able to cross a
+river of considerable size before coming to earth. It does not
+appear that he had any imitators, or that any advantage whatever
+was taken of his experiments; the age was one in which he would
+be regarded rather as a freak exhibitor than as a serious
+student, and possibly, considering his origin and the sale of
+his first apparatus to such a client, he regarded the matter
+himself as more in the nature of an amusement than as a
+discovery.
+
+Borelli, coming at the end of the century, proved to his own
+satisfaction and that of his fellows that flapping wing flight
+was an impossibility; the capabilities of the plane were as yet
+undreamed, and the prime mover that should make the plane
+available for flight was deep in the womb of time. Da Vinci's
+work was forgotten--flight was an impossibility, or at best such
+a useless show as Besnier was able to give.
+
+The eighteenth century was almost barren of experiment. Emanuel
+Swedenborg, having invented a new religion, set about inventing
+a flying machine, and succeeded theoretically, publishing the
+result of his investigations as follows:--
+
+'Let a car or boat or some like object be made of light material
+such as cork or bark, with a room within it for the operator.
+Secondly, in front as well as behind, or all round, set a
+widely-stretched sail parallel to the machine forming within a
+hollow or bend which could be reefed like the sails of a ship.
+Thirdly, place wings on the sides, to be worked up and down by a
+spiral spring, these wings also to be hollow below in order to
+increase the force and velocity, take in the air, and make the
+resistance as great as may be required. These, too, should be
+of light material and of sufficient size; they should be in the
+shape of birds' wings, or the sails of a windmill, or some such
+shape, and should be tilted obliquely upwards, and made so as to
+collapse on the upward stroke and expand on the downward.
+Fourth, place a balance or beam below, hanging down
+perpendicularly for some distance with a small weight attached
+to its end, pendent exactly in line with the centre of gravity;
+the longer this beam is, the lighter must it be, for it must
+have the same proportion as the well-known vectis or steel-yard.
+This would serve to restore the balance of the machine if it
+should lean over to any of the four sides. Fifthly, the wings
+would perhaps have greater force, so as to increase the
+resistance and make the flight easier, if a hood or shield were
+placed over them, as is the case with certain insects. Sixthly,
+when the sails are expanded so as to occupy a great surface and
+much air, with a balance keeping them horizontal, only a small
+force would be needed to move the machine back and forth in a
+circle, and up and down. And, after it has gained momentum to
+move slowly upwards, a slight movement and an even bearing would
+keep it balanced in the air and would determine its direction at
+will.'
+
+The only point in this worthy of any note is the first device
+for maintaining stability automatically--Swedenborg certainly
+scored a point there. For the rest. his theory was but theory,
+incapable of being put to practice--he does not appear to have
+made any attempt at advance beyond the mere suggestion.
+
+Some ten years before his time the state of knowledge with
+regard to flying in Europe was demonstrated by an order granted
+by the King of Portugal to Friar Lourenzo de Guzman, who claimed
+to have invented a flying machine capable of actual flight. The
+order stated that 'In order to encourage the suppliant to apply
+himself with zeal toward the improvement of the new machine,
+which is capable of producing the effects mentioned by him, I
+grant unto him the first vacant place in my College of Barcelos
+or Santarem, and the first professorship of mathematics in my
+University of Coimbra, with the annual pension of 600,000 reis
+during his life.--Lisbon, 17th of March, 1709.'
+
+What happened to Guzman when the non-existence of the machine
+was discovered is one of the things that is well outside the
+province of aeronautics. He was charlatan pure and simple, as
+far as actual flight was concerned, though he had some ideas
+respecting the design of hot-air balloons, according to
+Tissandier. (La Navigation Aerienne.) His flying machine was to
+contain, among other devices, bellows to produce artificial wind
+when the real article failed, and also magnets in globes to draw
+the vessel in an upward direction and maintain its buoyancy.
+Some draughtsman, apparently gifted with as vivid imagination as
+Guzman himself, has given to the world an illustration of the
+hypothetical vessel; it bears some resemblance to Lana's aerial
+ship, from which fact one draws obvious conclusions.
+
+A rather amusing claim to solving the problem of flight was
+made in the middle of the eighteenth century by one Grimaldi, a
+'famous and unique Engineer' who, as a matter of actual fact,
+spent twenty years in missionary work in India, and employed the
+spare time that missionary work left him in bringing his
+invention to a workable state. The invention is described as a
+'box which with the aid of clockwork rises in the air, and goes
+with such lightness and strong rapidity that it succeeds in
+flying a journey of seven leagues in an hour. It is made in the
+fashion of a bird; the wings from end to end are 25 feet in
+extent. The body is composed of cork, artistically joined
+together and well fastened with metal wire, covered with
+parchment and feathers. The wings are made of catgut and
+whalebone, and covered also with the same parchment and
+feathers, and each wing is folded in three seams. In the body
+of the machine are contained thirty wheels of unique work, with
+two brass globes and little chains which alternately wind up a
+counterpoise; with the aid of six brass vases, full of a certain
+quantity of quicksilver, which run in some pulleys, the machine
+is kept by the artist in due equilibrium and balance. By means,
+then, of the friction between a steel wheel adequately tempered
+and a very heavy and surprising piece of lodestone, the whole is
+kept in a regulated forward movement, given, however, a right
+state of the winds, since the machine cannot fly so much in
+totally calm weather as in stormy. This prodigious machine is
+directed and guided by a tail seven palmi long, which is
+attached to the knees and ankles of the inventor by leather
+straps; by stretching out his legs, either to the right or to
+the left, he moves the machine in whichever direction he
+pleases.... The machine's flight lasts only three hours, after
+which the wings gradually close themselves, when the inventor,
+perceiving this, goes down gently, so as to get on his own feet,
+and then winds up the clockwork and gets himself ready again
+upon the wings for the continuation of a new flight. He himself
+told us that if by chance one of the wheels came off or if one
+of the wings broke, it is certain he would inevitably fall
+rapidly to the ground, and, therefore, he does not rise more
+than the height of a tree or two, as also he only once put
+himself in the risk of crossing the sea, and that was from
+Calais to Dover, and the same morning he arrived in London.'
+
+And yet there are still quite a number of people who persist in
+stating that Bleriot was the first man to fly across the
+Channel!
+
+A study of the development of the helicopter principle was
+published in France in 1868, when the great French engineer
+Paucton produced his Theorie de la Vis d'Archimede. For some
+inexplicable reason, Paucton was not satisfied with the term
+'helicopter,' but preferred to call it a 'pterophore,' a name
+which, so far as can be ascertained, has not been adopted by any
+other writer or investigator. Paucton stated that, since a man
+is capable of sufficient force to overcome the weight of his own
+body, it is only necessary to give him a machine which acts on
+the air 'with all the force of which it is capable and at its
+utmost speed,' and he will then be able to lift himself in the
+air, just as by the exertion of all his strength he is able to
+lift himself in water. 'It would seem,' says Paucton, 'that in
+the pterophore, attached vertically to a carriage, the whole
+built lightly and carefully assembled, he has found something
+that will give him this result in all perfection. In
+construction, one would be careful that the machine produced the
+least friction possible, and naturally it ought to produce
+little, as it would not be at all complicated. The new
+Daedalus, sitting comfortably in his carriage, would by means of
+a crank give to the pterophore a suitable circular (or
+revolving) speed. This single pterophore would lift him
+vertically, but in order to move horizontally he should be
+supplied with a tail in the shape of another pterophore. When
+he wished to stop for a little time, valves fixed firmly across
+the end of the space between the blades would automatically
+close the openings through which the air flows, and change the
+pterophore into an unbroken surface which would resist the flow
+of air and retard the fall of the machine to a considerable
+degree.'
+
+The doctrine thus set forth might appear plausible, but it is
+based on the common misconception that all the force which might
+be put into the helicopter or 'pterophore' would be utilised for
+lifting or propelling the vehicle through the air, just as a
+propeller uses all its power to drive a ship through water.
+But, in applying such a propelling force to the air, most of the
+force is utilised in maintaining aerodynamic support--as a
+matter of fact, more force is needed to maintain this support
+than the muscle of man could possibly furnish to a lifting
+screw, and even if the helicopter were applied to a full-sized,
+engine-driven air vehicle, the rate of ascent would depend on
+the amount of surplus power that could be carried. For example,
+an upward lift of 1,000 pounds from a propeller 15 feet in
+diameter would demand an expenditure of 50 horse-power under the
+best possible conditions, and in order to lift this load
+vertically through such atmospheric pressure as exists at
+sea-level or thereabouts, an additional 20 horsepower would be
+required to attain a rate of 11 feet per second--50 horse-power
+must be continually provided for the mere support of the load,
+and the additional 20 horse-power must be continually provided
+in order to lift it. Although, in model form, there is nothing
+quite so strikingly successful as the helicopter in the range of
+flying machines, yet the essential weight increases so
+disproportionately to the effective area that it is necessary to
+go but very little beyond model dimensions for the helicopter to
+become quite ineffective.
+
+That is not to say that the lifting screw must be totally ruled
+out so far as the construction of aircraft is concerned. Much
+is still empirical, so far as this branch of aeronautics is
+concerned, and consideration of the structural features of a
+propeller goes to show that the relations of essential weight
+and effective area do not altogether apply in practice as they
+stand in theory. Paucton's dream, in some modified form, may yet
+become reality--it is only so short a time ago as 1896 that Lord
+Kelvin stated he had not the smallest molecule of faith in
+aerial navigation, and since the whole history of flight
+consists in proving the impossible possible, the helicopter may
+yet challenge the propelled plane surface for aerial supremacy.
+
+It does not appear that Paucton went beyond theory, nor is there
+in his theory any advance toward practical flight--da Vinci
+could have told him as much as he knew. He was followed by
+Meerwein, who invented an apparatus apparently something between
+a flapping wing machine and a glider, consisting of two wings,
+which were to be operated by means of a rod; the venturesome one
+who would fly by means of this apparatus had to lie in a
+horizontal position beneath the wings to work the rod. Meerwein
+deserves a place of mention, however, by reason of his
+investigations into the amount of surface necessary to support a
+given weight. Taking that weight at 200 pounds--which would
+allow for the weight of a man and a very light apparatus--he
+estimated that 126 square feet would be necessary for support.
+His pamphlet, published at Basle in 1784, shows him to have been
+a painstaking student of the potentialities of flight.
+
+Jean-Pierre Blanchard, later to acquire fame in connection with
+balloon flight, conceived and described a curious vehicle, of
+which he even announced trials as impending. His trials were
+postponed time after time, and it appears that he became
+convinced in the end of the futility of his device, being
+assisted to such a conclusion by Lalande, the astronomer, who
+repeated Borelli's statement that it was impossible for man ever
+to fly by his own strength. This was in the closing days of the
+French monarchy, and the ascent of the Montgolfiers' first
+hot-air balloon in 1783--which shall be told more fully in its
+place--put an end to all French experiments with heavier-
+than-air apparatus, though in England the genius of Cayley was
+about to bud, and even in France there were those who understood
+that ballooning was not true flight.
+
+
+
+III. SIR GEORGE CAYLEY--THOMAS WALKER
+
+On the fifth of June, 1783, the Montgolfiers' hot-air balloon
+rose at Versailles, and in its rising divided the study of the
+conquest of the air into two definite parts, the one being
+concerned with the propulsion of gas lifted, lighter-than-air
+vehicles, and the other being crystallised in one sentence by
+Sir George Cayley: 'The whole problem,' he stated, 'is
+confined within these limits, viz.: to make a surface support a
+given weight by the application of power to the resistance of
+the air.' For about ten years the balloon held the field
+entirely, being regarded as the only solution of the problem of
+flight that man could ever compass. So definite for a time was
+this view on the eastern side of the Channel that for some years
+practically all the progress that was made in the development of
+power-driven planes was made in Britain.
+
+In 1800 a certain Dr Thomas Young demonstrated that certain
+curved surfaces suspended by a thread moved into and not away
+from a horizontal current of air, but the demonstration, which
+approaches perilously near to perpetual motion if the current be
+truly horizontal, has never been successfully repeated, so that
+there is more than a suspicion that Young's air-current was NOT
+horizontal. Others had made and were making experiments on the
+resistance offered to the air by flat surfaces, when Cayley came
+to study and record, earning such a place among the pioneers as
+to win the title of 'father of British aeronautics.'
+
+Cayley was a man in advance of his time, in many ways. Of
+independent means, he made the grand tour which was considered
+necessary to the education of every young man of position, and
+during this excursion he was more engaged in studies of a
+semi-scientific character than in the pursuits that normally
+filled such a period. His various writings prove that
+throughout his life aeronautics was the foremost subject in his
+mind; the Mechanic's Magazine, Nicholson's Journal, the
+Philosophical Magazine, and other periodicals of like nature
+bear witness to Cayley's continued research into the subject of
+flight. He approached the subject after the manner of the
+trained scientist, analysing the mechanical properties of air
+under chemical and physical action. Then he set to work to
+ascertain the power necessary for aerial flight, and was one of
+the first to enunciate the fallacy of the hopes of successful
+flight by means of the steam engine of those days, owing to the
+fact that it was impossible to obtain a given power with a given
+weight.
+
+Yet his conclusions on this point were not altogether negative,
+for as early as 1810 he stated that he could construct a balloon
+which could travel with passengers at 20 miles an hour--he was
+one of the first to consider the possibilities of applying power
+to a balloon. Nearly thirty years later--in 1837--he made the
+first attempt at establishing an aeronautical society, but at
+that time the power-driven plane was regarded by the great
+majority as an absurd dream of more or less mad inventors, while
+ballooning ranked on about the same level as tight-rope walking,
+being considered an adjunct to fairs and fetes, more a pastime
+than a study.
+
+Up to the time of his death, in 1857, Cayley maintained his
+study of aeronautical matters, and there is no doubt whatever
+that his work went far in assisting the solution of the problem
+of air conquest. His principal published work, a monograph
+entitled Aerial Navigation, has been republished in the
+admirable series of 'Aeronautical Classics' issued by the Royal
+Aeronautical Society. He began this work by pointing out the
+impossibility of flying by means of attached wings, an
+impossibility due to the fact that, while the pectoral muscles
+of a bird account for more than two-thirds of its whole muscular
+strength, in a man the muscles available for flying, no matter
+what mechanism might be used, would not exceed one-tenth of his
+total strength.
+
+Cayley did not actually deny the possibility of a man flying by
+muscular effort, however, but stated that 'the flight of a
+strong man by great muscular exertion, though a curious and
+interesting circumstance, inasmuch as it will probably be the
+means of ascertaining finis power and supplying the basis
+whereon to improve it, would be of little use.'
+
+From this he goes on to the possibility of using a Boulton and
+Watt steam engine to develop the power necessary for flight, and
+in this he saw a possibility of practical result. It is worthy
+of note that in this connection he made mention of the
+forerunner of the modern internal combustion engine; 'The
+French,' he said, 'have lately shown the great power produced by
+igniting inflammable powders in closed vessels, and several
+years ago an engine was made to work in this country in a
+similar manner by inflammation of spirit of tar.' In a
+subsequent paragraph of his monograph he anticipates almost
+exactly the construction of the Lenoir gas engine, which came
+into being more than fifty-five years after his monograph was
+published.
+
+Certain experiments detailed in his work were made to ascertain
+the size of the surface necessary for the support of any given
+weight. He accepted a truism of to-day in pointing out that in
+any matters connected with aerial investigation, theory and
+practice are as widely apart as the poles. Inclined at first to
+favour the helicopter principle, he finally rejected this in
+favour of the plane, with which he made numerous experiments.
+During these, he ascertained the peculiar advantages of curved
+surfaces, and saw the necessity of providing both vertical and
+horizontal rudders in order to admit of side steering as well as
+the control of ascent and descent, and for preserving
+equilibrium. He may be said to have anticipated the work of
+Lilienthal and Pilcher, since he constructed and experimented
+with a fixed surface glider. 'It was beautiful,' he wrote
+concerning this, 'to see this noble white bird sailing
+majestically from the top of a hill to any given point of the
+plain below it with perfect steadiness and safety, according to
+the set of its rudder, merely by its own weight, descending at
+an angle of about eight degrees with the horizon.'
+
+It is said that he once persuaded his gardener to trust himself
+in this glider for a flight, but if Cayley himself ventured a
+flight in it he has left no record of the fact. The following
+extract from his work, Aerial Navigation, affords an instance of
+the thoroughness of his investigations, and the concluding
+paragraph also shows his faith in the ultimate triumph of
+mankind in the matter of aerial flight:--
+
+'The act of flying requires less exertion than from the
+appearance is supposed. Not having sufficient data to ascertain
+the exact degree of propelling power exerted by birds in the act
+of flying, it is uncertain what degree of energy may be required
+in this respect for vessels of aerial navigation; yet when we
+consider the many hundreds of miles of continued flight exerted
+by birds of passage, the idea of its being only a small effort
+is greatly corroborated. To apply the power of the first mover
+to the greatest advantage in producing this effect is a very
+material point. The mode universally adopted by Nature is the
+oblique waft of the wing. We have only to choose between the
+direct beat overtaking the velocity of the current, like the oar
+of a boat, or one applied like the wing, in some assigned degree
+of obliquity to it. Suppose 35 feet per second to be the
+velocity of an aerial vehicle, the oar must be moved with this
+speed previous to its being able to receive any resistance; then
+if it be only required to obtain a pressure of one-tenth of a
+lb. upon each square foot it must exceed the velocity of the
+current 7.3 feet per second. Hence its whole velocity must be
+42.5 feet per second. Should the same surface be wafted
+downward like a wing with the hinder edge inclined upward in an
+angle of about 50 deg. 40 feet to the current it will overtake
+it at a velocity of 3.5 feet per second; and as a slight unknown
+angle of resistance generates a lb. pressure per square foot at
+this velocity, probably a waft of a little more than 4 feet per
+second would produce this effect, one-tenth part of which would
+be the propelling power. The advantage of this mode of
+application compared with the former is rather more than ten to
+one.
+
+'In continuing the general principles of aerial navigation, for
+the practice of the art, many mechanical difficulties present
+themselves which require a considerable course of skilfully
+applied experiments before they can be overcome; but, to a
+certain extent, the air has already been made navigable, and no
+one who has seen the steadiness with which weights to the amount
+of ten stone (including four stone, the weight of the machine)
+hover in the air can doubt of the ultimate accomplishment of
+this object.'
+
+This extract from his work gives but a faint idea of the amount
+of research for which Cayley was responsible. He had the
+humility of the true investigator in scientific problems, and so
+far as can be seen was never guilty of the great fault of so
+many investigators in this subject--that of making claims which
+he could not support. He was content to do, and pass after
+having recorded his part, and although nearly half a century had
+to pass between the time of his death and the first actual
+flight by means of power-driven planes, yet he may be said to
+have contributed very largely to the solution of the problem,
+and his name will always rank high in the roll of the pioneers
+of flight.
+
+Practically contemporary with Cayley was Thomas Walker,
+concerning whom little is known save that he was a portrait
+painter of Hull, where was published his pamphlet on The Art of
+Flying in 1810, a second and amplified edition being produced,
+also in Hull, in 1831. The pamphlet, which has been reproduced
+in extenso in the Aeronautical Classics series published by the
+Royal Aeronautical Society, displays a curious mixture of the
+true scientific spirit and colossal conceit. Walker appears to
+have been a man inclined to jump to conclusions, which carried
+him up to the edge of discovery and left him vacillating there.
+
+The study of the two editions of his pamphlet side by side shows
+that their author made considerable advances in the
+practicability of his designs in the 21 intervening years,
+though the drawings which accompany the text in both editions
+fail to show anything really capable of flight. The great point
+about Walker's work as a whole is its suggestiveness; he did not
+hesitate to state that the 'art' of flying is as truly
+mechanical as that of rowing a boat, and he had some conception
+of the necessary mechanism, together with an absolute conviction
+that he knew all there was to be known. 'Encouraged by the
+public,' he says, 'I would not abandon my purpose of making
+still further exertions to advance and complete an art, the
+discovery of the TRUE PRINCIPLES (the italics are Walker's own)
+of which, I trust, I can with certainty affirm to be my own.'
+
+The pamphlet begins with Walker's admiration of the mechanism of
+flight as displayed by birds. 'It is now almost twenty years,'
+he says, 'since I was first led to think, by the study of birds
+and their means of flying, that if an artificial machine were
+formed with wings in exact imitation of the mechanism of one of
+those beautiful living machines, and applied in the very same
+way upon the air, there could be no doubt of its being made to
+fly, for it is an axiom in philosophy that the same cause will
+ever produce the same effect.' With this he confesses his
+inability to produce the said effect through lack of funds,
+though he clothes this delicately in the phrase 'professional
+avocations and other circumstances.' Owing to this inability he
+published his designs that others might take advantage of them,
+prefacing his own researches with a list of the very early
+pioneers, and giving special mention to Friar Bacon, Bishop
+Wilkins, and the Portuguese friar, De Guzman. But, although he
+seems to suggest that others should avail themselves of his
+theoretical knowledge, there is a curious incompleteness about
+the designs accompanying his work, and about the work itself,
+which seems to suggest that he had more knowledge to impart than
+he chose to make public--or else that he came very near to
+complete solution of the problem of flight, and stayed on the
+threshold without knowing it.
+
+After a dissertation upon the history and strength of the
+condor, and on the differences between the weights of birds, he
+says: 'The following observations upon the wonderful difference
+in the weight of some birds, with their apparent means of
+supporting it in their flight, may tend to remove some
+prejudices against my plan from the minds of some of my readers.
+The weight of the humming-bird is one drachm, that of the condor
+not less than four stone. Now, if we reduce four stone into
+drachms we shall find the condor is 14,336 times as heavy as the
+humming-bird. What an amazing disproportion of weight! Yet by
+the same mechanical use of its wings the condor can overcome the
+specific gravity of its body with as much ease as the little
+humming-bird. But this is not all. We are informed that this
+enormous bird possesses a power in its wings, so far exceeding
+what is necessary for its own conveyance through the air, that
+it can take up and fly away with a whole sheer in its talons,
+with as much ease as an eagle would carry off, in the same
+manner, a hare or a rabbit. This we may readily give credit to,
+from the known fact of our little kestrel and the sparrow-hawk
+frequently flying off with a partridge, which is nearly three
+times the weight of these rapacious little birds.'
+
+After a few more observations he arrives at the following
+conclusion: 'By attending to the progressive increase in the
+weight of birds, from the delicate little humming-bird up to the
+huge condor, we clearly discover that the addition of a few
+ounces, pounds, or stones, is no obstacle to the art of flying;
+the specific weight of birds avails nothing, for by their
+possessing wings large enough, and sufficient power to work
+them, they can accomplish the means of flying equally well upon
+all the various scales and dimensions which we see in nature.
+Such being a fact, in the name of reason and philosophy why
+shall not man, with a pair of artificial wings, large enough,
+and with sufficient power to strike them upon the air, be able
+to produce the same effect?'
+
+Walker asserted definitely and with good ground that muscular
+effort applied without mechanism is insufficient for human
+flight, but he states that if an aeronautical boat were
+constructed so that a man could sit in it in the same manner as
+when rowing, such a man would be able to bring into play his
+whole bodily strength for the purpose of flight, and at the same
+time would be able to get an additional advantage by exerting
+his strength upon a lever. At first he concluded there must be
+expansion of wings large enough to resist in a sufficient degree
+the specific gravity of whatever is attached to them, but in the
+second edition of his work he altered this to 'expansion of flat
+passive surfaces large enough to reduce the force of gravity so
+as to float the machine upon the air with the man in it.' The
+second requisite is strength enough to strike the wings with
+sufficient force to complete the buoyancy and give a projectile
+motion to the machine. Given these two requisites, Walker states
+definitely that flying must be accomplished simply by muscular
+exertion. 'If we are secure of these two requisites, and I am
+very confident we are, we may calculate upon the success of
+flight with as much certainty as upon our walking.'
+
+Walker appears to have gained some confidence from the
+experiments of a certain M. Degen, a watchmaker of Vienna, who,
+according to the Monthly Magazine of September, 1809, invented a
+machine by means of which a person might raise himself into the
+air. The said machine, according to the magazine, was formed of
+two parachutes which might be folded up or extended at pleasure,
+while the person who worked them was placed in the centre. This
+account, however, was rather misleading, for the magazine
+carefully avoided mention of a balloon to which the inventor
+fixed his wings or parachutes. Walker, knowing nothing of the
+balloon, concluded that Degen actually raised himself in the air,
+though he is doubtful of the assertion that Degen managed to fly
+in various directions, especially against the wind.
+
+Walker, after considering Degen and all his works, proceeds to
+detail his own directions for the construction of a flying
+machine, these being as follows: 'Make a car of as light
+material as possible, but with sufficient strength to support a
+man in it; provide a pair of wings about four feet each in
+length; let them be horizontally expanded and fastened upon the
+top edge of each side of the car, with two joints each, so as to
+admit of a vertical motion to the wings, which motion may be
+effected by a man sitting and working an upright lever in the
+middle of the car. Extend in the front of the car a flat surface
+of silk, which must be stretched out and kept fixed in a passive
+state; there must be the same fixed behind the car; these two
+surfaces must be perfectly equal in length and breadth and large
+enough to cover a sufficient quantity of air to support the whole
+weight as nearly in equilibrium as possible, thus we shall have a
+great sustaining power in those passive surfaces and the active
+wings will propel the car forward.'
+
+A description of how to launch this car is subsequently given:
+'It becomes necessary,' says the theorist, 'that I should give
+directions how it may be launched upon the air, which may be done
+by various means; perhaps the following method may be found to
+answer as well as any: Fix a poll upright in the earth, about
+twenty feet in height, with two open collars to admit another
+poll to slide upwards through them; let there be a sliding
+platform made fast upon the top of the sliding poll; place the
+car with a man in it upon the platform, then raise the platform
+to the height of about thirty feet by means of the sliding poll,
+let the sliding poll and platform suddenly fall down, the car
+will then be left upon the air, and by its pressing the air a
+projectile force will instantly propel the car forward; the man
+in the car must then strike the active wings briskly upon the
+air, which will so increase the projectile force as to become
+superior to the force of gravitation, and if he inclines his
+weight a little backward, the projectile impulse will drive the
+car forward in an ascending direction. When the car is brought to
+a sufficient altitude to clear the tops of hills, trees,
+buildings, etc., the man, by sitting a little forward on his
+seat, will then bring the wings upon a horizontal plane, and by
+continuing the action of the wings he will be impelled forward
+in that direction. To descend, he must desist from striking the
+wings, and hold them on a level with their joints; the car will
+then gradually come down, and when it is within five or six feet
+of the ground the man must instantly strike the wings downwards,
+and sit as far back as he can; he will by this means check the
+projectile force, and cause the car to alight very gently with a
+retrograde motion. The car, when up in the air, may be made to
+turn to the right or to the left by forcing out one of the fins,
+having one about eighteen inches long placed vertically on each
+side of the car for that purpose, or perhaps merely by the man
+inclining the weight of his body to one side.'
+
+Having stated how the thing is to be done, Walker is careful to
+explain that when it is done there will be in it some practical
+use, notably in respect of the conveyance of mails and
+newspapers, or the saving of life at sea, or for exploration,
+etc. It might even reduce the number of horses kept by man for
+his use, by means of which a large amount of land might be set
+free for the growth of food for human consumption.
+
+At the end of his work Walker admits the idea of steam power for
+driving a flying machine in place of simple human exertion, but
+he, like Cayley, saw a drawback to this in the weight of the
+necessary engine. On the whole, he concluded, navigation of the
+air by means of engine power would be mostly confined to the
+construction of navigable balloons.
+
+As already noted, Walker's work is not over practical, and the
+foregoing extract includes the most practical part of it; the
+rest is a series of dissertations on bird flight, in which,
+evidently, the portrait painter's observations were far less
+thorough than those of da Vinci or Borelli. Taken on the whole,
+Walker was a man with a hobby; he devoted to it much time and
+thought, but it remained a hobby, nevertheless. His
+observations have proved useful enough to give him a place among
+the early students of flight, but a great drawback to his work
+is the lack of practical experiment, by means of which alone
+real advance could be made; for, as Cayley admitted, theory and
+practice are very widely separated in the study of aviation, and
+the whole history of flight is a matter of unexpected results
+arising from scarcely foreseen causes, together with experiment
+as patient as daring.
+
+
+
+IV. THE MIDDLE NINETEENTH CENTURY
+
+Both Cayley and Walker were theorists, though Cayley supported
+his theoretical work with enough of practice to show that he
+studied along right lines; a little after his time there came
+practical men who brought to being the first machine which
+actually flew by the application of power. Before their time,
+however, mention must be made of the work of George Pocock of
+Bristol, who, somewhere about 1840 invented what was described
+as a 'kite carriage,' a vehicle which carried a number of
+persons, and obtained its motive power from a large kite. It is
+on record that, in the year 1846 one of these carriages conveyed
+sixteen people from Bristol to London. Another device of
+Pocock's was what he called a 'buoyant sail,' which was in
+effect a man-lifting kite, and by means of which a passenger was
+actually raised 100 yards from the ground, while the inventor's
+son scaled a cliff 200 feet in height by means of one of these,
+'buoyant sails.' This constitutes the first definitely recorded
+experiment in the use of man-lifting kites. A History of the
+Charvolant or Kite-carriage, published in London in 1851, states
+that 'an experiment of a bold and very novel character was made
+upon an extensive down, where a large wagon with a considerable
+load was drawn along, whilst this huge machine at the same time
+carried an observer aloft in the air, realising almost the
+romance of flying.'
+
+Experimenting, two years after the appearance of the
+'kite-carriage,' on the helicopter principle, W. H. Phillips
+constructed a model machine which weighed two pounds; this was
+fitted with revolving fans, driven by the combustion of
+charcoal, nitre, and gypsum, producing steam which, discharging
+into the air, caused the fans to revolve. The inventor stated
+that 'all being arranged, the steam was up in a few seconds,
+when the whole apparatus spun around like any top, and mounted
+into the air faster than a bird; to what height it ascended I
+had no means of ascertaining; the distance travelled was across
+two fields, where, after a long search, I found the machine
+minus the wings, which had been torn off in contact with the
+ground.' This could hardly be described as successful flight,
+but it was an advance in the construction of machines on the
+helicopter principle, and it was the first steam-driven model of
+the type which actually flew. The invention, however, was not
+followed up.
+
+After Phillips, we come to the great figures of the middle
+nineteenth century, W. S. Henson and John Stringfellow. Cayley
+had shown, in 1809, how success might be attained by developing
+the idea of the plane surface so driven as to take advantage of
+the resistance offered by the air, and Henson, who as early as
+1840 was experimenting with model gliders and light steam
+engines, evolved and patented an idea for something very nearly
+resembling the monoplane of the early twentieth century. His
+patent, No. 9478, of the year 1842 explains the principle of the
+machine as follows:--
+
+In order that the description hereafter given be rendered clear,
+I will first shortly explain the principle on which the machine
+is constructed. If any light and flat or nearly flat article be
+projected or thrown edgewise in a slightly inclined position,
+the same will rise on the air till the force exerted is
+expended, when the article so thrown or projected will descend;
+and it will readily be conceived that, if the article so
+projected or thrown possessed in itself a continuous power or
+force equal to that used in throwing or projecting it, the
+article would continue to ascend so long as the forward part of
+the surface was upwards in respect to the hinder part, and that
+such article, when the power was stopped, or when the
+inclination was reversed, would descend by gravity aided by the
+force of the power contained in the article, if the power be
+continued, thus imitating the flight of a bird.
+
+Now, the first part of my invention consists of an apparatus so
+constructed as to offer a very extended surface or plane of a
+light yet strong construction, which will have the same relation
+to the general machine which the extended wings of a bird have
+to the body when a bird is skimming in the air; but in place of
+the movement or power for onward progress being obtained by
+movement of the extended surface or plane, as is the case with
+the wings of birds, I apply suitable paddle-wheels or other
+proper mechanical propellers worked by a steam or other
+sufficiently light engine, and thus obtain the requisite power
+for onward movement to the plane or extended surface; and in
+order to give control as to the upward and downward direction of
+such a machine I apply a tail to the extended surface which is
+capable of being inclined or raised, so that when the power is
+acting to propel the machine, by inclining the tail upwards,
+the resistance offered by the air will cause the machine to rise
+on the air; and, on the contrary, when the inclination of the
+tail is reversed, the machine will immediately be propelled
+downwards, and pass through a plane more or less inclined to the
+horizon as the inclination of the tail is greater or less; and
+in order to guide the machine as to the lateral direction which
+it shall take, I apply a vertical rudder or second tail, and,
+according as the same is inclined in one direction or the other,
+so will be the direction of the machine.'
+
+The machine in question was very large, and differed very little
+from the modern monoplane; the materials were to be spars of
+bamboo and hollow wood, with diagonal wire bracing. The surface
+of the planes was to amount to 4,500 square feet, and the tail,
+triangular in form (here modern practice diverges) was to be
+1,500 square feet. The inventor estimated that there would be a
+sustaining power of half a pound per square foot, and the
+driving power was to be supplied by a steam engine of 25 to 30
+horse-power, driving two six-bladed propellers. Henson was
+largely dependent on Stringfellow for many details of his
+design, more especially with regard to the construction of the
+engine.
+
+The publication of the patent attracted a great amount of public
+attention, and the illustrations in contemporary journals,
+representing the machine flying over the pyramids and the
+Channel, anticipated fact by sixty years and more; the
+scientific world was divided, as it was up to the actual
+accomplishment of flight, as to the value of the invention.
+
+Strongfellow and Henson became associated after the conception
+of their design, with an attorney named Colombine, and a Mr
+Marriott, and between the four of them a project grew for
+putting the whole thing on a commercial basis--Henson and
+Stringfellow were to supply the idea; Marriott, knowing a member
+of Parliament, would be useful in getting a company
+incorporated, and Colombine would look after the purely legal
+side of the business. Thus an application was made by Mr
+Roebuck, Marriott's M.P., for an act of incorporation for 'The
+Aerial Steam Transit Company,' Roebuck moving to bring in the
+bill on the 24th of March, 1843. The prospectus, calling for
+funds for the development of the invention, makes interesting
+reading at this stage of aeronautical development; it was as
+follows:
+
+ PROPOSAL.
+
+For subscriptions of sums of L100, in furtherance of an
+Extraordinary Invention not at present safe to be developed by
+securing the necessary Patents, for which three times the sum
+advanced, namely, L300, is conditionally guaranteed for each
+subscription on February 1, 1844, in case of the anticipations
+being realised, with the option of the subscribers being
+shareholders for the large amount if so desired, but not
+otherwise.
+ ---------
+An Invention has recently been discovered, which if ultimately
+successful will be without parallel even in the age which
+introduced to the world the wonderful effects of gas and of
+steam.
+
+The discovery is of that peculiar nature, so simple in principle
+yet so perfect in all the ingredients required for complete and
+permanent success, that to promulgate it at present would wholly
+defeat its development by the immense competition which would
+ensue, and the views of the originator be entirely frustrated.
+
+This work, the result of years of labour and study, presents a
+wonderful instance of the adaptation of laws long since proved
+to the scientific world combined with established principles so
+judiciously and carefully arranged, as to produce a discovery
+perfect in all its parts and alike in harmony with the laws of
+Nature and of science.
+
+The Invention has been subjected to several tests and
+examinations and the results are most satisfactory so much so
+that nothing but the completion of the undertaking is required
+to determine its practical operation, which being once
+established its utility is undoubted, as it would be a necessary
+possession of every empire, and it were hardly too much to say,
+of every individual of competent means in the civilised world.
+
+Its qualities and capabilities are so vast that it were
+impossible and, even if possible, unsafe to develop them
+further, but some idea may be formed from the fact that as a
+preliminary measure patents in Great Britain Ireland, Scotland,
+the Colonies, France, Belgium, and the United States, and every
+other country where protection to the first discoveries of an
+Invention is granted, will of necessity be immediately obtained,
+and by the time these are perfected, which it is estimated will
+be in the month of February, the Invention will be fit for
+Public Trial, but until the Patents are sealed any further
+disclosure would be most dangerous to the principle on which it
+is based.
+
+Under these circumstances, it is proposed to raise an
+immediate sum of L2,000 in furtherance of the Projector's views,
+and as some protection to the parties who may embark in the
+matter, that this is not a visionary plan for objects
+imperfectly considered, Mr Colombine, to whom the secret has
+been confided, has allowed his name to be used on the occasion,
+and who will if referred to corroborate this statement, and
+convince any inquirer of the reasonable prospects of large
+pecuniary results following the development of the Invention.
+
+It is, therefore, intended to raise the sum of L2,000 in twenty
+sums of L100 each (of which any subscriber may take one or more
+not exceeding five in number to be held by any individual) the
+amount of which is to be paid into the hands of Mr Colombine as
+General Manager of the concern to be by him appropriated in
+procuring the several Patents and providing the expenses
+incidental to the works in progress. For each of which sums of
+L100 it is intended and agreed that twelve months after the 1st
+February next, the several parties subscribing shall receive as
+an equivalent for the risk to be run the sum of L300 for each of
+the sums of L100 now subscribed, provided when the time arrives
+the Patents shall be found to answer the purposes intended.
+
+As full and complete success is alone looked to, no moderate or
+imperfect benefit is to be anticipated, but the work, if it once
+passes the necessary ordeal, to which inventions of every kind
+must be first subject, will then be regarded by every one as the
+most astonishing discovery of modern times; no half success can
+follow, and therefore the full nature of the risk is immediately
+ascertained.
+
+The intention is to work and prove the Patent by collective
+instead of individual aid as less hazardous at first end more
+advantageous in the result for the Inventor, as well as others,
+by having the interest of several engaged in aiding one common
+object--the development of a Great Plan. The failure is not
+feared, yet as perfect success might, by possibility, not ensue,
+it is necessary to provide for that result, and the parties
+concerned make it a condition that no return of the subscribed
+money shall be required, if the Patents shall by any unforeseen
+circumstances not be capable of being worked at all; against
+which, the first application of the money subscribed, that of
+securing the Patents, affords a reasonable security, as no one
+without solid grounds would think of such an expenditure.
+
+It is perfectly needless to state that no risk or responsibility
+of any kind can arise beyond the payment of the sum to be
+subscribed under any circumstances whatever.
+
+As soon as the Patents shall be perfected and proved it is
+contemplated, so far as may be found practicable, to further the
+great object in view a Company shall be formed but respecting
+which it is unnecessary to state further details, than that a
+preference will be given to all those persons who now subscribe,
+and to whom shares shall be appropriated according to the larger
+amount (being three times the sum to be paid by each person)
+contemplated to be returned as soon as the success of the
+Invention shall have been established, at their option, or the
+money paid, whereby the Subscriber will have the means of either
+withdrawing with a large pecuniary benefit, or by continuing his
+interest in the concern lay the foundation for participating in
+the immense benefit which must follow the success of the plan.
+
+It is not pretended to conceal that the project is a
+speculation--all parties believe that perfect success, and
+thence incalculable advantage of every kind, will follow to
+every individual joining in this great undertaking; but the
+Gentlemen engaged in it wish that no concealment of the
+consequences, perfect success, or possible failure, should in
+the slightest degree be inferred. They believe this will prove
+the germ of a mighty work, and in that belief call for the
+operation of others with no visionary object, but a legitimate
+one before them, to attain that point where perfect success will
+be secured from their combined exertions.
+
+All applications to be made to D. E. Colombine, Esquire, 8
+Carlton Chambers, Regent Street.
+
+The applications did not materialise, as was only to be expected
+in view of the vagueness of the proposals. Colombine did some
+advertising, and Mr Roebuck expressed himself as unwilling to
+proceed further in the venture. Henson experimented with models
+to a certain extent, while Stringfellow looked for funds for the
+construction of a full-sized monoplane. In November of 1843 he
+suggested that he and Henson should construct a large model out
+of their own funds. On Henson's suggestion Colombine and
+Marriott were bought out as regards the original patent, and
+Stringfellow and Henson entered into an agreement and set to
+work.
+
+Their work is briefly described in a little pamphlet by F. J.
+Stringfellow, entitled A few Remarks on what has been done with
+screw-propelled Aero-plane Machines from 1809 to 1892. The
+author writes with regard to the work that his father and Henson
+undertook:--
+
+'They commenced the construction of a small model operated by a
+spring, and laid down the larger model 20 ft. from tip to tip
+of planes, 3 1/2 ft. wide, giving 70 ft. of sustaining surface,
+about 10 more in the tail. The making of this model required
+great consideration; various supports for the wings were tried,
+so as to combine lightness with firmness, strength and rigidity.
+
+'The planes were staid from three sets of fish-shaped masts, and
+rigged square and firm by flat steel rigging. The engine and
+boiler were put in the car to drive two screw-propellers, right
+and left-handed, 3 ft. in diameter, with four blades each,
+occupying three-quarters of the area of the circumference, set
+at an angle of 60 degrees. A considerable time was spent in
+perfecting the motive power. Compressed air was tried and
+abandoned. Tappets, cams, and eccentrics were all tried, to work
+the slide valve, to obtain the best results. The piston rod of
+engine passed through both ends of the cylinder, and with long
+connecting rods worked direct on the crank of the propellers.
+From memorandum of experiments still preserved the following is
+a copy of one: June, 27th, 1845, water 50 ozs., spirit 10 ozs.,
+lamp lit 8.45, gauge moves 8.46, engine started 8.48 (100 lb.
+pressure), engine stopped 8.57, worked 9 minutes, 2,288
+revolutions, average 254 per minute. No priming, 40 ozs. water
+consumed, propulsion (thrust of propellers), 5 lbs. 4 1/2 ozs.
+at commencement, steady, 4 lbs. 1/2 oz., 57 revolutions to 1 oz.
+water, steam cut off one-third from beginning.
+
+'The diameter of cylinder of engine was 1 1/2 inch, length of
+stroke 3 inches.
+
+'In the meantime an engine was also made for the smaller model,
+and a wing action tried, but with poor results. The time was
+mostly devoted to the larger model, and in 1847 a tent was
+erected on Bala Down, about two miles from Chard, and the model
+taken up one night by the workmen. The experiments were not so
+favourable as was expected. The machine could not support
+itself for any distance, but, when launched off, gradually
+descended, although the power and surface should have been
+ample; indeed, according to latest calculations, the thrust
+should have carried more than three times the weight, for there
+was a thrust of 5 lbs. from the propellers, and a surface of
+over 70 square feet to sustain under 30 lbs., but necessary
+speed was lacking.'
+
+Stringfellow himself explained the failure as follows:--
+
+'There stood our aerial protegee in all her purity--too
+delicate, too fragile, too beautiful for this rough world; at
+least those were my ideas at the time, but little did I think
+how soon it was to be realised. I soon found, before I had time
+to introduce the spark, a drooping in the wings, a flagging in
+all the parts. In less than ten minutes the machine was
+saturated with wet from a deposit of dew, so that anything like
+a trial was impossible by night. I did not consider we could get
+the silk tight and rigid enough. Indeed, the framework
+altogether was too weak. The steam-engine was the best part.
+Our want of success was not for want of power or sustaining
+surface, but for want of proper adaptation of the means to the
+end of the various parts.'
+
+Henson, who had spent a considerable amount of money in these
+experimental constructions, consoled himself for failure by
+venturing into matrimony; in 1849 he went to America, leaving
+Stringfellow to continue experimenting alone. From 1846 to 1848
+Stringfellow worked on what is really an epoch-making item in
+the history of aeronautics--the first engine-driven aeroplane
+which actually flew. The machine in question had a 10 foot
+span, and was 2 ft. across in the widest part of the wing; the
+length of tail was 3 ft. 6 ins., and the span of tail in the
+widest part 22 ins., the total sustaining area being about 14
+sq. ft. The motive power consisted of an engine with a cylinder
+of three-quarter inch diameter and a two-inch stroke; between
+this and the crank shaft was a bevelled gear giving three
+revolutions of the propellers to every stroke of the engine; the
+propellers, right and left screw, were four-bladed and 16 inches
+in diameter. The total weight of the model with engine was 8
+lbs. Its successful flight is ascribed to the fact that
+Stringfellow curved the wings, giving them rigid front edges and
+flexible trailing edges, as suggested long before both by Da
+Vinci and Borelli, but never before put into practice.
+
+Mr F. J. Stringfellow, in the pamphlet quoted above, gives the
+best account of the flight of this model: 'My father had
+constructed another small model which was finished early in
+1848, and having the loan of a long room in a disused lace
+factory, early in June the small model was moved there for
+experiments. The room was about 22 yards long and from 10 to 12
+ft. high.... The inclined wire for starting the machine occupied
+less than half the length of the room and left space at the end
+for the machine to clear the floor. In the first experiment the
+tail was set at too high an angle, and the machine rose too
+rapidly on leaving the wire. After going a few yards it slid
+back as if coming down an inclined plane, at such an angle that
+the point of the tail struck the ground and was broken. The
+tail was repaired and set at a smaller angle. The steam was
+again got up, and the machine started down the wire, and, upon
+reaching the point of self-detachment, it gradually rose until
+it reached the farther end of the room, striking a hole in the
+canvas placed to stop it. In experiments the machine flew well,
+when rising as much as one in seven. The late Rev. J. Riste,
+Esq., lace manufacturer, Northcote Spicer, Esq., J. Toms, Esq.,
+and others witnessed experiments. Mr Marriatt, late of the San
+Francisco News Letter brought down from London Mr Ellis, the
+then lessee of Cremorne Gardens, Mr Partridge, and Lieutenant
+Gale, the aeronaut, to witness experiments. Mr Ellis offered to
+construct a covered way at Cremorne for experiments. Mr
+Stringfellow repaired to Cremorne, but not much better
+accommodations than he had at home were provided, owing to
+unfulfilled engagement as to room. Mr Stringfellow was
+preparing for departure when a party of gentlemen unconnected
+with the Gardens begged to see an experiment, and finding them
+able to appreciate his endeavours, he got up steam and started
+the model down the wire. When it arrived at the spot where it
+should leave the wire it appeared to meet with some obstruction,
+and threatened to come to the ground, but it soon recovered
+itself and darted off in as fair a flight as it was possible to
+make at a distance of about 40 yards, where it was stopped by
+the canvas.
+
+'Having now demonstrated the practicability of making a
+steam-engine fly, and finding nothing but a pecuniary loss and
+little honour, this experimenter rested for a long time,
+satisfied with what he had effected. The subject, however, had
+to him special charms, and he still contemplated the renewal of
+his experiments.'
+
+It appears that Stringfellow's interest did not revive
+sufficiently for the continuance of the experiments until the
+founding of the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain in 1866.
+Wenham's paper on Aerial Locomotion read at the first meeting of
+the Society, which was held at the Society of Arts under the
+Presidency of the Duke of Argyll, was the means of bringing
+Stringfellow back into the field. It was Wenham's suggestion,
+in the first place, that monoplane design should be abandoned
+for the superposition of planes; acting on this suggestion
+Stringfellow constructed a model triplane, and also designed a
+steam engine of slightly over one horse-power, and a one
+horse-power copper boiler and fire box which, although capable
+of sustaining a pressure of 500 lbs. to the square inch, weighed
+only about 40 lbs.
+
+Both the engine and the triplane model were exhibited at the
+first Aeronautical Exhibition held at the Crystal Palace in
+1868. The triplane had a supporting surface of 28 sq. ft.;
+inclusive of engine, boiler, fuel, and water its total weight
+was under 12 lbs. The engine worked two 21 in. propellers at
+600 revolutions per minute, and developed 100 lbs. steam
+pressure in five minutes, yielding one-third horse-power. Since
+no free flight was allowed in the Exhibition, owing to danger
+from fire, the triplane was suspended from a wire in the nave of
+the building, and it was noted that, when running along the
+wire, the model made a perceptible lift.
+
+A prize of L100 was awarded to the steam engine as the lightest
+steam engine in proportion to its power. The engine and model
+together may be reckoned as Stringfellow's best achievement. He
+used his L100 in preparation for further experiments, but he
+was now an old man, and his work was practically done. Both the
+triplane and the engine were eventually bought for the
+Washington Museum; Stringfellow's earlier models, together with
+those constructed by him in conjunction with Henson, remain in
+this country in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
+
+John Stringfellow died on December 13th, 1883. His place in the
+history of aeronautics is at least equal to that of Cayley, and
+it may be said that he laid the foundation of such work as was
+subsequently accomplished by Maxim, Langley, and their fellows.
+It was the coming of the internal combustion engine that
+rendered flight practicable, and had this prime mover been
+available in John Stringfellow's day the Wright brothers'
+achievement might have been antedated by half a century.
+
+
+
+V. WENHAM, LE BRIS, AND SOME OTHERS
+
+There are few outstanding events in the development of
+aeronautics between Stringfellow's final achievement and the
+work of such men as Lilienthal, Pilcher, Montgomery, and their
+kind; in spite of this, the later middle decades of the
+nineteenth century witnessed a considerable amount of spade work
+both in England and in France, the two countries which led in
+the way in aeronautical development until Lilienthal gave honour
+to Germany, and Langley and Montgomery paved the way for the
+Wright Brothers in America.
+
+Two abortive attempts characterised the sixties of last century
+in France. As regards the first of these, it was carried out by
+three men, Nadar, Ponton d'Amecourt, and De la Landelle, who
+conceived the idea of a full-sized helicopter machine.
+D'Amecourt exhibited a steam model, constructed in 1865, at the
+Aeronautical Society's Exhibition in 1868. The engine was
+aluminium with cylinders of bronze, driving two screws placed
+one above the other and rotating in Opposite directions, but the
+power was not sufficient to lift the model. De la Landelle's
+principal achievement consisted in the publication in 1863 of a
+book entitled Aviation which has a certain historical value; he
+got out several designs for large machines on the helicopter
+principle, but did little more until the three combined in the
+attempt to raise funds for the construction of their
+full-sized machine. Since the funds were not forthcoming,
+Nadar took to ballooning as the means of raising money;
+apparently he found this substitute for real flight sufficiently
+interesting to divert him from the study of the helicopter
+principle, for the experiment went no further.
+
+The other experimenter of this period, one Count d'Esterno, took
+out a patent in 1864 for a soaring machine which allowed for
+alteration of the angle of incidence of the wings in the manner
+that was subsequently carried out by the Wright Brothers. It
+was not until 1883 that any attempt was made to put this patent
+to practical use, and, as the inventor died while it was under
+construction, it was never completed. D'Esterno was also
+responsible for the production of a work entitled Du Vol des
+Oiseaux, which is a very remarkable study of the flight of
+birds.
+
+Mention has already been made of the founding of the
+Aeronautical Society of Great Britain, which, since 1918 has
+been the Royal Aeronautical Society. 1866 witnessed the first
+meeting of the Society under the Presidency of the Duke of
+Argyll, when in June, at the Society of Arts, Francis Herbert
+Wenham read his now classic paper Aerial Locomotion. Certain
+quotations from this will show how clearly Wenham had thought
+out the problems connected with flight.
+
+'The first subject for consideration is the proportion of
+surface to weight, and their combined effect in descending
+perpendicularly through the atmosphere. The datum is here based
+upon the consideration of safety, for it may sometimes be
+needful for a living being to drop passively, without muscular
+effort. One square foot of sustaining surface for every pound
+of the total weight will be sufficient for security.
+
+'According to Smeaton's table of atmospheric resistances, to
+produce a force of one pound on a square foot, the wind must
+move against the plane (or which is the same thing, the plane
+against the wind), at the rate of twenty-two feet per second, or
+1,320 feet per minute, equal to fifteen miles per hour. The
+resistance of the air will now balance the weight on the
+descending surface, and, consequently, it cannot exceed that
+speed. Now, twenty-two feet per second is the velocity acquired
+at the end of a fall of eight feet--a height from which a
+well-knit man or animal may leap down without much risk of
+injury. Therefore, if a man with parachute weigh together 143
+lbs., spreading the same number of square feet of surface
+contained in a circle fourteen and a half feet in diameter, he
+will descend at perhaps an unpleasant velocity, but with safety
+to life and limb.
+
+'It is a remarkable fact how this proportion of wing-surface to
+weight extends throughout a great variety of the flying portion
+of the animal kingdom, even down to hornets, bees, and other
+insects. In some instances, however, as in the gallinaceous
+tribe, including pheasants, this area is somewhat exceeded, but
+they are known to be very poor fliers. Residing as they do
+chiefly on the ground, their wings are only required for short
+distances, or for raising them or easing their descent from
+their roosting-places in forest trees, the shortness of their
+wings preventing them from taking extended flights. The
+wing-surface of the common swallow is rather more than in the
+ratio of two square feet per pound, but having also great length
+of pinion, it is both swift and enduring in its flight. When on
+a rapid course this bird is in the habit of furling its wings
+into a narrow compass. The greater extent of surface is
+probably needful for the continual variations of speed and
+instant stoppages for obtaining its insect food.
+
+'On the other hand, there are some birds, particularly of the
+duck tribe, whose wing-surface but little exceeds half a square
+foot, or seventy-two inches per pound, yet they may be classed
+among the strongest and swiftest of fliers. A weight of one
+pound, suspended from an area of this extent, would acquire a
+velocity due to a fall of sixteen feet--a height sufficient for
+the destruction or injury of most animals. But when the plane
+is urged forward horizontally, in a manner analogous to the
+wings of a bird during flight, the sustaining power is greatly
+influenced by the form and arrangement of the surface.
+
+'In the case of perpendicular descent, as a parachute, the
+sustaining effect will be much the same, whatever the figure of
+the outline of the superficies may be, and a circle perhaps
+affords the best resistance of any. Take, for example, a circle
+of twenty square feet (as possessed by the pelican) loaded with
+as many pounds. This, as just stated, will limit the rate of
+perpendicular descent to 1,320 feet per minute. But instead of
+a circle sixty-one inches in diameter, if the area is bounded by
+a parallelogram ten feet long by two feet broad, and whilst at
+perfect freedom to descend perpendicularly, let a force be
+applied exactly in a horizontal direction, so as to carry it
+edgeways, with the long side foremost, at a forward speed of
+thirty miles per hour--just double that of its passive descent:
+the rate of fall under these conditions will be decreased most
+remarkably, probably to less than one-fifteenth part, or
+eighty-eight feet per minute, or one mile per hour.'
+
+And again: 'It has before been shown how utterly inadequate the
+mere perpendicular impulse of a plane is found to be in
+supporting a weight, when there is no horizontal motion at the
+time. There is no material weight of air to be acted upon, and
+it yields to the slightest force, however great the velocity of
+impulse may be. On the other hand, suppose that a large bird,
+in full flight, can make forty miles per hour, or 3,520 feet per
+minute, and performs one stroke per second. Now, during every
+fractional portion of that stroke, the wing is acting upon and
+obtaining an impulse from a fresh and undisturbed body of air;
+and if the vibration of the wing is limited to an arc of two
+feet, this by no means represents the small force of action that
+would be obtained when in a stationary position, for the impulse
+is secured upon a stratum of fifty-eight feet in length of air
+at each stroke. So that the conditions of weight of air for
+obtaining support equally well apply to weight of air and its
+reaction in producing forward impulse.
+
+'So necessary is the acquirement of this horizontal speed, even
+in commencing flight, that most heavy birds, when possible, rise
+against the wind, and even run at the top of their speed to make
+their wings available, as in the example of the eagle, mentioned
+at the commencement of this paper. It is stated that the Arabs,
+on horseback, can approach near enough to spear these birds,
+when on the plain, before they are able to rise; their habit is
+to perch on an eminence, where possible.
+
+'The tail of a bird is not necessary for flight. A pigeon can
+fly perfectly with this appendage cut short off; it probably
+performs an important function in steering, for it is to be
+remarked, that most birds that have either to pursue or evade
+pursuit are amply provided with this organ.
+
+'The foregoing reasoning is based upon facts, which tend to show
+that the flight of the largest and heaviest of all birds is
+really performed with but a small amount of force, and that man
+is endowed with sufficient muscular power to enable him also to
+take individual and extended flights, and that success is
+probably only involved in a question of suitable mechanical
+adaptations. But if the wings are to be modelled in imitation
+of natural examples, but very little consideration will serve to
+demonstrate its utter impracticability when applied in these
+forms.'
+
+Thus Wenham, one of the best theorists of his age. The Society
+with which this paper connects his name has done work, between
+that time and the present, of which the importance cannot be
+overestimated, and has been of the greatest value in the
+development of aeronautics, both in theory and experiment. The
+objects of the Society are to give a stronger impulse to the
+scientific study of aerial navigation, to promote the
+intercourse of those interested in the subject at home and
+abroad, and to give advice and instruction to those who study
+the principles upon which aeronautical science is based. From
+the date of its foundation the Society has given special study
+to dynamic flight, putting this before ballooning. Its library,
+its bureau of advice and information, and its meetings, all
+assist in forwarding the study of aeronautics, and its
+twenty-three early Annual Reports are of considerable value,
+containing as they do a large amount of useful information on
+aeronautical subjects, and forming practically the basis of
+aeronautical science.
+
+Ante to Wenham, Stringfellow and the French experimenters
+already noted, by some years, was Le Bris, a French sea captain,
+who appears to have required only a thorough scientific training
+to have rendered him of equal moment in the history of gliding
+flight with Lilienthal himself. Le Bris, it appears, watched
+the albatross and deduced, from the manner in which it supported
+itself in the air, that plane surfaces could be constructed and
+arranged to support a man in like manner. Octave Chanute,
+himself a leading exponent of gliding, gives the best
+description of Le Bris's experiments in a work, Progress in
+Flying Machines, which, although published as recently as I
+1894, is already rare. Chanute draws from a still rarer book,
+namely, De la Landelle's work published in 1884. Le Bris
+himself, quoted by De la Landelle as speaking of his first
+visioning of human flight, describes how he killed an albatross,
+and then--'I took the wing of the albatross and exposed it to
+the breeze; and lo! in spite of me it drew forward into the
+wind; notwithstanding my resistance it tended to rise. Thus I
+had discovered the secret of the bird! I comprehended the whole
+mystery of flight.'
+
+This apparently took place while at sea; later on Le Bris,
+returning to France, designed and constructed an artificial
+albatross of sufficient size to bear his own weight. The fact
+that he followed the bird outline as closely as he did attests
+his lack of scientific training for his task, while at the same
+time the success of the experiment was proof of his genius. The
+body of his artificial bird, boat-shaped, was 13 1/2 ft. in
+length, with a breadth of 4 ft. at the widest part. The
+material was cloth stretched over a wooden framework; in front
+was a small mast rigged after the manner of a ship's masts to
+which were attached poles and cords with which Le Bris intended
+to work the wings. Each wing was 23 ft. in length, giving a
+total supporting surface of nearly 220 sq. ft.; the weight of
+the whole apparatus was only 92 pounds. For steering, both
+vertical and horizontal, a hinged tail was provided, and the
+leading edge of each wing was made flexible. In construction
+throughout, and especially in that of the wings, Le Bris adhered
+as closely as possible to the original albatross.
+
+He designed an ingenious kind of mechanism which he termed
+'Rotules,' which by means of two levers gave a rotary motion to
+the front edge of the wings, and also permitted of their
+adjustment to various angles. The inventor's idea was to stand
+upright in the body of the contrivance, working the levers and
+cords with his hands, and with his feet on a pedal by means of
+which the steering tail was to be worked. He anticipated that,
+given a strong wind, he could rise into the air after the manner
+of an albatross, without any need for flapping his wings, and
+the account of his first experiment forms one of the most
+interesting incidents in the history of flight. It is related
+in full in Chanute's work, from which the present account is
+summarised.
+
+Le Bris made his first experiment on a main road near
+Douarnenez, at Trefeuntec. From his observation of the
+albatross Le Bris concluded that it was necessary to get some
+initial velocity in order to make the machine rise; consequently
+on a Sunday morning, with a breeze of about 12 miles an hour
+blowing down the road, he had his albatross placed on a cart and
+set off, with a peasant driver, against the wind. At the outset
+the machine was fastened to the cart by a rope running through
+the rails on which the machine rested, and secured by a slip
+knot on Le Bris's own wrist, so that only a jerk on his part was
+necessary to loosen the rope and set the machine free. On each
+side walked an assistant holding the wings, and when a turn of
+the road brought the machine full into the wind these men were
+instructed to let go, while the driver increased the pace from a
+walk to a trot. Le Bris, by pressure on the levers of the
+machine, raised the front edges of his wings slightly; they took
+the wind almost instantly to such an extent that the horse,
+relieved of a great part of the weight he had been drawing,
+turned his trot into a gallop. Le Bris gave the jerk of the
+rope that should have unfastened the slip knot, but a concealed
+nail on the cart caught the rope, so that it failed to run. The
+lift of the machine was such, however, that it relieved the
+horse of very nearly the weight of the cart and driver, as well
+as that of Le Bris and his machine, and in the end the rails of
+the cart gave way. Le Bris rose in the air, the machine
+maintaining perfect balance and rising to a height of nearly 300
+ft., the total length of the glide being upwards of an eighth of
+a mile. But at the last moment the rope which had originally
+fastened the machine to the cart got wound round the driver's
+body, so that this unfortunate dangled in the air under Le Bris
+and probably assisted in maintaining the balance of the
+artificial albatross. Le Bris, congratulating himself on his
+success, was prepared to enjoy just as long a time in the air as
+the pressure of the wind would permit, but the howls of the
+unfortunate driver at the end of the rope beneath him dispelled
+his dreams; by working his levers he altered the angle of the
+front wing edges so skilfully as to make a very successful
+landing indeed for the driver, who, entirely uninjured,
+disentangled himself from the rope as soon as he touched the
+ground, and ran off to retrieve his horse and cart.
+
+Apparently his release made a difference in the centre of
+gravity, for Le Bris could not manipulate his levers for further
+ascent; by skilful manipulation he retarded the descent
+sufficiently to escape injury to himself; the machine descended
+at an angle, so that one wing, striking the ground in front of
+the other, received a certain amount of damage.
+
+It may have been on account of the reluctance of this same or
+another driver that Le Bris chose a different method of
+launching himself in making a second experiment with his
+albatross. He chose the edge of a quarry which had been
+excavated in a depression of the ground; here he assembled his
+apparatus at the bottom of the quarry, and by means of a rope
+was hoisted to a height of nearly 100 ft. from the quarry
+bottom, this rope being attached to a mast which he had erected
+upon the edge of the depression in which the quarry was
+situated. Thus hoisted, the albatross was swung to face a
+strong breeze that blew inland, and Le Bris manipulated his
+levers to give the front edges of his wings a downward angle, so
+that only the top surfaces should take the wing pressure. Having
+got his balance, he obtained a lifting angle of incidence on the
+wings by means of his levers, and released the hook that secured
+the machine, gliding off over the quarry. On the glide he met
+with the inevitable upward current of air that the quarry and
+the depression in which it was situated caused; this current
+upset the balance of the machine and flung it to the bottom of
+the quarry, breaking it to fragments. Le Bris, apparently as
+intrepid as ingenious, gripped the mast from which his levers
+were worked, and, springing upward as the machine touched earth,
+escaped with no more damage than a broken leg. But for the
+rebound of the levers he would have escaped even this.
+
+The interest of these experiments is enhanced by the fact that
+Le Bris was a seafaring man who conducted them from love of the
+science which had fired his imagination, and in so doing
+exhausted his own small means. It was in 1855 that he made
+these initial attempts, and twelve years passed before his
+persistence was rewarded by a public subscription made at Brest
+for the purpose of enabling him to continue his experiments. He
+built a second albatross, and on the advice of his friends
+ballasted it for flight instead of travelling in it himself. It
+was not so successful as the first, probably owing to the lack
+of human control while in flight; on one of the trials a height
+of 150 ft. was attained, the glider being secured by a thin rope
+and held so as to face into the wind. A glide of nearly an
+eighth of a mile was made with the rope hanging slack, and, at
+the end of this distance, a rise in the ground modified the
+force of the wind, whereupon the machine settled down without
+damage. A further trial in a gusty wind resulted in the
+complete destruction of this second machine; Le Bris had no more
+funds, no further subscriptions were likely to materialise, and
+so the experiments of this first exponent of the art of gliding
+(save for Besnier and his kind) came to an end. They
+constituted a notable achievement, and undoubtedly Le Bris
+deserves a better place than has been accorded him in the ranks
+of the early experimenters.
+
+Contemporary with him was Charles Spencer, the first man to
+practice gliding in England. His apparatus consisted of a pair
+of wings with a total area of 30 sq. ft., to which a tail and
+body were attached. The weight of this apparatus was some 24
+lbs., and, launching himself on it from a small eminence, as was
+done later by Lilienthal in his experiments, the inventor made
+flights of over 120 feet. The glider in question was exhibited
+at the Aeronautical Exhibition of 1868.
+
+
+
+VI. THE AGE OF THE GIANTS
+
+Until the Wright Brothers definitely solved the problem of
+flight and virtually gave the aeroplane its present place in
+aeronautics, there were three definite schools of experiment.
+The first of these was that which sought to imitate nature by
+means of the ornithopter or flapping-wing machines directly
+imitative of bird flight; the second school was that which
+believed in the helicopter or lifting screw; the third and
+eventually successful school is that which followed up the
+principle enunciated by Cayley, that of opposing a plane surface
+to the resistance of the air by supplying suitable motive power
+to drive it at the requisite angle for support.
+
+Engineering problems generally go to prove that too close an
+imitation of nature in her forms of recipro-cating motion is not
+advantageous; it is impossible to copy the minutiae of a bird's
+wing effectively, and the bird in flight depends on the tiniest
+details of its feathers just as much as on the general principle
+on which the whole wing is constructed. Bird flight, however,
+has attracted many experimenters, including even Lilienthal;
+among others may be mentioned F. W. Brearey, who invented what
+he called the 'Pectoral cord,' which stored energy on each
+upstroke of the artificial wing; E. P. Frost; Major R. Moore,
+and especially Hureau de Villeneuve, a most enthusiastic student
+of this form of flight, who began his experiments about 1865,
+and altogether designed and made nearly 300 artificial birds.
+one of his later constructions was a machine in bird form with a
+wing span of about 50 ft.; the motive power for this was
+supplied by steam from a boiler which, being stationary on the
+ground, was connected by a length of hose to the machine. De
+Villeneuve, turning on steam for his first trial, obtained
+sufficient power to make the wings beat very forcibly; with the
+inventor on the machine the latter rose several feet into the
+air, whereupon de Villeneuve grew nervous and turned off the
+steam supply. The machine fell to the earth, breaking one of
+its wings, and it does not appear that de Villeneuve troubled to
+reconstruct it. This experiment remains as the greatest success
+yet achieved by any machine constructed on the ornithopter
+principle.
+
+It may be that, as forecasted by the prophet Wells, the
+flapping-wing machine will yet come to its own and compete with
+the aeroplane in efficiency. Against this, however, are the
+practical advantages of the rotary mechanism of the aeroplane
+propeller as compared with the movement of a bird's wing, which,
+according to Marey, moves in a figure of eight. The force
+derived from a propeller is of necessity continual, while it is
+equally obvious that that derived from a flapping movement is
+intermittent, and, in the recovery of a wing after completion of
+one stroke for the next, there is necessarily a certain
+cessation, if not loss, of power.
+
+The matter of experiment along any lines in connection with
+aviation is primarily one of hard cash. Throughout the whole
+history of flight up to the outbreak of the European war
+development has been handicapped on the score of finance, and,
+since the arrival of the aeroplane, both ornithopter and
+helicopter schools have been handicapped by this consideration.
+Thus serious study of the efficiency of wings in imitation of
+those of the living bird has not been carried to a point that
+might win success for this method of propulsion. Even Wilbur
+Wright studied this subject and propounded certain theories,
+while a later and possibly more scientific student, F. W.
+Lanchester, has also contributed empirical conclusions. Another
+and earlier student was Lawrence Hargrave, who made a
+wing-propelled model which achieved successful flight, and in
+1885 was exhibited before the Royal Society of New South Wales.
+Hargrave called the principle on which his propeller worked that
+of a 'Trochoided plane'; it was, in effect, similar to the
+feathering of an oar.
+
+Hargrave, to diverge for a brief while from the machine to the
+man, was one who, although he achieved nothing worthy of special
+remark, contributed a great deal of painstaking work to the
+science of flight. He made a series of experiments with
+man-lifting kites in addition to making a study of flapping-wing
+flight. It cannot be said that he set forth any new principle;
+his work was mainly imitative, but at the same time by
+developing ideas originated in great measure by others he helped
+toward the solution of the problem.
+
+Attempts at flight on the helicopter principle consist in the
+work of De la Landelle and others already mentioned. The
+possibility of flight by this method is modified by a very
+definite disadvantage of which lovers of the helicopter seem to
+take little account. It is always claimed for a machine of this
+type that it possesses great advantages both in rising and in
+landing, since, if it were effective, it would obviously be able
+to rise from and alight on any ground capable of containing its
+own bulk; a further advantage claimed is that the helicopter
+would be able to remain stationary in the air, maintaining
+itself in any position by the vertical lift of its propeller.
+
+These potential assets do not take into consideration the fact
+that efficiency is required not only in rising, landing, and
+remaining stationary in the air, but also in actual flight. It
+must be evident that if a certain amount of the motive force is
+used in maintaining the machine off the ground, that amount of
+force is missing from the total of horizontal driving power.
+Again, it is often assumed by advocates of this form of flight
+that the rapidity of climb of the helicopter would be far
+greater than that of the driven plane; this view overlooks the
+fact that the maintenance of aerodynamic support would claim the
+greater part of the engine-power; the rate of ascent would be
+governed by the amount of power that could be developed surplus
+to that required for maintenance.
+
+This is best explained by actual figures: assuming that a
+propeller 15 ft. in diameter is used, almost 50 horse-power
+would be required to get an upward lift of 1,000 pounds; this
+amount of horse-power would be continually absorbed in
+maintaining the machine in the air at any given level; for
+actual lift from one level to another at a speed of eleven feet
+per second a further 20 horse-power would be required, which
+means that 70 horse-power must be constantly provided for; this
+absorption of power in the mere maintenance of aero-dynamic
+support is a permanent drawback.
+
+The attraction of the helicopter lies, probably, in the ease
+with which flight is demonstrated by means of models constructed
+on this principle, but one truism with regard to the principles
+of flight is that the problems change remarkably, and often
+unexpectedly, with the size of the machine constructed for
+experiment. Berriman, in a brief but very interesting manual
+entitled Principles of Flight, assumed that 'there is a
+significant dimension of which the effective area is an
+expression of the second power, while the weight became an
+expression of the third power. Then once again we have the
+two-thirds power law militating against the successful
+construction of large helicopters, on the ground that the
+essential weight increases disproportionately fast to the
+effective area. From a consideration of the structural features
+of propellers it is evident that this particular relationship
+does not apply in practice, but it seems reasonable that some
+such governing factor should exist as an explanation of the
+apparent failure of all full-sized machines that have been
+constructed. Among models there is nothing more strikingly
+successful than the toy helicopter, in which the essential
+weight is so small compared with the effective area.'
+
+De la Landelle's work, already mentioned, was carried on a few
+years later by another Frenchman, Castel, who constructed a
+machine with eight propellers arranged in two fours and driven
+by a compressed air motor or engine. The model with which
+Castel experimented had a total weight of only 49 lbs.; it rose
+in the air and smashed itself by driving against a wall, and the
+inventor does not seem to have proceeded further. Contemporary
+with Castel was Professor Forlanini, whose design was for a
+machine very similar to de la Landelle's, with two superposed
+screws. This machine ranks as the second on the helicopter
+principle to achieve flight; it remained in the air for no less
+than the third of a minute in one of its trials.
+
+Later experimenters in this direction were Kress, a German;
+Professor Wellner, an Austrian; and W. R. Kimball, an American.
+Kress, like most Germans, set to the development of an idea
+which others had originated; he followed de la Landelle and
+Forlanini by fitting two superposed propellers revolving in
+opposite directions, and with this machine he achieved good
+results as regards horse-power to weight; Kimball, it appears,
+did not get beyond the rubber-driven model stage, and any
+success he may have achieved was modified by the theory
+enunciated by Berriman and quoted above.
+
+Comparing these two schools of thought, the helicopter and
+bird-flight schools, it appears that the latter has the greater
+chance of eventual success--that is, if either should ever come
+into competition with the aeroplane as effective means of
+flight. So far, the aeroplane holds the field, but the whole
+science of flight is so new and so full of unexpected
+developments that this is no reason for assuming that other
+means may not give equal effect, when money and brains are
+diverted from the driven plane to a closer imitation of natural
+flight.
+
+Reverting from non-success to success, from consideration of the
+two methods mentioned above to the direction in which practical
+flight has been achieved, it is to be noted that between the
+time of Le Bris, Stringfellow, and their contemporaries, and the
+nineties of last century, there was much plodding work carried
+out with little visible result, more especially so far as
+English students were concerned. Among the incidents of those
+years is one of the most pathetic tragedies in the whole history
+of aviation, that of Alphonse Penaud, who, in his thirty years
+of life, condensed the experience of his predecessors and
+combined it with his own genius to state in a published patent
+what the aeroplane of to-day should be. Consider the following
+abstract of Penaud's design as published in his patent of 1876,
+and comparison of this with the aeroplane that now exists will
+show very few divergences except for those forced on the
+inventor by the fact that the internal combustion engine had not
+then developed. The double surfaced planes were to be built
+with wooden ribs and arranged with a slight dihedral angle;
+there was to be a large aspect ratio and the wings were cambered
+as in Stringfellow's later models. Provision was made for
+warping the wings while in flight, and the trailing edges were
+so designed as to be capable of upward twist while the machine
+was in the air. The planes were to be placed above the car, and
+provision was even made for a glass wind-screen to give
+protection to the pilot during flight. Steering was to be
+accomplished by means of lateral and vertical planes forming a
+tail; these controlled by a single lever corresponding to the
+'joy stick' of the present day plane.
+
+Penaud conceived this machine as driven by two propellers;
+alternatively these could be driven by petrol or steam-fed
+motor, and the centre of gravity of the machine while in flight
+was in the front fifth of the wings. Penaud estimated from 20 to
+30 horse-power sufficient to drive this machine, weighing with
+pilot and passenger 2,600 lbs., through the air at a speed of 60
+miles an hour, with the wings set at an angle of incidence of
+two degrees. So complete was the design that it even included
+instruments, consisting of an aneroid, pressure indicator, an
+anemometer, a compass, and a level. There, with few
+alterations, is the aeroplane as we know it--and Penaud was
+twenty-seven when his patent was published.
+
+For three years longer he worked, experimenting with models,
+contributing essays and other valuable data to French papers on
+the subject of aeronautics. His gains were ill health, poverty,
+and neglect, and at the age of thirty a pistol shot put an end
+to what had promised to be one of the most brilliant careers in
+all the history of flight.
+
+Two years before the publication of Penaud's patent Thomas Moy
+experimented at the Crystal Palace with a twin-propelled
+aeroplane, steam driven, which seems to have failed mainly
+because the internal combustion engine had not yet come to give
+sufficient power for weight. Moy anchored his machine to a pole
+running on a prepared circular track; his engine weighed 80 lbs.
+and, developing only three horse-power, gave him a speed of
+12 miles an hour. He himself estimated that the machine would
+not rise until he could get a speed of 35 miles an hour, and his
+estimate was correct. Two six-bladed propellers were placed
+side by side between the two main planes of the machine, which
+was supported on a triangular wheeled undercarriage and steered
+by fairly conventional tail planes. Moy realised that he could
+not get sufficient power to achieve flight, but he went on
+experimenting in various directions, and left much data
+concerning his experiments which has not yet been deemed worthy
+of publication, but which still contains a mass of information
+that is of practical utility, embodying as it does a vast amount
+of painstaking work.
+
+Penaud and Moy were followed by Goupil, a Frenchman, who, in
+place of attempting to fit a motor to an aeroplane, experimented
+by making the wind his motor. He anchored his machine to the
+ground, allowing it two feet of lift, and merely waited for a
+wind to come along and lift it. The machine was stream lined,
+and the wings, curving as in the early German patterns of war
+aeroplanes, gave a total lifting surface of about 290 sq. ft.
+Anchored to the ground and facing a wind of 19 feet per second,
+Goupil's machine lifted its own weight and that of two men as
+well to the limit of its anchorage. Although this took place as
+late as 1883 the inventor went no further in practical work. He
+published a book, however, entitled La Locomotion Aerienne,
+which is still of great importance, more especially on the
+subject of inherent stability.
+
+In 1884 came the first patents of Horatio Phillips, whose work
+lay mainly in the direction of investigation into the curvature
+of plane surfaces, with a view to obtaining the greatest amount
+of support. Phillips was one of the first to treat the problem
+of curvature of planes as a matter for scientific experiment,
+and, great as has been the development of the driven plane in
+the 36 years that have passed since he began, there is still
+room for investigation into the subject which he studied so
+persistently and with such valuable result.
+
+At this point it may be noted that, with the solitary exception
+of Le Bris, practically every student of flight had so far set
+about constructing the means of launching humanity into the air
+without any attempt at ascertaining the nature and peculiarities
+of the sustaining medium. The attitude of experimenters in
+general might be compared to that of a man who from boyhood had
+grown up away from open water, and, at the first sight of an
+expanse of water, set to work to construct a boat with a vague
+idea that, since wood would float, only sufficient power was
+required to make him an efficient navigator. Accident, perhaps,
+in the shape of lack of means of procuring driving power, drove
+Le Bris to the form of experiment which he actually carried out;
+it remained for the later years of the nineteenth century to
+produce men who were content to ascertain the nature of the
+support the air would afford before attempting to drive
+themselves through it.
+
+Of the age in which these men lived and worked, giving their all
+in many cases to the science they loved, even to life itself, it
+may be said with truth that 'there were giants on the earth in
+those days,' as far as aeronautics is in question. It was an
+age of giants who lived and dared and died, venturing into
+uncharted space, knowing nothing of its dangers, giving, as a
+man gives to his mistress, without stint and for the joy of the
+giving. The science of to-day, compared with the glimmerings
+that were in that age of the giants, is a fixed and certain
+thing; the problems of to-day are minor problems, for the great
+major problem vanished in solution when the Wright Brothers made
+their first ascent. In that age of the giants was evolved the
+flying man, the new type in human species which found full
+expression and came to full development in the days of the war,
+achieving feats of daring and endurance which leave the
+commonplace landsman staggered at thought of that of which his
+fellows prove themselves capable. He is a new type, this flying
+man, a being of self-forgetfulness; of such was Lilienthal, of
+such was Pilcher; of such in later days were Farman, Bleriot,
+Hamel, Rolls, and their fellows; great names that will live for
+as long as man flies, adventurers equally with those of the
+spacious days of Elizabeth. To each of these came the call, and
+he worked and dared and passed, having, perhaps, advanced one
+little step in the long march that has led toward the perfecting
+of flight.
+
+It is not yet twenty years since man first flew, but into that
+twenty years have been compressed a century or so of progress,
+while, in the two decades that preceded it, was compressed still
+more. We have only to recall and recount the work of four men:
+Lilienthal, Langley, Pilcher, and Clement Ader to see the
+immense stride that was made between the time when Penaud pulled
+a trigger for the last time and the Wright Brothers first left
+the earth. Into those two decades was compressed the
+investigation that meant knowledge of the qualities of the air,
+together with the development of the one prime mover that
+rendered flight a possibility--the internal combustion engine.
+The coming and progress of this latter is a thing apart, to be
+detailed separately; for the present we are concerned with the
+evolution of the driven plane, and with it the evolution of that
+daring being, the flying man. The two are inseparable, for the
+men gave themselves to their art; the story of Lilienthal's life
+and death is the story of his work; the story of Pilcher's work
+is that of his life and death.
+
+Considering the flying man as he appeared in the war period,
+there entered into his composition a new element--patriotism--
+which brought about a modification of the type, or, perhaps, made
+it appear that certain men belonged to the type who in reality
+were commonplace mortals, animated, under normal conditions, by
+normal motives, but driven by the stress of the time to take rank
+with the last expression of human energy, the flying type.
+However that may be, what may be termed the mathematising of
+aeronautics has rendered the type itself evanescent; your pilot
+of to-day knows his craft, once he is trained, much in the manner
+that a driver of a motor-lorry knows his vehicle; design has been
+systematised, capabilities have been tabulated; camber, dihedral
+angle, aspect ratio, engine power, and plane surface, are
+business items of drawing office and machine shop; there is room
+for enterprise, for genius, and for skill; once and again there
+is room for daring, as in the first Atlantic flight. Yet that
+again was a thing of mathematical calculation and petrol storage,
+allied to a certain stark courage which may be found even in
+landsmen. For the ventures into the unknown, the limit of
+daring, the work for work's sake, with the almost certainty that
+the final reward was death, we must look back to the age of the
+giants, the age when flying was not a business, but romance.
+
+
+
+VII. LILIENTHAL AND PILCHER
+
+There was never a more enthusiastic and consistent student of
+the problems of flight than Otto Lilienthal, who was born in
+1848 at Anklam, Pomerania, and even from his early school-days
+dreamed and planned the conquest of the air. His practical
+experiments began when, at the age of thirteen, he and his
+brother Gustav made wings consisting of wooden framework covered
+with linen, which Otto attached to his arms, and then ran
+downhill flapping them. In consequence of possible derision on
+the part of other boys, Otto confined these experiments for the
+most part to moonlit nights, and gained from them some idea of
+the resistance offered by flat surfaces to the air. It was in
+1867 that the two brothers began really practical work,
+experimenting with wings which, from their design, indicate some
+knowledge of Besnier and the history of his gliding experiments;
+these wings the brothers fastened to their backs, moving them
+with their legs after the fashion of one attempting to swim.
+Before they had achieved any real success in gliding the
+Franco-German war came as an interruption; both brothers served
+in this campaign, resuming their experiments in 1871 at the
+conclusion of hostilities.
+
+The experiments made by the brothers previous to the war had
+convinced Otto that previous experimenters in gliding flight had
+failed through reliance on empirical conclusions or else through
+incomplete observation on their own part, mostly of bird flight.
+From 1871 onward Otto Lilenthal (Gustav's interest in the
+problem was not maintained as was his brother's) made what is
+probably the most detailed and accurate series of observations
+that has ever been made with regard to the properties of curved
+wing surfaces. So far as could be done, Lilienthal tabulated
+the amount of air resistance offered to a bird's wing,
+ascertaining that the curve is necessary to flight, as offering
+far more resistance than a flat surface. Cayley, and others,
+had already stated this, but to Lilienthal belongs the honour of
+being first to put the statement to effective proof--he made
+over 2,000 gliding flights between 1891 and the regrettable end
+of his experiments; his practical conclusions are still regarded
+as part of the accepted theory of students of flight. In 1889
+he published a work on the subject of gliding flight which
+stands as data for investigators, and, on the conclusions
+embodied in this work, he began to build his gliders and
+practice what he had preached, turning from experiment with
+models to wings that he could use.
+
+It was in the summer of 1891 that he built his first glider of
+rods of peeled willow, over which was stretched strong cotton
+fabric; with this, which had a supporting surface of about 100
+square feet, Otto Lilienthal launched himself in the air from a
+spring board, making glides which, at first of only a few feet,
+gradually lengthened. As his experience of the supporting
+qualities of the air progressed he gradually altered his designs
+until, when Pilcher visited him in the spring of 1895, he
+experimented with a glider, roughly made of peeled willow rods
+and cotton fabric, having an area of 150 square feet and
+weighing half a hundredweight. By this time Lilienthal had
+moved from his springboard to a conical artificial hill which he
+had had thrown up on level ground at Grosse Lichterfelde, near
+Berlin. This hill was made with earth taken from the
+excavations incurred in constructing a canal, and had a cave
+inside in which Lilienthal stored his machines. Pilcher, in his
+paper on 'Gliding,' [*] gives an excellent short summary of
+Lilienthal's experiments, from which the following extracts are
+taken:--
+
+[*] Aeronautical Classes, No. 5. Royal Aeronautical Society's
+publications.
+
+'At first Lilienthal used to experiment by jumping off a
+springboard with a good run. Then he took to practicing on some
+hills close to Berlin. In the summer of 1892 he built a
+flat-roofed hut on the summit of a hill, from the top of which
+he used to jump, trying, of course, to soar as far as possible
+before landing.... One of the great dangers with a soaring
+machine is losing forward speed, inclining the machine too much
+down in front, and coming down head first. Lilienthal was the
+first to introduce the system of handling a machine in the air
+merely by moving his weight about in the machine; he always
+rested only on his elbows or on his elbows and shoulders....
+
+'In 1892 a canal was being cut, close to where Lilienthal lived,
+in the suburbs of Berlin, and with the surplus earth Lilienthal
+had a special hill thrown up to fly from. The country round is
+as flat as the sea, and there is not a house or tree near it to
+make the wind unsteady, so this was an ideal practicing ground;
+for practicing on natural hills is generally rendered very
+difficult by shifty and gusty winds.... This hill is 50 feet
+high, and conical. Inside the hill there is a cave for the
+machines to be kept in.... When Lilienthal made a good flight he
+used to land 300 feet from the centre of the hill, having come
+down at an angle of 1 in 6; but his best flights have been at an
+angle of about 1 in 10.
+
+'If it is calm, one must run a few steps down the hill, holding
+the machine as far back on oneself as possible, when the air
+will gradually support one, and one slides off the hill into the
+air. If there is any wind, one should face it at starting; to
+try to start with a side wind is most unpleasant. It is
+possible after a great deal of practice to turn in the air, and
+fairly quickly. This is accomplished by throwing one's weight
+to one side, and thus lowering the machine on that side towards
+which one wants to turn. Birds do the same thing-- crows and
+gulls show it very clearly. Last year Lilienthal chiefly
+experimented with double-surfaced machines. These were very
+much like the old machines with awnings spread above them.
+
+'The object of making these double-surfaced machines was to get
+more surface without increasing the length and width of the
+machine. This, of course, it does, but I personally object to
+any machine in which the wing surface is high above the weight.
+I consider that it makes the machine very difficult to handle in
+bad weather, as a puff of wind striking the surface, high above
+one, has a great tendency to heel the machine over.
+
+'Herr Lilienthal kindly allowed me to sail down his hill in one
+of these double-surfaced machines last June. With the great
+facility afforded by his conical hill the machine was handy
+enough; but I am afraid I should not be able to manage one at
+all in the squally districts I have had to practice in over
+here.
+
+'Herr Lilienthal came to grief through deserting his old method
+of balancing. In order to control his tipping movements more
+rapidly he attached a line from his horizontal rudder to his
+head, so that when he moved his head forward it would lift the
+rudder and tip the machine up in front, and vice versa. He was
+practicing this on some natural hills outside Berlin, and he
+apparently got muddled with the two motions, and, in trying to
+regain speed after he had, through a lull in the wind, come to
+rest in the air, let the machine get too far down in front, came
+down head first and was killed.'
+
+Then in another passage Pilcher enunciates what is the true
+value of such experiments as Lilienthal--and, subsequently, he
+himself--made: 'The object of experimenting with soaring
+machines,' he says, 'is to enable one to have practice in
+starting and alighting and controlling a machine in the air.
+They cannot possibly float horizontally in the air for any
+length of time, but to keep going must necessarily lose in
+elevation. They are excellent schooling machines, and that is
+all they are meant to be, until power, in the shape of an engine
+working a screw propeller, or an engine working wings to drive
+the machine forward, is added; then a person who is used to
+soaring down a hill with a simple soaring machine will be able
+to fly with comparative safety. One can best compare them to
+bicycles having no cranks, but on which one could learn to
+balance by coming down an incline.'
+
+It was in 1895 that Lilienthal passed from experiment with the
+monoplane type of glider to the construction of a biplane glider
+which, according to his own account, gave better results than
+his previous machines. 'Six or seven metres velocity of wind,'
+he says, 'sufficed to enable the sailing surface of 18 square
+metres to carry me almost horizontally against the wind from the
+top of my hill without any starting jump. If the wind is
+stronger I allow myself to be simply lifted from the point of
+the hill and to sail slowly towards the wind. The direction of
+the flight has, with strong wind, a strong upwards tendency. I
+often reach positions in the air which are much higher than my
+starting point. At the climax of such a line of flight I
+sometimes come to a standstill for some time, so that I am
+enabled while floating to speak with the gentlemen who wish to
+photograph me, regarding the best position for the
+photographing.'
+
+Lilienthal's work did not end with simple gliding, though he did
+not live to achieve machine-driven flight. Having, as he
+considered, gained sufficient experience with gliders, he
+constructed a power-driven machine which weighed altogether
+about 90 lbs., and this was thoroughly tested. The extremities
+of its wings were made to flap, and the driving power was
+obtained from a cylinder of compressed carbonic acid gas,
+released through a hand-operated valve which, Lilienthal
+anticipated, would keep the machine in the air for four minutes.
+There were certain minor accidents to the mechanism, which
+delayed the trial flights, and on the day that Lilienthal had
+determined to make his trial he made a long gliding flight with
+a view to testing a new form of rudder that--as Pilcher
+relates--was worked by movements of his head. His death came
+about through the causes that Pilcher states; he fell from a
+height of 50 feet, breaking his spine, and the next day he died.
+
+It may be said that Lilienthal accomplished as much as any one
+of the great pioneers of flying. As brilliant in his
+conceptions as da Vinci had been in his, and as conscientious a
+worker as Borelli, he laid the foundations on which Pilcher,
+Chanute, and Professor Montgomery were able to build to such
+good purpose. His book on bird flight, published in 1889, with
+the authorship credited both to Otto and his brother Gustav, is
+regarded as epoch-making; his gliding experiments are no less
+entitled to this description.
+
+In England Lilienthal's work was carried on by Percy Sinclair
+Pilcher, who, born in 1866, completed six years' service in the
+British Navy by the time that he was nineteen, and then went
+through a course of engineering, subsequently joining Maxim in
+his experimental work. It was not until 1895 that he began
+to build the first of the series of gliders with which he earned
+his plane among the pioneers of flight. Probably the best
+account of Pilcher's work is that given in the Aeronautical
+Classics issued by the Royal Aeronautical Society, from which
+the following account of Pilcher's work is mainly abstracted.[*]
+
+[*] Aeronautical Classes, No. 5. Royal Aeronautical Society
+publications.
+
+The 'Bat,' as Pilcher named his first glider, was a monoplane
+which he completed before he paid his visit to Lilienthal in
+1895. Concerning this Pilcher stated that he purposely finished
+his own machine before going to see Lilienthal, so as to get the
+greatest advantage from any original ideas he might have; he was
+not able to make any trials with this machine, however, until
+after witnessing Lilienthal's experiments and making several
+glides in the biplane glider which Lilienthal constructed.
+
+
+The wings of the 'Bat' formed a pronounced dihedral angle; the
+tips being raised 4 feet above the body. The spars forming the
+entering edges of the wings crossed each other in the centre and
+were lashed to opposite sides of the triangle that served as a
+mast for the stay-wires that guyed the wings. The four ribs of
+each wing, enclosed in pockets in the fabric, radiated fanwise
+from the centre, and were each stayed by three steel piano-wires
+to the top of the triangular mast, and similarly to its base.
+These ribs were bolted down to the triangle at their roots, and
+could be easily folded back on to the body when the glider was
+not in use. A small fixed vertical surface was carried in the
+rear. The framework and ribs were made entirely of Riga pine;
+the surface fabric was nainsook. The area of the machine was
+150 square feet; its weight 45 lbs.; so that in flight, with
+Pilcher's weight of 145 lbs. added, it carried one and a half
+pounds to the square foot.
+
+Pilcher's first glides, which he carried out on a grass hill on
+the banks of the Clyde near Cardross, gave little result, owing
+to the exaggerated dihedral angle of the wings, and the absence
+of a horizontal tail. The 'Bat 'was consequently reconstructed
+with a horizontal tail plane added to the vertical one, and with
+the wings lowered so that the tips were only six inches above
+the level of the body. The machine now gave far better results;
+on the first glide into a head wind Pilcher rose to a height of
+twelve feet and remained in the the air for a third of a minute;
+in the second attempt a rope was used to tow the glider, which
+rose to twenty feet and did not come to earth again until nearly
+a minute had passed. With experience Pilcher was able to
+lengthen his glide and improve his balance, but the dropped wing
+tips made landing difficult, and there were many breakages.
+
+In consequence of this Pilcher built a second glider which he
+named the 'Beetle,' because, as he said, it looked like one. In
+this the square-cut wings formed almost a continuous plane,
+rigidly fixed to the central body, which consisted of a shaped
+girder. These wings were built up of five transverse bamboo
+spars, with two shaped ribs running from fore to aft of each
+wing, and were stayed overhead to a couple of masts. The tail,
+consisting of two discs placed crosswise (the horizontal one
+alone being movable), was carried high up in the rear. With the
+exception of the wing-spars, the whole framework was built of
+white pine. The wings in this machine were actually on a higher
+level than the operator's head; the centre of gravity was,
+consequently, very low, a fact which, according to Pilcher's own
+account, made the glider very difficult to handle. Moreover, the
+weight of the 'Beetle,' 80 lbs., was considerable; the body had
+been very solidly built to enable it to carry the engine which
+Pilcher was then contemplating; so that the glider carried some
+225 lbs. with its area of 170 square feet--too great a mass for
+a single man to handle with comfort.
+
+It was in the spring of 1896 that Pilcher built his third
+glider, the 'Gull,' with 300 square feet of area and a weight of
+55 lbs. The size of this machine rendered it unsuitable for
+experiment in any but very calm weather, and it incurred such
+damage when experiments were made in a breeze that Pilcher found
+it necessary to build a fourth, which he named the 'Hawk.' This
+machine was very soundly built, being constructed of bamboo,
+with the exception of the two main transverse beams. The wings
+were attached to two vertical masts, 7 feet high, and 8 feet
+apart, joined at their summits and their centres by two wooden
+beams. Each wing had nine bamboo ribs, radiating from its mast,
+which was situated at a distance of 2 feet 6 inches from the
+forward edge of the wing. Each rib was rigidly stayed at the
+top of the mast by three tie-wires, and by a similar number to
+the bottom of the mast, by which means the curve of each wing
+was maintained uniformly. The tail was formed of a triangular
+horizontal surface to which was affixed a triangular vertical
+surface, and was carried from the body on a high bamboo mast,
+which was also stayed from the masts by means of steel wires,
+but only on its upper surface, and it was the snapping of one of
+these guy wires which caused the collapse of the tail support
+and brought about the fatal end of Pilcher's experiments. In
+flight, Pilcher's head, shoulders, and the greater part of his
+chest projected above the wings. He took up his position by
+passing his head and shoulders through the top aperture formed
+between the two wings, and resting his forearms on the
+longitudinal body members. A very simple form of undercarriage,
+which took the weight off the glider on the ground, was fitted,
+consisting of two bamboo rods with wheels suspended on steel
+springs.
+
+Balance and steering were effected, apart from the high degree
+of inherent stability afforded by the tail, as in the case of
+Lilienthal's glider, by altering the position of the body. With
+this machine Pilcher made some twelve glides at Eynsford in Kent
+in the summer of 1896, and as he progressed he increased the
+length of his glides, and also handled the machine more easily,
+both in the air and in landing. He was occupied with plans for
+fitting an engine and propeller to the 'Hawk,' but, in these
+early days of the internal combustion engine, was unable to get
+one light enough for his purpose. There were rumours of an
+engine weighing 15 lbs. which gave 1 horse-power, and was
+reported to be in existence in America, but it could not be
+traced.
+
+In the spring of 1897 Pilcher took up his gliding experiments
+again, obtaining what was probably the best of his glides on
+June 19th, when he alighted after a perfectly balanced glide of
+over 250 yards in length, having crossed a valley at a
+considerable height. From his various experiments he concluded
+that once the machine was launched in the air an engine of, at
+most, 3 horse-power would suffice for the maintenance of
+horizontal flight, but he had to allow for the additional weight
+of the engine and propeller, and taking into account the
+comparative inefficiency of the propeller, he planned for an
+engine of 4 horse-power. Engine and propeller together were
+estimated at under 44 lbs. weight, the engine was to be fitted
+in front of the operator, and by means of an overhead shaft was
+to operate the propeller situated in rear of the wings. 1898
+went by while this engine was under construction. Then in 1899
+Pilcher became interested in Lawrence Hargrave's soaring kites,
+with which he carried out experiments during the summer of 1899.
+It is believed that he intended to incorporate a number of these
+kites in a new machine, a triplane, of which the fragments
+remaining are hardly sufficient to reconstitute the complete
+glider. This new machine was never given a trial. For on
+September 30th, 1899, at Stamford Hall, Market Harborough,
+Pilcher agreed to give a demonstration of gliding flight, but
+owing to the unfavourable weather he decided to postpone the
+trial of the new machine and to experiment with the 'Hawk,'
+which was intended to rise from a level field, towed by a line
+passing over a tackle drawn by two horses. At the first trial
+the machine rose easily, but the tow-line snapped when it was
+well clear of the ground, and the glider descended, weighed down
+through being sodden with rain. Pilcher resolved on a second
+trial, in which the glider again rose easily to about thirty
+feet, when one of the guy wires of the tail broke, and the tail
+collapsed; the machine fell to the ground, turning over, and
+Pilcher was unconscious when he was freed from the wreckage.
+
+Hopes were entertained of his recovery, but he died on Monday,
+October 2nd, 1899, aged only thirty-four. His work in the cause
+of flying lasted only four years, but in that time his actual
+accomplishments were sufficient to place his name beside that of
+Lilienthal, with whom he ranks as one of the greatest exponents
+of gliding flight.
+
+
+
+VIII. AMERICAN GLIDING EXPERIMENTS
+
+While Pilcher was carrying on Lilienthal's work in England, the
+great German had also a follower in America; one Octave Chanute,
+who, in one of the statements which he has left on the subject
+of his experiments acknowledges forty years' interest in the
+problem of flight, did more to develop the glider in America
+than--with the possible exception of Montgomery--any other man.
+Chanute had all the practicality of an American; he began his
+work, so far as actual gliding was concerned, with a full-sized
+glider of the Lilienthal type, just before Lilienthal was
+killed. In a rather rare monograph, entitled Experiments in
+Flying, Chanute states that he found the Lilienthal glider
+hazardous and decided to test the value of an idea of his own;
+in this he followed the same general method, but reversed the
+principle upon which Lilienthal had depended for maintaining his
+equilibrium in the air. Lilienthal had shifted the weight of
+his body, under immovable wings, as fast and as far as the
+sustaining pressure varied under his surfaces; this shifting was
+mainly done by moving the feet, as the actions required were
+small except when alighting. Chanute's idea was to have the
+operator remain seated in the machine in the air, and to
+intervene only to steer or to alight; moving mechanism was
+provided to adjust the wings automatically in order to restore
+balance when necessary.
+
+Chanute realised that experiments with models were of little
+use; in order to be fully instructive, these experiments should
+be made with a full-sized machine which carried its operator,
+for models seldom fly twice alike in the open air, and no
+relation can be gained from them of the divergent air currents
+which they have experienced. Chanute's idea was that any flying
+machine which might be constructed must be able to operate in a
+wind; hence the necessity for an operator to report upon what
+occurred in flight, and to acquire practical experience of the
+work of the human factor in imitation of bird flight. From this
+point of view he conducted his own experiments; it must be noted
+that he was over sixty years of age when he began, and, being no
+longer sufficiently young and active to perform any but short
+and insignificant glides, the courage of the man becomes all the
+more noteworthy; he set to work to evolve the state required by
+the problem of stability, and without any expectation of
+advancing to the construction of a flying machine which might be
+of commercial value. His main idea was the testing of devices
+to secure equilibrium; for this purpose he employed assistants
+to carry out the practical work, where he himself was unable to
+supply the necessary physical energy.
+
+Together with his assistants he found a suitable place for
+experiments among the sandhills on the shore of Lake Michigan,
+about thirty miles eastward from Chicago. Here a hill about
+ninety-five feet high was selected as a point from which
+Chanute's gliders could set off; in practice, it was found that
+the best observation was to be obtained from short glides at
+low speed, and, consequently, a hill which was only sixty-one
+feet above the shore of the lake was employed for the
+experimental work done by the party.
+
+In the years 1896 and 1897, with parties of from four to six
+persons, five full-sized gliders were tried out, and from these
+two distinct types were evolved: of these one was a machine
+consisting of five tiers of wings and a steering tail, and the
+other was of the biplane type; Chanute believed these to be
+safer than any other machine previously evolved, solving, as he
+states in his monograph, the problem of inherent equilibrium as
+fully as this could be done. Unfortunately, very few
+photographs were taken of the work in the first year, but one
+view of a multiple wing-glider survives, showing the machine in
+flight. In 1897 a series of photographs was taken exhibiting
+the consecutive phases of a single flight; this series of
+photographs represents the experience gained in a total of about
+one thousand glides, but the point of view was varied so as to
+exhibit the consecutive phases of one single flight.
+
+The experience gained is best told in Chanute's own words. 'The
+first thing,' he says, 'which we discovered practically was that
+the wind flowing up a hill-side is not a steadily-flowing
+current like that of a river. It comes as a rolling mass, full
+of tumultuous whirls and eddies, like those issuing from a
+chimney; and they strike the apparatus with constantly varying
+force and direction, sometimes withdrawing support when most
+needed. It has long been known, through instrumental
+observations, that the wind is constantly changing in force and
+direction; but it needed the experience of an operator afloat on
+a gliding machine to realise that this all proceeded from
+cyclonic action; so that more was learned in this respect in a
+week than had previously been acquired by several years of
+experiments with models. There was a pair of eagles, living in
+the top of a dead tree about two miles from our tent, that came
+almost daily to show us how such wind effects are overcome and
+utilised. The birds swept in circles overhead on pulseless
+wings, and rose high up in the air. Occasionally there was a
+side-rocking motion, as of a ship rolling at sea, and then the
+birds rocked back to an even keel; but although we thought the
+action was clearly automatic, and were willing to learn, our
+teachers were too far off to show us just how it was done, and
+we had to experiment for ourselves.'
+
+Chanute provided his multiple glider with a seat, but, since
+each glide only occupied between eight and twelve seconds, there
+was little possibility of the operator seating himself. With
+the multiple glider a pair of horizontal bars provided rest for
+the arms, and beyond these was a pair of vertical bars which the
+operator grasped with his hands; beyond this, the operator was
+in no way attached to the machine. He took, at the most, four
+running steps into the wind, which launched him in the air, and
+thereupon he sailed into the wind on a generally descending
+course. In the matter of descent Chanute observed the sparrow
+and decided to imitate it. 'When the latter,' he says,
+'approaches the street, he throws his body back, tilts his
+outspread wings nearly square to the course, and on the cushion
+of air thus encountered he stops his speed and drops lightly to
+the ground. So do all birds. We tried it with misgivings, but
+found it perfectly effective. The soft sand was a great
+advantage, and even when the experts were racing there was not a
+single sprained ankle.'
+
+With the multiple winged glider some two to three hundred glides
+were made without any accident either to the man or to the
+machine, and the action was found so effective, the principle so
+sound, that full plans were published for the benefit of any
+experimenters who might wish to improve on this apparatus. The
+American Aeronautical Annual for 1897 contains these plans;
+Chanute confessed that some movement on the part of the operator
+was still required to control the machine, but it was only a
+seventh or a sixth part of the movement required for control of
+the Lilienthal type.
+
+Chanute waxed enthusiastic over the possibilities of gliding,
+concerning which he remarks that 'There is no more delightful
+sensation than that of gliding through the air. All the
+faculties are on the alert, and the motion is astonishingly
+smooth and elastic. The machine responds instantly to the
+slightest movement of the operator; the air rushes by one's
+ears; the trees and bushes flit away underneath, and the landing
+comes all too quickly. Skating, sliding, and bicycling are not
+to be compared for a moment to aerial conveyance, in which,
+perhaps, zest is added by the spice of danger. For it must be
+distinctly understood that there is constant danger in such
+preliminary experiments. When this hazard has been eliminated
+by further evolution, gliding will become a most popular sport.'
+
+Later experiments proved that the biplane type of glider gave
+better results than the rather cumbrous model consisting of five
+tiers of planes. Longer and more numerous glides, to the number
+of seven to eight hundred, were obtained, the rate of descent
+being about one in six. The longest distance traversed was
+about 120 yards, but Chanute had dreams of starting from a hill
+about 200 feet high, which would have given him gliding flights
+of 1,200 feet. He remarked that 'In consequence of the speed
+gained by running, the initial stage of the flight is nearly
+horizontal, and it is thrilling to see the operator pass from
+thirty to forty feet overhead, steering his machine, undulating
+his course, and struggling with the wind-gusts which whistle
+through the guy wires. The automatic mechanism restores the
+angle of advance when compromised by variations of the breeze;
+but when these come from one side and tilt the apparatus, the
+weight has to be shifted to right the machine... these gusts
+sometimes raise the machine from ten to twenty feet vertically,
+and sometimes they strike the apparatus from above, causing it
+to descend suddenly. When sailing near the ground, these
+vicissitudes can be counteracted by movements of the body from
+three to four inches; but this has to be done instantly, for
+neither wings nor gravity will wait on meditation. At a height
+of three hundred or four hundred feet the regulating mechanism
+would probably take care of these wind-gusts, as it does, in
+fact, for their minor variations. The speed of the machine is
+generally about seventeen miles an hour over the ground, and
+from twenty-two to thirty miles an hour relative to the air.
+Constant effort was directed to keep down the velocity, which
+was at times fifty-two miles an hour. This is the purpose of
+the starting and gliding against the wind, which thus furnishes
+an initial velocity without there being undue speed at the
+landing. The highest wind we dared to experiment in blew at
+thirty-one miles an hour; when the wind was stronger, we waited
+and watched the birds.'
+
+Chanute details an amusing little incident which occurred in the
+course of experiment with the biplane glider. He says that 'We
+had taken one of the machines to the top of the hill, and loaded
+its lower wings with sand to hold it while we e went to lunch.
+A gull came strolling inland, and flapped full-winged to
+inspect. He swept several circles above the machine, stretched
+his neck, gave a squawk and went off. Presently he returned
+with eleven other gulls, and they seemed to hold a conclave
+about one hundred feet above the big new white bird which they
+had discovered on the sand. They circled round after round, and
+once in a while there was a series of loud peeps, like those of
+a rusty gate, as if in conference, with sudden flutterings, as
+if a terrifying suggestion had been made. The bolder birds
+occasionally swooped downwards to inspect the monster more
+closely; they twisted their heads around to bring first one eye
+and then the other to bear, and then they rose again. After
+some seven or eight minutes of this performance, they evidently
+concluded either that the stranger was too formidable to tackle,
+if alive, or that he was not good to eat, if dead, and they flew
+off to resume fishing, for the weak point about a bird is his
+stomach.'
+
+The gliders were found so stable, more especially the biplane
+form, that in the end Chanute permitted amateurs to make trials
+under guidance, and throughout the whole series of experiments
+not a single accident occurred. Chanute came to the conclusion
+that any young, quick, and handy man could master a gliding
+machine almost as soon as he could get the hang of a bicycle,
+although the penalty for any mistake would be much more severe.
+
+At the conclusion of his experiments he decided that neither the
+multiple plane nor the biplane type of glider was sufficiently
+perfected for the application of motive power. In spite of the
+amount of automatic stability that he had obtained he considered
+that there was yet more to be done, and he therefore advised
+that every possible method of securing stability and safety
+should be tested, first with models, and then with full-sized
+machines; designers, he said, should make a point of practice in
+order to make sure of the action, to proportion and adjust the
+parts of their machine, and to eliminate hidden defects.
+Experimental flight, he suggested, should be tried over water,
+in order to break any accidental fall; when a series of
+experiments had proved the stability of a glider, it would then
+be time to apply motive power. He admitted that such a process
+would be both costly and slow, but, he said, that 'it greatly
+diminished the chance of those accidents which bring a whole
+line of investigation into contempt.' He saw the flying machine
+as what it has, in fact, been; a child of evolution, carried on
+step by step by one investigator after another, through the
+stages of doubt and perplexity which lie behind the realm of
+possibility, beyond which is the present day stage of actual
+performance and promise of ultimate success and triumph over the
+earlier, more cumbrous, and slower forms of the transport that
+we know.
+
+Chanute's monograph, from which the foregoing notes have been
+comprised, was written soon after the conclusion of his series
+of experiments. He does not appear to have gone in for further
+practical work, but to have studied the subject from a
+theoretical view-point and with great attention to the work done
+by others. In a paper contributed in 1900 to the American
+Independent, he remarks that 'Flying machines promise better
+results as to speed, but yet will be of limited commercial
+application. They may carry mails and reach other inaccessible
+places, but they cannot compete with railroads as carriers of
+passengers or freight. They will not fill the heavens with
+commerce, abolish custom houses, or revolutionise the world, for
+they will be expensive for the loads which they can carry, and
+subject to too many weather contingencies. Success is, however,
+probable. Each experimenter has added something to previous
+knowledge which his successors can avail of. It now seems
+likely that two forms of flying machines, a sporting type and an
+exploration type, will be gradually evolved within one or two
+generations, but the evolution will be costly and slow, and must
+be carried on by well-equipped and thoroughly informed
+scientific men; for the casual inventor, who relies upon one or
+two happy inspirations, will have no chance of success
+whatever.'
+
+Follows Professor John J. Montgomery, who, in the true American
+spirit, describes his own experiments so well that nobody can
+possibly do it better. His account of his work was given first
+of all in the American Journal, Aeronautics, in January, 1909,
+and thence transcribed in the English paper of the same name in
+May, 1910, and that account is here copied word for word. It
+may, however, be noted first that as far back as 1860, when
+Montgomery was only a boy, he was attracted to the study of
+aeronautical problems, and in 1883 he built his first machine,
+which was of the flapping-wing ornithopter type, and which
+showed its designer, with only one experiment, that he must
+design some other form of machine if he wished to attain to a
+successful flight. Chanute details how, in 1884 and 1885
+Montgomery built three gliders, demonstrating the value of
+curved surfaces. With the first of these gliders Montgomery
+copied the wing of a seagull; with the second he proved that a
+flat surface was virtually useless, and with the third he
+pivoted his wings as in the Antoinette type of power-propelled
+aeroplane, proving to his own satisfaction that success lay in
+this direction. His own account of the gliding flights carried
+out under his direction is here set forth, being the best
+description of his work that can be obtained:--
+
+'When I commenced practical demonstration in my work with
+aeroplanes I had before me three points; first, equilibrium;
+second, complete control; and third, long continued or soaring
+flight. In starting I constructed and tested three sets of
+models, each in advance of the other in regard to the
+continuance of their soaring powers, but all equally perfect as
+to equilibrium and control. These models were tested by
+dropping them from a cable stretched between two mountain tops,
+with various loads, adjustments and positions. And it made no
+difference whether the models were dropped upside down or any
+other conceivable position, they always found their equilibrium
+immediately and glided safely to earth.
+
+'Then I constructed a large machine patterned after the first
+model, and with the assistance of three cowboy friends
+personally made a number of flights in the steep mountains near
+San Juan (a hundred miles distant). In making these flights I
+simply took the aeroplane and made a running jump. These tests
+were discontinued after I put my foot into a squirrel hole in
+landing and hurt my leg.
+
+'The following year I commenced the work on a larger scale, by
+engaging aeronauts to ride my aeroplane dropped from balloons.
+During this work I used five hot-air balloons and one gas
+balloon, five or six aeroplanes, three riders--Maloney, Wilkie,
+and Defolco--and had sixteen applicants on my list, and had a
+training station to prepare any when I needed them.
+
+'Exhibitions were given in Santa Cruz, San Jose, Santa Clara,
+Oaklands, and Sacramento. The flights that were made, instead
+of being haphazard affairs, were in the order of safety and
+development. In the first flight of an aeronaut the aeroplane
+was so arranged that the rider had little liberty of action,
+consequently he could make only a limited flight. In some of
+the first flights, the aeroplane did little more than settle in
+the air. But as the rider gained experience in each successive
+flight I changed the adjustments, giving him more liberty of
+action, so he could obtain longer flights and more varied
+movements in the flights. But in none of the flights did I have
+the adjustments so that the riders had full liberty, as I did
+not consider that they had the requisite knowledge and
+experience necessary for their safety; and hence, none of my
+aeroplanes were launched so arranged that the rider could make
+adjustments necessary for a full flight.
+
+'This line of action caused a good deal of trouble with
+aeronauts or riders, who had unbounded confidence and wanted to
+make long flights after the first few trials; but I found it
+necessary, as they seemed slow in comprehending the important
+elements and were willing to take risks. To give them the full
+knowledge in these matters I was formulating plans for a large
+starting station on the Mount Hamilton Range from which I could
+launch an aeroplane capable of carrying two, one of my aeronauts
+and myself, so I could teach him by demonstration. But the
+disasters consequent on the great earthquake completely stopped
+all my work on these lines. The flights that were given were
+only the first of the series with aeroplanes patterned after the
+first model. There were no aeroplanes constructed according to
+the two other models, as I had not given the full demonstration
+of the workings of the first, though some remarkable and
+startling work was done. On one occasion Maloney, in trying to
+make a very short turn in rapid flight, pressed very hard on the
+stirrup which gives a screw-shape to the wings, and made a side
+somersault. The course of the machine was very much like one
+turn of a corkscrew. After this movement the machine continued
+on its regular course. And afterwards Wilkie, not to be outdone
+by Maloney, told his friends he would do the same, and in a
+subsequent flight made two side somersaults, one in one
+direction and the other in an opposite, then made a deep dive
+and a long glide, and, when about three hundred feet in the air,
+brought the aeroplane to a sudden stop and settled to the earth.
+After these antics, I decreased the extent of the possible
+change in the form of wing-surface, so as to allow only straight
+sailing or only long curves in turning.
+
+'During my work I had a few carping critics that I silenced by
+this standing offer: If they would deposit a thousand dollars I
+would cover it on this proposition. I would fasten a 150 pound
+sack of sand in the rider's seat, make the necessary
+adjustments, and send up an aeroplane upside down with a
+balloon, the aeroplane to be liberated by a time fuse. If the
+aeroplane did not immediately right itself, make a flight, and
+come safely to the ground, the money was theirs.
+
+'Now a word in regard to the fatal accident. The circumstances
+are these: The ascension was given to entertain a military
+company in which were many of Maloney's friends, and he had told
+them he would give the most sensational flight they ever heard
+of. As the balloon was rising with the aeroplane, a guy rope
+dropping switched around the right wing and broke the tower that
+braced the two rear wings and which also gave control over the
+tail. We shouted Maloney that the machine was broken, but he
+probably did not hear us, as he was at the same time saying,
+"Hurrah for Montgomery's airship," and as the break was behind
+him, he may not have detected it. Now did he know of the
+breakage or not, and if he knew of it did he take a risk so as
+not to disappoint his friends? At all events, when the machine
+started on its flight the rear wings commenced to flap (thus
+indicating they were loose), the machine turned on its back, and
+settled a little faster than a parachute. When we reached
+Maloney he was unconscious and lived only thirty minutes. The
+only mark of any kind on him was a scratch from a wire on the
+side of his neck. The six attending physicians were puzzled at
+the cause of his death. This is remarkable for a vertical
+descent of over 2,000 feet.'
+
+The flights were brought to an end by the San Francisco
+earthquake in April, 1906, which, Montgomery states, 'Wrought
+such a disaster that I had to turn my attention to other
+subjects and let the aeroplane rest for a time.' Montgomery
+resumed experiments in 1911 in California, and in October of
+that year an accident brought his work to an end. The report in
+the American Aeronautics says that 'a little whirlwind caught
+the machine and dashed it head on to the ground; Professor
+Montgomery landed on his head and right hip. He did not believe
+himself seriously hurt, and talked with his year-old bride in
+the tent. He complained of pains in his back, and continued to
+grow worse until he died.'
+
+
+
+IX. NOT PROVEN
+
+The early history of flying, like that of most sciences, is
+replete with tragedies; in addition to these it contains one
+mystery concerning Clement Ader, who was well known among
+European pioneers in the development of the telephone, and first
+turned his attention to the problems of mechanical flight in
+1872. At the outset he favoured the ornithopter principle,
+constructing a machine in the form of a bird with a wing-spread
+of twenty-six feet; this, according to Ader's conception, was to
+fly through the efforts of the operator. The result of such an
+attempt was past question and naturally the machine never left
+the ground.
+
+A pause of nineteen years ensued, and then in 1886 Ader turned
+his mind to the development of the aeroplane, constructing a
+machine of bat-like form with a wingspread of about forty-six
+feet, a weight of eleven hundred pounds, and a steam-power plant
+of between twenty and thirty horse-power driving a four-bladed
+tractor screw. On October 9th, 1890, the first trials of this
+machine were made, and it was alleged to have flown a distance
+of one hundred and sixty-four feet. Whatever truth there may be
+in the allegation, the machine was wrecked through deficient
+equilibrium at the end of the trial. Ader repeated the
+construction, and on October 14th, 1897, tried out his third
+machine at the military establishment at Satory in the presence
+of the French military authorities, on a circular track
+specially prepared for the experiment. Ader and his friends
+alleged that a flight of nearly a thousand feet was made; again
+the machine was wrecked at the end of the trial, and there
+Ader's practical work may be said to have ended, since no more
+funds were forthcoming for the subsidy of experiments.
+
+There is the bald narrative, but it is worthy of some
+amplification. If Ader actually did what he claimed, then the
+position which the Wright Brothers hold as first to navigate the
+air in a power-driven plane is nullified. Although at this time
+of writing it is not a quarter of a century since Ader's
+experiment in the presence of witnesses competent to judge on
+his accomplishment, there is no proof either way, and whether he
+was or was not the first man to fly remains a mystery in the
+story of the conquest of the air.
+
+The full story of Ader's work reveals a persistence and
+determination to solve the problem that faced him which was
+equal to that of Lilienthal. He began by penetrating into the
+interior of Algeria after having disguised himself as an Arab,
+and there he spent some months in studying flight as practiced
+by the vultures of the district. Returning to France in 1886 he
+began to construct the 'Eole,' modelling it, not on the vulture,
+but in the shape of a bat. Like the Lilienthal and Pilcher
+gliders this machine was fitted with wings which could be
+folded; the first flight made, as already noted, on October 9th,
+1890, took place in the grounds of the chateau d'Amainvilliers,
+near Bretz; two fellow-enthusiasts named Espinosa and Vallier
+stated that a flight was actually made; no statement in the
+history of aeronautics has been subject of so much question, and
+the claim remains unproved.
+
+It was in September of 1891 that Ader, by permission of the
+Minister of War, moved the 'Eole' to the military establishment
+at Satory for the purpose of further trial. By this time,
+whether he had flown or not, his nineteen years of work in
+connection with the problems attendant on mechanical flight had
+attracted so much attention that henceforth his work was subject
+to the approval of the military authorities, for already it was
+recognised that an efficient flying machine would confer an
+inestimable advantage on the power that possessed it in the
+event of war. At Satory the 'Eole' was alleged to have made a
+flight of 109 yards, or, according to another account, 164 feet,
+as stated above, in the trial in which the machine wrecked
+itself through colliding with some carts which had been placed
+near the track--the root cause of this accident, however, was
+given as deficient equilibrium.
+
+Whatever the sceptics may say, there is reason for belief in the
+accomplishment of actual flight by Ader with his first machine
+in the fact that, after the inevitable official delay of some
+months, the French War Ministry granted funds for further
+experiment. Ader named his second machine, which he began to
+build in May, 1892, the 'Avion,' and--an honour which he well
+deserve--that name remains in French aeronautics as descriptive
+of the power-driven aeroplane up to this day.
+
+This second machine, however, was not a success, and it was not
+until 1897 that the second 'Avion,' which was the third
+power-driven aeroplane of Ader's construction, was ready for
+trial. This was fitted with two steam motors of twenty
+horse-power each, driving two four-bladed propellers; the wings
+warped automatically: that is to say, if it were necessary to
+raise the trailing edge of one wing on the turn, the trailing
+edge of the opposite wing was also lowered by the same movement;
+an under-carriage was also fitted, the machine running on three
+small wheels, and levers controlled by the feet of the aviator
+actuated the movement of the tail planes.
+
+On October the 12th, 1897, the first trials of this 'Avion' were
+made in the presence of General Mensier, who admitted that the
+machine made several hops above the ground, but did not consider
+the performance as one of actual flight. The result was so
+encouraging, in spite of the partial failure, that, two days
+later, General Mensier, accompanied by General Grillon, a
+certain Lieutenant Binet, and two civilians named respectively
+Sarrau and Leaute, attended for the purpose of giving the
+machine an official trial, over which the great controversy
+regarding Ader's success or otherwise may be said to have
+arisen.
+
+We will take first Ader's own statement as set out in a very
+competent account of his work published in Paris in 1910. Here
+are Ader's own words: 'After some turns of the propellers, and
+after travelling a few metres, we started off at a lively pace;
+the pressure-gauge registered about seven atmospheres; almost
+immediately the vibrations of the rear wheel ceased; a little
+later we only experienced those of the front wheels at
+intervals. 'Unhappily, the wind became suddenly strong, and we
+had some difficulty in keeping the "Avion" on the white line.
+We increased the pressure to between eight and nine atmospheres,
+and immediately the speed increased considerably, and the
+vibrations of the wheels were no longer sensible; we were at
+that moment at the point marked G in the sketch; the "Avion"
+then found itself freely supported by its wings; under the
+impulse of the wind it continually tended to go outside the
+(prepared) area to the right, in spite of the action of the
+rudder. On reaching the point V it found itself in a very
+critical position; the wind blew strongly and across the
+direction of the white line which it ought to follow; the
+machine then, although still going forward, drifted quickly out
+of the area; we immediately put over the rudder to the left as
+far as it would go; at the same time increasing the pressure
+still more, in order to try to regain the course. The "Avion"
+obeyed, recovered a little, and remained for some seconds headed
+towards its intended course, but it could not struggle against
+the wind; instead of going back, on the contrary it drifted
+farther and farther away. And ill-luck had it that the drift
+took the direction towards part of the School of Musketry, which
+was guarded by posts and barriers. Frightened at the prospect
+of breaking ourselves against these obstacles, surprised at
+seeing the earth getting farther away from under the "Avion,"
+and very much impressed by seeing it rushing sideways at a
+sickening speed, instinctively we stopped everything. What
+passed through our thoughts at this moment which threatened a
+tragic turn would be difficult to set down. All at once came a
+great shock, splintering, a heavy concussion: we had landed.'
+
+Thus speaks the inventor; the cold official mind gives out a
+different account, crediting the 'Avion' with merely a few hops,
+and to-day, among those who consider the problem at all, there
+is a little group which persists in asserting that to Ader
+belongs the credit of the first power-driven flight, while a
+larger group is equally persistent in stating that, save for a
+few ineffectual hops, all three wheels of the machine never left
+the ground. It is past question that the 'Avion' was capable of
+power-driven flight; whether it achieved it or no remains an
+unsettled problem.
+
+Ader's work is negative proof of the value of such experiments
+as Lilienthal, Pilcher, Chanute, and Montgomery conducted; these
+four set to work to master the eccentricities of the air before
+attempting to use it as a supporting medium for continuous
+flight under power; Ader attacked the problem from the other
+end; like many other experimenters he regarded the air as a
+stable fluid capable of giving such support to his machine as
+still water might give to a fish, and he reckoned that he had
+only to produce the machine in order to achieve flight. The
+wrecked 'Avion' and the refusal of the French War Ministry to
+grant any more funds for further experiment are sufficient
+evidence of the need for working along the lines taken by the
+pioneers of gliding rather than on those which Ader himself
+adopted.
+
+Let it not be thought that in this comment there is any desire
+to derogate from the position which Ader should occupy in any
+study of the pioneers of aeronautical enterprise. If he failed,
+he failed magnificently, and if he succeeded, then the student
+of aeronautics does him an injustice and confers on the Brothers
+Wright an honour which, in spite of the value of their work,
+they do not deserve. There was one earlier than Ader, Alphonse
+Penaud, who, in the face of a lesser disappointment than that
+which Ader must have felt in gazing on the wreckage of his
+machine, committed suicide; Ader himself, rendered unable to do
+more, remained content with his achievement, and with the
+knowledge that he had played a good part in the long search
+which must eventually end in triumph. Whatever the world might
+say, he himself was certain that he had achieved flight. This,
+for him, was perforce enough.
+
+Before turning to consideration of the work accomplished by the
+Brothers Wright, and their proved conquest of the air, it is
+necessary first to sketch as briefly as may be the experimental
+work of Sir (then Mr) Hiram Maxim, who, in his book, Artificial
+and Natural Flight, has given a fairly complete account of his
+various experiments. He began by experimenting with models,
+with screw-propelled planes so attached to a horizontal movable
+arm that when the screw was set in motion the plane described a
+circle round a central point, and, eventually, he built a giant
+aeroplane having a total supporting area of 1,500 square feet,
+and a wing-span of fifty feet. It has been thought advisable to
+give a fairly full description of the power plant used to the
+propulsion of this machine in the section devoted to engine
+development. The aeroplane, as Maxim describes it, had five
+long and narrow planes projecting from each side, and a main or
+central plane of pterygoid aspect. A fore and aft rudder was
+provided, and had all the auxiliary planes been put in position
+for experimental work a total lifting surface of 6,000 square
+feet could have been obtained. Maxim, however, did not use more
+than 4,000 square feet of lifting surface even in his later
+experiments; with this he judged the machine capable of lifting
+slightly under 8,000 lbs. weight, made up of 600 lbs. water in
+the boiler and tank, a crew of three men, a supply of naphtha
+fuel, and the weight of the machine itself.
+
+Maxim's intention was, before attempting free flight, to get as
+much data as possible regarding the conditions under which
+flight must be obtained, by what is known in these days as
+'taxi-ing'--that is, running the propellers at sufficient speed
+to drive the machine along the ground without actually mounting
+into the air. He knew that he had an immense lifting surface
+and a tremendous amount of power in his engine even when the
+total weight of the experimental plant was taken into
+consideration, and thus he set about to devise some means of
+keeping the machine on the nine foot gauge rail track which had
+been constructed for the trials. At the outset he had a set of
+very heavy cast-iron wheels made on which to mount the machine,
+the total weight of wheels, axles, and connections being about
+one and a half tons. These were so constructed that the light
+flanged wheels which supported the machine on the steel rails
+could be lifted six inches above the track, still leaving the
+heavy wheels on the rails for guidance of the machine. 'This
+arrangement,' Maxim states, 'was tried on several occasions, the
+machine being run fast enough to lift the forward end off the
+track. However, I found considerable difficulty in starting and
+stopping quickly on account of the great weight, and the amount
+of energy necessary to set such heavy wheels spinning at a high
+velocity. The last experiment with these wheels was made when a
+head wind was blowing at the rate of about ten miles an hour.
+It was rather unsteady, and when the machine was running at its
+greatest velocity, a sudden gust lifted not only the front end,
+but also the heavy front wheels completely off the track, and
+the machine falling on soft ground was soon blown over by the
+wind.'
+
+Consequently, a safety track was provided, consisting of squared
+pine logs, three inches by nine inches, placed about two feet
+above the steel way and having a thirty-foot gauge. Four extra
+wheels were fitted to the machine on outriggers and so adjusted
+that, if the machine should lift one inch clear of the steel
+rails, the wheels at the ends of the outriggers would engage the
+under side of the pine trackway.
+
+The first fully loaded run was made in a dead calm with 150 lbs.
+steam pressure to the square inch, and there was no sign of the
+wheels leaving the steel track. On a second run, with 230 lbs.
+steam pressure the machine seemed to alternate between adherence
+to the lower and upper tracks, as many as three of the outrigger
+wheels engaging at the same time, and the weight on the steel
+rails being reduced practically to nothing. In preparation for
+a third run, in which it was intended to use full power, a
+dynamometer was attached to the machine and the engines were
+started at 200 lbs. pressure, which was gradually increased to
+310 lbs per square inch. The incline of the track, added to the
+reading of the dynamometer, showed a total screw thrust of 2,164
+lbs. After the dynamometer test had been completed, and
+everything had been made ready for trial in motion, careful
+observers were stationed on each side of the track, and the
+order was given to release the machine. What follows is best
+told in Maxim's own words:--
+
+'The enormous screw-thrust started the engine so quickly that it
+nearly threw the engineers off their feet, and the machine
+bounded over the track at a great rate. Upon noticing a slight
+diminution in the steam pressure, I turned on more gas, when
+almost instantly the steam commenced to blow a steady blast from
+the small safety valve, showing that the pressure was at least
+320 lbs. in the pipes supplying the engines with steam. Before
+starting on this run, the wheels that were to engage the upper
+track were painted, and it was the duty of one of my assistants
+to observe these wheels during the run, while another assistant
+watched the pressure gauges and dynagraphs. The first part of
+the track was up a slight incline, but the machine was lifted
+clear of the lower rails and all of the top wheels were fully
+engaged on the upper track when about 600 feet had been covered.
+The speed rapidly increased, and when 900 feet had been covered,
+one of the rear axle trees, which were of two-inch steel tubing,
+doubled up and set the rear end of the machine completely free.
+The pencils ran completely across the cylinders of the
+dynagraphs and caught on the underneath end. The rear end of
+the machine being set free, raised considerably above the track
+and swayed. At about 1,000 feet, the left forward wheel also
+got clear of the upper track, and shortly afterwards the right
+forward wheel tore up about 100 feet of the upper track. Steam
+was at once shut off and the machine sank directly to the earth,
+embedding the wheels in the soft turf without leaving any other
+marks, showing most conclusively that the machine was completely
+suspended in the air before it settled to the earth. In this
+accident, one of the pine timbers forming the upper track went
+completely through the lower framework of the machine and broke
+a number of the tubes, but no damage was done to the machinery
+except a slight injury to one of the screws.'
+
+It is a pity that the multifarious directions in which Maxim
+turned his energies did not include further development of the
+aeroplane, for it seems fairly certain that he was as near
+solution of the problem as Ader himself, and, but for the
+holding-down outer track, which was really the cause of his
+accident, his machine would certainly have achieved free flight,
+though whether it would have risen, flown and alighted, without
+accident, is matter for conjecture.
+
+The difference between experiments with models and with
+full-sized machines is emphasised by Maxim's statement to the
+effect that with a small apparatus for ascertaining the power
+required for artificial flight, an angle of incidence of one in
+fourteen was most advantageous, while with a large machine he
+found it best to increase his angle to one in eight in order to
+get the maximum lifting effect on a short run at a moderate
+speed. He computed the total lifting effect in the experiments
+which led to the accident as not less than 10,000 lbs., in which
+is proof that only his rail system prevented free flight.
+
+
+
+X. SAMUEL PIERPOINT LANGLEY
+
+Langley was an old man when he began the study of aeronautics,
+or, as he himself might have expressed it, the study of
+aerodromics, since he persisted in calling the series of
+machines he built 'Aerodromes,' a word now used only to denote
+areas devoted to use as landing spaces for flying machines; the
+Wright Brothers, on the other hand, had the great gift of youth
+to aid them in their work. Even so it was a great race between
+Langley, aided by Charles Manly, and Wilbur and Orville Wright,
+and only the persistent ill-luck which dogged Langley from the
+start to the finish of his experiments gave victory to his
+rivals. It has been proved conclusively in these later years of
+accomplished flight that the machine which Langley launched on
+the Potomac River in October of 1903 was fully capable of
+sustained flight, and only the accidents incurred in launching
+prevented its pilot from being the first man to navigate the air
+successfully in a power-driven machine.
+
+The best account of Langley's work is that diffused throughout a
+weighty tome issued by the Smithsonian Institution, entitled the
+Langley Memoir on Mechanical Flight, of which about one-third
+was written by Langley himself, the remainder being compiled by
+Charles M. Manly, the engineer responsible for the construction
+of the first radial aero-engine, and chief assistant to Langley
+in his experiments. To give a twentieth of the contents of this
+volume in the present short account of the development of
+mechanical flight would far exceed the amount of space that can
+be devoted even to so eminent a man in aeronautics as S. P.
+Langley, who, apart from his achievement in the construction of
+a power-driven aeroplane really capable of flight, was a
+scientist of no mean order, and who brought to the study of
+aeronautics the skill of the trained investigator allied to the
+inventive resource of the genius.
+
+That genius exemplified the antique saw regarding the infinite
+capacity for taking pains, for the Langley Memoir shows that as
+early as 1891 Langley had completed a set of experiments,
+lasting through years, which proved it possible to construct
+machines giving such a velocity to inclined surfaces that bodies
+indefinitely heavier than air could be sustained upon it and
+propelled through it at high speed. For full account (very
+full) of these experiments, and of a later series leading up to
+the construction of a series of 'model aerodromes' capable of
+flight under power, it is necessary to turn to the bulky memoir
+of Smithsonian origin.
+
+The account of these experiments as given by Langley himself
+reveals the humility of the true investigator. Concerning them,
+Langley remarks that, 'Everything here has been done with a view
+to putting a trial aerodrome successfully in flight within a few
+years, and thus giving an early demonstration of the only kind
+which is conclusive in the eyes of the scientific man, as well
+as of the general public--a demonstration that mechanical flight
+is possible--by actually flying. All that has been done has
+been with an eye principally to this immediate result, and all
+the experiments given in this book are to be considered only as
+approximations to exact truth. All were made with a view, not
+to some remote future, but to an arrival within the compass of a
+few years at some result in actual flight that could not be
+gainsaid or mistaken.'
+
+With a series of over thirty rubber-driven models Langley
+demonstrated the practicability of opposing curved surfaces to
+the resistance of the air in such a way as to achieve flight, in
+the early nineties of last century; he then set about finding
+the motive power which should permit of the construction of
+larger machines, up to man-carrying size. The internal
+combustion engine was then an unknown quantity, and he had to
+turn to steam, finally, as the propulsive energy for his power
+plant. The chief problem which faced him was that of the
+relative weight and power of his engine; he harked back to the
+Stringfellow engine of 1868, which in 1889 came into the
+possession of the Smithsonian Institution as a historical
+curiosity. Rightly or wrongly Langley concluded on examination
+that this engine never had developed and never could develop
+more than a tenth of the power attributed to it; consequently he
+abandoned the idea of copying the Stringfellow design and set
+about making his own engine.
+
+How he overcame the various difficulties that faced him and
+constructed a steam-engine capable of the task allotted to it
+forms a story in itself, too long for recital here. His first
+power-driven aerodrome of model size was begun in November of
+1891, the scale of construction being decided with the idea that
+it should be large enough to carry an automatic steering
+apparatus which would render the machine capable of maintaining
+a long and steady flight. The actual weight of the first model
+far exceeded the theoretical estimate, and Langley found that a
+constant increase of weight under the exigencies of construction
+was a feature which could never be altogether eliminated. The
+machine was made principally of steel, the sustaining surfaces
+being composed of silk stretched from a steel tube with wooden
+attachments. The first engines were the oscillating type, but
+were found deficient in power. This led to the construction of
+single-acting inverted oscillating engines with high and low
+pressure cylinders, and with admission and exhaust ports to
+avoid the complication and weight of eccentric and valves.
+Boiler and furnace had to be specially designed; an analysis of
+sustaining surfaces and the settlement of equilibrium while in
+flight had to be overcome, and then it was possible to set about
+the construction of the series of model aerodromes and make test
+of their 'lift.'
+
+By the time Langley had advanced sufficiently far to consider it
+possible to conduct experiments in the open air, even with these
+models, he had got to his fifth aerodrome, and to the year 1894.
+Certain tests resulted in failure, which in turn resulted in
+further modifications of design, mainly of the engines. By
+February of 1895 Langley reported that under favourable
+conditions a lift of nearly sixty per cent of the flying weight
+was secured, but although this was much more than was required
+for flight, it was decided to postpone trials until two machines
+were ready for the test. May, 1896, came before actual trials
+were made, when one machine proved successful and another, a
+later design, failed. The difficulty with these models was that
+of securing a correct angle for launching; Langley records how,
+on launching one machine, it rose so rapidly that it attained an
+angle of sixty degrees and then did a tail slide into the water
+with its engines working at full speed, after advancing nearly
+forty feet and remaining in the air for about three seconds.
+Here, Langley found that he had to obtain greater rigidity in
+his wings, owing to the distortion of the form of wing under
+pressure, and how he overcame this difficulty constitutes yet
+another story too long for the telling here.
+
+Field trials were first attempted in 1893, and Langley blamed
+his launching apparatus for their total failure. There was a
+brief, but at the same time practical, success in model flight
+in 1894, extending to between six and seven seconds, but this
+only proved the need for strengthening of the wing. In 1895
+there was practically no advance toward the solution of the
+problem, but the flights of May 6th and November 28th, 1896,
+were notably successful. A diagram given in Langley's memoir
+shows the track covered by the aerodrome on these two flights;
+in the first of them the machine made three complete circles,
+covering a distance of 3,200 feet; in the second, that of
+November 28th, the distance covered was 4,200 feet, or about
+three-quarters of a mile, at a speed of about thirty miles an
+hour.
+
+These achievements meant a good deal; they proved mechanically
+propelled flight possible. The difference between them and such
+experiments as were conducted by Clement Ader, Maxim, and
+others, lay principally in the fact that these latter either did
+or did not succeed in rising into the air once, and then, either
+willingly or by compulsion, gave up the quest, while Langley
+repeated his experiments and thus attained to actual proof of
+the possibilities of flight. Like these others, however, he
+decided in 1896 that he would not undertake the construction of
+a large man-carrying machine. In addition to a multitude of
+actual duties, which left him practically no time available for
+original research, he had as an adverse factor fully ten years
+of disheartening difficulties in connection with his model
+machines. It was President McKinley who, by requesting Langley
+to undertake the construction and test of a machine which might
+finally lead to the development of a flying machine capable of
+being used in warfare, egged him on to his final experiment.
+Langley's acceptance of the offer to construct such a machine is
+contained in a letter addressed from the Smithsonian Institution
+on December 12th, 1898, to the Board of Ordnance and
+Fortification of the United States War Department; this letter
+is of such interest as to render it worthy of reproduction:--
+
+'Gentlemen,--In response to your invitation I repeat what I had
+the honour to say to the Board--that I am willing, with the
+consent of the Regents of this Institution, to undertake for the
+Government the further investigation of the subject of the
+construction of a flying machine on a scale capable of carrying
+a man, the investigation to include the construction,
+development and test of such a machine under conditions left as
+far as practicable in my discretion, it being understood that my
+services are given to the Government in such time as may not be
+occupied by the business of the Institution, and without charge.
+
+'I have reason to believe that the cost of the construction will
+come within the sum of $50,000.00, and that not more than
+one-half of that will be called for in the coming year.
+
+'I entirely agree with what I understand to be the wish of the
+Board that privacy be observed with regard to the work, and only
+when it reaches a successful completion shall I wish to make
+public the fact of its success.
+
+'I attach to this a memorandum of my understanding of some
+points of detail in order to be sure that it is also the
+understanding of the Board, and I am, gentlemen, with much
+respect, your obedient servant, S. P. Langley.'
+
+One of the chief problems in connection with the construction of
+a full-sized apparatus was that of the construction of an
+engine, for it was realised from the first that a steam power
+plant for a full-sized machine could only be constructed in such
+a way as to make it a constant menace to the machine which it
+was to propel. By this time (1898) the internal combustion
+engine had so far advanced as to convince Langley that it formed
+the best power plant available. A contract was made for the
+delivery of a twelve horse-power engine to weigh not more than a
+hundred pounds, but this contract was never completed, and it
+fell to Charles M. Manly to design the five-cylinder radial
+engine, of which a brief account is included in the section of
+this work devoted to aero engines, as the power plant for the
+Langley machine.
+
+The history of the years 1899 to 1903 in the Langley series of
+experiments contains a multitude of detail far beyond the scope
+of this present study, and of interest mainly to the designer.
+There were frames, engines, and propellers, to be considered,
+worked out, and constructed. We are concerned here mainly with
+the completed machine and its trials. Of these latter it must
+be remarked that the only two actual field trials which took
+place resulted in accidents due to the failure of the launching
+apparatus, and not due to any inherent defect in the machine.
+It was intended that these two trials should be the first of a
+series, but the unfortunate accidents, and the fact that no
+further funds were forthcoming for continuance of experiments,
+prevented Langley's success, which, had he been free to go
+through as he intended with his work, would have been certain.
+
+The best brief description of the Langley aerodrome in its final
+form, and of the two attempted trials, is contained in the
+official report of Major M. M. Macomb of the United States
+Artillery Corps, which report is here given in full:--
+
+ REPORT
+
+Experiments with working models which were concluded August 8
+last having proved the principles and calculations on which the
+design of the Langley aerodrome was based to be correct, the
+next step was to apply these principles to the construction of a
+machine of sufficient size and power to permit the carrying of a
+man, who could control the motive power and guide its flight,
+thus pointing the way to attaining the final goal of producing a
+machine capable of such extensive and precise aerial flight,
+under normal atmospheric conditions, as to prove of military or
+commercial utility.
+
+Mr C. M. Manly, working under Professor Langley, had, by the
+summer of 1903, succeeded in completing an engine-driven machine
+which under favourable atmospheric conditions was expected to
+carry a man for any time up to half an hour, and to be capable
+of having its flight directed and controlled by him.
+
+The supporting surface of the wings was ample, and experiment
+showed the engine capable of supplying more than the necessary
+motive power.
+
+Owing to the necessity of lightness, the weight of the various
+elements had to be kept at a minimum, and the factor of safety
+in construction was therefore exceedingly small, so that the
+machine as a whole was delicate and frail and incapable of
+sustaining any unusual strain. This defect was to be corrected
+in later models by utilising data gathered in future experiments
+under varied conditions.
+
+One of the most remarkable results attained was the production
+of a gasoline engine furnishing over fifty continuous
+horse-power for a weight of 120 lbs.
+
+The aerodrome, as completed and prepared for test, is briefly
+described by Professor Langley as 'built of steel, weighing
+complete about 730 lbs., supported by 1,040 feet of sustaining
+surface, having two propellers driven by a gas engine developing
+continuously over fifty brake horse-power.'
+
+The appearance of the machine prepared for flight was
+exceedingly light and graceful, giving an impression to all
+observers of being capable of successful flight.
+
+On October 7 last everything was in readiness, and I witnessed
+the attempted trial on that day at Widewater, Va. On the
+Potomac. The engine worked well and the machine was launched at
+about 12.15 p.m. The trial was unsuccessful because the front
+guy-post caught in its support on the launching car and was not
+released in time to give free flight, as was intended, but, on
+the contrary, caused the front of the machine to be dragged
+downward, bending the guy-post and making the machine plunge
+into the water about fifty yards in front of the house-boat.
+The machine was subsequently recovered and brought back to the
+house-boat. The engine was uninjured and the frame only slightly
+damaged, but the four wings and rudder were practically destroyed
+by the first plunge and subsequent towing back to the house-boat.
+
+This accident necessitated the removal of the house-boat to
+Washington for the more convenient repair of damages.
+
+On December 8 last, between 4 and 5 p.m., another attempt at a
+trial was made, this time at the junction of the Anacostia with
+the Potomac, just below Washington Barracks.
+
+On this occasion General Randolph and myself represented the
+Board of Ordnance and Fortification. The launching car was
+released at 4.45 p.m. being pointed up the Anacostia towards the
+Navy Yard. My position was on the tug Bartholdi, about 150 feet
+from and at right angles to the direction of proposed flight.
+The car was set in motion and the propellers revolved rapidly,
+the engine working perfectly, but there was something wrong with
+the launching. The rear guy-post seemed to drag, bringing the
+rudder down on the launching ways, and a crashing, rending
+sound, followed by the collapse of the rear wings, showed that
+the machine had been wrecked in the launching, just how, it was
+impossible for me to see. The fact remains that the rear wings
+and rudder were wrecked before the machine was free of the ways.
+Their collapse deprived the machine of its support in the rear,
+and it consequently reared up in front under the action of the
+motor, assumed a vertical position, and then toppled over to the
+rear, falling into the water a few feet in front of the boat.
+
+Mr Manly was pulled out of the wreck uninjured and the wrecked
+machine--was subsequently placed upon the house-boat, and the
+whole brought back to Washington.
+
+From what has been said it will be seen that these unfortunate
+accidents have prevented any test of the apparatus in free
+flight, and the claim that an engine-driven, man-carrying
+aerodrome has been constructed lacks the proof which actual
+flight alone can give.
+
+Having reached the present stage of advancement in its
+development, it would seem highly desirable, before laying down
+the investigation, to obtain conclusive proof of the possibility
+of free flight, not only because there are excellent reasons to
+hope for success, but because it marks the end of a definite
+step toward the attainment of the final goal.
+
+Just what further procedure is necessary to secure successful
+flight with the large aerodrome has not yet been decided upon.
+Professor Langley is understood to have this subject under
+advisement, and will doubtless inform the Board of his final
+conclusions as soon as practicable.
+
+In the meantime, to avoid any possible misunderstanding, it
+should be stated that even after a successful test of the
+present great aerodrome, designed to carry a man, we are still
+far from the ultimate goal, and it would seem as if years of
+constant work and study by experts, together with the
+expenditure of thousands of dollars, would still be necessary
+before we can hope to produce an apparatus of practical utility
+on these lines.--Washington, January 6, 1904.
+
+A subsequent report of the Board of ordnance and Fortification
+to the Secretary of War embodied the principal points in Major
+Macomb's report, but as early as March 3rd, 1904, the Board came
+to a similar conclusion to that of the French Ministry of War in
+respect of Clement Ader's work, stating that it was not
+'prepared to make an additional allotment at this time for
+continuing the work.' This decision was in no small measure due
+to hostile newspaper criticisms. Langley, in a letter to the
+press explaining his attitude, stated that he did not wish to
+make public the results of his work till these were certain, in
+consequence of which he refused admittance to newspaper
+representatives, and this attitude produced a hostility which
+had effect on the United States Congress. An offer was made to
+commercialise the invention, but Langley steadfastly refused it.
+Concerning this, Manly remarks that Langley had 'given his time
+and his best labours to the world without hope of remuneration,
+and he could not bring himself, at his stage of life, to consent
+to capitalise his scientific work.'
+
+The final trial of the Langley aerodrome was made on December
+8th, 1903; nine days later, on December 17th, the Wright
+Brothers made their first flight in a power-propelled machine,
+and the conquest of the air was thus achieved. But for the two
+accidents that spoilt his trials, the honour which fell to the
+Wright Brothers would, beyond doubt, have been secured by Samuel
+Pierpoint Langley.
+
+
+
+XI. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS
+
+Such information as is given here concerning the Wright Brothers
+is derived from the two best sources available, namely, the
+writings of Wilbur Wright himself, and a lecture given by Dr
+Griffith Brewer to members of the Royal Aeronautical Society.
+There is no doubt that so far as actual work in connection with
+aviation accomplished by the two brothers is concerned, Wilbur
+Wright's own statements are the clearest and best available.
+Apparently Wilbur was, from the beginning, the historian of the
+pair, though he himself would have been the last to attempt to
+detract in any way from the fame that his brother's work also
+deserves. Throughout all their experiments the two were
+inseparable, and their work is one indivisible whole; in fact,
+in every department of that work, it is impossible to say where
+Orville leaves off and where Wilbur begins.
+
+It is a great story, this of the Wright Brothers, and one worth
+all the detail that can be spared it. It begins on the 16th
+April, 1867, when Wilbur Wright was born within eight miles of
+Newcastle, Indiana. Before Orville's birth on the 19th August,
+1871, the Wright family had moved to Dayton, Ohio, and settled
+on what is known as the 'West Side' of the town. Here the
+brothers grew up, and, when Orville was still a boy in his
+teens, he started a printing business, which, as Griffith
+Brewer remarks, was only limited by the smallness of his machine
+and small quantity of type at his disposal. This machine was in
+such a state that pieces of string and wood were incorporated in
+it by way of repair, but on it Orville managed to print a boys'
+paper which gained considerable popularity in Dayton 'West
+Side.' Later, at the age of seventeen, he obtained a more
+efficient outfit, with which he launched a weekly newspaper,
+four pages in size, entitled The West Side News. After three
+months' running the paper was increased in size and Wilbur came
+into the enterprise as editor, Orville remaining publisher. In
+1894 the two brothers began the publication of a weekly
+magazine, Snap-Shots, to which Wilbur contributed a series of
+articles on local affairs that gave evidence of the incisive and
+often sarcastic manner in which he was able to express himself
+throughout his life. Dr Griffith Brewer describes him as a
+fearless critic, who wrote on matters of local interest in a
+kindly but vigorous manner, which did much to maintain the
+healthy public municipal life of Dayton.
+
+Editorial and publishing enterprise was succeeded by the
+formation, just across the road from the printing works, of the
+Wright Cycle Company, where the two brothers launched out as
+cycle manufacturers with the 'Van Cleve' bicycle, a machine of
+great local repute for excellence of construction, and one which
+won for itself a reputation that lasted long after it had ceased
+to be manufactured. The name of the machine was that of an
+ancestor of the brothers, Catherine Van Cleve, who was one of
+the first settlers at Dayton, landing there from the River Miami
+on April 1st, 1796, when the country was virgin forest.
+
+It was not until 1896 that the mechanical genius which
+characterised the two brothers was turned to the consideration
+of aeronautics. In that year they took up the problem
+thoroughly, studying all the aeronautical information then in
+print. Lilienthal's writings formed one basis for their
+studies, and the work of Langley assisted in establishing in
+them a confidence in the possibility of a solution to the
+problems of mechanical flight. In 1909, at the banquet given by
+the Royal Aero Club to the Wright Brothers on their return to
+America, after the series of demonstration flights carried out
+by Wilbur Wright on the Continent, Wilbur paid tribute to the
+great pioneer work of Stringfellow, whose studies and
+achievements influenced his own and Orville's early work. He
+pointed out how Stringfellow devised an aeroplane having two
+propellers and vertical and horizontal steering, and gave due
+place to this early pioneer of mechanical flight.
+
+Neither of the brothers was content with mere study of the work
+of others. They collected all the theory available in the books
+published up to that time, and then built man-carrying gliders
+with which to test the data of Lilienthal and such other
+authorities as they had consulted. For two years they conducted
+outdoor experiments in order to test the truth or otherwise of
+what were enunciated as the principles of flight; after this
+they turned to laboratory experiments, constructing a wind
+tunnel in which they made thousands of tests with models of
+various forms of curved planes. From their experiments they
+tabulated thousands of readings, which Griffith Brewer remarks
+as giving results equally efficient with those of the elaborate
+tables prepared by learned institutions.
+
+Wilbur Wright has set down the beginnings of the practical
+experiments made by the two brothers very clearly. 'The
+difficulties,' he says, 'which obstruct the pathway to success
+in flying machine construction are of three general classes:
+(1) Those which relate to the construction of the sustaining
+wings; (2) those which relate to the generation and application
+of the power required to drive the machine through the air; (3)
+those relating to the balancing and steering of the machine
+after it is actually in flight. Of these difficulties two are
+already to a certain extent solved. Men already know how to
+construct wings, or aeroplanes, which, when driven through the
+air at sufficient speed, will not only sustain the weight of the
+wings themselves, but also that of the engine and the engineer
+as well. Men also know how to build engines and' screws of
+sufficient lightness and power to drive these planes at
+sustaining speed. Inability to balance and steer still
+confronts students of the flying problem, although nearly ten
+years have passed (since Lilienthal's success). When this one
+feature has been worked out, the age of flying machines will
+have arrived, for all other difficulties are of minor
+importance.
+
+'The person who merely watches the flight of a bird gathers the
+impression that the bird has nothing to think of but the
+flapping of its wings. As a matter of fact, this is a very
+small part of its mental labour. Even to mention all the things
+the bird must constantly keep in mind in order to fly securely
+through the air would take a considerable time. If I take a
+piece of paper and, after placing it parallel with the ground,
+quickly let it fall, it will not settle steadily down as a
+staid, sensible piece of paper ought to do, but it insists on
+contravening every recognised rule of decorum, turning over and
+darting hither and thither in the most erratic manner, much
+after the style of an untrained horse. Yet this is the style of
+steed that men must learn to manage before flying can become an
+everyday sport. The bird has learned this art of equilibrium,
+and learned it so thoroughly that its skill is not apparent to
+our sight. We only learn to appreciate it when we can imitate
+it.
+
+'Now, there are only two ways of learning to ride a fractious
+horse: one is to get on him and learn by actual practice how
+each motion and trick may be best met; the other is to sit on a
+fence and watch the beast awhile, and then retire to the house
+and at leisure figure out the best way of overcoming his jumps
+and kicks. The latter system is the safer, but the former, on
+the whole, turns out the larger proportion of good riders. It
+is very much the same in learning to ride a flying machine; if
+you are looking for perfect safety you will do well to sit on a
+fence and watch the birds, but if you really wish to learn you
+must mount a machine and become acquainted with its tricks by
+actual trial. The balancing of a gliding or flying machine is
+very simple in theory. It merely consists in causing the centre
+of pressure to coincide with the centre of gravity.'
+
+These comments are taken from a lecture delivered by Wilbur
+Wright before the Western Society of Engineers in September of
+1901, under the presidency of Octave Chanute. In that lecture
+Wilbur detailed the way in which he and his brother came to
+interest themselves in aeronautical problems and constructed
+their first glider. He speaks of his own notice of the death of
+Lilienthal in 1896, and of the way in which this fatality roused
+him to an active interest in aeronautical problems, which was
+stimulated by reading Professor Marey's Animal Mechanism, not
+for the first time. 'From this I was led to read more modern
+works, and as my brother soon became equally interested with
+myself, we soon passed from the reading to the thinking, and
+finally to the working stage. It seemed to us that the main
+reason why the problem had remained so long unsolved was that no
+one had been able to obtain any adequate practice. We figured
+that Lilienthal in five years of time had spent only about five
+hours in actual gliding through the air. The wonder was not
+that he had done so little, but that he had accomplished so
+much. It would not be considered at all safe for a bicycle
+rider to attempt to ride through a crowded city street after
+only five hours' practice, spread out in bits of ten seconds
+each over a period of five years; yet Lilienthal with this brief
+practice was remarkably successful in meeting the fluctuations
+and eddies of wind-gusts. We thought that if some method could
+be found by which it would be possible to practice by the hour
+instead of by the second there would be hope of advancing the
+solution of a very difficult problem. It seemed feasible to do
+this by building a machine which would be sustained at a speed
+of eighteen miles per hour, and then finding a locality where
+winds of this velocity were common. With these conditions a
+rope attached to the machine to keep it from floating backward
+would answer very nearly the same purpose as a propeller driven
+by a motor, and it would be possible to practice by the hour,
+and without any serious danger, as it would not be necessary to
+rise far from the ground, and the machine would not have any
+forward motion at all. We found, according to the accepted
+tables of air pressure on curved surfaces, that a machine
+spreading 200 square feet of wing surface would be sufficient
+for our purpose, and that places would easily be found along the
+Atlantic coast where winds of sixteen to twenty-five miles were
+not at all uncommon. When the winds were low it was our plan to
+glide from the tops of sandhills, and when they were
+sufficiently strong to use a rope for our motor and fly over one
+spot. Our next work was to draw up the plans for a suitable
+machine. After much study we finally concluded that tails were
+a source of trouble rather than of assistance, and therefore we
+decided to dispense with them altogether. It seemed reasonable
+that if the body of the operator could be placed in a horizontal
+position instead of the upright, as in the machines of
+Lilienthal, Pilcher, and Chanute, the wind resistance could be
+very materially reduced, since only one square foot instead of
+five would be exposed. As a full half horse-power would be
+saved by this change, we arranged to try at least the horizontal
+position. Then the method of control used by Lilienthal, which
+consisted in shifting the body, did not seem quite as quick or
+effective as the case required; so, after long study, we
+contrived a system consisting of two large surfaces on the
+Chanute double-deck plan, and a smaller surface placed a short
+distance in front of the main surfaces in such a position that
+the action of the wind upon it would counterbalance the effect
+of the travel of the centre of pressure on the main surfaces.
+Thus changes in the direction and velocity of the wind would
+have little disturbing effect, and the operator would be
+required to attend only to the steering of the machine, which
+was to be effected by curving the forward surface up or down.
+The lateral equilibrium and the steering to right or left was to
+be attained by a peculiar torsion of the main surfaces which was
+equivalent to presenting one end of the wings at a greater angle
+than the other. In the main frame a few changes were also made
+in the details of construction and trussing employed by Mr
+Chanute. The most important of these were: (1) The moving of
+the forward main crosspiece of the frame to the extreme front
+edge; (2) the encasing in the cloth of all crosspieces and ribs
+of the surfaces; (3) a rearrangement of the wires used in
+trussing the two surfaces together, which rendered it possible
+to tighten all the wires by simply shortening two of them.'
+
+The brothers intended originally to get 200 square feet of
+supporting surface for their glider, but the impossibility of
+obtaining suitable material compelled them to reduce the area to
+165 square feet, which, by the Lilienthal tables, admitted of
+support in a wind of about twenty-one miles an hour at an angle
+of three degrees. With this glider they went in the summer of I
+1900 to the little settlement of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina,
+situated on the strip of land dividing Albemarle Sound from the
+Atlantic. Here they reckoned on obtaining steady wind, and
+here, on the day that they completed the machine, they took it
+out for trial as a kite with the wind blowing at between
+twenty-five and thirty miles an hour. They found that in order
+to support a man on it the glider required an angle nearer
+twenty degrees than three, and even with the wind at thirty
+miles an hour they could not get down to the planned angle of
+three degrees. 'Later, when the wind was too light to support
+the machine with a man on it, they tested it as a kite, working
+the rudders by cords. Although they obtained satisfactory
+results in this way they realised fully that actual gliding
+experience was necessary before the tests could be considered
+practical.
+
+A series of actual measurements of lift and drift of the machine
+gave astonishing results. 'It appeared that the total
+horizontal pull of the machine, while sustaining a weight of 52
+lbs., was only 8.5 lbs., which was less than had been previously
+estimated for head resistance of the framing alone. Making
+allowance for the weight carried, it appeared that the head
+resistance of the framing was but little more than fifty per
+cent of the amount which Mr Chanute had estimated as the head
+resistance of the framing of his machine. On the other hand, it
+appeared sadly deficient in lifting power as compared with the
+calculated lift of curved surfaces of its size... we decided to
+arrange our machine for the following year so that the depth of
+curvature of its surfaces could be varied at will, and its
+covering air-proofed.'
+
+After these experiments the brothers decided to turn to
+practical gliding, for which they moved four miles to the south,
+to the Kill Devil sandhills, the principal of which is slightly
+over a hundred feet in height, with an inclination of nearly ten
+degrees on its main north-western slope. On the day after their
+arrival they made about a dozen glides, in which, although the
+landings were made at a speed of more than twenty miles an hour,
+no injury was sustained either by the machine or by the
+operator.
+
+'The slope of the hill was 9.5 degrees, or a drop of one foot in
+six. We found that after attaining a speed of about twenty-five
+to thirty miles with reference to the wind, or ten to fifteen
+miles over the ground, the machine not only glided parallel to
+the slope of the hill, but greatly increased its speed, thus
+indicating its ability to glide on a somewhat less angle than
+9.5 degrees, when we should feel it safe to rise higher from the
+surface. The control of the machine proved even better than we
+had dared to expect, responding quickly to the slightest motion
+of the rudder. With these glides our experiments for the year
+1900 closed. Although the hours and hours of practice we had
+hoped to obtain finally dwindled down to about two minutes, we
+were very much pleased with the general results of the trip,
+for, setting out as we did with almost revolutionary theories on
+many points and an entirely untried form of machine, we
+considered it quite a point to be able to return without having
+our pet theories completely knocked on the head by the hard
+logic of experience, and our own brains dashed out in the
+bargain. Everything seemed to us to confirm the correctness of
+our original opinions: (1) That practice is the key to the
+secret of flying; (2) that it is practicable to assume the
+horizontal position; (3) that a smaller surface set at a
+negative angle in front of the main bearing surfaces, or wings,
+will largely counteract the effect of the fore and aft travel of
+the centre of pressure; (4) that steering up and down can be
+attained with a rudder without moving the position of the
+operator's body; (5) that twisting the wings so as to present
+their ends to the wind at different angles is a more prompt and
+efficient way of maintaining lateral equilibrium than shifting
+the body of the operator.'
+
+For the gliding experiments of 1901 it was decided to retain the
+form of the 1900 glider, but to increase the area to 308 square
+feet, which, the brothers calculated, would support itself and
+its operator in a wind of seventeen miles an hour with an angle
+of incidence of three degrees. Camp was formed at Kitty Hawk in
+the middle of July, and on July 27th the machine was completed
+and tried for the first time in a wind of about fourteen miles
+an hour. The first attempt resulted in landing after a glide of
+only a few yards, indicating that the centre of gravity was too
+far in front of the centre of pressure. By shifting his
+position farther and farther back the operator finally achieved
+an undulating flight of a little over 300 feet, but to obtain
+this success he had to use full power of the rudder to prevent
+both stalling and nose-diving. With the 1900 machine one-fourth
+of the rudder action had been necessary for far better control.
+
+Practically all glides gave the same result, and in one the
+machine rose higher and higher until it lost all headway. 'This
+was the position from which Lilienthal had always found
+difficulty in extricating himself, as his machine then, in spite
+of his greatest exertions, manifested a tendency to dive
+downward almost vertically and strike the ground head on with
+frightful velocity. In this case a warning cry from the ground
+caused the operator to turn the rudder to its full extent and
+also to move his body slightly forward. The machine then
+settled slowly to the ground, maintaining its horizontal
+position almost perfectly, and landed without any injury at all.
+This was very encouraging, as it showed that one of the very
+greatest dangers in machines with horizontal tails had been
+overcome by the use of the front rudder. Several glides later
+the same experience was repeated with the same result. In the
+latter case the machine had even commenced to move backward, but
+was nevertheless brought safely to the ground in a horizontal
+position. On the whole this day's experiments were encouraging,
+for while the action of the rudder did not seem at all like that
+of our 1900 machine, yet we had escaped without difficulty from
+positions which had proved very dangerous to preceding
+experimenters, and after less than one minute's actual practice
+had made a glide of more than 300 feet, at an angle of descent
+of ten degrees, and with a machine nearly twice as large as had
+previously been considered safe. The trouble with its control,
+which has been mentioned, we believed could be corrected when we
+should have located its cause.'
+
+It was finally ascertained that the defect could be remedied by
+trussing down the ribs of the whole machine so as to reduce the
+depth of curvature. When this had been done gliding was
+resumed, and after a few trials glides of 366 and 389 feet were
+made with prompt response on the part of the machine, even to
+small movements of the rudder. The rest of the story of the
+gliding experiments of 1901 cannot be better told than in Wilbur
+Wright's own words, as uttered by him in the lecture from which
+the foregoing excerpts have been made.
+
+'The machine, with its new curvature, never failed to respond
+promptly to even small movements of the rudder. The operator
+could cause it to almost skim the ground, following the
+undulations of its surface, or he could cause it to sail out
+almost on a level with the starting point, and, passing high
+above the foot of the hill, gradually settle down to the ground.
+The wind on this day was blowing eleven to fourteen miles per
+hour. The next day, the conditions being favourable, the
+machine was again taken out for trial. This time the velocity
+of the wind was eighteen to twenty-two miles per hour. At first
+we felt some doubt as to the safety of attempting free flight in
+so strong a wind, with a machine of over 300 square feet and a
+practice of less than five minutes spent in actual flight. But
+after several preliminary experiments we decided to try a glide.
+The control of the machine seemed so good that we then felt no
+apprehension in sailing boldly forth. And thereafter we made
+glide after glide, sometimes following the ground closely and
+sometimes sailing high in the air. Mr Chanute had his camera
+with him and took pictures of some of these glides, several of
+which are among those shown.
+
+'We made glides on subsequent days, whenever the conditions were
+favourable. The highest wind thus experimented in was a little
+over twelve metres per second--nearly twenty-seven miles per
+hour.
+
+It had been our intention when building the machine to do the
+larger part of the experimenting in the following manner:--When
+the wind blew seventeen miles an hour, or more, we would attach
+a rope to the machine and let it rise as a kite with the
+operator upon it. When it should reach a proper height the
+operator would cast off the rope and glide down to the ground
+just as from the top of a hill. In this way we would be saved
+the trouble of carrying the machine uphill after each glide, and
+could make at least ten glides in the time required for one in
+the other way. But when we came to try it, we found that a wind
+of seventeen miles, as measured by Richards' anemometer, instead
+of sustaining the machine with its operator, a total weight of
+240 lbs., at an angle of incidence of three degrees, in reality
+would not sustain the machine alone--100 lbs.--at this angle.
+Its lifting capacity seemed scarcely one third of the calculated
+amount. In order to make sure that this was not due to the
+porosity of the cloth, we constructed two small experimental
+surfaces of equal size, one of which was air-proofed and the
+other left in its natural state; but we could detect no
+difference in their lifting powers. For a time we were led to
+suspect that the lift of curved surfaces very little exceeded
+that of planes of the same size, but further investigation and
+experiment led to the opinion that (1) the anemometer used by us
+over-recorded the true velocity of the wind by nearly 15 per
+cent; (2) that the well-known Smeaton co-efficient of .005 V
+squared for the wind pressure at 90 degrees is probably too
+great by at least 20 per cent; (3) that Lilienthal's estimate
+that the pressure on a curved surface having an angle of
+incidence of 3 degrees equals .545 of the pressure at go degrees
+is too large, being nearly 50 per cent greater than very recent
+experiments of our own with a pressure testing-machine indicate;
+(4) that the superposition of the surfaces somewhat reduced the
+lift per square foot, as compared with a single surface of equal
+area.
+
+'In gliding experiments, however, the amount of lift is of less
+relative importance than the ratio of lift to drift, as this
+alone decides the angle of gliding descent. In a plane the
+pressure is always perpendicular to the surface, and the ratio
+of lift to drift is therefore the same as that of the cosine to
+the sine of the angle of incidence. But in curved surfaces a
+very remarkable situation is found. The pressure, instead of
+being uniformly normal to the chord of the arc, is usually
+inclined considerably in front of the perpendicular. The result
+is that the lift is greater and the drift less than if the
+pressure were normal. Lilienthal was the first to discover this
+exceedingly important fact, which is fully set forth in his
+book, Bird Flight the Basis of the Flying Art, but owing to some
+errors in the methods he used in making measurements, question
+was raised by other investigators not only as to the accuracy of
+his figures, but even as to the existence of any tangential
+force at all. Our experiments confirm the existence of this
+force, though our measurements differ considerably from those of
+Lilienthal. While at Kitty Hawk we spent much time in measuring
+the horizontal pressure on our unloaded machine at various
+angles of incidence. We found that at 13 degrees the horizontal
+pressure was about 23 lbs. This included not only the drift
+proper, or horizontal component of the pressure on the side of
+the surface, but also the head resistance of the framing as
+well. The weight of the machine at the time of this test was
+about 108 lbs. Now, if the pressure had been normal to the
+chord of the surface, the drift proper would have been to the
+lift (108 lbs.) as the sine of 13 degrees is to the cosine of 13
+degrees, or .22 X 108/.97 = 24+ lbs.; but this slightly exceeds
+the total pull of 23 pounds on our scales. Therefore it is
+evident that the average pressure on the surface, instead of
+being normal to the chord, was so far inclined toward the front
+that all the head resistance of framing and wires used in the
+construction was more than overcome. In a wind of fourteen
+miles per hour resistance is by no means a negligible factor, so
+that tangential is evidently a force of considerable value. In
+a higher wind, which sustained the machine at an angle of 10
+degrees the pull on the scales was 18 lbs. With the pressure
+normal to the chord the drift proper would have been 17 X 98/.98.
+The travel of the centre of pressure made it necessary to put
+sand on the front rudder to bring the centres of gravity and
+pressure into coincidence, consequently the weight of the
+machine varied from 98 lbs. to 108 lbs. in the different tests)=
+17 lbs., so that, although the higher wind velocity must have
+caused an increase in the head resistance, the tangential force
+still came within 1 lb. of overcoming it. After our return
+from Kitty Hawk we began a series of experiments to accurately
+determine the amount and direction of the pressure produced on
+curved surfaces when acted upon by winds at the various angles
+from zero to 90 degrees. These experiments are not yet
+concluded, but in general they support Lilienthal in the claim
+that the curves give pressures more favourable in amount and
+direction than planes; but we find marked differences in the
+exact values, especially at angles below 10 degrees. We were
+unable to obtain direct measurements of the horizontal pressures
+of the machine with the operator on board, but by comparing the
+distance travelled with the vertical fall, it was easily
+calculated that at a speed of 24 miles per hour the total
+horizontal resistances of our machine, when bearing the
+operator, amounted to 40 lbs., which is equivalent to about
+2 1/3 horse-power. It must not be supposed, however, that a
+motor developing this power would be sufficient to drive a
+man-bearing machine. The extra weight of the motor would
+require either a larger machine, higher speed, or a greater
+angle of incidence in order to support it, and therefore more
+power. It is probable, however, that an engine of 6
+horse-power, weighing 100 lbs. would answer the purpose. Such
+an engine is entirely practicable. Indeed, working motors of
+one-half this weight per horse-power (9 lbs. per horse-power)
+have been constructed by several different builders. Increasing
+the speed of our machine from 24 to 33 miles per hour reduced
+the total horizontal pressure from 40 to about 35 lbs. This was
+quite an advantage in gliding, as it made it possible to sail
+about 15 per cent farther with a given drop. However, it would
+be of little or no advantage in reducing the size of the motor
+in a power-driven machine, because the lessened thrust would be
+counterbalanced by the increased speed per minute. Some years
+ago Professor Langley called attention to the great economy of
+thrust which might be obtained by using very high speeds, and
+from this many were led to suppose that high speed was essential
+to success in a motor-driven machine. But the economy to which
+Professor Langley called attention was in foot pounds per mile
+of travel, not in foot pounds per minute. It is the foot pounds
+per minute that fixes the size of the motor. The probability is
+that the first flying machines will have a relatively low speed,
+perhaps not much exceeding 20 miles per hour, but the problem of
+increasing the speed will be much simpler in some respects than
+that of increasing the speed of a steamboat; for, whereas in the
+latter case the size of the engine must increase as the cube of
+the speed, in the flying machine, until extremely high speeds
+are reached, the capacity of the motor increases in less than
+simple ratio; and there is even a decrease in the fuel per mile
+of travel. In other words, to double the speed of a steamship
+(and the same is true of the balloon type of airship) eight
+times the engine and boiler capacity would be required, and four
+times the fuel consumption per mile of travel: while a flying
+machine would require engines of less than double the size, and
+there would be an actual decrease in the fuel consumption per
+mile of travel. But looking at the matter conversely, the great
+disadvantage of the flying machine is apparent; for in the
+latter no flight at all is possible unless the proportion of
+horse-power to flying capacity is very high; but on the other
+hand a steamship is a mechanical success if its ratio of
+horse-power to tonnage is insignificant. A flying machine that
+would fly at a speed of 50 miles per hour with engines of 1,000
+horse-power would not be upheld by its wings at all at a speed
+of less than 25 miles an hour, and nothing less than 500
+horse-power could drive it at this speed. But a boat which
+could make 40 miles an hour with engines of 1,000 horse-power
+would still move 4 miles an hour even if the engines were
+reduced to 1 horse-power. The problems of land and water travel
+were solved in the nineteenth century, because it was possible
+to begin with small achievements, and gradually work up to our
+present success. The flying problem was left over to the
+twentieth century, because in this case the art must be highly
+developed before any flight of any considerable duration at all
+can be obtained.
+
+'However, there is another way of flying which requires no
+artificial motor, and many workers believe that success will
+come first by this road. I refer to the soaring flight, by
+which the machine is permanently sustained in the air by the
+same means that are employed by soaring birds. They spread
+their wings to the wind, and sail by the hour, with no
+perceptible exertion beyond that required to balance and steer
+themselves. What sustains them is not definitely known, though
+it is almost certain that it is a rising current of air. But
+whether it be a rising current or something else, it is as well
+able to support a flying machine as a bird, if man once learns
+the art of utilising it. In gliding experiments it has long been
+known that the rate of vertical descent is very much retarded,
+and the duration of the flight greatly prolonged, if a strong
+wind blows UP the face of the hill parallel to its surface. Our
+machine, when gliding in still air, has a rate of vertical
+descent of nearly 6 feet per second, while in a wind blowing 26
+miles per hour up a steep hill we made glides in which the rate
+of descent was less than 2 feet per second. And during the larger
+part of this time, while the machine remained exactly in the
+rising current, THERE WAS NO DESCENT AT ALL, BUT EVEN A SLIGHT
+RISE. If the operator had had sufficient skill to keep himself
+from passing beyond the rising current he would have been
+sustained indefinitely at a higher point than that from which he
+started. The illustration shows one of these very slow glides at
+a time when the machine was practically at a standstill. The
+failure to advance more rapidly caused the photographer some
+trouble in aiming, as you will perceive. In looking at this
+picture you will readily understand that the excitement of
+gliding experiments does not entirely cease with the breaking up
+of camp. In the photographic dark-room at home we pass moments
+of as thrilling interest as any in the field, when the image
+begins to appear on the plate and it is yet an open question
+whether we have a picture of a flying machine or merely a patch
+of open sky. These slow glides in rising current probably hold
+out greater hope of extensive practice than any other method
+within man's reach, but they have the disadvantage of requiring
+rather strong winds or very large supporting surfaces. However,
+when gliding operators have attained greater skill, they can with
+comparative safety maintain themselves in the air for hours at a
+time in this way, and thus by constant practice so increase
+their knowledge and skill that they can rise into the higher air
+and search out the currents which enable the soaring birds to
+transport themselves to any desired point by first rising in a
+circle and then sailing off at a descending angle. This
+illustration shows the machine, alone, flying in a wind of 35
+miles per hour on the face of a steep hill, 100 feet high. It
+will be seen that the machine not only pulls upward, but also
+pulls forward in the direction from which the wind blows, thus
+overcoming both gravity and the speed of the wind. We tried the
+same experiment with a man on it, but found danger that the
+forward pull would become so strong, that the men holding the
+ropes would be dragged from their insecure foothold on the slope
+of the hill. So this form of experimenting was discontinued
+after four or five minutes' trial.
+
+'In looking over our experiments of the past two years, with
+models and full-size machines, the following points stand out
+with clearness:--
+
+'1. That the lifting power of a large machine, held stationary
+in a wind at a small distance from the earth, is much less than
+the Lilienthal table and our own laboratory experiments would
+lead us to expect. When the machine is moved through the air,
+as in gliding, the discrepancy seems much less marked.
+
+'2. That the ratio of drift to lift in well-shaped surfaces is
+less at angles of incidence of 5 degrees to 12 degrees than at
+an angle of 3 degrees.
+
+'3. That in arched surfaces the centre of pressure at 90
+degrees is near the centre of the surface, but moves slowly
+forward as the angle becomes less, till a critical angle varying
+with the shape and depth of the curve is reached, after which it
+moves rapidly toward the rear till the angle of no lift is
+found.
+
+'4. That with similar conditions large surfaces may be
+controlled with not much greater difficulty than small ones, if
+the control is effected by manipulation of the surfaces
+themselves, rather than by a movement of the body of the
+operator.
+
+'5. That the head resistances of the framing can be brought to
+a point much below that usually estimated as necessary.
+
+'6. That tails, both vertical and horizontal, may with safety
+be eliminated in gliding and other flying experiments.
+
+'7. That a horizontal position of the operator's body may be
+assumed without excessive danger, and thus the head resistance
+reduced to about one-fifth that of the upright position.
+
+'8. That a pair of superposed, or tandem surfaces, has less
+lift in proportion to drift than either surface separately, even
+after making allowance for weight and head resistance of the
+connections.'
+
+Thus, to the end of the 1901 experiments, Wilbur Wright provided
+a fairly full account of what was accomplished; the record shows
+an amount of patient and painstaking work almost beyond
+belief--it was no question of making a plane and launching it,
+but a business of trial and error, investigation and tabulation
+of detail, and the rejection time after time of previously
+accepted theories, till the brothers must have felt the the
+solid earth was no longer secure, at times. Though it was
+Wilbur who set down this and other records of the work done,
+yet the actual work was so much Orville's as his brother's that
+no analysis could separate any set of experiments and say that
+Orville did this and Wilbur that--the two were inseparable. On
+this point Griffith Brewer remarked that 'in the arguments, if
+one brother took one view, the other brother took the opposite
+view as a matter of course, and the subject was thrashed to
+pieces until a mutually acceptable result remained. I have
+often been asked since these pioneer days, "Tell me, Brewer, who
+was really the originator of those two?" In reply, I used
+first to say, "I think it was mostly Wilbur," and later,
+when I came to know Orville better, I said, "The thing could not
+have been without Orville." Now, when asked, I have to say, " I
+don't know," and I feel the more I think of it that it was only
+the wonderful combination of these two brothers, who devoted
+their lives together or this common object, that made the
+discovery of the art of flying possible.'
+
+Beyond the 1901 experiments in gliding, the record grows more
+scrappy, less detailed. It appears that once power-driven
+flight had been achieved, the brothers were not so willing to
+talk as before; considering the amount of work that they put in,
+there could have been little time for verbal description
+of that work--as already remarked, their tables still stand for
+the designer and experimenter. The end of the 1901 experiments
+left both brothers somewhat discouraged, though they had
+accomplished more than any others. 'Having set out with
+absolute faith in the existing scientific data, we ere driven to
+doubt one thing after another, finally, after two years of
+experiment, we cast it all aside, and decided to rely entirely
+on our own investigations. Truth and error were everywhere so
+in,timately mixed as to be indistinguishable.... We had taken up
+aeronautics as a sport. We reluctantly entered upon the
+scientific side of it.'
+
+Yet, driven thus to the more serious aspect of the work, they
+found in the step its own reward, for the work of itself drew
+them on and on, to the construction of measuring machines for
+the avoidance of error, and to the making of series after series
+of measurements, concerning which Wilbur wrote in 1908 (in the
+Century Magazine) that 'after making preliminary measurements on
+a great number of different shaped surfaces, to secure a general
+understanding of the subject, we began systematic measurements
+of standard surfaces, so varied in design as to bring out the
+underlying causes of differences noted in their pressures.
+Measurements were tabulated on nearly fifty of these at all
+angles from zero to 45 degrees, at intervals of 2 1/2 degrees.
+Measurements were also secured showing the effects on each other
+when surfaces are superposed, or when they follow one another.
+
+'Some strange results were obtained. One surface, with a heavy
+roll at the front edge, showed the same lift for all angles from
+7 1/2 to 45 degrees. This seemed so anomalous that we were
+almost ready to doubt our own measurements, when a simple test
+was suggested. A weather vane, with two planes attached to the
+pointer at an angle of 80 degrees with each other, was made.
+According to our table, such a vane would be in unstable
+equilibrium when pointing directly into the wind, for if by
+chance the wind should happen to strike one plane at 39 degrees
+and the other at 41 degrees, the plane with the smaller angle
+would have the greater pressure and the pointer would be turned
+still farther out of the course of the wind until the two vanes
+again secured equal pressures, which would be at approximately
+30 and 50 degrees. But the vane performed in this very manner.
+Further corroboration of the tables was obtained in experiments
+with the new glider at Kill Devil Hill the next season.
+
+'In September and October, 1902 nearly 1,000 gliding flights
+were made, several of which covered distances of over 600 feet.
+Some, made against a wind of 36 miles an hour, gave proof of the
+effectiveness of the devices for control. With this machine, in
+the autumn of 1903, we made a number of flights in which we
+remained in the air for over a minute, often soaring for a
+considerable time in one spot, without any descent at all.
+Little wonder that our unscientific assistant should think the
+only thing needed to keep it indefinitely in the air would be a
+coat of feathers to make it light! '
+
+It was at the conclusion of these experiments of 1903 that the
+brothers concluded they had obtained sufficient data from their
+thousands of glides and multitude of calculations to permit of
+their constructing and making trial of a power-driven machine.
+The first designs got out provided for a total weight of 600
+lbs., which was to include the weight of the motor and the
+pilot; but on completion it was found that there was a surplus
+of power from the motor, and thus they had 150 lbs. weight to
+allow for strengthening wings and other parts.
+
+They came up against the problem to which Riach has since
+devoted so much attention, that of propeller design. 'We had
+thought of getting the theory of the screw-propeller from the
+marine engineers, and then, by applying our table of
+air-pressures to their formulae, of designing air-propellers
+suitable for our uses. But, so far as we could learn, the
+marine engineers possessed only empirical formulae, and the
+exact action of the screw propeller, after a century of use, was
+still very obscure. As we were not in a position to undertake a
+long series of practical experiments to discover a propeller
+suitable for our machine, it seemed necessary to obtain such a
+thorough understanding of the theory of its reactions as would
+enable us to design them from calculation alone. What at first
+seemed a simple problem became more complex the longer we
+studied it. With the machine moving forward, the air flying
+backward, the propellers turning sidewise, and nothing standing
+still, it seemed impossible to find a starting point from which
+to trace the various simultaneous reactions. Contemplation of
+it was confusing. After long arguments we often found ourselves
+in the ludicrous position of each having been converted to the
+other's side, with no more agreement than when the discussion
+began.
+
+'It was not till several months had passed, and every phase of
+the problem had been thrashed over and over, that the various
+reactions began to untangle themselves. When once a clear
+understanding had been obtained there was no difficulty in
+designing a suitable propeller, with proper diameter, pitch, and
+area of blade, to meet the requirements of the flier. High
+efficiency in a screw-propeller is not dependent upon any
+particular or peculiar shape, and there is no such thing as a
+"best" screw. A propeller giving a high dynamic efficiency when
+used upon one machine may be almost worthless when used upon
+another. The propeller should in every case be designed to meet
+the particular conditions of the machine to which it is to be
+applied. Our first propellers, built entirely from calculation,
+gave in useful work 66 per cent of the power expended. This was
+about one-third more than had been secured by Maxim or Langley.'
+
+Langley had made his last attempt with the 'aerodrome,' and his
+splendid failure but a few days before the brothers made their
+first attempt at power-driven aeroplane flight. On December
+17th, 1903, the machine was taken out; in addition to Wilbur and
+Orville Wright, there were present five spectators: Mr A. D.
+Etheridge, of the Kil1 Devil life-saving station; Mr W. S.Dough,
+Mr W. C. Brinkley, of Manteo; Mr John Ward, of Naghead, and Mr
+John T. Daniels.[*] A general invitation had been given to
+practically all the residents in the vicinity, but the Kill
+Devil district is a cold area in December, and history had
+recorded so many experiments in which machines had failed to
+leave the ground that between temperature and scepticism only
+these five risked a waste of their time.
+
+[*] This list is as given by Wilbur Wright himself.
+
+And these five were in at the greatest conquest man had made
+since James Watt evolved the steam engine --perhaps even a
+greater conquest than that of Watt. Four flights in all were
+made; the first lasted only twelve seconds, 'the first in the
+history of the world in which a machine carrying a man had
+raised itself into the air by its own power in free flight, had
+sailed forward on a level course without reduction of speed, and
+had finally landed without being wrecked,' said Wilbur
+Wright concerning the achievement.[*] The next two flights were
+slightly longer, and the fourth and last of the day was one
+second short of the complete minute; it was made into the teeth
+of a 20 mile an hour wind, and the distance travelled was 852
+feet.
+
+[*] Century Magazine, September, 1908.
+
+This bald statement of the day's doings is as Wilbur Wright
+himself has given it, and there is in truth nothing more to say;
+no amount of statement could add to the importance of the
+achievement, and no more than the bare record is necessary. The
+faith that had inspired the long roll of pioneers, from da Vinci
+onward, was justified at last.
+
+Having made their conquest, the brothers took the machine back
+to camp, and, as they thought, placed it in safety. Talking
+with the little group of spectators about the flights, they
+forgot about the machine, and then a sudden gust of wind struck
+it. Seeing that it was being overturned, all made a rush toward
+it to save it, and Mr Daniels, a man of large proportions, was
+in some way lifted off his feet, falling between the planes.
+The machine overturned fully, and Daniels was shaken like a die
+in a cup as the wind rolled the machine over and over--he came
+out at the end of his experience with a series of bad bruises,
+and no more, but the damage done to the machine by the accident
+was sufficient to render it useless for further experiment that
+season.
+
+A new machine, stronger and heavier, was constructed by the
+brothers, and in the spring of 1904 they began experiments again
+at Sims Station, eight miles to the east of Dayton, their home
+town. Press representatives were invited for the first trial,
+and about a dozen came--the whole gathering did not number more
+than fifty people. 'When preparations had been concluded,'
+Wilbur Wright wrote of this trial, 'a wind of only three or four
+miles an hour was blowing--insufficient for starting on so short
+a track --but since many had come a long way to see the machine
+in action, an attempt was made. To add to the other difficulty,
+the engine refused to work properly. The machine, after running
+the length of the track, slid off the end without rising into
+the air at all. Several of the newspaper men returned next day
+but were again disappointed. The engine performed badly, and
+after a glide of only sixty feet the machine again came to the
+ground. Further trial was postponed till the motor could be put
+in better running condition. The reporters had now, no doubt,
+lost confidence in the machine, though their reports, in
+kindness, concealed it. Later, when they heard that we were
+making flights of several minutes' duration, knowing that longer
+flights had been made with airships, and not knowing any
+essential difference between airships and flying machines, they
+were but little interested.
+
+'We had not been flying long in 1904 before we found that the
+problem of equilibrium had not as yet been entirely solved.
+Sometimes, in making a circle, the machine would turn over
+sidewise despite anything the operator could do, although, under
+the same conditions in ordinary straight flight it could have
+been righted in an instant. In one flight, in 1905, while
+circling round a honey locust-tree at a height of about 50 feet,
+the machine suddenly began to turn up on one wing, and took a
+course toward the tree. The operator, not relishing the idea of
+landing in a thorn tree, attempted to reach the ground. The
+left wing, however, struck the tree at a height of 10 or 12 feet
+from the ground and carried away several branches; but the
+flight, which had already covered a distance of six miles, was
+continued to the starting point.
+
+'The causes of these troubles--too technical for explanation
+here--were not entirely overcome till the end of September,
+1905. The flights then rapidly increased in length, till
+experiments were discontinued after October 5 on account of the
+number of people attracted to the field. Although made on a
+ground open on every side, and bordered on two sides by
+much-travelled thoroughfares, with electric cars passing every
+hour, and seen by all the people living in the neighbourhood for
+miles around, and by several hundred others, yet these flights
+have been made by some newspapers the subject of a great
+"mystery." '
+
+Viewing their work from the financial side, the two brothers
+incurred but little expense in the earlier gliding experiments,
+and, indeed, viewed these only as recreation, limiting their
+expenditure to that which two men might spend on any hobby.
+When they had once achieved successful power-driven flight, they
+saw the possibilities of their work, and abandoned such other
+business as had engaged their energies, sinking all their
+capital in the development of a practical flying machine.
+Having, in 1905, improved their designs to such an extent that
+they could consider their machine a practical aeroplane, they
+devoted the years 1906 and 1907 to business negotiations and to
+the construction of new machines, resuming flying experiments in
+May of 1908 in order to test the ability of their machine to
+meet the requirements of a contract they had made with the
+United States Government, which required an aeroplane capable of
+carrying two men, together with sufficient fuel supplies for a
+flight of 125 miles at 40 miles per hour. Practically similar
+to the machine used in the experiments of 1905, the contract
+aeroplane was fitted with a larger motor, and provision was made
+for seating a passenger and also for allowing of the operator
+assuming a sitting position, instead of lying prone.
+
+Before leaving the work of the brothers to consider contemporary
+events, it may be noted that they claimed--with justice--that
+they were first to construct wings adjustable to different
+angles of incidence on the right and left side in order to
+control the balance of an aeroplane; the first to attain lateral
+balance by adjusting wing-tips to respectively different angles
+of incidence on the right and left sides, and the first to use a
+vertical vane in combination with wing-tips, adjustable to
+respectively different angles of incidence, in balancing and
+steering an aeroplane. They were first, too, to use a movable
+vertical tail, in combination with wings adjustable to different
+angles of incidence, in controlling the balance and direction of
+an aeroplane.[*]
+
+[*]Aeronautical Journal, No. 79.
+
+A certain Henry M. Weaver, who went to see the work of the
+brothers, writing in a letter which was subsequently read before
+the Aero Club de France records that he had a talk in 1905 with
+the farmer who rented the field in which the Wrights made their
+flights.' On October 5th (1905) he was cutting corn in the next
+field east, which is higher ground. When he noticed the
+aeroplane had started on its flight he remarked to his helper:
+"Well, the boys are at it again," and kept on cutting corn, at
+the same time keeping an eye on the great white form rushing
+about its course. "I just kept on shocking corn," he continued,
+"until I got down to the fence, and the durned thing was still
+going round. I thought it would never stop." '
+
+He was right. The brothers started it, and it will never stop.
+
+Mr Weaver also notes briefly the construction of the 1905 Wright
+flier. 'The frame was made of larch wood-from tip to tip of the
+wings the dimension was 40 feet. The gasoline motor--a special
+construction made by them--much the same, though, as the motor
+on the Pope-Toledo automobile--was of from 12 to 15 horse-power.
+The motor weighed 240 lbs. The frame was covered with ordinary
+muslin of good quality. No attempt was made to lighten the
+machine; they simply built it strong enough to stand the shocks.
+The structure stood on skids or runners, like a sleigh. These
+held the frame high enough from the ground in alighting to
+protect the blades of the propeller. Complete with motor, the
+machine weighed 925 lbs.
+
+
+
+XII. THE FIRST YEARS OF CONQUEST
+
+It is no derogation of the work accomplished by the Wright
+Brothers to say that they won the honour of the first
+power-propelled flights in a heavier-than-air machine only by a
+short period. In Europe, and especially in France, independent
+experiment was being conducted by Ferber, by Santos-Dumont, and
+others, while in England Cody was not far behind the other
+giants of those days. The history of the early years of
+controlled power flights is a tangle of half-records; there were
+no chroniclers, only workers, and much of what was done goes
+unrecorded perforce, since it was not set down at the time.
+
+Before passing to survey of those early years, let it be set
+down that in 1907, when the Wright Brothers had proved the
+practicability of their machines, negotiations were entered into
+between the brothers and the British War office. On April 12th
+1907, the apostle of military stagnation, Haldane, then War
+Minister, put an end to the negotiations by declaring that 'the
+War office is not disposed to enter into relations at present
+with any manufacturer of aeroplanes' The state of the British
+air service in 1914 at the outbreak of hostilities, is eloquent
+regarding the pursuance of the policy which Haldane initiated.
+
+'If I talked a lot,' said Wilbur Wright once, 'I should be like
+the parrot, which is the bird that speaks most and flies least.'
+That attitude is emblematic of the majority of the early fliers,
+and because of it the record of their achievements is incomplete
+to-day. Ferber, for instance, has left little from which to
+state what he did, and that little is scattered through various
+periodicals, scrappily enough. A French army officer, Captain
+Ferber was experimenting with monoplane and biplane gliders at
+the beginning of the century-his work was contemporary with that
+of the Wrights. He corresponded both with Chanute and with the
+Wrights, and in the end he was commissioned by the French
+Ministry of War to undertake the journey to America in order to
+negotiate with the Wright Brothers concerning French rights in
+the patents they had acquired, and to study their work at first
+hand.
+
+Ferber's experiments in gliding began in 1899 at the Military
+School at Fountainebleau, with a canvas glider of some 80 square
+feet supporting surface, and weighing 65 lbs. Two years later
+he constructed a larger and more satisfactory machine, with
+which he made numerous excellent glides. Later, he constructed
+an apparatus which suspended a plane from a long arm which swung
+on a tower, in order that experiments might be carried out
+without risk to the experimenter, and it was not until 1905 that
+he attempted power-driven free flight. He took up the Voisin
+design of biplane for his power-driven flights, and virtually
+devoted all his energies to the study of aeronautics. His book,
+Aviation, its Dawn and Development, is a work of scientific
+value--unlike many of his contemporaries, Ferber brought to the
+study of the problems of flight a trained mind, and he was
+concerned equally with the theoretical problems of aeronautics
+and the practical aspects of the subject.
+
+After Bleriot's successful cross-Channel flight, it was proposed
+to offer a prize of L1,000 for the feat which C. S. Rolls
+subsequently accomplished (starting from the English side of the
+Channel), a flight from Boulogne to Dover and back; in place of
+this, however, an aviation week at Boulogne was organised, but,
+although numerous aviators were invited to compete, the
+condition of the flying grounds was such that no competitions
+took place. Ferber was virtually the only one to do any flying
+at Boulogne, and at the outset he had his first accident; after
+what was for those days a good flight, he made a series of
+circles with his machine, when it suddenly struck the ground,
+being partially wrecked. Repairs were carried out, and Ferber
+resumed his exhibition flights, carrying on up to Wednesday,
+September 22nd, 1909. On that day he remained in the air for
+half an hour, and, as he was about to land, the machine struck a
+mound of earth and overturned, pinning Ferber under the weight
+of the motor. After being extricated, Ferber seemed to show
+little concern at the accident, but in a few minutes he
+complained of great pain, when he was conveyed to the ambulance
+shed on the ground.
+
+'I was foolish,' he told those who were with him there. 'I was
+flying too low. It was my own fault and it will be a severe
+lesson to me. I wanted to turn round, and was only five metres
+from the ground.' A little after this, he got up from the couch
+on which he had been placed, and almost immediately collapsed,
+dying five minutes later.
+
+Ferber's chief contemporaries in France were Santos-Dumont, of
+airship fame, Henri and Maurice Farman, Hubert Latham, Ernest
+Archdeacon, and Delagrange. These are names that come at once to
+mind, as does that of Bleriot, who accomplished the second great
+feat of power-driven flight, but as a matter of fact the years
+1903-10 are filled with a little host of investigators and
+experimenters, many of whom, although their names do not survive
+to any extent, are but a very little way behind those mentioned
+here in enthusiasm and devotion. Archdeacon and Gabriel Voisin,
+the former of whom took to heart the success achieved by the
+Wright Brothers, co-operated in experiments in gliding.
+Archdeacon constructed a glider in box-kite fashion, and Voisin
+experimented with it on the Seine, the glider being towed by a
+motorboat to attain the necessary speed. It was Archdeacon who
+offered a cup for the first straight flight of 200 metres, which
+was won by Santos-Dumont, and he also combined with Henri Deutsch
+de la Meurthe in giving the prize for the first circular flight
+of a mile, which was won by Henry Farman on January 13th, 1908.
+
+A history of the development of aviation in France in these, the
+strenuous years, would fill volumes in itself. Bleriot was
+carrying out experiments with a biplane glider on the Seine, and
+Robert Esnault-Pelterie was working on the lines of the Wright
+Brothers, bringing American practice to France. In America
+others besides the Wrights had wakened to the possibilities of
+heavier-than-air flight; Glenn Curtiss, in company with Dr
+Alexander Graham Bell, with J. A. D. McCurdy, and with F. W.
+Baldwin, a Canadian engineer, formed the Aerial Experiment
+Company, which built a number of aeroplanes, most famous of
+which were the 'June Bug,' the 'Red Wing,' and the 'White Wing.'
+In 1908 the 'June Bug 'won a cup presented by the Scientific
+American--it was the first prize offered in America in
+connection with aeroplane flight.
+
+Among the little group of French experimenters in these first
+years of practical flight, Santos-Dumont takes high rank. He
+built his 'No. 14 bis' aeroplane in biplane form, with two
+superposed main plane surfaces, and fitted it with an
+eight-cylinder Antoinette motor driving a two-bladed aluminium
+propeller, of which the blades were 6 feet only from tip to tip.
+The total lift surface of 860 square feet was given with a
+wing-span of a little under 40 feet, and the weight of the
+complete machine was 353 lbs., of which the engine weighed 158
+lbs. In July of 1906 Santos-Dumont flew a distance of a few
+yards in this machine, but damaged it in striking the ground; on
+October 23rd of the same year he made a flight of nearly 200
+feet--which might have been longer, but that he feared a crowd
+in front of the aeroplane and cut off his ignition. This may be
+regarded as the first effective flight in Europe, and by it
+Santos-Dumont takes his place as one of the chief--if not the
+chief--of the pioneers of the first years of practical flight,
+so far as Europe is concerned.
+
+Meanwhile, the Voisin Brothers, who in 1904 made cellular kites
+for Archdeacon to test by towing on the Seine from a motor
+launch, obtained data for the construction of the aeroplane
+which Delagrange and Henry Farman were to use later. The Voisin
+was a biplane, constructed with due regard to the designs of
+Langley, Lilienthal, and other earlier experimenters--both the
+Voisins and M. Colliex, their engineer, studied Lilienthal
+pretty exhaustively in getting out their design, though their
+own researches were very thorough as well. The weight of this
+Voisin biplane was about 1,450 lbs., and its maximum speed was
+some 38 to 40 miles per hour, the total supporting surface being
+about 535 square feet. It differed from the Wright design in
+the possession of a tail-piece, a characteristic which marked
+all the French school of early design as in opposition to the
+American. The Wright machine got its longitudinal stability by
+means of the main planes and the elevating planes, while the
+Voisin type added a third factor of stability in its sailplanes.
+Further, the Voisins fitted their biplane with a wheeled
+undercarriage, while the Wright machine, being fitted only with
+runners, demanded a launching rail for starting. Whether a
+machine should be tailless or tailed was for some long time
+matter for acute controversy, which in the end was settled by
+the fitting of a tail to the Wright machines-France won the
+dispute by the concession.
+
+Henry Farman, who began his flying career with a Voisin machine,
+evolved from it the aeroplane which bore his name, following the
+main lines of the Voisin type fairly closely, but making
+alterations in the controls, and in the design of the
+undercarriage, which was somewhat elaborated, even to the
+inclusion of shock absorbers. The seven-cylinder 50 horse-power
+Gnome rotary engine was fitted to the Farman machine--the
+Voisins had fitted an eight-cylinder Antoinette, giving 50
+horse-power at 1,100 revolutions per minute, with direct drive
+to the propeller. Farman reduced the weight of the machine from
+the 1,450 lbs. of the Voisins to some 1,010 lbs. or
+thereabouts, and the supporting area to 450 square feet. This
+machine won its chief fame with Paulhan as pilot in the famous
+London to Manchester flight--it is to be remarked, too, that
+Farman himself was the first man in Europe to accomplish a
+flight of a mile.
+
+Other notable designs of these early days were the 'R.E.P.',
+Esnault Pelterie's machine, and the Curtiss-Herring biplane. Of
+these Esnault Pelterie's was a monoplane, designed in that form
+since Esnault Pelterie had found by experiment that the wire
+used in bracing offers far more resistance to the air than its
+dimensions would seem to warrant. He built the wings of
+sufficient strength to stand the strain of flight without
+bracing wires, and dependent only for their support on the
+points of attachment to the body of the machine; for the rest,
+it carried its propeller in front of the planes, and both
+horizontal and vertical rudders at the stern--a distinct
+departure from the Wright and similar types. One wheel only was
+fixed under the body where the undercarriage exists on a normal
+design, but light wheels were fixed, one at the extremity of
+each wing, and there was also a wheel under the tail portion of
+the machine. A single lever actuated all the controls for
+steering. With a supporting surface of 150 square feet the
+machine weighed 946 lbs., about 6.4 lbs. per square foot of
+lifting surface.
+
+The Curtiss biplane, as flown by Glenn Curtiss at the Rheims
+meeting, was built with a bamboo framework, stayed by means of
+very fine steel-stranded cables. A--then--novel feature of the
+machine was the moving of the ailerons by the pilot leaning to
+one side or the other in his seat, a light, tubular arm-rest
+being pressed by his body when he leaned to one side or the
+other, and thus operating the movement of the ailerons employed
+for tilting the plane when turning. A steering-wheel fitted
+immediately in front of the pilot's seat served to operate a
+rear steering-rudder when the wheel was turned in either
+direction, while pulling back the wheel altered the inclination
+of the front elevating planes, and so gave lifting or depressing
+control of the plane.
+
+This machine ran on three wheels before leaving the ground, a
+central undercarriage wheel being fitted in front, with two more
+in line with a right angle line drawn through the centre of the
+engine crank at the rear end of the crank-case. The engine was
+a 35 horsepower Vee design, water cooled, with overhead inlet
+and exhaust valves, and Bosch high-tension magneto ignition.
+The total weight of the plane in flying order was about 700 lbs.
+
+As great a figure in the early days as either Ferber or
+Santos-Dumont was Louis Bleriot, who, as early as 1900 built a
+flapping-wing model, this before ever he came to experimenting
+with the Voisin biplane type of glider on the Seine. Up to 1906
+he had built four biplanes of his own design, and in March of
+1907 he built his first monoplane, to wreck it only a few days
+after completion in an accident from which he had a fortunate
+escape. His next machine was a double monoplane, designed after
+Langley's precept, to a certain extent, and this was totally
+wrecked in September of 1907. His seventh machine, a
+monoplane, was built within a month of this accident, and with
+this he had a number of mishaps, also achieving some good
+flights, including one in which he made a turn. It was wrecked
+in December of 1907, whereupon he built another monoplane on
+which, on July 6th, 1908, Bleriot made a flight lasting eight
+and a half minutes. In October of that year he flew the machine
+from Toury to Artenay and returned on it--this was just a day
+after Farman's first cross-country flight--but, trying to repeat
+the success five days later, Bleriot collided with a tree in a
+fog and wrecked the machine past repair. Thereupon he set about
+building his eleventh machine, with which he was to achieve the
+first flight across the English channel.
+
+Henry Farman, to whom reference has already been made, was
+engaged with his two brothers, Maurice and Richard, in the
+motor-car business, and turned to active interest in flying in
+1907, when the Voisin firm built his first biplane on the
+box-kite principle. In July of 1908 he won a prize of L400 for
+a flight of thirteen miles, previously having completed the
+first kilometre flown in Europe with a passenger, the said
+passenger being Ernest Archdeaon. In September of 1908 Farman
+put up a speed record of forty miles an hour in a flight lasting
+forty minutes.
+
+Santos-Dumont produced the famous 'Demoiselle' monoplane early
+in 1909, a tiny machine in which the pilot had his seat in a
+sort of miniature cage under the main plane. It was a very
+fast, light little machine but was difficult to fly, and owing
+to its small wingspread was unable to glide at a reasonably safe
+angle. There has probably never been a cheaper flying machine
+to build than the 'Demoiselle,' which could be so upset as to
+seem completely wrecked, and then repaired ready for further
+flight by a couple of hours' work. Santos-Dumont retained no
+patent in the design, but gave it out freely to any one who
+chose to build 'Demoiselles'; the vogue of the pattern was
+brief, owing to the difficulty of piloting the machine.
+
+These were the years of records, broken almost as soon as made.
+There was Farman's mile, there was the flight of the Comte de
+Lambert over the Eiffel Tower, Latham's flight at Blackpool in a
+high wind, the Rheims records, and then Henry Farman's flight of
+four hours later in 1909, Orville Wright's height record of
+1,640 feet, and Delagrange's speed record of 49.9 miles per
+hour. The coming to fame of the Gnome rotary engine helped in
+the making of these records to a very great extent, for in this
+engine was a prime mover which gave the reliability that
+aeroplane builders and pilots had been searching for, but
+vainly. The Wrights and Glenn Curtiss, of course, had their own
+designs of engine, but the Gnome, in spite of its lack of
+economy in fuel and oil, and its high cost, soon came to be
+regarded as the best power plant for flight.
+
+Delagrange, one of the very good pilots of the early days,
+provided a curious insight to the way in which flying was
+regarded, at the opening of the Juvisy aero aerodrome in May of
+1909. A huge crowd had gathered for the first day's flying, and
+nine machines were announced to appear, but only three were
+brought out. Delagrange made what was considered an indifferent
+little flight, and another pilot, one De Bischoff, attempted to
+rise, but could not get his machine off the ground. Thereupon
+the crowd of 30,000 people lost their tempers, broke down the
+barriers surrounding the flying course, and hissed the
+officials, who were quite unable to maintain order. Delagrange,
+however, saved the situation by making a circuit of the course
+at a height of thirty feet from the ground, which won him rounds
+of cheering and restored the crowd to good humour. Possibly the
+smash achieved by Rougier, the famous racing motorist, who
+crashed his Voisin biplane after Delagrange had made his
+circuit, completed the enjoyment of the spectators. Delagrange,
+flying at Argentan in June of 1909, made a flight of four
+kilometres at a height of sixty feet; for those days this was a
+noteworthy performance. Contemporary with this was Hubert
+Latham's flight of an hour and seven minutes on an Antoinette
+monoplane; this won the adjective 'magnificent' from
+contemporary recorders of aviation.
+
+Viewing the work of the little group of French experimenters, it
+is, at this length of time from their exploits, difficult to see
+why they carried the art as far as they did. There was in it
+little of satisfaction, a certain measure of fame, and
+practically no profit--the giants of those days got very little
+for their pains. Delagrange's experience at the opening of the
+Juvisy ground was symptomatic of the way in which flight was
+regarded by the great mass of people--it was a sport, and
+nothing more, but a sport without the dividends attaching to
+professional football or horse-racing. For a brief period,
+after the Rheims meeting, there was a golden harvest to be
+reaped by the best of the pilots. Henry Farman asked L2,000 for
+a week's exhibition flying in England, and Paulhan asked half
+that sum, but a rapid increase in the number of capable pilots,
+together with the fact that most flying meetings were financial
+failures, owing to great expense in organisation and the
+doubtful factor of the weather, killed this goose before many
+golden eggs had been gathered in by the star aviators. Besides,
+as height and distance records were broken one after another, it
+became less and less necessary to pay for entrance to an
+aerodrome in order to see a flight--the thing grew too big for a
+mere sports ground.
+
+Long before Rheims and the meeting there, aviation had grown too
+big for the chronicling of every individual effort. In that
+period of the first days of conquest of the air, so much was
+done by so many whose names are now half-forgotten that it is
+possible only to pick out the great figures and make brief
+reference to their achievements and the machines with which they
+accomplished so much, pausing to note such epoch-making events
+as the London-Manchester flight, Bleriot's Channel crossing, and
+the Rheims meeting itself, and then passing on beyond the days
+of individual records to the time when the machine began to
+dominate the man. This latter because, in the early days, it
+was heroism to trust life to the planes that were turned out
+--the 'Demoiselle' and the Antoinette machine that Latham used
+in his attempt to fly the Channel are good examples of the
+flimsiness of early types--while in the later period, that of
+the war and subsequently, the heroism turned itself in a
+different--and nobler-direction. Design became standardised,
+though not perfected. The domination of the machine may best be
+expressed by contrasting the way in which machines came to be
+regarded as compared with the men who flew them: up to 1909,
+flying enthusiasts talked of Farman, of Bleriot, of Paulhan,
+Curtiss, and of other men; later, they began to talk of the
+Voisin, the Deperdussin, and even to the Fokker, the Avro, and
+the Bristol type. With the standardising of the machine, the
+days of the giants came to an end.
+
+
+
+XIII. FIRST FLIERS IN ENGLAND
+
+Certain experiments made in England by Mr Phillips seem to have
+come near robbing the Wright Brothers of the honour of the first
+flight; notes made by Colonel J. D. Fullerton on the Phillips
+flying machine show that in 1893 the first machine was built
+with a length of 25 feet, breadth of 22 feet, and height of 11
+feet, the total weight, including a 72 lb. load, being 420 lbs.
+The machine was fitted with some fifty wood slats, in place of
+the single supporting surface of the monoplane or two superposed
+surfaces of the biplane, these slats being fixed in a steel
+frame so that the whole machine rather resembled a Venetian
+blind. A steam engine giving about 9 horse-power provided the
+motive power for the six-foot diameter propeller which drove the
+machine. As it was not possible to put a passenger in control
+as pilot, the machine was attached to a central post by wire
+guys and run round a circle 100 feet in diameter, the track
+consisting of wooden planking 4 feet wide. Pressure of air
+under the slats caused the machine to rise some two or three
+feet above the track when sufficient velocity had been attained,
+and the best trials were made on June 19th 1893, when at a speed
+of 40 miles an hour, with a total load of 385 lbs., all the
+wheels were off the ground for a distance of 2,000 feet.
+
+In 1904 a full-sized machine was constructed by Mr Phillips,
+with a total weight, including that of the pilot, of 600 lbs.
+The machine was designed to lift when it had attained a velocity
+of 50 feet per second, the motor fitted giving 22 horse-power.
+On trial, however, the longitudinal equilibrium was found to be
+defective, and a further design was got out, the third machine
+being completed in 1907. In this the wood slats were held in
+four parallel container frames, the weight of the machine,
+excluding the pilot, being 500 lbs. A motor similar to that
+used in the 1904 machine was fitted, and the machine was
+designed to lift at a velocity of about 30 miles an hour, a
+seven-foot propeller doing the driving. Mr Phillips tried out
+this machine in a field about 400 yards across. 'The machine
+was started close to the hedge, and rose from the ground when
+about 200 yards had been covered. When the machine touched the
+ground again, about which there could be no doubt, owing to the
+terrific jolting, it did not run many yards. When it came to
+rest I was about ten yards from the boundary. Of course, I
+stopped the engine before I commenced to descend.'[*]
+
+[*] Aeronautical Journal, July, 1908.
+
+S. F. Cody, an American by birth, aroused the attention not only
+of the British public, but of the War office and Admiralty as
+well, as early as 1905 with his man-lifting kites. In that year
+a height of 1,600 feet was reached by one of these box-kites,
+carrying a man, and later in the same year one Sapper Moreton,
+of the Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers (the parent of the
+Royal Flying Corps) remained for an hour at an altitude of 2,600
+feet. Following on the success of these kites, Cody constructed
+an aeroplane which he designated a 'power kite,' which was in
+reality a biplane that made the first flight in Great Britain.
+Speaking before the Aeronautical Society in 1908, Cody said that
+'I have accomplished one thing that I hoped for very much, that
+is, to be the first man to fly in Great Britain.... I made a
+machine that left the ground the first time out; not high,
+possibly five or six inches only. I might have gone higher if I
+wished. I made some five flights in all, and the last flight
+came to grief.... On the morning of the accident I went out
+after adjusting my propellers at 8 feet pitch running at 600
+(revolutions per minute). I think that I flew at about
+twenty-eight miles per hour. I had 50 horsepower motor power in
+the engine. A bunch of trees, a flat common above these trees,
+and from this flat there is a slope goes down... to another clump
+of trees. Now, these clumps of trees are a quarter of a mile
+apart or thereabouts.... I was accused of doing nothing but
+jumping with my machine, so I got a bit agitated and went to fly.
+
+I went out this morning with an easterly wind, and left the
+ground at the bottom of the hill and struck the ground at the
+top, a distance of 74 yards. That proved beyond a doubt that the
+machine would fly--it flew uphill. That was the most talented
+flight the machine did, in my opinion. Now, I turned round at
+the top and started the machine and left the ground--remember, a
+ten mile wind was blowing at the time. Then, 60 yards from where
+the men let go, the machine went off in this direction
+(demonstrating)--I make a line now where I hoped to land--to cut
+these trees off at that side and land right off in here. I got
+here somewhat excited, and started down and saw these trees right
+in front of me. I did not want to smash my head rudder to
+pieces, so I raised it again and went up. I got one wing direct
+over that clump of trees, the right wing over the trees, the left
+wing free; the wind, blowing with me, had to lift over these
+trees. So I consequently got a false lift on the right side and
+no lift on the left side. Being only about 8 feet from the tree
+tops, that turned my machine up like that (demonstrating). This
+end struck the ground shortly after I had passed the trees. I
+pulled the steering handle over as far as I could. Then I faced
+another bunch of trees right in front of me. Trying to avoid
+this second bunch of trees I turned the rudder, and turned it
+rather sharp. That side of the machine struck, and it crumpled
+up like so much tissue paper, and the machine spun round and
+struck the ground that way on, and the framework was considerably
+wrecked. Now, I want to advise all aviators not to try to fly
+with the wind and to cross over any big clump of earth or any
+obstacle of any description unless they go square over the top of
+it, because the lift is enormous crossing over anything like
+that, and in coming the other way against the wind it would be
+the same thing when you arrive at the windward side of the
+obstacle. That is a point I did not think of, and had I thought
+of it I would have been more cautious.'
+
+This Cody machine was a biplane with about 40 foot span, the
+wings being about 7 feet in depth with about 8 feet between
+upper and lower wing surfaces. 'Attached to the extremities of
+the lower planes are two small horizontal planes or rudders,
+while a third small vertical plane is fixed over the centre of
+the upper plane.' The tail-piece and principal rudder were
+fitted behind the main body of the machine, and a horizontal
+rudder plane was rigged out in front, on two supporting arms
+extending from the centre of the machine. The small end-planes
+and the vertical plane were used in conjunction with the main
+rudder when turning to right or left, the inner plane being
+depressed on the turn, and the outer one correspondingly raised,
+while the vertical plane, working in conjunction, assisted in
+preserving stability. Two two-bladed propellers were driven by
+an eight-cylinder 50 horse-power Antoinette motor. With this
+machine Cody made his first flights over Laffan's plain, being
+then definitely attached to the Balloon Section of the Royal
+Engineers as military aviation specialist.
+
+There were many months of experiment and trial, after the
+accident which Cody detailed in the statement given above, and
+then, on May 14th, 1909, Cody took the air and made a flight of
+1,200 yards with entire success. Meanwhile A. V. Roe was
+experimenting at Lea Marshes with a triplane of rather curious
+design the pilot having his seat between two sets of three
+superposed planes, of which the front planes could be tilted and
+twisted while the machine was in motion. He comes but a little
+way after Cody in the chronology of early British experimenters,
+but Cody, a born inventor, must be regarded as the pioneer of
+the present century so far as Britain is concerned. He was
+neither engineer nor trained mathematician, but he was a good
+rule-of-thumb mechanic and a man of pluck and perseverance; he
+never strove to fly on an imperfect machine, but made alteration
+after alteration in order to find out what was improvement and
+what was not, in consequence of which it was said of him that he
+was 'always satisfied with his alterations.'
+
+By July of 1909 he had fitted an 80 horse-power motor to his
+biplane, and with this he made a flight of over four miles over
+Laffan's Plain on July 21st. By August he was carrying
+passengers, the first being Colonel Capper of the R.E. Balloon
+Section, who flew with Cody for over two miles, and on September
+8th, 1909, he made a world's record cross-country flight of
+over forty miles in sixty-six minutes, taking a course from
+Laffan's Plain over Farnborough, Rushmoor, and Fleet, and back
+to Laffan's Plain. He was one of the competitors in the 1909
+Doncaster Aviation Meeting, and in 1910 he competed at
+Wolverhampton, Bournemouth, and Lanark. It was on June 7th,
+1910, that he qualified for his brevet, No. 9, on the Cody
+biplane.
+
+He built a machine which embodied all the improvements for which
+he had gained experience, in 1911, a biplane with a length of
+35 feet and span of 43 feet, known as the 'Cody cathedral' on
+account of its rather cumbrous appearance. With this, in 1911,
+he won the two Michelin trophies presented in England, completed
+the Daily Mail circuit of Britain, won the Michelin
+cross-country prize in 1912 and altogether, by the end of 1912,
+had covered more than 7,000 miles with the machine. It was
+fitted with a 120 horse-power Austro-Daimler engine, and was
+characterised by an exceptionally wide range of speed--the great
+wingspread gave a slow landing speed.
+
+A few of his records may be given: in 1910, flying at Laffan's
+Plain in his biplane, fitted with a 50-60 horsepower Green
+engine, on December 31st, he broke the records for distance and
+time by flying 185 miles, 787 yards, in 4 hours 37 minutes. On
+October 31st, 1911, he beat this record by flying for 5 hours 15
+minutes, in which period he covered 261 miles 810 yards with a 60
+horse-power Green engine fitted to his biplane. In 1912,
+competing in the British War office tests of military
+aeroplanes, he won the L5,000 offered by the War Office. This
+was in competition with no less than twenty-five other machines,
+among which were the since-famous Deperdussin, Bristol,
+Flanders, and Avro types, as well as the Maurice Farman and
+Bleriot makes of machine. Cody's remarkable speed range was
+demonstrated in these trials, the speeds of his machine varying
+between 72.4 and 48.5 miles per hour. The machine was the only
+one delivered for the trials by air, and during the three hours'
+test imposed on all competitors a maximum height of 5,000 feet
+was reached, the first thousand feet being achieved in three and
+a half minutes.
+
+During the summer of 1913 Cody put his energies into the
+production of a large hydro-biplane, with which he intended to
+win the L5,000 prize offered by the Daily Mail to the first
+aviator to fly round Britain on a waterplane. This machine was
+fitted with landing gear for its tests, and, while flying it
+over Laffan's Plain on August 7th, 1913, with Mr W. H. B. Evans
+as passenger, Cody met with the accident that cost both
+him and his passenger their lives. Aviation lost a great figure
+by his death, for his plodding, experimenting, and dogged
+courage not only won him the fame that came to a few of the
+pilots of those days, but also advanced the cause of flying very
+considerably and contributed not a little to the sum of
+knowledge in regard to design and construction.
+
+Another figure of the early days was A. V. Roe, who came from
+marine engineering to the motor industry and aviation in 1905.
+In 1906 he went out to Colorado, getting out drawings for the
+Davidson helicopter, and in 1907 having returned to England, he
+obtained highest award out of 200 entries in a model aeroplane
+flying competition. From the design of this model he built a
+full-sized machine, and made a first flight on it, fitted with a
+24 horse-power Antoinette engine, in June of 1908 Later, he
+fitted a 9 horsepower motor-cycle engine to a triplane of his
+own design, and with this made a number of short flights; he got
+his flying brevet on a triplane with a motor of 35 horse-power,
+which, together with a second triplane, was entered for the
+Blackpool aviation meeting of 1910 but was burnt in transport to
+the meeting. He was responsible for the building of the first
+seaplane to rise from English waters, and may be counted the
+pioneer of the tractor type of biplane. In 1913 he built a
+two-seater tractor biplane with 80 horse-power engine, a machine
+which for some considerable time ranked as a leader of design.
+Together with E. V. Roe and H. V. Roe, 'A. V.' controlled the
+Avro works, which produced some of the most famous training
+machines of the war period in a modification of the original 80
+horse-power tractor. The first of the series of Avro tractors
+to be adopted by the military authorities was the 1912 biplane, a
+two-seater fitted with 50 horsepower engine. It was the first
+tractor biplane with a closed fuselage to be used for military
+work, and became standard for the type. The Avro seaplane, of I
+100 horse-power (a fourteen-cylinder Gnome engine was used) was
+taken up by the British Admiralty in 1913. It had a length of 34
+feet and a wing-span of 50 feet, and was of the twin-float type.
+
+Geoffrey de Havilland, though of later rank, counts high among
+designers of British machines. He qualified for his brevet as
+late as February, 1911, on a biplane of his own construction, and
+became responsible for the design of the BE2, the first
+successful British Government biplane. On this he made a British
+height record of 10,500 feet over Salisbury Plain, in August of
+1912, when he took up Major Sykes as passenger. In the war
+period he was one of the principal designers of fighting and
+reconnaissance machines.
+
+F. Handley Page, who started in business as an aeroplane
+builder in 1908, having works at Barking, was one of the
+principal exponents of the inherently stable machine, to which
+he devoted practically all his experimental work up to the
+outbreak of war. The experiments were made with various
+machines, both of monoplane and biplane type, and of these one
+of the best was a two-seater monoplane built in 1911, while a
+second was a larger machine, a biplane, built in 1913 and fitted
+with a 110 horse-power Anzani engine. The war period brought out
+the giant biplane with which the name of Handley Page is most
+associated, the twin-engined night-bomber being a familiar
+feature of the later days of the war; the four-engined bomber had
+hardly had a chance of proving itself under service conditions
+when the war came to an end.
+
+Another notable figure of the early period was 'Tommy' Sopwith,
+who took his flying brevet at Brooklands in November of 1910,
+and within four days made the British duration record of 108
+miles in 3 hours 12 minutes. On December 18th, 1910, he won the
+Baron de Forrest prize of L4,000 for the longest flight from
+England to the Continent, flying from Eastchurch to Tirlemont,
+Belgium, in three hours, a distance of 161 miles. After two
+years of touring in America, he returned to England and
+established a flying school. In 1912 he won the first aerial
+Derby, and in 1913 a machine of his design, a tractor biplane,
+raised the British height record to 13,000 feet (June 16th, at
+Brooklands). First as aviator, and then as designer, Sopwith has
+done much useful work in aviation.
+
+These are but a few, out of a host who contributed to the
+development of flying in this country, for, although France may
+be said to have set the pace as regards development, Britain was
+not far behind. French experimenters received far more
+Government aid than did the early British aviators and
+designers--in the early days the two were practically
+synonymous, and there are many stories of the very early days at
+Brooklands, where, when funds ran low, the ardent spirits
+patched their trousers with aeroplane fabric and went on with
+their work with Bohemian cheeriness. Cody, altering and
+experimenting on Laffan's Plain, is the greatest figure of them
+all, but others rank, too, as giants of the early days, before
+the war brought full recognition of the aeroplane's
+potentialities.
+
+one of the first men actually to fly in England, Mr J. C. T.
+Moore-Brabazon, was a famous figure in the days of exhibition
+flying, and won his reputation mainly through being first to fly
+a circular mile on a machine designed and built in Great Britain
+and piloted by a British subject. Moore-Brabazon's earliest
+flights were made in France on a Voisin biplane in 1908, and he
+brought this machine over to England, to the Aero Club grounds
+at Shellness, but soon decided that he would pilot a British
+machine instead. An order was placed for a Short machine, and
+this, fitted with a 50-60 horse-power Green engine, was used for
+the circular mile, which won a prize of L1,000 offered by the
+Daily Mail, the feat being accomplished on October 30th, 1909.
+Five days later, Moore-Brabazon achieved the longest flight up
+to that time accomplished on a British-built machine, covering
+three and a half miles. In connection with early flying in
+England, it is claimed that A. V. Roe, flying 'Avro B,',' on
+June 8th, 1908, was actually the first man to leave the ground,
+this being at Brooklands, but in point of fact Cody antedated
+him.
+
+No record of early British fliers could be made without the name
+of C. S. Rolls, a son of Lord Llangattock, on June 2nd, 1910,
+he flew across the English Channel to France, until he was duly
+observed over French territory, when he returned to England
+without alighting. The trip was made on a Wright biplane, and
+was the third Channel crossing by air, Bleriot having made the
+first, and Jacques de Lesseps the second. Rolls was first to
+make the return journey in one trip. He was eventually killed
+through the breaking of the tail-plane of his machine in
+descending at a flying meeting at Bournemouth. The machine was
+a Wright biplane, but the design of the tail-plane--which, by
+the way, was an addition to the machine, and was not even
+sanctioned by the Wrights--appears to have been carelessly
+executed, and the plane itself was faulty in construction. The
+breakage caused the machine to overturn, killing Rolls, who was
+piloting it.
+
+
+
+XIV. RHEIMS, AND AFTER
+
+The foregoing brief--and necessarily incomplete--survey of the
+early British group of fliers has taken us far beyond some of
+the great events of the early days of successful flight, and it
+is necessary to go back to certain landmarks in the history of
+aviation, first of which is the great meeting at Rheims in 1909.
+Wilbur Wright had come to Europe, and, flying at Le Mans and
+Pau--it was on August 8th, 1908, that Wilbur Wright made the
+first of his ascents in Europe--had stimulated public interest
+in flying in France to a very great degree. Meanwhile, Orville
+Wright, flying at Fort Meyer, U.S.A., with Lieutenant Selfridge
+as a passenger, sustained an accident which very nearly cost him
+his life through the transmission gear of the motor breaking.
+Selfridge was killed and Orville Wright was severely injured--it
+was the first fatal accident with a Wright machine.
+
+Orville Wright made a flight of over an hour on September 9th,
+1908, and on December 31st of that year Wilbur flew for 2 hours
+19 minutes. Thus, when the Rheims meeting was organised--more
+notable because it was the first of its kind, there were already
+records waiting to be broken. The great week opened on August
+22nd, there being thirty entrants, including all the most famous
+men among the early fliers in France. Bleriot, fresh from his
+Channel conquest, was there, together with Henry Farman,
+Paulhan, Curtiss, Latham, and the Comte de Lambert, first pupil
+of the Wright machine in Europe to achieve a reputation as an
+aviator.
+
+'To say that this week marks an epoch in the history of the
+world is to state a platitude. Nevertheless, it is worth
+stating, and for us who are lucky enough to be at Rheims during
+this week there is a solid satisfaction in the idea that we are
+present at the making of history. In perhaps only a few years
+to come the competitions of this week may look pathetically
+small and the distances and speeds may appear paltry.
+Nevertheless, they are the first of their kind, and that is
+sufficient.'
+
+So wrote a newspaper correspondent who was present at the famous
+meeting, and his words may stand, being more than mere
+journalism; for the great flying week which opened on August
+22nd, 1909, ranks as one of the great landmarks in the history
+of heavier-than-air flight. The day before the opening of the
+meeting a downpour of rain spoilt the flying ground; Sunday
+opened with a fairly high wind, and in a lull M. Guffroy turned
+out on a crimson R.E.P. monoplane, but the wheels of his
+undercarriage stuck in the mud and prevented him from rising in
+the quarter of an hour allowed to competitors to get off the
+ground. Bleriot, following, succeeded in covering one side of
+the triangular course, but then came down through grit in the
+carburettor. Latham, following him with thirteen as the number
+of his machine, experienced his usual bad luck and came to earth
+through engine trouble after a very short flight. Captain
+Ferber, who, owing to military regulations, always flew under
+the name of De Rue, came out next with his Voisin biplane, but
+failed to get off the ground; he was followed by Lefebvre on a
+Wright biplane, who achieved the success of the morning by
+rounding the course--a distance of six and a quarter miles--in
+nine minutes with a twenty mile an hour wind blowing. His
+flight finished the morning.
+
+Wind and rain kept competitors out of the air until the evening,
+when Latham went up, to be followed almost immediately by the
+Comte de Lambert. Sommer, Cockburn (the only English
+competitor), Delagrange, Fournier, Lefebvre, Bleriot,
+Bunau-Varilla, Tissandier, Paulhan, and Ferber turned out after
+the first two, and the excitement of the spectators at seeing so
+many machines in the air at one time provoked wild cheering.
+The only accident of the day came when Bleriot damaged his
+propeller in colliding with a haycock.
+
+The main results of the day were that the Comte de Lambert flew
+30 kilometres in 29 minutes 2 seconds; Lefebvre made the
+ten-kilometre circle of the track in just a second under 9
+minutes, while Tissandier did it in 9 1/4 minutes, and Paulhan
+reached a height of 230 feet. Small as these results seem to us
+now, and ridiculous as may seem enthusiasm at the sight of a few
+machines in the air at the same time, the Rheims Meeting remains
+a great event, since it proved definitely to the whole world
+that the conquest of the air had been achieved.
+
+Throughout the week record after record was made and broken.
+Thus on the Monday, Lefebvre put up a record for rounding the
+course and Bleriot beat it, to be beaten in turn by Glenn
+Curtiss on his Curtiss-Herring biplane. On that day, too,
+Paulhan covered 34 3/4 miles in 1 hour 6 minutes. On the next
+day, Paulhan on his Voisin biplane took the air with Latham, and
+Fournier followed, only to smash up his machine by striking an
+eddy of wind which turned him over several times. On the
+Thursday, one of the chief events was Latham's 43 miles
+accomplished in 1 hour 2 minutes in the morning and his 96.5
+miles in 2 hours 13 minutes in the afternoon, the latter flight
+only terminated by running out of petrol. On the Friday, the
+Colonel Renard French airship, which had flown over the ground
+under the pilotage of M. Kapfarer, paid Rheims a second visit;
+Latham manoeuvred round the airship on his Antoinette and finally
+left it far behind. Henry Farman won the Grand Prix de Champagne
+on this day, covering 112 miles in 3 hours, 4 minutes, 56
+seconds, Latham being second with his 96.5 miles flight, and
+Paulhan third.
+
+On the Saturday, Glenn Curtiss came to his own, winning the
+Gordon-Bennett Cup by covering 20 kilometres in 15 minutes
+50.6 seconds. Bleriot made a good second with 15 minutes 56.2
+seconds as his time, and Latham and Lefebvre were third and
+fourth. Farman carried off the passenger prize by carrying two
+passengers a distance of 6 miles in 10 minutes 39 seconds. On
+the last day Delagrange narrowly escaped serious accident
+through the bursting of his propeller while in the air, Curtiss
+made a new speed record by travelling at the rate of over 50
+miles an hour, and Latham, rising to 500 feet, won the altitude
+prize.
+
+These are the cold statistics of the meeting; at this length of
+time it is difficult to convey any idea of the enthusiasm of the
+crowds over the achievements of the various competitors, while
+the incidents of the week, comic and otherwise, are nearly
+forgotten now even by those present in this making of history.
+Latham's great flight on the Thursday was rendered a breathless
+episode by a downpour of rain when he had covered all but a
+kilometre of the record distance previously achieved by Paulhan,
+and there was wild enthusiasm when Latham flew on through the
+rain until he had put up a new record and his petrol had run
+out. Again, on the Friday afternoon, the Colonel Renard took
+the air together with a little French dirigible, Zodiac III;
+Latham was already in the air directly over Farman, who was also
+flying, and three crows which turned out as rivals to the human
+aviators received as much cheering for their appearance as had
+been accorded to the machines, which doubtless they could not
+understand. Frightened by the cheering, the crows tried to
+escape from the course, but as they came near the stands, the
+crowd rose to cheer again and the crows wheeled away to make a
+second charge towards safety, with the same result; the crowd
+rose and cheered at them a third and fourth time; between ten
+and fifteen thousand people stood on chairs and tables and waved
+hats and handkerchiefs at three ordinary, everyday crows. One
+thoughtful spectator, having thoroughly enjoyed the funny side
+of the incident, remarked that the ultimate mastery of the air
+lies with the machine that comes nearest to natural flight.
+This still remains for the future to settle.
+
+Farman's world record, which won the Grand Prix de Champagne,
+was done with a Gnome Rotary Motor which had only been run on
+the test bench and was fitted to his machine four hours before
+he started on the great flight. His propeller had never been
+tested, having only been completed the night before. The
+closing laps of that flight, extending as they did into the
+growing of the dusk, made a breathlessly eerie experience for
+such of the spectators as stayed on to watch--and these were
+many. Night came on steadily and Farman covered lap after lap
+just as steadily, a buzzing, circling mechanism with something
+relentless in its isolated persistency.
+
+The final day of the meeting provided a further record in the
+quarter million spectators who turned up to witness the close of
+the great week. Bleriot, turning out in the morning, made a
+landing in some such fashion as flooded the carburettor and
+caused it to catch fire. Bleriot himself was badly burned,
+since the petrol tank burst and, in the end, only the metal
+parts of the machine were left. Glenn Curtis tried to beat
+Bleriot's time for a lap of the course, but failed. In the
+evening, Farman and Latham went out and up in great circles,
+Farman cleaving his way upward in what at the time counted for a
+huge machine, on circles of about a mile diameter. His first
+round took him level with the top of the stands, and, in his
+second, he circled the captive balloon anchored in the middle of
+the grounds. After another circle, he came down on a long glide,
+when Latham's lean Antoinette monoplane went up in circles more
+graceful than those of Farman. 'Swiftly it rose and swept round
+close to the balloon, veered round to the hangars, and out over
+to the Rheims road. Back it came high over the stands, the
+people craning their necks as the shrill cry of the engine drew
+nearer and nearer behind the stands. Then of a sudden, the
+little form appeared away up in the deep twilight blue vault of
+the sky, heading straight as an arrow for the anchored balloon.
+Over it, and high, high above it went the Antoinette, seemingly
+higher by many feet than the Farman machine. Then, wheeling in
+a long sweep to the left, Latham steered his machine round past
+the stands, where the people, their nerve-tension released on
+seeing the machine descending from its perilous height of 500
+feet, shouted their frenzied acclamations to the hero of the
+meeting.
+
+'For certainly "Le Tham," as the French call him, was the
+popular hero. He always flew high, he always flew well, and his
+machine was a joy to the eye, either afar off or at close
+quarters. The public feeling for Bleriot is different.
+Bleriot, in the popular estimation, is the man who fights
+against odds, who meets the adverse fates calmly and with good
+courage, and to whom good luck comes once in a while as a reward
+for much labour and anguish, bodily and mental. Latham is the
+darling of the Gods, to whom Fate has only been unkind in the
+matter of the Channel flight, and only then because the honour
+belonged to Bleriot.
+
+'Next to these two, the public loved most Lefebvre, the joyous,
+the gymnastic. Lefebvre was the comedian of the meeting. When
+things began to flag, the gay little Lefebvre would trot out to
+his starting rail, out at the back of the judge's enclosure
+opposite the stands, and after a little twisting of propellers
+his Wright machine would bounce off the end of its starting rail
+and proceed to do the most marvellous tricks for the benefit of
+the crowd, wheeling to right and left, darting up and down, now
+flying over a troop of the cavalry who kept the plain clear of
+people and sending their horses into hysterics, anon making
+straight for an unfortunate photographer who would throw himself
+and his precious camera flat on the ground to escape
+annihilation as Lefebvre swept over him 6 or 7 feet off the
+ground. Lefebvre was great fun, and when he had once found that
+his machine was not fast enough to compete for speed with the
+Bleriots, Antoinettes, and Curtiss, he kept to his metier of
+amusing people. The promoters of the meeting owe Lefebvre a
+debt of gratitude, for he provided just the necessary comic
+relief.'--(The Aero, September 7th, 1909.)
+
+It may be noted, in connection with the fact that Cockburn was
+the only English competitor at the meeting, that the Rheims
+Meeting did more than anything which had preceded it to waken
+British interest in aviation. Previously, heavier-than-air
+flight in England had been regarded as a freak business by the
+great majority, and the very few pioneers who persevered toward
+winning England a share in the conquest of the air came in for
+as much derision as acclamation. Rheims altered this; it taught
+the world in general, and England in particular, that a serious
+rival to the dirigible balloon had come to being, and it
+awakened the thinking portion of the British public to the fact
+that the aeroplane had a future.
+
+The success of this great meeting brought about a host of
+imitations of which only a few deserve bare mention since,
+unlike the first, they taught nothing and achieved little.
+There was the meeting at Boulogne late in September of 1909, of
+which the only noteworthy event was Ferber's death. There was a
+meeting at Brescia where Curtiss again took first prize for
+speed and Rougier put up a world's height record of 645 feet.
+The Blackpool meeting followed between 18th and 23rd of
+October, 1909, forming, with the exception of Doncaster, the
+first British Flying Meeting. Chief among the competitors were
+Henry Farman, who took the distance prize, Rougier, Paulhan, and
+Latham, who, by a flight in a high wind, convinced the British
+public that the theory that flying was only possible in a calm
+was a fallacy. A meeting at Doncaster was practically
+simultaneous with the Blackpool week; Delagrange, Le Blon,
+Sommer, and Cody were the principal figures in this event. It
+should be added that 130 miles was recorded as the total flown
+at Doncaster, while at Blackpool only 115 miles were flown.
+Then there were Juvisy, the first Parisian meeting,
+Wolverhampton, and the Comte de Lambert's flight round the
+Eiffel Tower at a height estimated at between 1,200 and 1,300
+feet. This may be included in the record of these aerial
+theatricals, since it was nothing more.
+
+Probably wakened to realisation of the possibilities of the
+aeroplane by the Rheims Meeting, Germany turned out its first
+plane late in 1909. It was known as the Grade monoplane, and
+was a blend of the Bleriot and Santos-Dumont machines, with a
+tail suggestive of the Antoinette type. The main frame took the
+form of a single steel tube, at the forward end of which was
+rigged a triangular arrangement carrying the pilot's seat and
+the landing wheels underneath, with the wing warping wires and
+stays above. The sweep of the wings was rather similar to the
+later Taube design, though the sweep back was not so pronounced,
+and the machine was driven by a four-cylinder, 20 horse-power,
+air-cooled engine which drove a two-bladed tractor propeller.
+In spite of Lilienthal's pioneer work years before, this was the
+first power-driven German plane which actually flew.
+
+Eleven months after the Rheims meeting came what may be reckoned
+the only really notable aviation meeting on English soil, in the
+form of the Bournemouth week, July 10th to 16th, 1910. This
+gathering is noteworthy mainly in view of the amazing advance
+which it registered on the Rheims performances. Thus, in the
+matter of altitude, Morane reached 4,107 feet and Drexel came
+second with 2,490 feet. Audemars on a Demoiselle monoplane made
+a flight of 17 miles 1,480 yards in 27 minutes 17.2 seconds, a
+great flight for the little Demoiselle. Morane achieved a speed
+of 56.64 miles per hour, and Grahame White climbed to 1,000 feet
+altitude in 6 minutes 36.8 seconds. Machines carrying the Gnome
+engine as power unit took the great bulk of the prizes, and
+British-built engines were far behind.
+
+The Bournemouth Meeting will always be remembered with regret
+for the tragedy of C. S. Rolls's death, which took place on
+the Tuesday, the second day of the meeting. The first
+competition of the day was that for the landing prize; Grahame
+White, Audemars, and Captain Dickson had landed with varying
+luck, and Rolls, following on a Wright machine with a tail-plane
+which ought never to have been fitted and was not part of the
+Wright design, came down wind after a left-hand turn and turned
+left again over the top of the stands in order to land up wind.
+He began to dive when just clear of the stands, and had dropped
+to a height of 40 feet when he came over the heads of the people
+against the barriers. Finding his descent too steep, he pulled
+back his elevator lever to bring the nose of the machine up,
+tipping down the front end of the tail to present an almost flat
+surface to the wind. Had all gone well, the nose of the machine
+would have been forced up, but the strain on the tail and its
+four light supports was too great; the tail collapsed, the wind
+pressed down the biplane elevator, and the machine dived
+vertically for the remaining 20 feet of the descent, hitting the
+ground vertically and crumpling up. Major Kennedy, first to
+reach the debris, found Rolls lying with his head doubled under
+him on the overturned upper main plane; the lower plane had been
+flung some few feet away with the engine and tanks under it.
+Rolls was instantaneously killed by concussion of the brain.
+
+Antithesis to the tragedy was Audemars on his Demoiselle, which
+was named 'The Infuriated Grasshopper.' Concerning this, it was
+recorded at the time that 'Nothing so excruciatingly funny as
+the action of this machine has ever been seen at any aviation
+ground. The little two-cylinder engine pops away with a sound
+like the frantic drawing of ginger beer corks; the machine
+scutters along the ground with its tail well up; then down comes
+the tail suddenly and seems to slap the ground while the front
+jumps up, and all the spectators rock with laughter. The whole
+attitude and the jerky action of the machine suggest a
+grasshopper in a furious rage, and the impression is intensified
+when it comes down, as it did twice on Wednesday, in long grass,
+burying its head in the ground in its temper.'--(The Aero, July,
+1910.)
+
+The Lanark Meeting followed in August of the same year, and with
+the bare mention of this, the subject of flying meetings may he
+left alone, since they became mere matters of show until there
+came military competitions such as the Berlin Meeting at the end
+of August, 1910, and the British War office Trials on Salisbury
+Plain, when Cody won his greatest triumphs. The Berlin meeting
+proved that, from the time of the construction of the first
+successful German machine mentioned above, to the date of the
+meeting, a good number of German aviators had qualified for
+flight, but principally on Wright and Antoinette machines, though
+by that time the Aviatik and Dorner German makes had taken the
+air. The British War office Trials deserve separate and longer
+mention.
+
+In 1910 in spite of official discouragement, Captain Dickson
+proved the value of the aeroplane for scouting purposes by
+observing movements of troops during the Military Manoeuvres on
+Salisbury Plain. Lieut. Lancelot Gibbs and Robert Loraine,
+the actor-aviator, also made flights over the manoeuvre area,
+locating troops and in a way anticipating the formation and work
+of the Royal Flying Corps by a usefulness which could not be
+officially recognised.
+
+
+
+XV. THE CHANNEL CROSSING
+
+It may be said that Louis Bleriot was responsible for the second
+great landmark in the history of successful flight. The day when
+the brothers Wright succeeded in accomplishing power-driven
+flight ranks as the first of these landmarks. Ader may or may
+not have left the ground, but the wreckage of his 'Avion' at the
+end of his experiment places his doubtful success in a different
+category from that of the brothers Wright and leaves them the
+first definite conquerors, just as Bleriot ranks as first
+definite conqueror of the English Channel by air.
+
+In a way, Louis Bleriot ranks before Farman in point of time;
+his first flapping-wing model was built as early as 1900, and
+Voisin flew a biplane glider of his on the Seine in the very
+early experimental days. Bleriot's first four machines were
+biplanes, and his fifth, a monoplane, was wrecked almost
+immediately after its construction. Bleriot had studied
+Langley's work to a certain extent, and his sixth construction
+was a double monoplane based on the Langley principle. A month
+after he had wrecked this without damaging himself-- for Bleriot
+had as many miraculous escapes as any of the other fliers-he
+brought out number seven, a fairly average monoplane. It was in
+December of 1907 after a series of flights that he wrecked this
+machine, and on its successor, in July of 1908, he made a
+flight of over 8 minutes. Sundry flights, more or less
+successful, including the first cross-country flight from Toury
+to Artenay, kept him busy up to the beginning of November, 1908,
+when the wreckage in a fog of the machine he was flying sent him
+to the building of 'number eleven,' the famous cross-channel
+aeroplane.
+
+Number eleven was shown at the French Aero Show in the Grand
+Palais and was given its first trials on the 18th January, 1909.
+It was first fitted with a R.E.P. motor and had a lifting area
+of 120 square feet, which was later increased to 150 square
+feet. The framework was of oak and poplar spliced and
+reinforced with piano wire; the weight of the machine was 47
+lbs. and the undercarriage weight a further 60 lbs., this
+consisting of rubber cord shock absorbers mounted on two wheels.
+The R.E.P. motor was found unsatisfactory, and a three-cylinder
+Anzani of 105 mm. bore and 120 mm. stroke replaced it. An
+accident seriously damaged the machine on June 2nd, but Bleriot
+repaired it and tested it at Issy, where between June 19th and
+June 23rd he accomplished flights of 8, 12, 15, 16, and 36
+minutes. On July 4th he made a 50-minute flight and on the 13th
+flew from Etampes to Chevilly.
+
+A few further details of construction may be given: the wings
+themselves and an elevator at the tail controlled the rate of
+ascent and descent, while a rudder was also fitted at the tail.
+The steering lever, working on a universally jointed
+shaft--forerunner of the modern joystick--controlled both the
+rudder and the wings, while a pedal actuated the elevator. The
+engine drove a two-bladed tractor screw of 6 feet 7 inches
+diameter, and the angle of incidence of the wings was 20
+degrees. Timed at Issy, the speed of the machine was given as 36
+miles an hour, and as Bleriot accomplished the Channel flight of
+20 miles in 37 minutes, he probably had a slight following wind.
+
+The Daily Mail had offered a prize of L1,000 for the first
+Cross-Channel flight, and Hubert Latham set his mind on winning
+it. He put up a shelter on the French coast at Sangatte,
+half-way between Calais and Cape Blanc Nez. From here he made
+his first attempt to fly to England on Monday the 19th of July.
+He soared to a fair height, circling, and reached an estimated
+height of about 900 feet as he came over the water with every
+appearance of capturing the Cross-Channel prize. The luck which
+dogged his career throughout was against him, for, after he had
+covered some 8 miles, his engine stopped and he came down to the
+water in a series of long glides. It was discovered afterward
+that a small piece of wire had worked its way into a vital part
+of the engine to rob Latham of the honour he coveted. The tug
+that came to his rescue found him seated on the fuselage of his
+Antoinette, smoking a cigarette and waiting for a boat to take
+him to the tug. It may be remarked that Latham merely assumed
+his Antoinette would float in case he failed to make the English
+coast; he had no actual proof.
+
+Bleriot immediately entered his machine for the prize and took
+up his quarters at Barraques. On Sunday, July 25th, 1909,
+shortly after 4 a.m., Bleriot had his machine taken out from its
+shelter and prepared for flight. He had been recently injured
+in a petrol explosion and hobbled out on crutches to make his
+cross-Channel attempt; he made two great circles in the air to
+try the machine, and then alighted. 'In ten minutes I start
+for England,' he declared, and at 4.35 the motor was started up.
+After a run of 100 yards, the machine rose in the air and got a
+height of about 100 feet over the land, then wheeling sharply
+seaward and heading for Dover.
+
+Bleriot had no means of telling direction, and any change of
+wind might have driven him out over the North Sea, to be lost,
+as were Cecil Grace and Hamel later on. Luck was with him,
+however, and at 5.12 a.m. of that July Sunday, he made his
+landing in the North Fall meadow, just behind Dover Castle.
+Twenty minutes out from the French coast, he lost sight of the
+destroyer which was patrolling the Channel, and at the same time
+he was out of sight of land without compass or any other means
+of ascertaining his direction. Sighting the English coast, he
+found that he had gone too far to the east, for the wind
+increased in strength throughout the flight, this to such an
+extent as almost to turn the machine round when he came over
+English soil. Profiting by Latham's experience, Bleriot had
+fitted an inflated rubber cylinder a foot in diameter by 5 feet
+in length along the middle of his fuselage, to render floating a
+certainty in case he had to alight on the water.
+
+Latham in his camp at Sangatte had been allowed to sleep through
+the calm of the early morning through a mistake on the part of a
+friend, and when his machine was turned out--in order that he
+might emulate Bleriot, although he no longer hoped to make the
+first flight, it took so long to get the machine ready and
+dragged up to its starting-point that there was a 25 mile an
+hour wind by the time everything was in readiness. Latham was
+anxious to make the start in spite of the wind, but the
+Directors of the Antoinette Company refused permission. It was
+not until two days later that the weather again became
+favourable, and then with a fresh machine, since the one on
+which he made his first attempt had been very badly damaged in
+being towed ashore, he made a circular trial flight of about 5
+miles. In landing from this, a side gust of wind drove the nose
+of the machine against a small hillock, damaging both propeller
+blades and chassis, and it was not until evening that the damage
+was repaired.
+
+French torpedo boats were set to mark the route, and Latham set
+out on his second attempt at six o'clock. Flying at a height of
+200 feet, he headed over the torpedo boats for Dover and seemed
+certain of making the English coast, but a mile and a half out
+from Dover his engine failed him again, and he dropped to the
+water to be picked up by the steam pinnace of an English warship
+and put aboard the French destroyer Escopette.
+
+There is little to choose between the two aviators for courage
+in attempting what would have been considered a foolhardy feat a
+year or two before. Bleriot's state, with an abscess in the
+burnt foot which had to control the elevator of his machine,
+renders his success all the more remarkable. His machine was
+exhibited in London for a time, and was afterwards placed in the
+Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, while a memorial in stone,
+copying his monoplane in form, was let into the turf at the
+point where he landed.
+
+The second Channel crossing was not made until 1910, a year of
+new records. The altitude record had been lifted to over 10,000
+feet, the duration record to 8 hours 12 minutes, and the
+distance for a single flight to 365 miles, while a speed of over
+65 miles an hour had been achieved, when Jacques de Lesseps, son
+of the famous engineer of Suez Canal and Panama fame, crossed
+from France to England on a Bleriot monoplane. By this time
+flying had dropped so far from the marvellous that this second
+conquest of the Channel aroused but slight public interest in
+comparison with Bleriot's feat.
+
+The total weight of Bleriot's machine in Cross Channel trim was
+660 lbs., including the pilot and sufficient petrol for a three
+hours' run; at a speed of 37 miles an hour, it was capable of
+carrying about 5 lbs. per square foot of lifting surface. It
+was the three-cylinder 25 horse-power Anzani motor which drove
+the machine for the flight. Shortly after the flight had been
+accomplished, it was announced that the Bleriot firm would
+construct similar machines for sale at L400 apiece--a good
+commentary on the prices of those days.
+
+On June the 2nd, 1910, the third Channel crossing was made by C.
+S. Rolls, who flew from Dover, got himself officially observed
+over French soil at Barraques, and then flew back without
+landing. He was the first to cross from the British side of the
+Channel and also was the first aviator who made the double
+journey. By that time, however, distance flights had so far
+increased as to reduce the value of the feat, and thenceforth
+the Channel crossing was no exceptional matter. The honour,
+second only to that of the Wright Brothers, remains with Bleriot.
+
+
+
+XVI. LONDON TO MANCHESTER
+
+The last of the great contests to arouse public enthusiasm was
+the London to Manchester Flight of 1910. As far back as 1906,
+the Daily Mail had offered a prize of L10,000 to the first
+aviator who should accomplish this journey, and, for a long time,
+the offer was regarded as a perfectly safe one for any person or
+paper to make--it brought forth far more ridicule than belief.
+Punch offered a similar sum to the first man who should swim the
+Atlantic and also for the first flight to Mars and back within a
+week, but in the spring of 1910 Claude Grahame White and Paulhan,
+the famous French pilot, entered for the 183 mile run on which
+the prize depended. Both these competitors flew the Farman
+biplane with the 50 horse-power Gnome motor as propulsive power.
+Grahame White surveyed the ground along the route, and the L. &
+N. W. Railway Company, at his request, whitewashed the sleepers
+for 100 yards on the north side of all junctions to give him his
+direction on the course. The machine was run out on to the
+starting ground at Park Royal and set going at 5.19 a.m. on April
+23rd. After a run of 100 yards, the machine went up over
+Wormwood Scrubs on its journey to Normandy, near Hillmorten,
+which was the first arranged stopping place en route; Grahame
+White landed here in good trim at 7.20 a.m., having covered 75
+miles and made a world's record cross country flight. At 8.15 he
+set off again to come down at Whittington, four miles short of
+Lichfield, at about 9.20, with his machine in good order except
+for a cracked landing skid. Twice, on this second stage of the
+journey, he had been caught by gusts of wind which turned the
+machine fully round toward London, and, when over a wood near
+Tamworth, the engine stopped through a defect in the balance
+springs of two exhaust valves; although it started up again
+after a 100 foot glide, it did not give enough power to give him
+safety in the gale he was facing. The rising wind kept him on
+the ground throughout the day, and, though he hoped for better
+weather, the gale kept up until the Sunday evening. The men in
+charge of the machine during its halt had attempted to hold the
+machine down instead of anchoring it with stakes and ropes, and,
+in consequence of this, the wind blew the machine over on its
+back, breaking the upper planes and the tail. Grahame White had
+to return to London, while the damaged machine was prepared for
+a second flight. The conditions of the competition enacted that
+the full journey should be completed within 24 hours, which made
+return to the starting ground inevitable.
+
+Louis Paulhan, who had just arrived with his Farman machine,
+immediately got it unpacked and put together in order to be
+ready to make his attempt for the prize as soon as the weather
+conditions should admit. At 5.31 p.m., on April 27th, he went
+up from Hendon and had travelled 50 miles when Grahame White,
+informed of his rival's start, set out to overtake him. Before
+nightfall Paulhan landed at Lichfield, 117 miles from London,
+while Grahame White had to come down at Roden, only 60 miles out.
+The English aviator's chance was not so small as it seemed, for,
+as Latham had found in his cross-Channel attempts, engine failure
+was more the rule than the exception, and a very little thing
+might reverse the relative positions.
+
+A special train accompanied Paulhan along the North-Western
+route, conveying Madame Paulhan, Henry Farman, and the mechanics
+who fitted the Farman biplane together. Paulhan himself, who
+had flown at a height of 1,000 feet, spent the night at
+Lichfield, starting again at 4.9 a.m. On the 28th, passing
+Stafford at 4.45, Crewe at 5.20, and landing at Burnage, near
+Didsbury, at 5.32, having had a clean run.
+
+Meanwhile, Grahame White had made a most heroic attempt to beat
+his rival. An hour before dawn on the 28th, he went to the
+small field in which his machine had landed, and in the darkness
+managed to make an ascent from ground which made starting
+difficult even in daylight. Purely by instinct and his
+recollection of the aspect of things the night before, he had to
+clear telegraph wires and a railway bridge, neither of which he
+could possibly see at that hour. His engine, too, was
+faltering, and it was obvious to those who witnessed his start
+that its note was far from perfect.
+
+At 3.50 he was over Nuneaton and making good progress; between
+Atherstone and Lichfield the wind caught him and the engine
+failed more and more, until at 4.13 in the morning he was forced
+to come to earth, having covered 6 miles less distance than in
+his first attempt. It was purely a case of engine failure, for,
+with full power, he would have passed over Paulhan just as the
+latter was preparing for the restart. Taking into consideration
+the two machines, there is little doubt that Grahame White
+showed the greater flying skill, although he lost the prize.
+After landing and hearing of Paulhan's victory, on which he
+wired congratulations, he made up his mind to fly to Manchester
+within the 24 hours. He started at 5 o'clock in the afternoon
+from Polesworth, his landing place, but was forced to land at
+5.30 at Whittington, where he had landed on the previous
+Saturday. The wind, which had forced his descent, fell again
+and permitted of starting once more; on this third stage he
+reached Lichfield, only to make his final landing at 7.15 p.m.,
+near the Trent Valley station. The defective running of the
+Gnome engine prevented his completing the course, and his Farman
+machine had to be brought back to London by rail.
+
+The presentation of the prize to Paulhan was made the occasion
+for the announcement of a further competition, consisting of a
+1,000 mile flight round a part of Great Britain. In this,
+nineteen competitors started, and only four finished; the end of
+the race was a great fight between Beaumont and Vedrines, both
+of whom scorned weather conditions in their determination to
+win. Beaumont made the distance in a flying time of 22 hours 28
+minutes 19 seconds, and Vedrines covered the journey in a little
+over 23 1/2 hours. Valentine came third on a Deperdussin
+monoplane and S. F. Cody on his Cathedral biplane was fourth.
+This was in 1911, and by that time heavier-than-air flight had
+so far advanced that some pilots had had war experience in the
+Italian campaign in Tripoli, while long cross-country flights
+were an everyday event, and bad weather no longer counted.
+
+
+
+XVII. A SUMMARY, TO 1911
+
+There is so much overlapping in the crowded story of the first
+years of successful power-driven flight that at this point it is
+advisable to make a concise chronological survey of the chief
+events of the period of early development, although much of this
+is of necessity recapitulation. The story begins, of course,
+with Orville Wright's first flight of 852 feet at Kitty Hawk on
+December 19th, 1903. The next event of note was Wright's flight
+of 11.12 miles in 18 minutes 9 seconds at Dayton, Ohio, on
+September 26th, 1905, this being the first officially recorded
+flight. On October 4th of the same year, Wright flew 20.75 miles
+in 33 minutes 17 seconds, this being the first flight of over 20
+miles ever made. Then on September 14th 1906, Alberto
+Santos-Dumont made a flight of eight seconds on the second
+heavier-than-air machine he had constructed. It was a big
+box-kite-like machine; this was the second power-driven aeroplane
+in Europe to fly, for although Santos-Dumont's first machine
+produced in 1905 was reckoned an unsuccessful design, it had
+actually got off the ground for brief periods. Louis Bleriot
+came into the ring on April 5th, 1907, with a first flight of 6
+seconds on a Bleriot monoplane, his eighth but first successful
+construction.
+
+Henry Farman made his first appearance in the history of aviation
+with a flight of 935 feet on a Voisin biplane on October 15th
+1907. On October 25th, in a flight of 2,530 feet, he made the
+first recorded turn in the air, and on March 29th, 1908, carrying
+Leon Delagrange on a Voisin biplane, he made the first passenger
+flight. On April 10th of this year, Delagrange, in flying 1 1/2
+miles, made the first flight in Europe exceeding a mile in
+distance. He improved on this by flying 10 1/2 miles at Milan on
+June 22nd, while on July 8th, at Turin, he took up Madame
+Peltier, the first woman to make an aeroplane flight.
+
+Wilbur Wright, coming over to Europe, made his first appearance
+on the Continent with a flight of 1 3/4 minutes at Hunaudieres,
+France, on August 8th, 1908. On September 6th, at Chalons, he
+flew for 1 hour 4 minutes 26 seconds with a passenger, this
+being the first flight in which an hour in the air was exceeded
+with a passenger on board.
+
+on September 12th 1908, Orville Wright, flying at Fort Meyer,
+U.S.A., with Lieut. Selfridge as passenger, crashed his
+machine, suffering severe injuries, while Selfridge was killed.
+This was the first aeroplane fatality. On October 30th, 1908,
+Farman made the first cross-country flight, covering the
+distance of 17 miles between Bouy and Rheims. The next day,
+Louis Bleriot, in flying from Toury to Artenay, made two
+landings en route, this being the first cross-country flight
+with landings. On the last day of the year, Wilbur Wright won
+the Michelin Cup at Auvours with a flight of 90 miles, which,
+lasting 2 hours 20 minutes 23 seconds, exceeded 2 hours in the
+air for the first time.
+
+On January 2nd, 1909, S. F. Cody opened the New Year by making
+the first observed flight at Farnborough on a British Army
+aeroplane. It was not until July 18th of 1909 that the first
+European height record deserving of mention was put up by
+Paulhan, who achieved a height of 450 feet on a Voisin
+biplane. This preceded Latham's first attempt to fly the
+Channel by two days, and five days later, on the 25th of the
+month, Bleriot made the first Channel crossing. The Rheims
+Meeting followed on August 22nd, and it was a great day for
+aviation when nine machines were seen in the air at once. It
+was here that Farman, with a 118 mile flight, first exceeded
+the hundred miles, and Latham raised the height record
+officially to 500 feet, though actually he claimed to have
+reached 1,200 feet. On September 8th, Cody, flying from
+Aldershot, made a 40 mile journey, setting up a new
+cross-country record. On October 19th the Comte de Lambert
+flew from Juvisy to Paris, rounded the Eiffel Tower and flew
+back. J. T. C. Moore-Brabazon made the first circular mile
+flight by a British aviator on an all-British machine in Great
+Britain, on October 30th, flying a Short biplane with a Green
+engine. Paulhan, flying at Brooklands on November 2nd,
+accomplished 96 miles in 2 hours 48 minutes, creating a British
+distance record; on the following day, Henry Farman made a
+flight of 150 miles in 4 hours 22 minutes at Mourmelon, and on
+the 5th of the month, Paulhan, flying a Farman biplane, made a
+world's height record of 977 feet. This, however, was not to
+stand long, for Latham got up to 1,560 feet on an Antoinette at
+Mourmelon on December 1st. December 31st witnessed the first
+flight in Ireland, made by H. Ferguson on a monoplane which he
+himself had constructed at Downshire Park, Lisburn.
+
+These, thus briefly summarised, are the principal events up to
+the end of 1909. 1910 opened with tragedy, for on January 4th
+Leon Delagrange, one of the greatest pilots of his time, was
+killed while flying at Pau. The machine was the Bleriot XI which
+Delagrange had used at the Doncaster meeting, and to which
+Delagrange had fitted a 50 horse-power Gnome engine, increasing
+the speed of the machine from its original 30 to 45 miles per
+hour. With the Rotary Gnome engine there was of necessity a
+certain gyroscopic effect, the strain of which proved too much
+for the machine. Delagrange had come to assist in the
+inauguration of the Croix d'Hins aerodrome, and had twice lapped
+the course at a height of about 60 feet. At the beginning of
+the third lap, the strain of the Gnome engine became too great
+for the machine; one wing collapsed as if the stay wires had
+broken, and the whole machine turned over and fell, killing
+Delagrange.
+
+On January 7th Latham, flying at Mourmelon, first made the
+vertical kilometre and dedicated the record to Delagrange, this
+being the day of his friend's funeral. The record was
+thoroughly authenticated by a large registering barometer which
+Latham carried, certified by the officials of the French Aero
+Club. Three days later Paulhan, who was at Los Angeles,
+California, raised the height record to 4,146 feet.
+
+On January 25th the Brussels Exhibition opened, when the
+Antoinette monoplane, the Gaffaux and Hanriot monoplanes,
+together with the d'Hespel aeroplane, were shown; there were
+also the dirigible Belgica and a number of interesting aero
+engines, including a German airship engine and a four-cylinder
+50 horse-power Miesse, this last air-cooled by means of 22
+fans driving a current of air through air jackets surrounding
+fluted cylinders.
+
+On April 2nd Hubert Le Blon, flying a Bleriot with an Anzani
+engine, was killed while flying over the water. His machine was
+flying quite steadily, when it suddenly heeled over and came
+down sideways into the sea; the motor continued running for some
+seconds and the whole machine was drawn under water. When boats
+reached the spot, Le Blon was found lying back in the driving
+seat floating just below the surface. He had done good flying
+at Doncaster, and at Heliopolis had broken the world's speed
+records for 5 and 10 kilometres. The accident was attributed
+to fracture of one of the wing stay wires when running into a
+gust of wind.
+
+The next notable event was Paulhan's London-Manchester flight,
+of which full details have already been given. In May Captain
+Bertram Dickson, flying at the Tours meeting, beat all the
+Continental fliers whom he encountered, including Chavez, the
+Peruvian, who later made the first crossing of the Alps.
+Dickson was the first British winner of international aviation
+prizes.
+
+C. S. Rolls, of whom full details have already been given, was
+killed at Bournemouth on July 12th, being the first British
+aviator of note to be killed in an aeroplane accident. His
+return trip across the Channel had taken place on June 2nd.
+Chavez, who was rapidly leaping into fame, as a pilot, raised
+the British height record to 5,750 feet while flying at
+Blackpool on August 3rd. On the 11th of that month, Armstrong
+Drexel, flying a Bleriot, made a world's height record of 6,745
+feet.
+
+It was in 1910 that the British War office first began fully to
+realise that there might be military possibilities in
+heavier-than-air flying. C. S. Rolls had placed a Wright
+biplane at the disposal of the military authorities, and Cody,
+as already recorded, had been experimenting with a biplane type
+of his own for some long period. Such development as was
+achieved was mainly due to the enterprise and energy of Colonel
+J. E. Capper, C.B., appointed to the superintendency of the
+Balloon Factory and Balloon School at Farnborough in 1906.
+Colonel Capper's retirement in 1910 brought (then) Mr Mervyn
+O'Gorman to command, and by that time the series of successes of
+the Cody biplane, together with the proved efficiency of the
+aeroplane in various civilian meetings, had convinced the
+British military authorities that the mastery of the air did not
+lie altogether with dirigible airships, and it may be said that
+in 1910 the British War office first began seriously to consider
+the possibilities of the aeroplane, though two years more were
+to elapse before the formation of the Royal Flying Corps marked
+full realisation of its value.
+
+A triumph and a tragedy were combined in September of 1910. On
+the 23rd of the month, Georges Chavez set out to fly across the
+Alps on a Bleriot monoplane. Prizes had been offered by the
+Milan Aviation Committee for a flight from Brigue in Switzerland
+over the Simplon Pass to Milan, a distance of 94 miles with a
+minimum height of 6,600 feet above sea level. Chavez started at
+1.30 p.m. On the 23rd, and 41 minutes later he reached
+Domodossola, 25 miles distant. Here he descended, numbed with
+the cold of the journey; it was said that the wings of his
+machine collapsed when about 30 feet from the ground, but
+however this may have been, he smashed the machine on landing,
+and broke both legs, in addition to sustaining other serious
+injuries. He lay in hospital until the 27th September, when he
+died, having given his life to the conquest of the Alps. His
+death in the moment of success was as great a tragedy as were
+those of Pilcher and Lilienthal.
+
+The day after Chavez's death, Maurice Tabuteau flew across the
+Pyrenees, landing in the square at Biarritz. On December 30th,
+Tabuteau made a flight of 365 miles in 7 hours 48 minutes.
+Farman, on December 18th, had flown for over 8 hours, but his
+total distance was only 282 miles. The autumn of this year was
+also noteworthy for the fact that aeroplanes were first
+successfully used in the French Military Manoeuvres. The
+British War Office, by the end of the year, had bought two
+machines, a military type Farman and a Paulhan, ignoring British
+experimenters and aeroplane builders of proved reliability.
+These machines, added to an old Bleriot two-seater, appear to
+have constituted the British aeroplane fleet of the period.
+
+There were by this time three main centres of aviation in
+England, apart from Cody, alone on Laffan's Plain. These three
+were Brooklands, Hendon, and the Isle of Sheppey, and of the
+three Brooklands was chief. Here such men as Graham Gilmour,
+Rippen, Leake, Wickham, and Thomas persistently experimented.
+Hendon had its own little group, and Shellbeach, Isle of
+Sheppey, held such giants of those days as C. S. Rolls and
+Moore Brabazon, together with Cecil Grace and Rawlinson. One or
+other, and sometimes all of these were deserted on the occasion
+of some meeting or other, but they were the points where the
+spade work was done, Brooklands taking chief place. 'If you want
+the early history of flying in England, it is there,' one of the
+early school remarked, pointing over toward Brooklands course.
+
+1911 inaugurated a new series of records of varying character.
+On the 17th January, E. B. Ely, an American, flew from the shore
+of San Francisco to the U.S. cruiser Pennsylvania, landing on the
+cruiser, and then flew back to the shore. The British military
+designing of aeroplanes had been taken up at Farnborough by G. H.
+de Havilland, who by the end of January was flying a machine of
+his own design, when he narrowly escaped becoming a casualty
+through collision with an obstacle on the ground, which swept the
+undercarriage from his machine.
+
+A list of certified pilots of the countries of the world was
+issued early in 1911, showing certificates granted up to the
+end of 1910. France led the way easily with 353 pilots; England
+came next with 57, and Germany next with 46; Italy owned 32,
+Belgium 27, America 26, and Austria 19; Holland and Switzerland
+had 6 aviators apiece, while Denmark followed with 3, Spain with
+2, and Sweden with 1. The first certificate in England was that
+of J. T. C. Moore-Brabazon, while Louis Bleriot was first on
+the French list and Glenn Curtiss, first holder of an American
+certificate, also held the second French brevet.
+
+On the 7th March, Eugene Renaux won the Michelin Grand Prize by
+flying from the French Aero Club ground at St Cloud and landing
+on the Puy de Dome. The landing, which was one of the
+conditions of the prize, was one of the most dangerous
+conditions ever attached to a competition; it involved dropping
+on to a little plateau 150 yards square, with a possibility of
+either smashing the machine against the face of the mountain, or
+diving over the edge of the plateau into the gulf beneath. The
+length of the journey was slightly over 200 miles and the height
+of the landing point 1,465 metres, or roughly 4,500 feet above
+sea-level. Renaux carried a passenger, Doctor Senoucque, a
+member of Charcot's South Polar Expedition.
+
+The 1911 Aero Exhibition held at Olympia bore witness to the
+enormous strides made in construction, more especially by
+British designers, between 1908 and the opening of the Show.
+The Bristol Firm showed three machines, including a military
+biplane, and the first British built biplane with tractor screw.
+The Cody biplane, with its enormous size rendering it a
+prominent feature of the show, was exhibited. Its designer
+anticipated later engines by expressing his desire for a motor
+of 150 horse-power, which in his opinion was necessary to get
+the best results from the machine. The then famous Dunne
+monoplane was exhibited at this show, its planes being V-shaped
+in plan, with apex leading. It embodied the results of very
+lengthy experiments carried out both with gliders and
+power-driven machines by Colonel Capper, Lieut. Gibbs, and
+Lieut. Dunne, and constituted the longest step so far taken in
+the direction of inherent stability.
+
+Such forerunners of the notable planes of the war period as the
+Martin Handasyde, the Nieuport, Sopwith, Bristol, and Farman
+machines, were features of the show; the Handley-Page monoplane,
+with a span of 32 feet over all, a length of 22 feet, and a
+weight of 422 lbs., bore no relation at all to the twin-engined
+giant which later made this firm famous. In the matter of
+engines, the principal survivals to the present day, of which
+this show held specimens, were the Gnome, Green, Renault
+air-cooled, Mercedes four-cylinder dirigible engine of 115
+horse-power, and 120 horsepower Wolseley of eight cylinders for
+use with dirigibles.
+
+On April 12th, of 1911, Paprier, instructor at the Bleriot
+school at Hendon, made the first non-stop flight between London
+and Paris. He left the aerodrome at 1.37 p.m., and arrived at
+Issy-les-Moulineaux at 5.33 p.m., thus travelling 250 miles in a
+little under 4 hours. He followed the railway route practically
+throughout, crossing from Dover to nearly opposite Calais,
+keeping along the coast to Boulogne, and then following the Nord
+Railway to Amiens, Beauvais, and finally Paris.
+
+In May, the Paris-Madrid race took place; Vedrines, flying a
+Morane biplane, carried off the prize by first completing the
+distance of 732 miles. The Paris-Rome race of 916 miles was won
+in the same month by Beaumont, flying a Bleriot monoplane. In
+July, Koenig won the German National Circuit race of 1,168 miles
+on an Albatross biplane. This was practically simultaneous with
+the Circuit of Britain won by Beaumont, who covered 1,010 miles
+on a Bleriot monoplane, having already won the
+Paris-Brussels-London-Paris Circuit of 1,080 miles, this also on
+a Bleriot. It was in August that a new world's height record of
+11,152 feet was set up by Captain Felix at Etampes, while
+on the 7th of the month Renaux flew nearly 600 miles on a
+Maurice Farman machine in 12 hours. Cody and Valentine were
+keeping interest alive in the Circuit of Britain race, although
+this had long been won, by determinedly plodding on at finishing
+the course.
+
+On September 9th, the first aerial post was tried between Hendon
+and Windsor, as an experiment in sending mails by aeroplane.
+Gustave Hamel flew from Hendon to Windsor and back in a strong
+wind. A few days later, Hamel went on strike, refusing to carry
+further mails unless the promoters of the Aerial Postal Service
+agreed to pay compensation to Hubert, who fractured both his legs
+on the 11th of the month while engaged in aero postal work. The
+strike ended on September 25th, when Hamel resumed mail-carrying
+in consequence of the capitulation of the Postmaster-General, who
+agreed to set aside L500 as compensation to Hubert.
+
+September also witnessed the completion in America of a flight
+across the Continent, a distance of 2,600 miles. The only
+competitor who completed the full distance was C. P. Rogers,
+who was disqualified through failing to comply with the time
+limit. Rogers needed so many replacements to his machine on the
+journey that, expressing it in American fashion, he arrived with
+practically a dfferent aeroplane from that with which he
+started.
+
+With regard to the aerial postal service, analysis of the matter
+carried and the cost of the service seemed to show that with a
+special charge of one shilling for letters and sixpence for post
+cards, the revenue just balanced the expenditure. It was not
+possible to keep to the time-table as, although the trials were
+made in the most favourable season of the year, aviation was not
+sufficiently advanced to admit of facing all weathers and
+complying with time-table regulations.
+
+French military aeroplane trials took place at Rheims in
+October, the noteworthy machines being Antoinette, Farman,
+Nieuport, and Deperdussin. The tests showed the Nieuport
+monoplane with Gnome motor as first in position; the Breguet
+biplane was second, and the Deperdussin monoplanes third. The
+first five machines in order of merit were all engined with the
+Gnome motor.
+
+The records quoted for 1911 form the best evidence that can
+be given of advance in design and performance during the year.
+It will be seen that the days of the giants were over; design
+was becoming more and more standardised and aviation not so much
+a matter of individual courage and even daring, as of the
+reliability of the machine and its engine. This was the first
+year in which the twin-engined aeroplane made its appearance,
+and it was the year, too, in which flying may be said to have
+grown so common that the 'meetings' which began with Rheims were
+hardly worth holding, owing to the fact that increase in height
+and distance flown rendered it no longer necessary for a
+would-be spectator of a flight to pay half a crown and enter an
+enclosure. Henceforth, flying as a spectacle was very little to
+be considered; its commercial aspects were talked of, and to a
+very slight degree exploited, but, more and more, the fact that
+the aeroplane was primarily an engine of war, and the growing
+German menace against the peace of the world combined to point
+the way of speediest development, and the arrangements for the
+British Military Trials to be held in August, 1912, showed that
+even the British War office was waking up to the potentialities
+of this new engine of war.
+
+
+
+XVIII. A SUMMARY, TO 1914
+
+Consideration of the events in the years immediately preceding
+the War must be limited to as brief a summary as possible, this
+not only because the full history of flying achievements is
+beyond the compass of any single book, but also because, viewing
+the matter in perspective, the years 1903-1911 show up as far
+more important as regards both design and performance. From
+1912 to August of 1914, the development of aeronautics was
+hindered by the fact that it had not progressed far enough to
+form a real commercial asset in any country. The meetings which
+drew vast concourses of people to such places as Rheims and
+Bournemouth may have been financial successes at first, but, as
+flying grew more common and distances and heights extended, a
+great many people found it other than worth while to pay for
+admission to an aerodrome. The business of taking up passengers
+for pleasure flights was not financially successful, and,
+although schemes for commercial routes were talked of, the
+aeroplane was not sufficiently advanced to warrant the
+investment of hard cash in any of these projects. There was a
+deadlock; further development was necessary in order to secure
+financial aid, and at the same time financial aid was necessary
+in order to secure further development. Consequently, neither
+was forthcoming.
+
+This is viewing the matter in a broad and general sense; there
+were firms, especially in France, but also in England and
+America, which looked confidently for the great days of flying to
+arrive, and regarded their sunk capital as investment which would
+eventually bring its due return. But when one looks back on
+those years, the firms in question stand out as exceptions to the
+general run of people, who regarded aeronautics as something
+extremely scientific, exceedingly dangerous, and very expensive.
+The very fame that was attained by such pilots as became
+casualties conduced to the advertisement of every death, and the
+dangers attendant on the use of heavier-than-air machines became
+greatly exaggerated; considering the matter as one of number of
+miles flown, even in the early days, flying exacted no more toll
+in human life than did railways or road motors in the early
+stages of their development. But to take one instance, when C.
+S. Rolls was killed at Bournemouth by reason of a faulty
+tail-plane, the fact was shouted to the whole world with almost
+as much vehemence as characterised the announcement of the
+Titanic sinking in mid-Atlantic.
+
+Even in 1911 the deadlock was apparent; meetings were falling
+off in attendance, and consequently in financial benefit to the
+promoters; there remained, however, the knowledge--for it was
+proved past question--that the aeroplane in its then stage of
+development was a necessity to every army of the world. France
+had shown this by the more than interest taken by the French
+Government in what had developed into an Air Section of the
+French army; Germany, of course, was hypnotised by Count
+Zeppelin and his dirigibles, to say nothing of the Parsevals
+which had been proved useful military accessories; in spite of
+this, it was realised in Germany that the aeroplane also had its
+place in military affairs. England came into the field with the
+military aeroplane trials of August 1st to 15th, 1912, barely two
+months after the founding of the Royal Flying Corps.
+
+When the R.F.C. was founded--and in fact up to two years after
+its founding--in no country were the full military
+potentialities of the aeroplane realised; it was regarded as an
+accessory to cavalry for scouting more than as an independent
+arm; the possibilities of bombing were very vaguely considered,
+and the fact that it might be possible to shoot from an
+aeroplane was hardly considered at all. The conditions of the
+British Military Trials of 1912 gave to the War office the
+option of purchasing for L1,000 any machine that might be
+awarded a prize. Machines were required, among other things, to
+carry a useful load of 350 lbs. in addition to equipment, with
+fuel and oil for 4 1/2-hours; thus loaded, they were required to
+fly for 3 hours, attaining an altitude of 4,500 feet, maintaining
+a height of 1,500 feet for 1 hour, and climbing 1,000 feet from
+the ground at a rate of 200 feet per minute, 'although 300 feet
+per minute is desirable.' They had to attain a speed of not less
+than 55 miles per hour in a calm, and be able to plane down to
+the ground in a calm from not more than 1,000 feet with engine
+stopped, traversing 6,000 feet horizontal distance. For those
+days, the landing demands were rather exacting; the machine
+should be able to rise without damage from long grass, clover, or
+harrowed land, in 100 yards in a calm, and should be able to land
+without damage on any cultivated ground, including rough ploughed
+land, and, when landing on smooth turf in a calm, be able to pull
+up within 75 yards of the point of first touching the ground. It
+was required that pilot and observer should have as open a view
+as possible to front and flanks, and they should be so shielded
+from the wind as to be able to communicate with each other.
+These are the main provisions out of the set of conditions laid
+down for competitors, but a considerable amount of leniency was
+shown by the authorities in the competition, who obviously wished
+to try out every machine entered and see what were its
+capabilities.
+
+The beginning of the competition consisted in assembling the
+machines against time from road trim to flying trim. Cody's
+machine, which was the only one to be delivered by air, took 1
+hour and 35 minutes to assemble; the best assembling time was
+that of the Avro, which was got into flying trim in 14 minutes 30
+seconds. This machine came to grief with Lieut. Parke as pilot,
+on the 7th, through landing at very high speed on very bad
+ground; a securing wire of the under-carriage broke in the
+landing, throwing the machine forward on to its nose and then
+over on its back. Parke was uninjured, fortunately; the damaged
+machine was sent off to Manchester for repair and was back again
+on the 16th of August.
+
+It is to be noted that by this time the Royal Aircraft Factory
+was building aeroplanes of the B.E. and F.E. types, but at the
+same time it is also to be noted that British military interest
+in engines was not sufficient to bring them up to the high level
+attained by the planes, and it is notorious that even the
+outbreak of war found England incapable of providing a really
+satisfactory aero engine. In the 1912 Trials, the only machines
+which actually completed all their tests were the Cody biplane,
+the French Deperdussin, the Hanriot, two Bleriots and a Maurice
+Farman. The first prize of L4,000, open to all the world, went
+to F. S. Cody's British-built biplane, which complied with all
+the conditions of the competition and well earned its official
+acknowledgment of supremacy. The machine climbed at 280 feet per
+minute and reached a height of 5,000 feet, while in the landing
+test, in spite of its great weight and bulk, it pulled up on
+grass in 56 yards. The total weight was 2,690 lbs. when fully
+loaded, and the total area of supporting surface was 500 square
+feet; the motive power was supplied by a six-cylinder 120
+horsepower Austro-Daimler engine. The second prize was taken by
+A. Deperdussin for the French-built Deperdussin monoplane. Cody
+carried off the only prize awarded for a British-built plane,
+this being the sum of L1,000, and consolation prizes of L500 each
+were awarded to the British Deperdussin Company and The British
+and Colonial Aeroplane Company, this latter soon to become famous
+as makers of the Bristol aeroplane, of which the war honours are
+still fresh in men's minds.
+
+While these trials were in progress Audemars accomplished the
+first flight between Paris and Berlin, setting out from Issy
+early in the morning of August 18th, landing at Rheims to refill
+his tanks within an hour and a half, and then coming into bad
+weather which forced him to land successively at Mezieres,
+Laroche, Bochum, and finally nearly Gersenkirchen, where, owing
+to a leaky petrol tank, the attempt to win the prize offered for
+the first flight between the two capitals had to be abandoned
+after 300 miles had been covered, as the time limit was
+definitely exceeded. Audemars determined to get through to
+Berlin, and set off at 5 in the morning of the 19th, only to be
+brought down by fog; starting off again at 9.15 he landed at
+Hanover, was off again at 1.35, and reached the Johannisthal
+aerodrome in the suburbs of Berlin at 6.48 that evening.
+
+As early as 1910 the British Government possessed some ten
+aeroplanes, and in 1911 the force developed into the Army Air
+Battalion, with the aeroplanes under the control of Major J. H.
+Fulton, R.F.A. Toward the end of 1911 the Air Battalion was
+handed over to (then) Brig.-Gen. D. Henderson, Director of
+Military Training. On June 6th, 1912, the Royal Flying Corps was
+established with a military wing under Major F. H. Sykes and a
+naval wing under Commander C. R. Samson. A joint Naval and
+Military Flying School was established at Upavon with Captain
+Godfrey M. Paine, R.N., as Commandant and Major Hugh Trenchard
+as Assistant Commandant. The Royal Aircraft Factory brought out
+the B.E. and F.E. types of biplane, admittedly superior to any
+other British design of the period, and an Aircraft Inspection
+Department was formed under Major J. H. Fulton. The military
+wing of the R.F.C. was equipped almost entirely with machines
+of Royal Aircraft Factory design, but the Navy preferred to
+develop British private enterprise by buying machines from
+private firms. On July 1st, 1914 the establishment of the Royal
+Naval Air Service marked the definite separation of the military
+and naval sides of British aviation, but the Central Flying
+School at Upavon continued to train pilots for both services.
+
+It is difficult at this length of time, so far as the military
+wing was concerned, to do full justice to the spade work done by
+Major-General Sir David Henderson in the early days. Just before
+war broke out, British military air strength consisted officially
+of eight squadrons, each of 12 machines and 13 in reserve, with
+the necessary complement of road transport. As a matter of fact,
+there were three complete squadrons and a part of a fourth which
+constituted the force sent to France at the outbreak of war. The
+value of General Henderson's work lies in the fact that, in spite
+of official stinginess and meagre supplies of every kind, he
+built up a skeleton organisation so elastic and so well thought
+out that it conformed to war requirements as well as even the
+German plans fitted in with their aerial needs. On the 4th of
+August, 1914, the nominal British air strength of the military
+wing was 179 machines. Of these, 82 machines proceeded to
+France, landing at Amiens and flying to Maubeuge to play their
+part in the great retreat with the British Expeditionary Force,
+in which they suffered heavy casualties both in personnel and
+machines. The history of their exploits, however, belongs to the
+War period.
+
+The development of the aeroplane between 1912 and 1914 can be
+judged by comparison of the requirements of the British War
+Office in 1912 with those laid down in an official memorandum
+issued by the War Office in February, 1914. This latter
+called for a light scout aeroplane, a single-seater, with fuel
+capacity to admit of 300 miles range and a speed range of from
+50 to 85 miles per hour. It had to be able to climb 3,500 feet
+in five minutes, and the engine had to be so constructed that
+the pilot could start it without assistance. At the same time,
+a heavier type of machine for reconnaissance work was called
+for, carrying fuel for a 200 mile flight with a speed range of
+between 35 and 60 miles per hour, carrying both pilot and
+observer. It was to be equipped with a wireless telegraphy set,
+and be capable of landing over a 30 foot vertical obstacle and
+coming to rest within a hundred yards' distance from the
+obstacle in a wind of not more than 15 miles per hour. A third
+requirement was a heavy type of fighting aeroplane accommodating
+pilot and gunner with machine gun and ammunition, having a speed
+range of between 45 and 75 miles per hour and capable of
+climbing 3,500 feet in 8 minutes. It was required to carry fuel
+for a 300 mile flight and to give the gunner a clear field of
+fire in every direction up to 30 degrees on each side of the
+line of flight. Comparison of these specifications with those
+of the 1912 trials will show that although fighting, scouting,
+and reconnaissance types had been defined, the development of
+performance compared with the marvellous development of the
+earlier years of achieved flight was small.
+
+Yet the records of those years show that here and there an
+outstanding design was capable of great things. On the 9th
+September, 1912, Vedrines, flying a Deperdussin monoplane at
+Chicago, attained a speed of 105 miles an hour. On August 12th,
+G. de Havilland took a passenger to a height of 10,560 feet
+over Salisbury Plain, flying a B.E. biplane with a 70
+horse-power Renault engine. The work of de Havilland may be
+said to have been the principal influence in British military
+aeroplane design, and there is no doubt that his genius was in
+great measure responsible for the excellence of the early B.E.
+and F.E. types.
+
+on the 31st May, 1913, H. G. Hawker, flying at Brooklands,
+reached a height of 11,450 feet on a Sopwith biplane engined with
+an 80 horse-power Gnome engine. On June 16th, with the same type
+of machine and engine, he achieved 12,900 feet. On the 2nd
+October, in the same year, a Grahame White biplane with 120
+horse-power Austro-Daimler engine, piloted by Louis Noel, made a
+flight of just under 20 minutes carrying 9 passengers. In France
+a Nieuport monoplane piloted by G. Legagneaux attained a height
+of 6,120 metres, or just over 20,070 feet, this being the world's
+height record. It is worthy of note that of the world's aviation
+records as passed by the International Aeronautical Federation up
+to June 30th, 1914, only one, that of Noel, is credited to Great
+Britain.
+
+Just as records were made abroad, with one exception, so were
+the really efficient engines. In England there was the Green
+engine, but the outbreak of war found the Royal Flying Corps
+with 80 horse-power Gnomes, 70 horse-power Renaults, and one or
+two Antoinette motors, but not one British, while the Royal
+Naval Air Service had got 20 machines with engines of similar
+origin, mainly land planes in which the wheeled undercarriages
+had been replaced by floats. France led in development, and
+there is no doubt that at the outbreak of war, the French
+military aeroplane service was the best in the world. It was
+mainly composed of Maurice Farman two-seater biplanes and
+Bleriot monoplanes-- the latter type banned for a period on
+account of a number of serious accidents that took place in 1912
+
+America had its Army Aviation School, and employed Burgess-Wright
+and Curtiss machines for the most part. In the pre-war years,
+once the Wright Brothers had accomplished their task, America's
+chief accomplishment consisted in the development of the 'Flying
+
+Boat,' alternatively named with characteristic American
+clumsiness, 'The Hydro-Aeroplane.' In February of 1911, Glenn
+Curtiss attached a float to a machine similar to that with which
+he won the first Gordon-Bennett Air Contest and made his first
+flying boat experiment. From this beginning he developed the
+boat form of body which obviated the use and troubles of
+floats--his hydroplane became its own float.
+
+Mainly owing to greater engine reliability the duration records
+steadily increased. By September of 1912 Fourny, on a Maurice
+Farman biplane, was able to accomplish a distance of 628 miles
+without a landing, remaining in the air for 13 hours 17 minutes
+and just over 57 seconds. By 1914 this was raised by the German
+aviator, Landemann, to 21 hours 48 3/4 seconds. The nature of
+this last record shows that the factors in such a record had
+become mere engine endurance, fuel capacity, and capacity of the
+pilot to withstand air conditions for a prolonged period, rather
+than any exceptional flying skill.
+
+Let these years be judged by the records they produced, and even
+then they are rather dull. The glory of achievement such as
+characterised the work of the Wright Brothers, of Bleriot, and
+of the giants of the early days, had passed; the splendid
+courage, the patriotism and devotion of the pilots of the War
+period had not yet come to being. There was progress, past
+question, but it was mechanical, hardly ever inspired. The
+study of climatic conditions was definitely begun and
+aeronautical meteorology came to being, while another development
+already noted was the fitting of wireless telegraphy to
+heavier-than-air machines, as instanced in the British War
+office specification of February, 1914. These, however, were
+inevitable; it remained for the War to force development beyond
+the inevitable, producing in five years that which under normal
+circumstances might easily have occupied fifty --the aeroplane of
+to-day; for, as already remarked, there was a deadlock, and any
+survey that may be made of the years 1912-1914, no matter how
+superficial, must take it into account with a view to retaining
+correct perspective in regard to the development of the
+aeroplane.
+
+There is one story of 1914 that must be included, however
+briefly, in any record of aeronautical achievement, since it
+demonstrates past question that to Professor Langley really
+belongs the honour of having achieved a design which would ensure
+actual flight, although the series of accidents which attended
+his experiments gave to the Wright Brothers the honour of first
+leaving the earth and descending without accident in a
+power-driven heavier-than-air machine. In March, 1914, Glenn
+Curtiss was invited to send a flying boat to Washington for the
+celebration of 'Langley Day,' when he remarked, 'I would like to
+put the Langley aeroplane itself in the air.' In consequence of
+this remark, Secretary Walcot of the Smithsonian Institution
+authorised Curtiss to re-canvas the original Langley aeroplane
+and launch it either under its own power or with a more recent
+engine and propeller. Curtiss completed this, and had the
+machine ready on the shores of Lake Keuka, Hammondsport, N.Y., by
+May. The main object of these renewed trials was to show whether
+the original Langley machine was capable of sustained free flight
+with a pilot, and a secondary object was to determine more fully
+the advantages of the tandem monoplane type; thus the aeroplane
+was first flown as nearly as possible in its original condition,
+and then with such modifications as seemed desirable. The only
+difference made for the first trials consisted in fitting floats
+with connecting trusses; the steel main frame, wings, rudders,
+engine, and propellers were substantially as they had been in
+1903. The pilot had the same seat under the main frame and the
+same general system of control. He could raise or lower the
+craft by moving the rear rudder up and down; he could steer
+right or left by moving the vertical rudder. He had no ailerons
+nor wing-warping mechanism, but for lateral balance depended on
+the dihedral angle of the wings and upon suitable movements of
+his weight or of the vertical rudder.
+
+After the adjustments for actual flight had been made in the
+Curtiss factory, according to the minute descriptions contained
+in the Langley Memoir on Mechanical Flight, the aeroplane was
+taken to the shore of Lake Keuka, beside the Curtiss hangars,
+and assembled for launching. On a clear morning (May 28th) and
+in a mild breeze, the craft was lifted on to the water by a
+dozen men and set going, with Mr Curtiss at the steering wheel,
+esconced in the little boat-shaped car under the forward part of
+the frame. The four-winged craft, pointed somewhat across the
+wind, went skimming over the waveless, then automatically headed
+into the wind, rose in level poise, soared gracefully for 150
+feet, and landed softly on the water near the shore. Mr Curtiss
+asserted that he could have flown farther, but, being unused to
+the machine, imagined that the left wings had more resistance
+than the right. The truth is that the aeroplane was perfectly
+balanced in wing resistance, but turned on the water like a
+weather vane, owing to the lateral pressure on its big rear
+rudder. Hence in future experiments this rudder was made
+turnable about a vertical axis, as well as about the horizontal
+axis used by Langley. Henceforth the little vertical rudder
+under the frame was kept fixed and inactive.[*]
+
+That the Langley aeroplane was subsequently fitted with an 80
+horse-power Curtiss engine and successfully flown is of little
+interest in such a record as this, except for the fact that with
+the weight nearly doubled by the new engine and accessories the
+machine flew successfully, and demonstrated the perfection of
+Langley's design by standing the strain. The point that is of
+most importance is that the design itself proved a success and
+fully vindicated Langley's work. At the same time, it would be
+unjust to pass by the fact of the flight without according to
+Curtiss due recognition of the way in which he paid tribute to
+the genius of the pioneer by these experiments.
+
+[*] Smithsonian Publications No. 2329.
+
+
+
+XIX. THE WAR PERIOD--I
+
+Full record of aeronautical progress and of the accomplishments
+of pilots in the years of the War would demand not merely a
+volume, but a complete library, and even then it would be barely
+possible to pay full tribute to the heroism of pilots of the war
+period. There are names connected with that period of which the
+glory will not fade, names such as Bishop, Guynemer, Boelcke,
+Ball, Fonck, Immelmann, and many others that spring to mind as
+one recalls the 'Aces' of the period. In addition to the
+pilots, there is the stupendous development of the
+machines--stupendous when the length of the period in which it
+was achieved is considered.
+
+The fact that Germany was best prepared in the matter of
+heavier-than-air service machines in spite of the German faith
+in the dirigible is one more item of evidence as to who forced
+hostilities. The Germans came into the field with well over 600
+aeroplanes, mainly two-seaters of standardised design, and with
+factories back in the Fatherland turning out sufficient new
+machines to make good the losses. There were a few
+single-seater scouts built for speed, and the two-seater
+machines were all fitted with cameras and bomb-dropping gear.
+Manoeuvres had determined in the German mind what should be the
+uses of the air fleet; there was photography of fortifications
+and field works; signalling by Very lights; spotting for the
+guns, and scouting for news of enemy movements. The methodical
+German mind had arranged all this beforehand, but had not allowed
+for the fact that opponents might take counter-measures which
+would upset the over-perfect mechanism of the air service just as
+effectually as the great march on Paris was countered by the
+genius of Joffre.
+
+The French Air Force at the beginning of the War consisted of
+upwards of 600 machines. These, unlike the Germans, were not
+standardised, but were of many and diverse types. In order to
+get replacements quickly enough, the factories had to work on
+the designs they had, and thus for a long time after the
+outbreak of hostilities standardisation was an impossibility.
+The versatility of a Latin race in a measure compensated for
+this; from the outset, the Germans tried to overwhelm the French
+Air Force, but failed, since they had not the numerical
+superiority, nor--this equally a determining factor--the
+versatility and resource of the French pilots. They calculated
+on a 50 per cent superiority to ensure success; they needed more
+nearly 400 per cent, for the German fought to rule, avoiding
+risks whenever possible, and definitely instructed to save both
+machines and pilots wherever possible. French pilots, on the
+other hand, ran all the risks there were, got news of German
+movements, bombed the enemy, and rapidly worked up a very
+respectable antiaircraft force which, whatever it may have
+accomplished in the way of hitting German planes, got on the
+German pilots' nerves.
+
+It has already been detailed how Britain sent over 82 planes as
+its contribution to the military aerial force of 1914. These
+consisted of Farman, Caudron, and Short biplanes, together with
+Bleriot, Deperdussin and Nieuport monoplanes, certain R.A.F.
+types, and other machines of which even the name barely survives
+--the resourceful Yankee entitles them 'orphans.' It is on
+record that the work of providing spares might have been rather
+complicated but for the fact that there were none.
+
+There is no doubt that the Germans had made study of aerial
+military needs just as thoroughly as they had perfected their
+ground organisation. Thus there were 21 illuminated aircraft
+stations in Germany before the War, the most powerful being at
+Weimar, where a revolving electric flash of over 27 million
+candle-power was located. Practically all German aeroplane
+tests in the period immediately preceding the War were of a
+military nature, and quite a number of reliability tests were
+carried out just on the other side of the French frontier.
+Night flying and landing were standardised items in the German
+pilot's course of instruction while they were still experimental
+in other countries, and a system of signals was arranged which
+rendered the instructional course as perfect as might be.
+
+The Belgian contribution consisted of about twenty machines fit
+for active service and another twenty which were more or less
+useful as training machines. The material was mainly French,
+and the Belgian pilots used it to good account until German
+numbers swamped them. France, and to a small extent England,
+kept Belgian aviators supplied with machines throughout the War.
+
+The Italian Air Fleet was small, and consisted of French machines
+together with a percentage of planes of Italian origin, of which
+the design was very much a copy of French types. It was not
+until the War was nearing its end that the military and naval
+services relied more on the home product than on imports. This
+does not apply to engines, however, for the F.I.A.T. and S.C.A.T.
+
+were equal to practically any engine of Allied make, both in
+design and construction.
+
+Russia spent vast sums in the provision of machines: the giant
+Sikorsky biplane, carrying four 100 horsepower Argus motors,
+was designed by a young Russian engineer in the latter part of
+1913, and in its early trials it created a world's record by
+carrying seven passengers for 1 hour 54 minutes. Sikorsky also
+designed several smaller machines, tractor biplanes on the lines
+of the British B.E. type, which were very successful. These
+were the only home productions, and the imports consisted mainly
+of French aeroplanes by the hundred, which got as far as the
+docks and railway sidings and stayed there, while German
+influence and the corruption that ruined the Russian Army helped
+to lose the War. A few Russian aircraft factories were got into
+operation as hostilities proceeded, but their products were
+negligible, and it is not on record that Russia ever learned to
+manufacture a magneto.
+
+The United States paid tribute to British efficiency by adopting
+the British system of training for its pilots; 500 American
+cadets were trained at the School of Military Aeronautics at
+oxford, in order to form a nucleus for the American aviation
+schools which were subsequently set up in the United States and
+in France. As regards production of craft, the designing of the
+Liberty engine and building of over 20,000 aeroplanes within a
+year proves that America is a manufacturing country, even under
+the strain of war.
+
+There were three years of struggle for aerial supremacy, the
+combatants being England and France against Germany, and the
+contest was neck and neck all the way. Germany led at the
+outset with the standardised two-seater biplanes manned by
+pilots and observers, whose training was superior to that
+afforded by any other nation, while the machines themselves were
+better equipped and fitted with accessories. All the early
+German aeroplanes were designated Taube by the uninitiated, and
+were formed with swept-back, curved wings very much resembling
+the wings of a bird. These had obvious disadvantages, but the
+standardisation of design and mass production of the German
+factories kept them in the field for a considerable period, and
+they flew side by side with tractor biplanes of improved design.
+For a little time, the Fokker monoplane became a definite threat
+both to French and British machines. It was an improvement on
+the Morane French monoplane, and with a high-powered engine it
+climbed quickly and flew fast, doing a good deal of damage for a
+brief period of 1915. Allied design got ahead of it and finally
+drove it out of the air.
+
+German equipment at the outset, which put the Allies at a
+disadvantage, included a hand-operated magneto engine-starter
+and a small independent screw which, mounted on one of the main
+planes, drove the dynamo used for the wireless set. Cameras
+were fitted on practically every machine; equipment included
+accurate compasses and pressure petrol gauges, speed and height
+recording instruments, bomb-dropping fittings and sectional
+radiators which facilitated repairs and gave maximum engine
+efficiency in spite of variations of temperature. As counter to
+these, the Allied pilots had resource amounting to impudence.
+In the early days they carried rifles and hand grenades and
+automatic pistols. They loaded their machines down, often at
+their own expense, with accessories and fittings until their
+aeroplanes earned their title of Christmas trees. They played
+with death in a way that shocked the average German pilot of the
+War's early stages, declining to fight according to rule and
+indulging in the individual duels of the air which the German
+hated. As Sir John French put it in one of his reports, they
+established a personal ascendancy over the enemy, and in this
+way compensated for their inferior material.
+
+French diversity of design fitted in well with the initiative
+and resource displayed by the French pilots. The big Caudron
+type was the ideal bomber of the early days; Farman machines
+were excellent for reconnaissance and artillery spotting; the
+Bleriots proved excellent as fighting scouts and for aerial
+photography; the Nieuports made good fighters, as did the Spads,
+both being very fast craft, as were the Morane-Saulnier
+monoplanes, while the big Voisin biplanes rivalled the Caudron
+machines as bombers.
+
+The day of the Fokker ended when the British B.E.2.C. aeroplane
+came to France in good quantities, and the F.E. type, together
+with the De Havilland machines, rendered British aerial
+superiority a certainty. Germany's best reply--this was about
+1916--was the Albatross biplane, which was used by Captain Baron
+von Richthofen for his famous travelling circus, manned by
+German star pilots and sent to various parts of the line to
+hearten up German troops and aviators after any specially bad
+strafe. Then there were the Aviatik biplane and the Halberstadt
+fighting scout, a cleanly built and very fast machine with a
+powerful engine with which Germany tried to win back superiority
+in the third year of the War, but Allied design kept about three
+months ahead of that of the enemy, once the Fokker had been
+mastered, and the race went on. Spads and Bristol fighters,
+Sopwith scouts and F.E.'s played their part in the race, and
+design was still advancing when peace came.
+
+The giant twin-engined Handley-Page bomber was tried out, proved
+efficient, and justly considered better than anything of its
+kind that had previously taken the field. Immediately after the
+conclusion of its trials, a specimen of the type was delivered
+intact at Lille for the Germans to copy, the innocent pilot
+responsible for the delivery doing some great disservice to his
+own cause. The Gotha Wagon-Fabrik Firm immediately set to work
+and copied the Handley-Page design, producing the great Gotha
+bombing machine which was used in all the later raids on England
+as well as for night work over the Allied lines.
+
+How the War advanced design may be judged by comparison of the
+military requirements given for the British Military Trials of
+1912, with performances of 1916 and 1917, when the speed of the
+faster machines had increased to over 150 miles an hour and
+Allied machines engaged enemy aircraft at heights ranging up to
+22,000 feet. All pre-war records of endurance, speed, and climb
+went by the board, as the race for aerial superiority went on.
+
+Bombing brought to being a number of crude devices in the first
+year of the War. Allied pilots of the very early days carried up
+bombs packed in a small box and threw them over by hand, while, a
+little later, the bombs were strung like apples on wings and
+undercarriage, so that the pilot who did not get rid of his load
+before landing risked an explosion. Then came a properly
+designed carrying apparatus, crude but fairly efficient, and with
+1916 development had proceeded as far as the proper bomb-racks
+with releasing gear.
+
+Reconnaissance work developed, so that fighting machines went as
+escort to observing squadrons and scouting operations were
+undertaken up to 100 miles behind the enemy lines; out of this
+grew the art of camouflage, when ammunition dumps were painted
+to resemble herds of cows, guns were screened by foliage or
+painted to merge into a ground scheme, and many other schemes
+were devised to prevent aerial observation. Troops were moved by
+night for the most part, owing to the keen eyes of the air
+pilots and the danger of bombs, though occasionally the aviator
+had his chance. There is one story concerning a British pilot
+who, on returning from a reconnaissance flight, observed a
+German Staff car on the road under him; he descended and bombed
+and machine--gunned the car until the German General and his
+chauffeur abandoned it, took to their heels, and ran like
+rabbits. Later still, when Allied air superiority was assured,
+there came the phase of machine-gunning bodies of enemy troops
+from the air. Disregarding all antiaircraft measures, machines
+would sweep down and throw battalions into panic or upset the
+military traffic along a road, demoralising a battery or a
+transport train and causing as much damage through congestion of
+traffic as with their actual machine-gun fire. Aerial
+photography, too, became a fine art; the ordinary long focus
+cameras were used at the outset with automatic plate changers,
+but later on photographing aeroplanes had cameras of wide angle
+lens type built into the fuselage. These were very simply
+operated, one lever registering the exposure and changing the
+plate. In many cases, aerial photographs gave information which
+the human eye had missed, and it is noteworthy that photographs
+of ground showed when troops had marched over it, while the
+aerial observer was quite unable to detect the marks left by
+their passing.
+
+Some small mention must be made of seaplane activities, which,
+round the European coasts involved in the War, never ceased.
+The submarine campaign found in the spotting seaplane its
+greatest deterrent, and it is old news now how even the deeply
+submerged submarines were easily picked out for destruction from
+a height and the news wirelessed from seaplane to destroyer,
+while in more than one place the seaplane itself finished the
+task by bomb dropping. It was a seaplane that gave Admiral
+Beatty the news that the whole German Fleet was out before the
+Jutland Battle, news which led to a change of plans that very
+nearly brought about the destruction of Germany's naval power.
+For the most part, the seaplanes of the War period were heavier
+than the land machines and, in the opinion of the land pilots,
+were slow and clumsy things to fly. This was inevitable, for
+their work demanded more solid building and greater reliability.
+To put the matter into Hibernian phrase, a forced landing at sea
+is a much more serious matter than on the ground. Thus there
+was need for greater engine power, bigger wingspread to support
+the floats, and fuel tanks of greater capacity. The flying
+boats of the later War period carried considerable crews, were
+heavily armed, capable of withstanding very heavy weather, and
+carried good loads of bombs on long cruises. Their work was not
+all essentially seaplane work, for the R.N.A.S. was as well
+known as hated over the German airship sheds in Belgium and
+along the Flanders coast. As regards other theatres of War,
+they rendered valuable service from the Dardanelles to the
+Rufiji River, at this latter place forming a principal factor in
+the destruction of the cruiser Konigsberg. Their spotting work
+at the Dardanelles for the battleships was responsible for
+direct hits from 15 in. guns on invisible targets at ranges of
+over 12,000 yards. Seaplane pilots were bombing specialists,
+including among their targets army headquarters, ammunition
+dumps, railway stations, submarines and their bases, docks,
+shipping in German harbours, and the German Fleet at
+Wilhelmshaven. Dunkirk, a British seaplane base, was a sharp
+thorn in the German side.
+
+Turning from consideration of the various services to the
+exploits of the men composing them, it is difficult to
+particularise. A certain inevitable prejudice even at this
+length of time leads one to discount the valour of pilots in the
+German Air Service, but the names of Boelcke, von Richthofen,
+and Immelmann recur as proof of the courage that was not wanting
+in the enemy ranks, while, however much we may decry the Gotha
+raids over the English coast and on London, there is no doubt
+that the men who undertook these raids were not deficient in the
+form of bravery that is of more value than the unthinking valour
+of a minute which, observed from the right quarter, wins a
+military decoration.
+
+Yet the fact that the Allied airmen kept the air at all in the
+early days proved on which side personal superiority lay, for
+they were outnumbered, out-manoeuvred, and faced by better
+material than any that they themselves possessed; yet they won
+their fights or died. The stories of their deeds are endless;
+Bishop, flying alone and meeting seven German machines and
+crashing four; the battle of May 5th, 1915, when five heroes
+fought and conquered twenty-seven German machines, ranging in
+altitude between 12,000 and 3,000 feet, and continuing the
+extraordinary struggle from five until six in the evening.
+Captain Aizlewood, attacking five enemy machines with such
+reckless speed that he rammed one and still reached his
+aerodrome safely--these are items in a long list of feats of
+which the character can only be realised when it is fully
+comprehended that the British Air Service accounted for some
+8,ooo enemy machines in the course of the War. Among the French
+there was Captain Guynemer, who at the time of his death had
+brought down fifty-four enemy machines, in addition to many
+others of which the destruction could not be officially
+confirmed. There was Fonck, who brought down six machines in
+one day, four of them within two minutes.
+
+There are incredible stories, true as incredible, of shattered
+men carrying on with their work in absolute disregard of
+physical injury. Major Brabazon Rees, V.C., engaged a big
+German battle-plane in September of 1915 and, single-handed,
+forced his enemy out of action. Later in his career, with a
+serious wound in the thigh from which blood was pouring, he kept
+up a fight with an enemy formation until he had not a round of
+ammunition left, and then returned to his aerodrome to get his
+wound dressed. Lieutenants Otley and Dunning, flying in the
+Balkans, engaged a couple of enemy machines and drove them off,
+but not until their petrol tank had got a hole in it and Dunning
+was dangerously wounded in the leg. Otley improvised a
+tourniquet, passed it to Dunning, and, when the latter had
+bandaged himself, changed from the observer's to the pilot's
+seat, plugged the bullet hole in the tank with his thumb and
+steered the machine home.
+
+These are incidents; the full list has not been, and can never
+be recorded, but it goes to show that in the pilot of the War
+period there came to being a new type of humanity, a product of
+evolution which fitted a certain need. Of such was Captain
+West, who, engaging hostile troops, was attacked by seven
+machines. Early in the engagement, one of his legs was
+partially severed by an explosive bullet and fell powerless into
+the controls, rendering the machine for the time unmanageable.
+Lifting his disabled leg, he regained control of the machine,
+and although wounded in the other leg, he manoeuvred his machine
+so skilfully that his observer was able to get several good
+bursts into the enemy machines, driving them away. Then,
+desperately wounded as he was, Captain West brought the machine
+over to his own lines and landed safely. He fainted from loss
+of blood and exhaustion, but on regaining consciousness,
+insisted on writing his report. Equal to this was the exploit
+of Captain Barker, who, in aerial combat, was wounded in the
+right and left thigh and had his left arm shattered,
+subsequently bringing down an enemy machine in flames, and then
+breaking through another hostile formation and reaching the
+British lines.
+
+In recalling such exploits as these, one is tempted on and on,
+for it seems that the pilots rivalled each other in their
+devotion to duty, this not confined to British aviators, but
+common practically to all services. Sufficient instances have
+been given to show the nature of the work and the character of
+the men who did it.
+
+The rapid growth of aerial effort rendered it necessary in
+January of 1915 to organise the Royal Flying Corps into
+separate wings, and in October of the same year it was
+constituted in Brigades. In 1916 the Air Board was formed,
+mainly with the object of co-ordinating effort and ensuring both
+to the R.N.A.S. and to the R.F.C. adequate supplies of material
+as far as construction admitted. Under the presidency of Lord
+Cowdray, the Air Board brought about certain reforms early in
+1917, and in November of that year a separate Air Ministry was
+constituted, separating the Air Force from both Navy and Army,
+and rendering it an independent force. On April 1st, 1918, the
+Royal Air Force came into existence, and unkind critics in the
+Royal Flying Corps remarked on the appropriateness of the date.
+At the end of the War, the personnel of the Royal Air Force
+amounted to 27,906 officers, and 263,842 other ranks. Contrast
+of these figures with the number of officers and men who took
+the field in 1914 is indicative of the magnitude of British
+aerial effort in the War period.
+
+
+
+XX. THE WAR PERIOD--II
+
+There was when War broke out no realisation on the part of the
+British Government of the need for encouraging the enterprise of
+private builders, who carried out their work entirely at
+their-own cost. The importance of a supply of British-built
+engines was realised before the War, it is true, and a
+competition was held in which a prize of L5,000 was offered for
+the best British engine, but this awakening was so late that the
+R.F.C. took the field without a single British power plant.
+Although Germany woke up equally late to the need for home
+produced aeroplane engines, the experience gained in building
+engines for dirigibles sufficed for the production of aeroplane
+power plants. The Mercedes filled all requirements together
+with the Benz and the Maybach. There was a 225 horsepower Benz
+which was very popular, as were the 100 horse-power and 170
+horse-power Mercedes, the last mentioned fitted to the Aviatik
+biplane of 1917. The Uberursel was a copy of the Gnome and
+supplied the need for rotary engines.
+
+In Great Britain there were a number of aeroplane constructing
+firms that had managed to emerge from the lean years 1912-1913
+with sufficient manufacturing plant to give a hand in making up
+the leeway of construction when War broke out. Gradually the
+motor-car firms came in, turning their body-building departments
+to plane and fuselage construction, which enabled them to turn
+out the complete planes engined and ready for the field. The
+coach-building trade soon joined in and came in handy as
+propeller makers; big upholstering and furniture firms and scores
+of concerns that had never dreamed of engaging in aeroplane
+construction were busy on supplying the R.F.C. By 1915 hundreds
+of different firms were building aeroplanes and parts; by 1917
+the number had increased to over 1,000, and a capital of over a
+million pounds for a firm that at the outbreak of War had
+employed a score or so of hands was by no means uncommon. Women
+and girls came into the work, more especially in plane
+construction and covering and doping, though they took their
+place in the engine shops and proved successful at acetylene
+welding and work at the lathes. It was some time before Britain
+was able to provide its own magnetos, for this key industry had
+been left in the hands of the Germans up to the outbreak of War,
+and the 'Bosch' was admittedly supreme--even now it has never
+been beaten, and can only be equalled, being as near perfection
+as is possible for a magneto.
+
+One of the great inventions of the War was the synchronisation
+of engine-timing and machine gun, which rendered it possible to
+fire through the blades of a propeller without damaging them,
+though the growing efficiency of the aeroplane as a whole and of
+its armament is a thing to marvel at on looking back and
+considering what was actually accomplished. As the efficiency
+of the aeroplane increased, so anti-aircraft guns and
+range-finding were improved. Before the War an aeroplane
+travelling at full speed was reckoned perfectly safe at 4,000
+feet, but, by the first month of 1915, the safe height had gone
+up to 9,000 feet, 7,000 feet being the limit of rifle and machine
+gun bullet trajectory; the heavier guns were not sufficiently
+mobile to tackle aircraft. At that time, it was reckoned that
+effective aerial photography ceased at 6,000 feet, while
+bomb-dropping from 7,000-8,000 feet was reckoned uncertain except
+in the case of a very large target. The improvement in
+anti-aircraft devices went on, and by May of 1916, an aeroplane
+was not safe under 15,000 feet, while anti-aircraft shells had
+fuses capable of being set to over 20,000 feet, and bombing from
+15,000 and 16,000 feet was common. It was not till later that
+Allied pilots demonstrated the safety that lies in flying very
+near the ground, this owing to the fact that, when flying swiftly
+at a very low altitude, the machine is out of sight almost before
+it can be aimed at.
+
+The Battle of the Somme and the clearing of the air preliminary
+to that operation brought the fighting aeroplane pure and simple
+with them. Formations of fighting planes preceded reconnaissance
+craft in order to clear German machines and observation balloons
+out of the sky and to watch and keep down any further enemy
+formations that might attempt to interfere with Allied
+observation work. The German reply to this consisted in the
+formation of the Flying Circus, of which Captain Baron von
+Richthofen's was a good example. Each circus consisted of a
+large formation of speedy machines, built specially for fighting
+and manned by the best of the German pilots. These were sent to
+attack at any point along the line where the Allies had got a
+decided superiority.
+
+The trick flying of pre-war days soon became an everyday matter;
+Pegoud astonished the aviation world before the War by first
+looping the loop, but, before three years of hostilities had
+elapsed, looping was part of the training of practically every
+pilot, while the spinning nose dive, originally considered fatal,
+was mastered, and the tail slide, which consisted of a machine
+rising nose upward in the air and falling back on its tail,
+became one of the easiest 'stunts' in the pilot's repertoire.
+Inherent stability was gradually improved, and, from 1916 onward,
+practically every pilot could carry on with his machine-gun or
+camera and trust to his machine to fly itself until he was free
+to attend to it. There was more than one story of a machine
+coming safely to earth and making good landing on its own account
+with the pilot dead in his cock-pit.
+
+Toward the end of the War, the Independent Air Force was formed
+as a branch of the R.A.F. with a view to bombing German bases
+and devoting its attention exclusively to work behind the enemy
+lines. Bombing operations were undertaken by the R.N.A.S. as
+early as 1914-1915 against Cuxhaven, Dusseldorf, and
+Friedrichshavn, but the supply of material was not sufficient to
+render these raids continuous. A separate Brigade, the 8th, was
+formed in 1917 to harass the German chemical and iron
+industries, the base being in the Nancy area, and this policy
+was found so fruitful that the Independent Force was constituted
+on the 8th June, 1918. The value of the work accomplished by
+this force is demonstrated by the fact that the German High
+Command recalled twenty fighting squadrons from the Western
+front to counter its activities, and, in addition, took troops
+away from the fighting line in large numbers for manning
+anti-aircraft batteries and searchlights. The German press of
+the last year of the War is eloquent of the damage done in
+manufacturing areas by the Independent Force, which, had
+hostilities continued a little longer, would have included Berlin
+in its activities.
+
+Formation flying was first developed by the Germans, who made
+use of it in the daylight raids against England in 1917. Its
+value was very soon realised, and the V formation of wild geese
+was adopted, the leader taking the point of the V and his
+squadron following on either side at different heights. The air
+currents set up by the leading machines were thus avoided by
+those in the rear, while each pilot had a good view of the
+leader's bombs, and were able to correct their own aim by the
+bursts, while the different heights at which they flew rendered
+anti-aircraft gun practice less effective. Further, machines
+were able to afford mutual protection to each other and any
+attacker would be met by machine-gun fire from three or four
+machines firing on him from different angles and heights. In
+the later formations single-seater fighters flew above the
+bombers for the purpose of driving off hostile craft. Formation
+flying was not fully developed when the end of the War brought
+stagnation in place of the rapid advance in the strategy and
+tactics of military air work.
+
+
+
+XXI. RECONSTRUCTION
+
+The end of the War brought a pause in which the multitude of
+aircraft constructors found themselves faced with the possible
+complete stagnation of the industry, since military activities
+no longer demanded their services and the prospects of
+commercial flying were virtually nil. That great factor in
+commercial success, cost of plant and upkeep, had received no
+consideration whatever in the War period, for armies do not
+count cost. The types of machines that had evolved from the War
+were very fast, very efficient, and very expensive, although the
+bombers showed promise of adaptation to commercial needs, and,
+so far as other machines were concerned, America had already
+proved the possibilities of mail-carrying by maintaining a mail
+service even during the War period.
+
+A civil aviation department of the Air Ministry was formed in
+February of 1919 with a Controller General of Civil Aviation
+at the head. This was organised into four branches, one dealing
+with the survey and preparation of air routes for the British
+Empire, one organising meteorological and wireless telegraphy
+services, one dealing with the licensing of aerodromes, machines
+for passenger or goods carrying and civilian pilots, and one
+dealing with publicity and transmission of information
+generally. A special Act of Parliament 264 entitled 'The Air
+Navigation Acts, 1911-1919,' was passed on February 27th, and
+commercial flying was officially permitted from May 1st, 1919.
+
+Meanwhile the great event of 1919, the crossing of the
+Atlantic by air, was gradually ripening to performance. In
+addition to the rigid airship, R.34, eight machines entered for
+this flight, these being a Short seaplane, Handley-Page,
+Martinsyde, Vickers-Vimy, and Sopwith aeroplanes, and three
+American flying boats, N.C.1, N.C.3, and N.C.4. The Short
+seaplane was the only one of the eight which proposed to make
+the journey westward; in flying from England to Ireland, before
+starting on the long trip to Newfoundland, it fell into the sea
+off the coast of Anglesey, and so far as it was concerned the
+attempt was abandoned.
+
+The first machines to start from the Western end were the three
+American seaplanes, which on the morning of May 6th left
+Trepassy, Newfoundland, on the 1,380 mile stage to Horta in the
+Azores. N.C.1 and N.C.3 gave up the attempt very early, but
+N.C.4, piloted by Lieut.-Commander Read, U.S.N., made Horta on
+May 17th and made a three days' halt. On the 20th the second
+stage of the journey to Ponta Delgada, a further 190 miles, was
+completed and a second halt of a week was made. On the 27th,
+the machine left for Lisbon, 900 miles distant, and completed
+the journey in a day. On the 30th a further stage of 340 miles
+took N.C.4 on to Ferrol, and the next day the last stage of 420
+miles to Plymouth was accomplished.
+
+Meanwhile, H. G. Hawker, pilot of the Sopwith biplane, together
+with Commander Mackenzie Grieve, R.N., his navigator, found the
+weather sufficiently auspicious to set out at 6.48 p.m. On
+Sunday, May 18th, in the hope of completing the trip by the
+direct route before N.C.4 could reach Plymouth. They set out
+from Mount Pearl aerodrome, St John's, Newfoundland, and vanished
+into space, being given up as lost, as Hamel was lost immediately
+before the War in attempting to fly the North Sea. There was a
+week of dead silence regarding their fate, but on the following
+Sunday morning there was world-wide relief at the news that the
+plucky attempt had not ended in disaster, but both aviators had
+been picked up by the steamer Mary at 9.30 a.m. on the morning of
+the 19th, while still about 750 miles short of the conclusion of
+their journey. Engine failure brought them down, and they planed
+down to the sea close to the Mary to be picked up; as the vessel
+was not fitted with wireless, the news of their rescue could not
+be communicated until land was reached. An equivalent of half
+the L10,000 prize offered by the Daily Mail for the non-stop
+flight was presented by the paper in recognition of the very
+gallant attempt, and the King conferred the Air Force Cross on
+both pilot and navigator.
+
+Raynham, pilot of the Martinsyde competing machine, had the bad
+luck to crash his craft twice in attempting to start before he
+got outside the boundary of the aerodrome. The Handley-Page
+machine was withdrawn from the competition, and, attempting to
+fly to America, was crashed on the way.
+
+The first non-stop crossing was made on June 14th-15th in 16
+hours 27 minutes, the speed being just over 117 miles per hour.
+The machine was a Vickers-Vimy bomber, engined with two
+Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII's, piloted by Captain John Alcock, D.S.C.,
+with Lieut. Arthur Whitten-Brown as navigator. The journey was
+reported to be very rough, so much so at times that Captain
+Alcock stated that they were flying upside down, and for the
+greater part of the time they were out of sight of the sea. Both
+pilot and navigator had the honour of knighthood conferred on
+them at the conclusion of the journey.
+
+Meanwhile, commercial flying opened on May 8th (the official
+date was May 1st) with a joy-ride service from Hounslow of Avro
+training machines. The enterprise caught on remarkably, and the
+company extended their activities to coastal resorts for the
+holiday season--at Blackpool alone they took up 10,000
+passengers before the service was two months old. Hendon,
+beginning passenger flights on the same date, went in for
+exhibition and passenger flying, and on June 21st the aerial
+Derby was won by Captain Gathergood on an Airco 4R machine with
+a Napier 450 horse-power 'Lion' engine; incidentally the speed
+of 129.3 miles per hour was officially recognised as constituting
+the world's record for speed within a closed circuit. On July
+17th a Fiat B.R. biplane with a 700 horse-power engine landed at
+Kenley aerodrome after having made a non-stop flight of 1,100
+miles. The maximum speed of this machine was 160 miles per
+hour, and it was claimed to be the fastest machine in existence.
+On August 25th a daily service between London and Paris was
+inaugurated by the Aircraft Manufacturing Company, Limited, who
+ran a machine each way each day, starting at 12.30 and due to
+arrive at 2.45 p.m. The Handley-Page Company began a similar
+service in September of 1919, but ran it on alternate days
+with machines capable of accommodating ten passengers. The
+single fare in each case was fixed at 15 guineas and the parcel
+rate at 7s. 6d. per pound.
+
+Meanwhile, in Germany, a number of passenger services had been
+in operation from the early part of the year; the Berlin-Weimar
+service was established on February 5th and Berlin-Hamburg on
+March 1st, both for mail and passenger carrying. Berlin-Breslau
+was soon added, but the first route opened remained most
+popular, 538 flights being made between its opening and the
+end of April, while for March and April combined, the
+Hamburg-Berlin route recorded only 262 flights. All three
+routes were operated by a combine of German aeronautical firms
+entitled the Deutsch Luft Rederie. The single fare between
+Hamburg and Berlin was 450 marks, between Berlin and Breslau 500
+marks, and between Berlin and Weimar 450 marks. Luggage was
+carried free of charge, but varied according to the weight of
+the passenger, since the combined weight of both passenger and
+luggage was not allowed to exceed a certain limit.
+
+In America commercial flying had begun in May of 1918 with the
+mail service between Washington, Philadelphia, and New York,
+which proved that mail carrying is a commercial possibility, and
+also demonstrated the remarkable reliability of the modern
+aeroplane by making 102 complete flights out of a possible total
+of 104 in November, 1918, at a cost of 0.777 of a dollar per
+mile. By March of 1919 the cost per mile had gone up to 1.28
+dollars; the first annual report issued at the end of May showed
+an efficiency of 95.6 per cent and the original six aeroplanes
+and engines with which the service began were still in regular
+use.
+
+In June of 1919 an American commercial firm chartered an
+aeroplane for emergency service owing to a New York harbour
+strike and found it so useful that they made it a regular
+service. The Travellers Company inaugurated a passenger flying
+boat service between New York and Atlantic City on July 25th, the
+fare, inclusive of 35 lbs. of luggage, being fixed at L25 each
+way.
+
+Five flights on the American continent up to the end of 1919
+are worthy of note. On December 13th, 1918, Lieut. D. Godoy of
+the Chilian army left Santiago, Chili, crossed the Andes at a
+height of 19,700 feet and landed at Mendoza, the capital of the
+wine-growing province of Argentina. On April 19th, 1919, Captain
+E. F. White made the first non-stop flight between New York and
+Chicago in 6 hours 50 minutes on a D.H.4 machine driven by a
+twelve-cylinder Liberty engine. Early in August Major Schroeder,
+piloting a French Lepere machine flying at a height of 18,400
+feet, reached a speed of 137 miles per hour with a Liberty motor
+fitted with a super-charger. Toward the end of August, Rex
+Marshall, on a Thomas-Morse biplane, starting from a height of
+17,000 feet, made a glide of 35 miles with his engine cut off,
+restarting it when at a height of 600 feet above the ground.
+About a month later R. Rohlfe, piloting a Curtiss triplane, broke
+the height record by reaching 34,610 feet.
+
+
+
+XXII. 1919-20
+
+Into the later months of 1919 comes the flight by Captain
+Ross-Smith from England to Australia and the attempt to make the
+Cape to Cairo voyage by air. The Australian Government had
+offered a prize of L10,000 for the first flight from England to
+Australia in a British machine, the flight to be accomplished in
+720 consecutive hours. Ross-Smith, with his brother, Lieut.
+Keith Macpherson Smith, and two mechanics, left Hounslow in a
+Vickers-Vimy bomber with Rolls-Royce engine on November 12th and
+arrived at Port Darwin, North Australia, on the 10th December,
+having completed the flight in 27 days 20 hours 20 minutes, thus
+having 51 hours 40 minutes to spare out of the 720 allotted
+hours.
+
+Early in 1920 came a series of attempts at completing the
+journey by air between Cairo and the Cape. Out of four
+competitors Colonel Van Ryneveld came nearest to making the
+journey successfully, leaving England on a standard Vickers-Vimy
+bomber with Rolls-Royce engines, identical in design with the
+machine used by Captain Ross-Smith on the England to Australia
+flight. A second Vickers-Vimy was financed by the Times
+newspaper and a third flight was undertaken with a Handley-Page
+machine under the auspices of the Daily Telegraph. The Air
+Ministry had already prepared the route by means of three survey
+parties which cleared the aerodromes and landing grounds,
+dividing their journey into stages of 200 miles or less. Not
+one of the competitors completed the course, but in both this
+and Ross-Smith's flight valuable data was gained in respect of
+reliability of machines and engines, together with a mass of
+meteorological information.
+
+The Handley-Page Company announced in the early months of 1920
+that they had perfected a new design of wing which brought about
+a twenty to forty per cent improvement in lift rate in the year.
+When the nature of the design was made public, it was seen to
+consist of a division of the wing into small sections, each with
+its separate lift. A few days later, Fokker, the Dutch
+inventor, announced the construction of a machine in which all
+external bracing wires are obviated, the wings being of a very
+deep section and self-supporting. The value of these two
+inventions remains to be seen so far as commercial flying is
+concerned.
+
+The value of air work in war, especially so far as the Colonial
+campaigns in which British troops are constantly being engaged is
+in question, was very thoroughly demonstrated in a report issued
+early in 1920 with reference to the successful termination of the
+Somaliland campaign through the intervention of the Royal Air
+Force, which between January 21st and the 31st practically
+destroyed the Dervish force under the Mullah, which had been a
+thorn in the side of Britain since 1907. Bombs and machine-guns
+did the work, destroying fortifications and bringing about the
+surrender of all the Mullah's following, with the exception of
+about seventy who made their escape.
+
+Certain records both in construction and performance had
+characterised the post-war years, though as design advances and
+comes nearer to perfection, it is obvious that records must get
+fewer and farther between. The record aeroplane as regards size
+at the time of its construction was the Tarrant triplane, which
+made its first--and last--flight on May 28th, 1919. The total
+loaded weight was 30 tons, and the machine was fitted with six
+400 horse-power engines; almost immediately after the trial
+flight began, the machine pitched forward on its nose and was
+wrecked, causing fatal injuries to Captains Dunn and Rawlings,
+who were aboard the machine. A second accident of similar
+character was that which befell the giant seaplane known as the
+Felixstowe Fury, in a trial flight. This latter machine was
+intended to be flown to Australia, but was crashed over the
+water.
+
+On May 4th, 1920, a British record for flight duration and
+useful load was established by a commercial type Handley-Page
+biplane, which, carrying a load of 3,690 lbs., rose to a height
+of 13,999 feet and remained in the air for 1 hour 20 minutes.
+On May 27th the French pilot, Fronval, flying at Villacoublay in
+a Morane-Saulnier type of biplane with Le Rhone motor, put up an
+extraordinary type of record by looping the loop 962 times in 3
+hours 52 minutes 10 seconds. Another record of the year of
+similar nature was that of two French fliers, Boussotrot and
+Bernard, who achieved a continuous flight of 24 hours 19 minutes
+7 seconds, beating the pre-war record of 21 hours 48 3/4 seconds
+set up by the German pilot, Landemann. Both these records are
+likely to stand, being in the nature of freaks, which demonstrate
+little beyond the reliability of the machine and the capacity for
+endurance on the part of its pilots.
+
+Meanwhile, on February 14th, Lieuts. Masiero and Ferrarin left
+Rome on S.V.A. Ansaldo V. machines fitted with 220 horse-power
+S.V.A. motors. On May 30th they arrived at Tokio, having flown
+by way of Bagdad, Karachi, Canton, Pekin, and Osaka. Several
+other competitors started, two of whom were shot down by Arabs in
+Mesopotamia.
+
+Considered in a general way, the first two years after the
+termination of the Great European War form a period of transition
+in which the commercial type of aeroplane was gradually evolved
+from the fighting machine which was perfected in the four
+preceding years. There was about this period no sense of
+finality, but it was as experimental, in its own way, as were the
+years of progressing design which preceded the war period. Such
+commercial schemes as were inaugurated call for no more note than
+has been given here; they have been experimental, and, with the
+possible exception of the United States Government mail service,
+have not been planned and executed on a sufficiently large scale
+to furnish reliable data on which to forecast the prospects of
+commercial aviation. And there is a school rapidly growing up
+which asserts that the day of aeroplanes is nearly over. The
+construction of the giant airships of to-day and the successful
+return flight of R34 across the Atlantic seem to point to the
+eventual triumph, in spite of its disadvantages, of the dirigible
+airship.
+
+This is a hard saying for such of the aeroplane industry as
+survived the War period and consolidated itself, and it is but
+the saying of a section which bases its belief on the fact that,
+as was noted in the very early years of the century, the
+aeroplane is primarily a war machine. Moreover, the experience
+of the War period tended to discredit the dirigible, since,
+before the introduction of helium gas, the inflammability of its
+buoyant factor placed it at an immense disadvantage beside the
+machine dependent on the atmosphere itself for its lift.
+
+As life runs to-day, it is a long time since Kipling wrote his
+story of the airways of a future world and thrust out a prophecy
+that the bulk of the world's air traffic would be carried by
+gas-bag vessels. If the school which inclines to belief in the
+dirigible is right in its belief, as it well may be, then the
+foresight was uncannily correct, not only in the matter of the
+main assumption, but in the detail with which the writer
+embroidered it.
+
+On the constructional side, the history of the aeroplane is
+still so much in the making that any attempt at a critical
+history would be unwise, and it is possible only to record fact,
+leaving it to the future for judgment to be passed. But, in a
+general way, criticism may be advanced with regard to the place
+that aeronautics takes in civilisation. In the past hundred
+years, the world has made miraculously rapid strides materially,
+but moral development has not kept abreast. Conception of the
+responsibilities of humanity remains virtually in a position of
+a hundred years ago; given a higher conception of life and its
+responsibilities, the aeroplane becomes the crowning achievement
+of that long series which James Watt inaugurated, the last step
+in intercommunication, the chain with which all nations are
+bound in a growing prosperity, surely based on moral wellbeing.
+Without such conception of the duties as well as the rights of
+life, this last achievement of science may yet prove the weapon
+that shall end civilisation as men know it to-day, and bring
+this ultra-material age to a phase of ruin on which saner people
+can build a world more reasonable and less given to groping
+after purely material advancement.
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+1903-1920: PROGRESS IN DESIGN
+BY LIEUT.-COL. W. LOCKWOOD MARSH
+
+I. THE BEGINNINGS
+
+Although the first actual flight of an aeroplane was made by the
+Wrights on December 17th 1903, it is necessary, in considering
+the progress of design between that period and the present day,
+to go back to the earlier days of their experiments with
+'gliders,' which show the alterations in design made by them in
+their step-bystep progress to a flying machine proper, and give
+a clear idea of the stage at which they had arrived in the art
+of aeroplane design at the time of their first flights.
+
+They started by carefully surveying the work of previous
+experimenters, such as Lilienthal and Chanute, and from the
+lesson of some of the failures of these pioneers evolved certain
+new principles which were embodied in their first glider, built
+in 1900. In the first place, instead of relying upon the
+shifting of the operator's body to obtain balance, which had
+proved too slow to be reliable, they fitted in front of the main
+supporting surfaces what we now call an 'elevator,' which could
+be flexed, to control the longitudinal balance, from where the
+operator lay prone upon the main supporting surfaces. The second
+main innovation which they incorporated in this first glider, and
+the principle of which is still used in every aeroplane in
+existence, was the attainment of lateral balance by warping the
+extremities of the main planes. The effect of warping or pulling
+down the extremity of the wing on one side was to increase its
+lift and so cause that side to rise. In the first two gliders
+this control was also used for steering to right and left. Both
+these methods of control were novel for other than model work, as
+previous experimenters, such as Lilienthal and Pilcher, had
+relied entirely upon moving the legs or shifting the position of
+the body to control the longitudinal and lateral motions of their
+gliders. For the main supporting surfaces of the glider the
+biplane system of Chanute's gliders was adopted with certain
+modifications, while the curve of the wings was founded upon the
+calculations of Lilienthal as to wind pressure and consequent
+lift of the plane.
+
+This first glider was tested on the Kill Devil Hill sand-hills
+in North Carolina in the summer of 1900 and proved at any
+rate the correctness of the principles of the front elevator and
+warping wings, though its designers were puzzled by the fact
+that the lift was less than they expected; whilst the 'drag'(as
+we call it), or resistance, was also considerably lower than
+their predictions. The 1901 machine was, in consequence, nearly
+doubled in area--the lifting surface being increased from 165 to
+308 square feet--the first trial taking place on July 27th,
+1901, again at Kill Devil Hill. It immediately appeared that
+something was wrong, as the machine dived straight to the
+ground, and it was only after the operator's position had been
+moved nearly a foot back from what had been calculated as the
+correct position that the machine would glide--and even then the
+elevator had to be used far more strongly than in the previous
+year's glider. After a good deal of thought the apparent
+solution of the trouble was finally found.
+
+This consisted in the fact that with curved surfaces, while at
+large angles the centre of pressure moves forward as the angle
+decreases, when a certain limit of angle is reached it travels
+suddenly backwards and causes the machine to dive. The Wrights
+had known of this tendency from Lilienthal's researches, but had
+imagined that the phenomenon would disappear if they used a
+fairly lightly cambered--or curved--surface with a very abrupt
+curve at the front. Having discovered what appeared to be the
+cause they surmounted the difficulty by 'trussing down' the
+camber of the wings, with the result that they at once got back
+to the old conditions of the previous year and could control the
+machine readily with small movements of the elevator, even being
+able to follow undulations in the ground. They still found,
+however, that the lift was not as great as it should have been;
+while the drag remained, as in the previous glider, surprisingly
+small. This threw doubt on previous figures as to wind
+resistance and pressure on curved surfaces; but at the same time
+confirmed (and this was a most important result) Lilienthal's
+previously questioned theory that at small angles the pressure
+on a curved surface instead of being normal, or at right angles
+to, the chord is in fact inclined in front of the perpendicular.
+The result of this is that the pressure actually tends to draw
+the machine forward into the wind--hence the small amount of
+drag, which had puzzled Wilbur and Orville Wright.
+
+Another lesson which was learnt from these first two years of
+experiment, was that where, as in a biplane, two surfaces are
+superposed one above the other, each of them has somewhat less
+lift than it would have if used alone. The experimenters were
+also still in doubt as to the efficiency of the warping method
+of controlling the lateral balance as it gave rise to certain
+phenomena which puzzled them, the machine turning towards the
+wing having the greater angle, which seemed also to touch the
+ground first, contrary to their expectations. Accordingly, on
+returning to Dayton towards the end of 1901, they set
+themselves to solve the various problems which had appeared and
+started on a lengthy series of experiments to check the previous
+figures as to wind resistance and lift of curved surfaces,
+besides setting themselves to grapple with the difficulty of
+lateral control. They accordingly constructed for themselves at
+their home in Dayton a wind tunnel 16 inches square by 6 feet
+long in which they measured the lift and 'drag' of more than two
+hundred miniature wings. In the course of these tests they for
+the first time produced comparative results of the lift of
+oblong and square surfaces, with the result that they
+re-discovered the importance of 'aspect ratio'--the ratio of
+length to breadth of planes. As a result, in the next year's
+glider the aspect ration of the wings was increased from the
+three to one of the earliest model to about six to one, which is
+approximately the same as that used in the machines of to-day.
+Further than that, they discussed the question of lateral
+stability, and came to the conclusion that the cause of the
+trouble was that the effect of warping down one wing was to
+increase the resistance of, and consequently slow down, that
+wing to such an extent that its lift was reduced sufficiently to
+wipe out the anticipated increase in lift resulting from the
+warping. From this they deduced that if the speed of the warped
+wing could be controlled the advantage of increasing the angle
+by warping could be utilised as they originally intended. They
+therefore decided to fit a vertical fin at the rear which, if the
+machine attempted to turn, would be exposed more and more to the
+wind and so stop the turning motion by offering increased
+resistance.
+
+As a result of this laboratory research work the third Wright
+glider, which was taken to Kill Devil Hill in September, 1902,
+was far more efficient aerodynamically than either of its two
+predecessors, and was fitted with a fixed vertical fin at the
+rear in addition to the movable elevator in front. According to
+Mr Griffith Brewer,[*] this third glider contained 305 square
+feet of surface; though there may possibly be a mistake here, as
+he states[**] the surface of the previous year's glider to have
+been only 290 square feet, whereas Wilbur Wright himself[***]
+states it to have been 308 square feet. The matter is not,
+perhaps, save historically, of much importance, except that the
+gliders are believed to have been progressively larger, and
+therefore if we accept Wilbur Wright's own figure of the surface
+of the second glider, the third must have had a greater area
+than that given by Mr Griffith Brewer. Unfortunately, no
+evidence of the Wright Brothers themselves on this point is
+available.
+
+[*] Fourth Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, Aeronautical Journal,
+Vol. XX, No. 79, page 75.
+
+[**] Ibid. page 73.
+
+[***] Ibid. pp. 91 and 102.
+
+The first glide of the 1902, season was made on September 17th
+of that year, and the new machine at once showed itself an
+improvement on its predecessors, though subsequent trials showed
+that the difficulty of lateral balance had not been entirely
+overcome. It was decided, therefore, to turn the vertical fin
+at the rear into a rudder by making it movable. At the same
+time it was realised that there was a definite relation between
+lateral balance and directional control, and the rudder controls
+and wing-warping wires were accordingly connected This ended the
+pioneer gliding experiments of Wilbur and Orville Wright--though
+further glides were made in subsequent years--as the following
+year, 1903, saw the first power-driven machine leave the ground.
+
+To recapitulate--in the course of these original experiments the
+Wrights confirmed Lilienthal's theory of the reversal of the
+centre of pressure on cambered surfaces at small angles of
+incidence: they confirmed the importance of high aspect ratio
+in respect to lift: they had evolved new and more accurate
+tables of lift and pressure on cambered surfaces: they were the
+first to use a movable horizontal elevator for controlling
+height: they were the first to adjust the wings to different
+angles of incidence to maintain lateral balance: and they were
+the first to use the movable rudder and adjustable wings in
+combination.
+
+They now considered that they had gone far enough to justify
+them in building a power-driven 'flier,' as they called their
+first aeroplane. They could find no suitable engine and so
+proceeded to build for themselves an internal combustion engine,
+which was designed to give 8 horse-power, but when completed
+actually developed about 12-15 horse-power and weighed 240 lbs.
+The complete machine weighed about 750 lbs. Further details of
+the first Wright aeroplane are difficult to obtain, and even
+those here given should be received with some caution. The
+first flight was made on December 17th 1903, and lasted 12
+seconds. Others followed immediately, and the fourth lasted 59
+seconds, a distance of 852 feet being covered against a 20-mile
+wind.
+
+The following year they transferred operations to a field
+outside Dayton, Ohio (their home), and there they flew a
+somewhat larger and heavier machine with which on September 20th
+1904, they completed the first circle in the air. In this
+machine for the first time the pilot had a seat; all the
+previous experiments having been carried out with the operator
+lying prone on the lower wing. This was followed next year by
+another still larger machine, and on it they carried out many
+flights. During the course of these flights they satisfied
+themselves as to the cause of a phenomenon which had puzzled
+them during the previous year and caused them to fear that they
+had not solved the problem of lateral control. They found that
+on occasions--always when on a turn--the machine began to slide
+down towards the ground and that no amount of warping could stop
+it. Finally it was found that if the nose of the machine was
+tilted down a recovery could be effected; from which they
+concluded that what actually happened was that the machine,
+'owing to the increased load caused by centrifugal force,' had
+insufficient power to maintain itself in the air and therefore
+lost speed until a point was reached at which the controls
+became inoperative. In other words, this was the first
+experience of 'stalling on a turn,' which is a danger against
+which all embryo pilots have to guard in the early stages of
+their training.
+
+The 1905 machine was, like its predecessors, a biplane with a
+biplane elevator in front and a double vertical rudder in rear.
+The span was 40 feet, the chord of the wings being 6 feet and
+the gap between them about the same. The total area was about
+600 square feet which supported a total weight of 925 lbs.;
+while the motor was 12 to 15 horse-power driving two propellers
+on each side behind the main planes through chains and giving
+the machine a speed of about 30 m.p.h. one of these chains was
+crossed so that the propellers revolved in opposite directions
+to avoid the torque which it was feared would be set up if they
+both revolved the same way. The machine was not fitted with a
+wheeled undercarriage but was carried on two skids, which also
+acted as outriggers to carry the elevator. Consequently, a
+mechanical method of launching had to be evolved and the machine
+received initial velocity from a rail, along which it was drawn
+by the impetus provided by the falling of a weight from a wooden
+tower or 'pylon.' As a result of this the Wright aeroplane in
+its original form had to be taken back to its starting rail
+after each flight, and could not restart from the point of
+alighting. Perhaps, in comparison with French machines of more
+or less contemporary date (evolved on independent lines in
+ignorance of the Americans' work), the chief feature of the
+Wright biplane of 1905 was that it relied entirely upon the
+skill of the operator for its stability; whereas in France some
+attempt was being made, although perhaps not very successfully,
+to make the machine automatically stable laterally. The
+performance of the Wrights in carrying a loading of some 60 lbs.
+per horse-power is one which should not be overlooked. The wing
+loading was about 1 1/2 lbs. per square foot.
+
+About the same time that the Wrights were carrying out their
+power-driven experiments, a band of pioneers was quite
+independently beginning to approach success in France. In
+practically every case, however, they started from a somewhat
+different standpoint and took as their basic idea the cellular
+(or box) kite. This form of kite, consisting of two superposed
+surfaces connected at each end by a vertical panel or curtain of
+fabric, had proved extremely successful for man-carrying
+purposes, and, therefore, it was little wonder that several minds
+conceived the idea of attempting to fly by fitting a series of
+box-kites with an engine. The first to achieve success was M.
+Santos-Dumont, the famous Brazilian pioneer-designer of airships,
+who, on November 12th, 1906, made several flights, the last of
+which covered a little over 700 feet. Santos-Dumont's machine
+consisted essentially of two box-kites, forming the main wings,
+one on each side of the body, in which the pilot stood, and at
+the front extremity of which was another movable box-kite to act
+as elevator and rudder. The curtains at the ends were intended
+to give lateral stability, which was further ensured by setting
+the wings slightly inclined upwards from the centre, so that when
+seen from the front they formed a wide V. This feature is still
+to be found in many aeroplanes to-day and has come to be known
+as the 'dihedral.' The motor was at first of 24 horse-power, for
+which later a 50 horse-power Antoinette engine was substituted;
+whilst a three-wheeled undercarriage was provided, so that the
+machine could start without external mechanical aid. The
+machine was constructed of bamboo and steel, the weight being as
+low as 352 lbs. The span was 40 feet, the length being 33 feet,
+with a total surface of main planes of 860 square feet. It will
+thus be seen--for comparison with the Wright machine--that the
+weight per horse-power (with the 50 horse-power engine) was only
+7 lbs., while the wing loading was equally low at 1/2 lb. per
+square foot.
+
+The main features of the Santos-Dumont machine were the box-kite
+form of construction, with a dihedral angle on the main planes,
+and the forward elevator which could be moved in any direction
+and therefore acted in the same way as the rudder at the rear of
+the Wright biplane. It had a single propeller revolving in the
+centre behind the wings and was fitted with an undercarriage
+incorporated in the machine.
+
+The other chief French experimenters at this period were the
+Voisin Freres, whose first two machines--identical in
+form--were sold to Delagrange and H. Farman, which has sometimes
+caused confusion, the two purchasers being credited with the
+design they bought. The Voisins, like the Wrights, based their
+designs largely on the experimental work of Lilienthal, Langley,
+Chanute, and others, though they also carried out tests on the
+lifting properties of aerofoils in a wind tunnel of their own.
+Their first machines, like those of Santos-Dumont, showed the
+effects of experimenting with box-kites, some of which they had
+built for M. Ernest Archdeacon in 1904. In their case the
+machine, which was again a biplane, had, like both the others
+previously mentioned, an elevator in front--though in this case
+of monoplane form--and, as in the Wright, a rudder was fitted in
+rear of the main planes. The Voisins, however, fitted a fixed
+biplane horizontal 'tail'--in an effort to obtain a measure of
+automatic longitudinal stability--between the two surfaces of
+which the single rudder worked. For lateral stability they
+depended entirely on end curtains between the upper and lower
+surfaces of both the main planes and biplane tail surfaces.
+They, like Santos-Dumont, fitted a wheeled undercarriage, so
+that the machine was self-contained. The Voisin machine, then,
+was intended to be automatically stable in both senses; whereas
+the Wrights deliberately produced a machine which was entirely
+dependent upon the pilot's skill for its stability. The
+dimensions of the Voisin may be given for comparative purposes,
+and were as follows: Span 33 feet with a chord (width from back
+to front) of main planes of 6 1/2 feet, giving a total area of
+430 square feet. The 50 horse-power Antoinette engine, which was
+enclosed in the body (or 'nacelle ') in the front of which the
+pilot sat, drove a propeller behind, revolving between the
+outriggers carrying the tail. The total weight, including Farman
+as pilot, is given as 1,540 lbs., so that the machine was much
+heavier than either of the others; the weight per horse-power
+being midway between the Santos-Dumont and the Wright at 31 lbs.
+per square foot, while the wing loading was considerably greater
+than either at 3 1/2 lbs. per square foot. The Voisin machine
+was
+experimented with by Farman and Delagrange from about June 1907
+onwards, and was in the subsequent years developed by Farman; and
+right up to the commencement of the War upheld the principles of
+the box-kite method of construction for training purposes. The
+chief modification of the original design was the addition of
+flaps (or ailerons) at the rear extremities of the main planes to
+give lateral control, in a manner analogous to the wing-warping
+method invented by the Wrights, as a result of which the end
+curtains between the planes were abolished. An additional
+elevator was fitted at the rear of the fixed biplane tail, which
+eventually led to the discarding of the front elevator
+altogether. During the same period the Wright machine came into
+line with the others by the fitting of a wheeled undercarriage
+integral with the machine. A fixed horizontal tail was also
+added to the rear rudder, to which a movable elevator was later
+attached; and, finally, the front elevator was done away with.
+It will thus be seen that having started from the very different
+standpoints of automatic stability and complete control by the
+pilot, the Voisin (as developed in the Farman) and Wright
+machines, through gradual evolution finally resulted in
+aeroplanes of similar characteristics embodying a modicum of
+both features.
+
+Before proceeding to the next stage of progress mention should
+be made of the experimental work of Captain Ferber in France.
+This officer carried out a large number of experiments with
+gliders contemporarily with the Wrights, adopting--like
+them--the Chanute biplane principle. He adopted the front
+elevator from the Wrights, but immediately went a step farther
+by also fitting a fixed tail in rear, which did not become a
+feature of the Wright machine until some seven or eight years
+later. He built and appeared to have flown a machine fitted
+with a motor in 1905, and was commissioned to go to America by
+the French War Office on a secret mission to the Wrights.
+Unfortunately, no complete account of his experiments appears to
+exist, though it can be said that his work was at least as
+important as that of any of the other pioneers mentioned.
+
+
+
+II. MULTIPLICITY OF IDEAS
+
+In a review of progress such as this, it is obviously
+impossible, when a certain stage of development has been
+reached, owing to the very multiplicity of experimenters, to
+continue dealing in anything approaching detail with all the
+different types of machines; and it is proposed, therefore, from
+this point to deal only with tendencies, and to mention
+individuals merely as examples of a class of thought rather than
+as personalities, as it is often difficult fairly to allocate
+the responsibility for any particular innovation.
+
+During 1907 and 1908 a new type of machine, in the monoplane,
+began to appear from the workshops of Louis Bleriot, Robert
+Esnault-Pelterie, and others, which was destined to give rise to
+long and bitter controversies on the relative advantages of the
+two types, into which it is not proposed to enter here; though
+the rumblings of the conflict are still to be heard by
+discerning ears. Bleriot's early monoplanes had certain new
+features, such as the location of the pilot, and in some cases
+the engine, below the wing; but in general his monoplanes,
+particularly the famous No. XI on which the first Channel
+crossing was made on July 25th, 1909, embodied the main
+principles of the Wright and Voisin types, except that the
+propeller was in front of instead of behind the supporting
+surfaces, and was, therefore, what is called a 'tractor' in
+place of the then more conventional 'pusher.' Bleriot aimed at
+lateral balance by having the tip of each wing pivoted, though he
+soon fell into line with the Wrights and adopted the warping
+system. The main features of the design of Esnault-Pelterie's
+monoplane was the inverted dihedral (or kathedral as this was
+called in Mr S. F. Cody's British Army Biplane of 1907) on the
+wings, whereby the tips were considerably lower than the roots at
+the body. This was designed to give automatic lateral stability,
+but, here again, conventional practice was soon adopted and the
+R.E.P. monoplanes, which became well-known in this country
+through their adoption in the early days by Messrs Vickers, were
+of the ordinary monoplane design, consisting of a tractor
+propeller with wire-stayed wings, the pilot being in an enclosed
+fuselage containing the engine in front and carrying at its rear
+extremity fixed horizontal and vertical surfaces combined with
+movable elevators and rudder. Constructionally, the R.E.P.
+monoplane was of extreme interest as the body was constructed of
+steel. The Antoinette monoplane, so ably flown by Latham, was
+another very famous machine of the 1909-1910 period, though its
+performance were frequently marred by engine failure; which was
+indeed the bugbear of all these early experimenters, and it is
+difficult to say, after this lapse of time, how far in many cases
+the failures which occurred, both in performances and even in the
+actual ability to rise from the ground, were due to defects in
+design or merely faults in the primitive engines available. The
+Antoinette aroused admiration chiefly through its graceful,
+birdlike lines, which have probably never been equalled; but its
+chief interest for our present purpose lies in the novel method
+of wing-staying which was employed. Contemporary monoplanes
+practically all had their wings stayed by wires to a post in the
+centre above the fuselage, and, usually, to the undercarriage
+below. In the Antoinette, however, a king post was introduced
+half-way along the wing, from which wires were carried to the
+ends of the wings and the body. This was intended to give
+increased strength and permitted of a greater wing-spread and
+consequently improved aspect ratio. The same system of
+construction was adopted in the British Martinsyde monoplanes of
+two or three years later.
+
+This period also saw the production of the first triplane, which
+was built by A. V. Roe in England and was fitted with a J.A.P.
+engine of only 9 horse-power--an amazing performance which
+remains to this day unequalled. Mr Roe's triplane was chiefly
+interesting otherwise for the method of maintaining longitudinal
+control, which was achieved by pivoting the whole of the three
+main planes so that their angle of incidence could be altered.
+This was the direct converse of the universal practice of
+elevating by means of a subsidiary surface either in front or
+rear of the main planes.
+
+Recollection of the various flying meetings and exhibitions
+which one attended during the years from 1909 to 1911, or even
+1912 are chiefly notable for the fact that the first thought on
+seeing any new type of machine was not as to what its
+'performance'--in speed, lift, or what not--would be; but
+speculation as to whether it would leave the ground at all when
+eventually tried. This is perhaps the best indication of the
+outstanding characteristic of that interim period between the
+time of the first actual flights and the later period,
+commencing about 1912, when ideas had become settled and it
+was at last becoming possible to forecast on the drawing-board
+the performance of the completed machine in the air. Without
+going into details, for which there is no space here, it is
+difficult to convey the correct impression of the chaotic state
+which existed as to even the elementary principles of aeroplane
+design. All the exhibitions contained large numbers--one had
+almost written a majority--of machines which embodied the most
+unusual features and which never could, and in practice never
+did, leave the ground. At the same time, there were few who
+were sufficiently hardy to say certainly that this or that
+innovation was wrong; and consequently dozens of inventors in
+every country were conducting isolated experiments on both good
+and bad lines. All kinds of devices, mechanical and otherwise,
+were claimed as the solution of the problem of stability, and
+there was even controversy as to whether any measure of
+stability was not undesirable; one school maintaining that the
+only safety lay in the pilot having the sole say in the attitude
+of the machine at any given moment, and fearing danger from the
+machine having any mind of its own, so to speak. There was, as
+in most controversies, some right on both sides, and when we
+come to consider the more settled period from 1912 to the
+outbreak of the War in 1914 we shall find how a compromise was
+gradually effected.
+
+At the same time, however, though it was at the time difficult
+to pick out, there was very real progress being made, and,
+though a number of 'freak' machines fell out by the wayside, the
+pioneer designers of those days learnt by a process of trial and
+error the right principles to follow and gradually succeeded in
+getting their ideas crystallised.
+
+In connection with stability mention must be made of a machine
+which was evolved in the utmost secrecy by Mr J. W. Dunne in a
+remote part of Scotland under subsidy from the War office. This
+type, which was constructed in both monoplane and biplane form,
+showed that it was in fact possible in 1910 and 1911 to design an
+aeroplane which could definitely be left to fly itself in the
+air. One of the Dunne machines was, for example flown from
+Farnborough to Salisbury Plain without any control other than the
+rudder being touched; and on another occasion it flew a complete
+circle with all controls locked automatically assuming the
+correct bank for the radius of turn. The peculiar form of wing
+used, the camber of which varied from the root to the tip, gave
+rise however, to a certain loss in efficiency, and there was also
+a difficulty in the pilot assuming adequate control when desired.
+Other machines designed to be stable--such as the German Etrich
+and the British Weiss gliders and Handley-Page monoplanes--were
+based on the analogy of a wing attached to a certain seed found
+in Nature (the 'Zanonia' leaf), on the righting effect of
+back-sloped wings combined with upturned (or 'negative') tips.
+Generally speaking, however, the machines of the 1909-1912 period
+relied for what automatic stability they had on the principle of
+the dihedral angle, or flat V, both longitudinally and laterally.
+Longitudinally this was obtained by setting the tail at a
+slightly smaller angle than the main planes.
+
+The question of reducing the resistance by adopting 'stream-line'
+forms, along which the air could flow uninterruptedly without the
+formation of eddies, was not at first properly realised, though
+credit should be given to Edouard Nieuport, who in 1909 produced
+a monoplane with a very large body which almost completely
+enclosed the pilot and made the machine very fast, for those
+days, with low horse-power. On one of these machines C. T.
+Weyman won the Gordon-Bennett Cup for America in 1911 and
+another put up a fine performance in the same race with only a 30
+horse-power engine. The subject, was however, early taken up by
+the British Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, which was
+established by the Government in 1909, and designers began to
+realise the importance of streamline struts and fuselages towards
+the end of this transition period. These efforts were at first
+not always successful and showed at times a lack of understanding
+of the problems involved, but there was a very marked improvement
+during the year 1912. At the Paris Aero Salon held early in that
+year there was a notable variety of ideas on the subject; whereas
+by the time of the one held in October designs had considerably
+settled down, more than one exhibitor showing what were called
+'monocoque' fuselages completely circular in shape and having
+very low resistance, while the same show saw the introduction of
+rotating cowls over the propeller bosses, or 'spinners,' as they
+came to be called during the War. A particularly fine example of
+stream-lining was to be found in the Deperdussin monoplane on
+which Vedrines won back the Gordon-Bennett Aviation Cup from
+America at a speed of 105.5 m.p.h.--a considerable improvement on
+the 78 m.p.h. of the preceding year, which was by no means
+accounted for by the mere increase in engine power from 100
+horse-power to 140 horse-power. This machine was the first in
+which the refinement of 'stream-lining' the pilot's head, which
+became a feature of subsequent racing machines, was introduced.
+This consisted of a circular padded excresence above the cockpit
+immediately behind the pilot's head, which gradually tapered off
+into the top surface of the fuselage. The object was to give the
+air an uninterrupted flow instead of allowing it to be broken up
+into eddies behind the head of the pilot, and it also provided a
+support against the enormous wind-pressure encountered. This
+true stream-line form of fuselage owed its introduction to the
+Paulhan-Tatin 'Torpille' monoplane of the Paris Salon of early
+1917. Altogether the end of the year 1912 began to see the
+disappearance of 'freak' machines with all sorts of original
+ideas for the increase of stability and performance. Designs had
+by then gradually become to a considerable extent standardised,
+and it had become unusual to find a machine built which would
+fail to fly. The Gnome engine held the field owing to its
+advantages, as the first of the rotary type, in lightness and
+ease of fitting into the nose of a fuselage. The majority of
+machines were tractors (propeller in front) although a
+preference, which died down subsequently, was still shown for the
+monoplane over the biplane. This year also saw a great increase
+in the number of seaplanes, although the 'flying boat' type had
+only appeared at intervals and the vast majority were of the
+ordinary aeroplane type fitted with floats in place of the land
+undercarriage; which type was at that time commonly called
+'hydro-aeroplane.' The usual horse power was 50--that of the
+smallest Gnome engine--although engines of 100 to 140 horse-power
+were also fitted occasionally. The average weight per
+horse-power varied from 18 to 25 lbs., while the wing-loading was
+usually in the neighbourhood of 5 to 6 lbs. per square foot. The
+average speed ranged from 65-75 miles per hour.
+
+
+
+III. PROGRESS ON STANDARDISED LINES
+
+In the last section an attempt has been made to show how, during
+what was from the design standpoint perhaps the most critical
+period, order gradually became evident out of chaos,
+ill-considered ideas dropped out through failure to make good,
+and, though there was still plenty of room for improvement in
+details, the bulk of the aeroplanes showed a general similarity
+in form and conception. There was still a great deal to be
+learnt in finding the best form of wing section, and performances
+were still low; but it had become definitely possible to say that
+flying had emerged from the chrysalis stage and had become a
+science. The period which now began was one of scientific
+development and improvement--in performance, manoeuvrability,
+and general airworthiness and stability.
+
+The British Military Aeroplane Competition held in the summer of
+1912 had done much to show the requirements in design by giving
+possibly the first opportunity for a definite comparison of the
+performance of different machines as measured by impartial
+observers on standard lines--albeit the methods of measuring were
+crude. These showed that a high speed--for those days--of 75
+miles an hour or so was attended by disadvantages in the form of
+an equally fast low speed, of 50 miles per hour or more, and
+generally may be said to have given designers an idea what to aim
+for and in what direction improvements were required. In fact,
+the most noticeable point perhaps of the machines of this time
+was the marked manner in which a machine that was good in one
+respect would be found to be wanting in others. It had not yet
+been possible to combine several desirable attributes in one
+machine. The nearest approach to this was perhaps to be found
+in the much discussed Government B.E.2 machine, which was
+produced from the Royal Aircraft Factory at Farnborough, in the
+summer of 1912. Though considerably criticized from many points
+of view it was perhaps the nearest approach to a machine of
+all-round efficiency that had up to that date appeared. The
+climbing rate, which subsequently proved so important for
+military purposes, was still low, seldom, if ever, exceeding 400
+feet per minute; while gliding angles (ratio of descent to
+forward travel over the ground with engine stopped) little
+exceeded 1 in 8.
+
+The year 1912 and 1913 saw the subsequently all-conquering
+tractor biplane begin to come into its own. This type, which
+probably originated in England, and at any rate attained to its
+greatest excellence prior to the War from the drawing offices of
+the Avro Bristol and Sopwith firms, dealt a blow at the monoplane
+from which the latter never recovered.
+
+The two-seater tractor biplane produced by Sopwith and piloted
+by H. G. Hawker, showed that it was possible to produce a
+biplane with at least equal speed to the best monoplanes, whilst
+having the advantage of greater strength and lower landing
+speeds. The Sopwith machine had a top speed of over 80 miles an
+hour while landing as slowly as little more than 30 miles an
+hour; and also proved that it was possible to carry 3 passengers
+with fuel for 4 hours' flight with a motive power of only 80
+horse-power. This increase in efficiency was due to careful
+attention to detail in every part, improved wing sections, clean
+fuselage-lines, and simplified undercarriages. At the same
+time, in the early part of 1913 a tendency manifested itself
+towards the four-wheeled undercarriage, a pair of smaller wheels
+being added in front of the main wheels to prevent overturning
+while running on the ground; and several designs of
+oleo-pneumatic and steel-spring undercarriages were produced in
+place of the rubber shock-absorber type which had up till then
+been almost universal.
+
+These two statements as to undercarriage designs may appear to
+be contradictory, but in reality they do not conflict as they
+both showed a greater attention to the importance of good
+springing, combined with a desire to avoid complication and a
+mass of struts and wires which increased head resistance.
+
+The Olympia Aero Show of March, 1913, also produced a machine
+which, although the type was not destined to prove the best for
+the purpose for which it was designed, was of interest as being
+the first to be designed specially for war purposes. This was
+the Vickers 'Gun-bus,' a 'pusher' machine, with the propeller
+revolving behind the main planes between the outriggers carrying
+the tail, with a seat right in front for a gunner who was
+provided with a machine gun on a swivelling mount which had a
+free field of fire in every direction forward. The device which
+proved the death-blow for this type of aircraft during the war
+will be dealt with in the appropriate place later, but the
+machine should not go unrecorded.
+
+As a result of a number of accidents to monoplanes the
+Government appointed a Committee at the end of 1912 to inquire
+into the causes of these. The report which was presented in
+March, 1913, exonerated the monoplane by coming to the
+conclusion that the accidents were not caused by conditions
+peculiar to monoplanes, but pointed out certain desiderata in
+aeroplane design generally which are worth recording. They
+recommended that the wings of aeroplanes should be so internally
+braced as to have sufficient strength in themselves not to
+collapse if the external bracing wires should give way. The
+practice, more common in monoplanes than biplanes, of carrying
+important bracing wires from the wings to the undercarriage was
+condemned owing to the liability of damage from frequent
+landings. They also pointed out the desirability of duplicating
+all main wires and their attachments, and of using stranded
+cable for control wires. Owing to the suspicion that one
+accident at least had been caused through the tearing of the
+fabric away from the wing, it was recommended that fabric should
+be more securely fastened to the ribs of the wings, and that
+devices for preventing the spreading of tears should be
+considered. In the last connection it is interesting to note
+that the French Deperdussin firm produced a fabric wing-covering
+with extra strong threads run at right-angles through the fabric
+at intervals in order to limit the tearing to a defined area.
+
+In spite, however, of the whitewashing of the monoplane by the
+Government Committee just mentioned, considerable stir was
+occasioned later in the year by the decision of the War office
+not to order any more monoplanes; and from this time forward
+until the War period the British Army was provided exclusively
+with biplanes. Even prior to this the popularity of the
+monoplane had begun to wane. At the Olympia Aero Show in March,
+1913, biplanes for the first time outnumbered the
+'single-deckers'(as the Germans call monoplanes); which had the
+effect of reducing the wing-loading. In the case of the
+biplanes exhibited this averaged about 4 1/2 lbs. per square
+foot, while in the case of the monoplanes in the same exhibition
+the lowest was 5 1/2 lbs., and the highest over 8 1/2 lbs. per
+square foot of area. It may here be mentioned that it was not
+until the War period that the importance of loading per
+horse-power was recognised as the true criterion of aeroplane
+efficiency, far greater interest being displayed in the amount
+of weight borne per unit area of wing.
+
+An idea of the state of development arrived at about this time
+may be gained from the fact that the Commandant of the Military
+Wing of the Royal Flying Corps in a lecture before the Royal
+Aeronautical Society read in February, 1913, asked for
+single-seater scout aeroplanes with a speed of 90 miles an hour
+and a landing speed of 45 miles an hour--a performance which
+even two years later would have been considered modest in the
+extreme. It serves to show that, although higher performances
+were put up by individual machines on occasion, the general
+development had not yet reached the stage when such performances
+could be obtained in machines suitable for military purposes.
+So far as seaplanes were concerned, up to the beginning of 1913
+little attempt had been made to study the novel problems
+involved, and the bulk of the machines at the Monaco Meeting in
+April, 1913, for instance, consisted of land machines fitted with
+floats, in many cases of a most primitive nature, without other
+alterations. Most of those which succeeded in leaving the water
+did so through sheer pull of engine power; while practically all
+were incapable of getting off except in a fair sea, which enabled
+the pilot to jump the machine into the air across the trough
+between two waves. Stability problems had not yet been
+considered, and in only one or two cases was fin area added at
+the rear high up, to counterbalance the effect of the floats low
+down in front. Both twin and single-float machines were used,
+while the flying boat was only just beginning to come into being
+from the workshops of Sopwith in Great Britain, Borel-Denhaut in
+France, and Curtiss in America. In view of the approaching
+importance of amphibious seaplanes, mention should be made of the
+flying boat (or 'bat boat' as it was called, following Rudyard
+Kipling) which was built by Sopwith in 1913 with a wheeled
+landing-carriage which could be wound up above the bottom surface
+of the boat so as to be out of the way when alighting on water.
+
+During 1913 the (at one time almost universal) practice
+originated by the Wright Brothers, of warping the wings for
+lateral stability, began to die out and the bulk of aeroplanes
+began to be fitted with flaps (or 'ailerons') instead. This
+was a distinct change for the better, as continually warping the
+wings by bending down the extremities of the rear spars was
+bound in time to produce 'fatigue' in that member and lead to
+breakage; and the practice became completely obsolete during the
+next two or three years.
+
+The Gordon-Bennett race of September, 1913, was again won by
+a Deperdussin machine, somewhat similar to that of the previous
+year, but with exceedingly small wings, only 107 square feet in
+area. The shape of these wings was instructive as showing how
+what, from the general utility point of view, may be
+disadvantageous can, for a special purpose, be turned to
+account. With a span of 21 feet, the chord was 5 feet, giving
+the inefficient 'aspect ratio' of slightly over 4 to 1 only.
+The object of this was to reduce the lift, and therefore the
+resistance, to as low a point as possible. The total weight was
+1,500 lbs., giving a wing-loading of 14 lbs. per square foot--a
+hitherto undreamt-of figure. The result was that the machine
+took an enormously long run before starting; and after touching
+the ground on landing ran for nearly a mile before stopping; but
+she beat all records by attaining a speed of 126 miles per
+hour. Where this performance is mainly interesting is in
+contrast to the machines of 1920, which with an even higher
+speed capacity would yet be able to land at not more than 40 or
+50 miles per hour, and would be thoroughly efficient flying
+machines.
+
+The Rheims Aviation Meeting, at which the Gordon-Bennett race
+was flown, also saw the first appearance of the Morane 'Parasol'
+monoplane. The Morane monoplane had been for some time an
+interesting machine as being the only type which had no fixed
+surface in rear to give automatic stability, the movable
+elevator being balanced through being hinged about one-third of
+the way back from the front edge. This made the machine
+difficult to fly except in the hands of experts, but it was very
+quick and handy on the controls and therefore useful for racing
+purposes. In the 'Parasol' the modification was introduced of
+raising the wing above the body, the pilot looking out beneath
+it, in order to give as good a view as possible.
+
+Before passing to the year 1914 mention should be made of the
+feat performed by Nesteroff, a Russian, and Pegoud, a French
+pilot, who were the first to demonstrate the possibilities of
+flying upside-down and looping the loop. Though perhaps not
+coming strictly within the purview of a chapter on design
+(though certain alterations were made to the top wing-bracing of
+the machine for this purpose) this performance was of extreme
+importance to the development of aviation by showing the
+possibility of recovering, given reasonable height, from any
+position in the air; which led designers to consider the extra
+stresses to which an aeroplane might be subjected and to take
+steps to provide for them by increasing strength where
+necessary.
+
+When the year 1914 opened a speed of 126 miles per hour had been
+attained and a height of 19,600 feet had been reached. The
+Sopwith and Avro (the forerunner of the famous training machine
+of the War period) were probably the two leading tractor
+biplanes of the world, both two-seaters with a speed variation
+from 40 miles per hour up to some 90 miles per hour with 80
+horse-power engines. The French were still pinning their faith
+mainly to monoplanes, while the Germans were beginning to come
+into prominence with both monoplanes and biplanes of the 'Taube'
+type. These had wings swept backward and also upturned at the
+wing-tips which, though it gave a certain measure of automatic
+stability, rendered the machine somewhat clumsy in the air, and
+their performances were not on the whole as high as those of
+either France or Great Britain.
+
+Early in 1914 it became known that the experimental work of
+Edward Busk--who was so lamentably killed during an experimental
+flight later in the year--following upon the researches of
+Bairstow and others had resulted in the production at the Royal
+Aircraft Factory at Farnborough of a truly automatically stable
+aeroplane. This was the 'R.E.' (Reconnaissance Experimental), a
+development of the B.E. which has already been referred to. The
+remarkable feature of this design was that there was no
+particular device to which one could point out as the cause of
+the stability. The stable result was attained simply by detailed
+design of each part of the aeroplane, with due regard to its
+relation to, and effect on, other parts in the air. Weights and
+areas were so nicely arranged that under practically any
+conditions the machine tended to right itself. It did not,
+therefore, claim to be a machine which it was impossible to
+upset, but one which if left to itself would tend to right itself
+from whatever direction a gust might come. When the principles
+were extended to the 'B.E. 2c' type (largely used at the outbreak
+of the War) the latter machine, if the engine were switched of f
+at a height of not less than 1,000 feet above the ground, would
+after a few moments assume its correct gliding angle and glide
+down to the ground.
+
+The Paris Aero Salon of December, 1913, had been remarkable
+chiefly for the large number of machines of which the chassis and
+bodywork had been constructed of steel-tubing; for the excess of
+monoplanes over biplanes; and (in the latter) predominance of
+'pusher' machines (with propeller in rear of the main planes)
+compared with the growing British preference for 'tractors' (with
+air screw in front). Incidentally, the Maurice Farman, the last
+relic of the old type box-kite with elevator in front appeared
+shorn of this prefix, and became known as the 'short-horn' in
+contradistinction to its front-elevatored predecessor which,
+owing to its general reliability and easy flying capabilities,
+had long been affectionately called the 'mechanical cow.' The
+1913 Salon also saw some lingering attempts at attaining
+automatic stability by pendulum and other freak devices.
+
+Apart from the appearance of 'R.E.1,' perhaps the most notable
+development towards the end of 1913 was the appearance of the
+Sopwith 'Tabloid 'tractor biplane. This single-seater machine,
+evolved from the two-seater previously referred to, fitted with a
+Gnome engine of 80 horse-power, had the, for those days,
+remarkable speed of 92 miles an hour; while a still more
+notable feature was that it could remain in level flight at not
+more than 37 miles per hour. This machine is of particular
+importance because it was the prototype and forerunner of the
+successive designs of single-seater scout fighting machines
+which were used so extensively from 1914 to 1918. It was also
+probably the first machine to be capable of reaching a height of
+1,000 feet within one minute. It was closely followed by the
+'Bristol Bullet,' which was exhibited at the Olympia Aero Show
+of March, 1914. This last pre-war show was mainly remarkable
+for the good workmanship displayed--rather than for any distinct
+advance in design. In fact, there was a notable diversity in
+the types displayed, but in detailed design considerable
+improvements were to be seen, such as the general adoption of
+stranded steel cable in place of piano wire for the mail bracing
+
+
+
+IV. THE WAR PERIOD
+
+Up to this point an attempt has been made to give some idea of
+the progress that was made during the eleven years that had
+elapsed since the days of the Wrights' first flights. Much
+advance had been made and aeroplanes had settled down,
+superficially at any rate, into more or less standardised forms
+in three main types--tractor monoplanes, tractor biplanes, and
+pusher biplanes. Through the application of the results of
+experiments with models in wind tunnels to full-scale machines,
+considerable improvements had been made in the design of wing
+sections, which had greatly increased the efficiency of
+aeroplanes by raising the amount of 'lift' obtained from the
+wing compared with the 'drag' (or resistance to forward motion)
+which the same wing would cause. In the same way the shape of
+bodies, interplane struts, etc., had been improved to be of
+better stream-line shape, for the further reduction of
+resistance; while the problems of stability were beginning to be
+tolerably well understood. Records (for what they are worth)
+stood at 21,000 feet as far as height was concerned, 126 miles
+per hour for speed, and 24 hours duration. That there was
+considerable room for development is, however, evidenced by a
+statement made by the late B. C. Hucks (the famous pilot) in
+the course of an address delivered before the Royal Aeronautical
+Society in July, 1914. 'I consider,' he said, 'that the present
+day standard of flying is due far more to the improvement in
+piloting than to the improvement in machines.... I consider
+those (early 1914) machines are only slight improvements on the
+machines of three years ago, and yet they are put through
+evolutions which, at that time, were not even dreamed of. I can
+take a good example of the way improvement in piloting has
+outdistanced improvement in machines--in the case of myself, my
+'looping' Bleriot. Most of you know that there is very little
+difference between that machine and the 50 horse-power Bleriot
+of three years ago.' This statement was, of course, to some
+extent an exaggeration and was by no means agreed with by
+designers, but there was at the same time a germ of truth in it.
+There is at any rate little doubt that the theory and practice
+of aeroplane design made far greater strides towards becoming an
+exact science during the four years of War than it had done
+during the six or seven years preceding it.
+
+It is impossible in the space at disposal to treat of this
+development even with the meagre amount of detail that has been
+possible while covering the 'settling down' period from 1911 to
+1914, and it is proposed, therefore, to indicate the improvements
+by sketching briefly the more noticeable difference in various
+respects between the average machine of 1914 and a similar
+machine of 1918.
+
+In the first place, it was soon found that it was possible to
+obtain greater efficiency and, in particular, higher speeds,
+from tractor machines than from pusher machines with the air
+screw behind the main planes. This was for a variety of reasons
+connected with the efficiency of propellers and the possibility
+of reducing resistance to a greater extent in tractor machines
+by using a 'stream-line' fuselage (or body) to connect the main
+planes with the tail. Full advantage of this could not be
+taken, however, owing to the difficulty of fixing a machine-gun
+in a forward direction owing to the presence of the propeller.
+This was finally overcome by an ingenious device (known as an
+'Interrupter gear') which allowed the gun to fire only when
+none of the propeller blades was passing in front of the muzzle.
+The monoplane gradually fell into desuetude, mainly owing to the
+difficulty of making that type adequately strong without it
+becoming prohibitively heavy, and also because of its high
+landing speed and general lack of manoeuvrability. The triplane
+was also little used except in one or two instances, and,
+practically speaking, every machine was of the biplane tractor
+type.
+
+A careful consideration of the salient features leading to
+maximum efficiency in aeroplanes--particularly in regard to
+speed and climb, which were the two most important military
+requirements--showed that a vital feature was the reduction in
+the amount of weight lifted per horse-power employed; which in
+1914 averaged from 20 to 25 lbs. This was effected both by
+gradual increase in the power and size of the engines used and
+by great improvement in their detailed design (by increasing
+compression ratio and saving weight whenever possible); with the
+result that the motive power of single-seater aeroplanes rose
+from 80 and 100 horse-power in 1914 to an average of 200 to 300
+horse-power, while the actual weight of the engine fell from 3
+1/2-4 lbs. per horse-power to an average of 2 1/2 lbs. per
+horse-power. This meant that while a pre-war engine of 100
+horse-power would weigh some 400 lbs., the 1918 engine developing
+three times the power would have less than double the weight.
+The result of this improvement was that a scout aeroplane at the
+time of the Armistice would have 1 horse-power for every 8 lbs.
+of weight lifted, compared with the 20 or 25 lbs. of its 1914
+predecessors. This produced a considerable increase in the rate
+of climb, a good postwar machine being able to reach 10,000 feet
+in about 5 minutes and 20,000 feet in under half an hour. The
+loading per square foot was also considerably increased; this
+being rendered possible both by improvement in the design of wing
+sections and by more scientific construction giving increased
+strength. It will be remembered that in the machine of the very
+early period each square foot of surface had only to lift a
+weight of some 1 1/2 to 2 lbs., which by 1914 had been increased
+to about 4 lbs. By 1918 aeroplanes habitually had a loading of 8
+lbs. or more per square foot of area; which resulted in great
+increase in speed. Although a speed of 126 miles per hour had
+been attained by a specially designed racing machine over a short
+distance in 1914, the average at that period little exceeded, if
+at all, 100 miles per hour; whereas in 1918 speeds of 130 miles
+per hour had become a commonplace, and shortly afterwards a speed
+of over 166 miles an hour was achieved.
+
+In another direction, also, that of size, great developments
+were made. Before the War a few machines fitted with more than
+one engine had been built (the first being a triple
+Gnome-engined biplane built by Messrs Short Bros. at Eastchurch
+in 1913), but none of large size had been successfully produced,
+the total weight probably in no case exceeding about 2 tons. In
+1916, however, the twin engine Handley-Page biplane was
+produced, to be followed by others both in this country and
+abroad, which represented a very great increase in size and,
+consequently, load-carrying capacity. By the end of the War
+period several types were in existence weighing a total of 10
+tons when fully loaded, of which some 4 tons or more represented
+'useful load' available for crew, fuel, and bombs or passengers.
+This was attained through very careful attention to detailed
+design, which showed that the material could be employed more
+efficiently as size increased, and was also due to the fact that
+a large machine was not liable to be put through the same
+evolutions as a small machine, and therefore could safely be
+built with a lower factor of safety. Owing to the fact that a
+wing section which is adopted for carrying heavy loads usually
+has also a somewhat low lift to drag ratio, and is not therefore
+productive of high speed, these machines are not as fast as
+light scouts; but, nevertheless, they proved themselves capable
+of achieving speeds of 100 miles an hour or more in some cases;
+which was faster than the average small machine of 1914.
+
+In one respect the development during the War may perhaps have
+proved to be somewhat disappointing, as it might have been
+expected that great improvements would be effected in metal
+construction, leading almost to the abolition of wooden
+structures. Although, however, a good deal of experimental work
+was done which resulted in overcoming at any rate the worst of
+the difficulties, metal-built machines were little used (except
+to a certain extent in Germany) chiefly on account of the need
+for rapid production and the danger of delay resulting from
+switching over from known and tried methods to experimental
+types of construction. The Germans constructed some large
+machines, such as the giant Siemens-Schukhert machine, entirely
+of metal except for the wing covering, while the Fokker and
+Junker firms about the time of the Armistice in 1918 both
+produced monoplanes with very deep all-metal wings (including
+the covering) which were entirely unstayed externally, depending
+for their strength on internal bracing. In Great Britain cable
+bracing gave place to a great extent to 'stream-line wires,'
+which are steel rods rolled to a more or less oval section,
+while tie-rods were also extensively used for the internal
+bracing of the wings. Great developments in the economical use
+of material were also made in the direction of using built-up
+main spars for the wings and interplane struts; spars composed
+of a series of layers (or 'laminations') of different pieces of
+wood also being used.
+
+Apart from the metallic construction of aeroplanes an enormous
+amount of work was done in the testing of different steels and
+light alloys for use in engines, and by the end of the War
+period a number of aircraft engines were in use of which the
+pistons and other parts were of such alloys; the chief
+difficulty having been not so much in the design as in the
+successful heat-treatment and casting of the metal.
+
+An important development in connection with the inspection and
+testing of aircraft parts, particularly in the case of metal,
+was the experimental application of X-ray photography, which
+showed up latent defects, both in the material and in
+manufacture, which would otherwise have passed unnoticed. This
+method was also used to test the penetration of glue into the
+wood on each side of joints, so giving a measure of the
+strength; and for the effect of 'doping' the wings, dope being a
+film (of cellulose acetate dissolved in acetone with other
+chemicals) applied to the covering of wings and bodies to render
+the linen taut and weatherproof, besides giving it a smooth
+surface for the lessening of 'skin friction' when passing rapidly
+through the air.
+
+An important result of this experimental work was that it in
+many cases enabled designers to produce aeroplane parts from
+less costly material than had previously been considered
+necessary, without impairing the strength. It may be mentioned
+that it was found undesirable to use welded joints on aircraft
+in any part where the material is subjectto a tensile or bending
+load, owing to the danger resulting from bad workmanship causing
+the material to become brittle--an effect which cannot be
+discovered except by cutting through the weld, which, of course,
+involves a test to destruction. Written, as it has been, in
+August, 1920, it is impossible in this chapter to give any
+conception of how the developments of War will be applied to
+commercial aeroplanes, as few truly commercial machines have yet
+been designed, and even those still show distinct traces of the
+survival of war mentality. When, however, the inevitable
+recasting of ideas arrives, it will become evident, whatever the
+apparent modification in the relative importance of different
+aspects of design, that enormous advances were made under the
+impetus of War which have left an indelible mark on progress.
+
+We have, during the seventeen years since aeroplanes first took
+the air, seen them grow from tentative experimental structures
+of unknown and unknowable performance to highly scientific
+products, of which not only the performances (in speed,
+load-carrying capacity, and climb) are known, but of which the
+precise strength and degree of stability can be forecast with
+some accuracy on the drawing board. For the rest, with the
+future lies--apart from some revolutionary change in fundamental
+design--the steady development of a now well-tried and well-found
+engineering structure.
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+AEROSTATICS
+
+I. BEGINNINGS
+
+Francesco Lana, with his 'aerial ship,' stands as one of the
+first great exponents of aerostatics; up to the time of the
+Montgolfier and Charles balloon experiments, aerostatic and
+aerodynamic research are so inextricably intermingled that it
+has been thought well to treat of them as one, and thus the work
+of Lana, Veranzio and his parachute, Guzman's frauds, and the
+like, have already been sketched. In connection with Guzman,
+Hildebrandt states in his Airships Past and Present, a fairly
+exhaustive treatise on the subject up to 1906, the year of its
+publication, that there were two inventors--or
+charlatans--Lorenzo de Guzman and a monk Bartolemeo Laurenzo,
+the former of whom constructed an unsuccessful airship out of a
+wooden basket covered with paper, while the latter made certain
+experiments with a machine of which no description remains. A
+third de Guzman, some twenty-five years later, announced that he
+had constructed a flying machine, with which he proposed to fly
+from a tower to prove his success to the public. The lack of
+record of any fatal accident overtaking him about that time
+seems to show that the experiment was not carried out.
+
+Galien, a French monk, published a book L'art de naviguer dans
+l'air in 1757, in which it was conjectured that the air at high
+levels was lighter than that immediately over the surface of
+the earth. Galien proposed to bring down the upper layers of
+air and with them fill a vessel, which by Archimidean principle
+would rise through the heavier atmosphere. If one went high
+enough, said Galien, the air would be two thousand times as
+light as water, and it would be possible to construct an
+airship, with this light air as lifting factor, which should be
+as large as the town of Avignon, and carry four million
+passengers with their baggage. How this high air was to be
+obtained is matter for conjecture--Galien seems to have thought
+in a vicious circle, in which the vessel that must rise to
+obtain the light air must first be filled with it in order to
+rise.
+
+Cavendish's discovery of hydrogen in 1776 set men thinking, and
+soon a certain Doctor Black was suggesting that vessels might be
+filled with hydrogen, in order that they might rise in the air.
+Black, however, did not get beyond suggestion; it was Leo
+Cavallo who first made experiments with hydrogen, beginning with
+filling soap bubbles, and passing on to bladders and special
+paper bags. In these latter the gas escaped, and Cavallo was
+about to try goldbeaters' skin at the time that the Montgolfiers
+came into the field with their hot air balloon.
+
+Joseph and Stephen Montgolfier, sons of a wealthy French paper
+manufacturer, carried out many experiments in physics, and
+Joseph interested himself in the study of aeronautics some time
+before the first balloon was constructed by the brothers--he is
+said to have made a parachute descent from the roof of his house
+as early as 1771, but of this there is no proof. Galien's idea,
+together with study of the movement of clouds, gave Joseph some
+hope of achieving aerostation through Galien's schemes, and the
+first experiments were made by passing steam into a receiver,
+which, of course, tended to rise--but the rapid condensation of
+the steam prevented the receiver from more than threatening
+ascent. The experiments were continued with smoke, which
+produced only a slightly better effect, and, moreover, the paper
+bag into which the smoke was induced permitted of escape through
+its pores; finding this method a failure the brothers desisted
+until Priestley's work became known to them, and they conceived
+the use of hydrogen as a lifting factor. Trying this with paper
+bags, they found that the hydrogen escaped through the pores of
+the paper.
+
+Their first balloon, made of paper, reverted to the hot-air
+principle; they lighted a fire of wool and wet straw under the
+balloon--and as a matter of course the balloon took fire after
+very little experiment; thereupon they constructed a second,
+having a capacity of 700 cubic feet, and this rose to a height
+of over 1,000 feet. Such a success gave them confidence, and
+they gave their first public exhibition on June 5th, 1783, with
+a balloon constructed of paper and of a circumference of 112
+feet. A fire was lighted under this balloon, which, after
+rising to a height of 1,000 feet, descended through the cooling
+of the air inside a matter of ten minutes. At this the Academie
+des Sciences invited the brothers to conduct experiments in
+Paris.
+
+The Montgolfiers were undoubtedly first to send up balloons, but
+other experimenters were not far behind them, and before they
+could get to Paris in response to their invitation, Charles, a
+prominent physicist of those days, had constructed a balloon of
+silk, which he proofed against escape of gas with rubber--the
+Roberts had just succeeded in dissolving this substance to
+permit of making a suitable coating for the silk. With a
+quarter of a ton of sulphuric acid, and half a ton of iron
+filings and turnings, sufficient hydrogen was generated in four
+days to fill Charles's balloon, which went up on August 28th,
+1783. Although the day was wet, Paris turned out to the number
+of over 300,000 in the Champs de Mars, and cannon were fired to
+announce the ascent of the balloon. This, rising very rapidly,
+disappeared amid the rain clouds, but, probably bursting through
+no outlet being provided to compensate for the escape of gas,
+fell soon in the neighbourhood of Paris. Here peasants,
+ascribing evil supernatural influence to the fall of such a
+thing from nowhere, went at it with the implements of their
+craft--forks, hoes, and the like--and maltreated it severely,
+finally attaching it to a horse's tail and dragging it about
+until it was mere rag and scrap.
+
+Meanwhile, Joseph Montgolfier, having come to Paris, set about
+the construction of a balloon out of linen; this was in three
+diverse sections, the top being a cone 30 feet in depth, the
+middle a cylinder 42 feet in diameter by 26 feet in depth, and
+the bottom another cone 20 feet in depth from junction with the
+cylindrical portion to its point. The balloon was both lined
+and covered with paper, decorated in blue and gold. Before ever
+an ascent could be attempted this ambitious balloon was caught
+in a heavy rainstorm which reduced its paper covering to pulp
+and tore the linen at its seams, so that a supervening strong
+wind tore the whole thing to shreds.
+
+Montgolfier's next balloon was spherical, having a capacity of
+52,000 cubic feet. It was made from waterproofed linen, and on
+September 19th, 1783, it made an ascent for the palace courtyard
+at Versailles, taking up as passengers a cock, a sheep, and a
+duck. A rent at the top of the balloon caused it to descend
+within eight minutes, and the duck and sheep were found none the
+worse for being the first living things to leave the earth in a
+balloon, but the cock, evidently suffering, was thought to have
+been affected by the rarefaction of the atmosphere at the
+tremendous height reached--for at that time the general opinion
+was that the atmosphere did not extend more than four or five
+miles above the earth's surface. It transpired later that the
+sheep had trampled on the cock, causing more solid injury than
+any that might be inflicted by rarefied air in an eight-minute
+ascent and descent of a balloon.
+
+For achieving this flight Joseph Montgolfier received from the
+King of France a pension of of L40, while Stephen was given
+the order of St Michael, and a patent of nobility was granted to
+their father. They were made members of the Legion d'Honneur,
+and a scientific deputation, of which Faujas de Saint-Fond, who
+had raised the funds with which Charles's hydrogen balloon was
+constructed, presented to Stephen Montgolfier a gold medal
+struck in honour of his aerial conquest. Since Joseph appears
+to have had quite as much share in the success as Stephen, the
+presentation of the medal to one brother only was in
+questionable taste, unless it was intended to balance Joseph's
+pension.
+
+Once aerostation had been proved possible, many people began the
+construction of small balloons--the wholehole thing was regarded
+as a matter of spectacles and a form of amusement by the great
+majority. A certain Baron de Beaumanoir made the first balloon
+of goldbeaters' skin, this being eighteen inches in diameter, and
+using hydrogen as a lifting factor. Few people saw any
+possibilities in aerostation, in spite of the adventures of the
+duck and sheep and cock; voyages to the moon were talked and
+written, and there was more of levity than seriousness over
+ballooning as a rule. The classic retort of Benjamin Franklin
+stands as an exception to the general rule: asked what was the
+use of ballooning--'What's the use of a baby?' he countered, and
+the spirit of that reply brought both the dirigible and the
+aeroplane to being, later.
+
+The next noteworthy balloon was one by Stephen Montgolfier,
+designed to take up passengers, and therefore of rather large
+dimensions, as these things went then. The capacity was 100,000
+cubic feet, the depth being 85 feet, and the exterior was very
+gaily decorated. A short, cylindrical opening was made at the
+lower extremity, and under this a fire-pan was suspended, above
+the passenger car of the balloon. On October 15th, 1783,
+Pilatre de Rozier made the first balloon ascent--but the balloon
+was held captive, and only allowed to rise to a height of 80
+feet. But, a little later in 1783, Rozier secured the honour
+of making the first ascent in a free balloon, taking up with him
+the Marquis d'Arlandes. It had been originally intended that
+two criminals, condemned to death, should risk their lives in
+the perilous venture, with the prospect of a free pardon if they
+made a safe descent, but d'Arlandes got the royal consent to
+accompany Rozier, and the criminals lost their chance. Rozier
+and d'Arlandes made a voyage lasting for twenty-five minutes,
+and, on landing, the balloon collapsed with such rapidity as
+almost to suffocate Rozier, who, however, was dragged out to
+safety by d'Arlandes. This first aerostatic journey took place
+on November 21st, 1783.
+
+Some seven months later, on June 4th, 1784, a Madame Thible
+ascended in a free balloon, reaching a height of 9,000 feet, and
+making a journey which lasted for forty-five minutes--the great
+King Gustavus of Sweden witnessed this ascent. France grew used
+to balloon ascents in the course of a few months, in spite of
+the brewing of such a storm as might have been calculated to
+wipe out all but purely political interests. Meanwhile,
+interest in the new discovery spread across the Channel, and on
+September 15th, 1784, one Vincent Lunardi made the first balloon
+voyage in England, starting from the Artillery Ground at
+Chelsea, with a cat and dog as passengers, and landing in a
+field in the parish of Standon, near Ware. There is a rather
+rare book which gives a very detailed account of this first
+ascent in England, one copy of which is in the library of the
+Royal Aeronautical Society; the venturesome Lunardi won a
+greater measure of fame through his exploit than did Cody for
+his infinitely more courageous and--from a scientific point of
+view--valuable first aeroplane ascent in this country.
+
+The Montgolfier type of balloon, depending on hot air for its
+lifting power, was soon realised as having dangerous
+limitations. There was always a possibility of the balloon
+catching fire while it was being filled, and on landing there
+was further danger from the hot pan which kept up the supply of
+hot air on the voyage --the collapsing balloon fell on the pan,
+inevitably. The scientist Saussure, observing the filling of
+the balloons very carefully, ascertained that it was rarefaction
+of the air which was responsible for the lifting power, and not
+the heat in itself, and, owing to the rarefaction of the air at
+normal temperature at great heights above the earth, the limit
+of ascent for a balloon of the Montgolfier type was estimated by
+him at under 9,000 feet. Moreover, since the amount of fuel
+that could be carried for maintaining the heat of the balloon
+after inflation was subject to definite limits, prescribed by
+the carrying capacity of the balloon, the duration of the
+journey was necessarily limited just as strictly.
+
+These considerations tended to turn the minds of those
+interested in aerostation to consideration of the hydrogen
+balloon evolved by Professor Charles. Certain improvements had
+been made by Charles since his first construction; he employed
+rubber-coated silk in the construction of a balloon of 30 feet
+diameter, and provided a net for distributing the pressure
+uniformly over the surface of the envelope; this net covered the
+top half of the balloon, and from its lower edge dependent ropes
+hung to join on a wooden ring, from which the car of the balloon
+was suspended--apart from the extension of the net so as to
+cover in the whole of the envelope, the spherical balloon of
+to-day is virtually identical with that of Charles in its method
+of construction. He introduced the valve at the top of the
+balloon, by which escape of gas could be controlled, operating
+his valve by means of ropes which depended to the car of the
+balloon, and he also inserted a tube, of about 7 inches
+diameter, at the bottom of the balloon, not only for purposes of
+inflation, but also to provide a means of escape for gas in case
+of expansion due to atmospheric conditions.
+
+Sulphuric acid and iron filings were used by Charles for filling
+his balloon, which required three days and three nights for the
+generation of its 14,000 cubic feet of hydrogen gas. The
+inflation was completed on December 1st, 1783, and the fittings
+carried included a barometer and a grapnel form of anchor. In
+addition to this, Charles provided the first 'ballon sonde' in
+the form of a small pilot balloon which he handed to Montgolfier
+to launch before his own ascent, in order to determine the
+direction and velocity of the wind. It was a graceful compliment
+to his rival, and indicated that, although they were both working
+to the one end, their rivalry was not a matter of bitterness.
+
+Ascending on December 1st, 1783, Charles took with him one of
+the brothers Robert, and with him made the record journey up to
+that date, covering a period of three and three-quarter hours,
+in which time they journeyed some forty miles. Robert then
+landed, and Charles ascended again alone, reaching such a height
+as to feel the effects of the rarefaction of the air, this very
+largely due to the rapidity of his ascent. Opening the valve at
+the top of the balloon, he descended thirty-five minutes after
+leaving Robert behind, and came to earth a few miles from the
+point of the first descent. His discomfort over the rapid
+ascent was mainly due to the fact that, when Robert landed, he
+forgot to compensate for the reduction of weight by taking in
+further ballast, but the ascent proved the value of the tube at
+the bottom of the balloon envelope, for the gas escaped very
+rapidly in that second ascent, and, but for the tube, the
+balloon must inevitably have burst in the air, with fatal
+results for Charles.
+
+As in the case of aeroplane flight, as soon as the balloon was
+proved practicable the flight across the English Channel was
+talked of, and Rozier, who had the honour of the first flight,
+announced his intention of being first to cross. But Blanchard,
+who had an idea for a 'flying car,' anticipated him, and made a
+start from Dover on January 7th, 1785, taking with him an
+American doctor named Jeffries. Blanchard fitted out his craft
+for the journey very thoroughly, taking provisions, oars, and
+even wings, for propulsion in case of need. He took so much, in
+fact, that as soon as the balloon lifted clear of the ground the
+whole of the ballast had to be jettisoned, lest the balloon
+should drop into the sea. Half-way across the Channel the
+sinking of the balloon warned Blanchard that he had to part with
+more than ballast to accomplish the journey, and all the
+equipment went, together with certain books and papers that were
+on board the car. The balloon looked perilously like
+collapsing, and both Blanchard and Jeffries began to undress in
+order further to lighten their craft--Jeffries even proposed a
+heroic dive to save the situation, but suddenly the balloon rose
+sufficiently to clear the French coast, and the two voyagers
+landed at a point near Calais in the Forest of Gaines, where a
+marble column was subsequently erected to commemorate the great
+feat.
+
+Rozier, although not first across, determined to be second, and
+for that purpose he constructed a balloon which was to owe its
+buoyancy to a combination of the hydrogen and hot air
+principles. There was a spherical hydrogen balloon above, and
+beneath it a cylindrical container which could be filled with
+hot air, thus compensating for the leakage of gas from the
+hydrogen portion of the balloon--regulating the heat of his
+fire, he thought, would give him perfect control in the matter of
+ascending and descending.
+
+On July 6th, 1785, a favourable breeze gave Rozier his
+opportunity of starting from the French coast, and with a
+passenger aboard he cast off in his balloon, which he had named
+the 'Aero-Montgolfiere.' There was a rapid rise at first, and
+then for a time the balloon remained stationary over the land,
+after which a cloud suddenly appeared round the balloon,
+denoting that an explosion had taken place. Both Rozier and his
+companion were killed in the fall, so that he, first to leave
+the earth by balloon, was also first victim to the art of
+aerostation.
+
+There followed, naturally, a lull in the enthusiasm with which
+ballooning had been taken up, so far as France was concerned.
+In Italy, however, Count Zambeccari took up hot-air ballooning,
+using a spirit lamp to give him buoyancy, and on the first
+occasion when the balloon car was set on fire Zambeccari let
+down his passenger by means of the anchor rope, and managed to
+extinguish the fire while in the air. This reduced the buoyancy
+of the balloon to such an extent that it fell into the Adriatic
+and was totally wrecked, Zambeccari being rescued by fishermen.
+He continued to experiment up to 1812, when he attempted to
+ascend at Bologna; the spirit in his lamp was upset by the
+collision of the car with a tree, and the car was again set on
+fire. Zambeccari jumped from the car when it was over fifty feet
+above level ground, and was killed. With him the Rozier type of
+balloon, combining the hydrogen and hot air principles,
+disappeared; the combination was obviously too dangerous to be
+practical.
+
+The brothers Robert were first to note how the heat of the sun
+acted on the gases within a balloon envelope, and it has since
+been ascertained that sun rays will heat the gas in a balloon to
+as much as 80 degrees Fahrenheit greater temperature than the
+surrounding atmosphere; hydrogen, being less affected by change
+of temperature than coal gas, is the most suitable filling
+element, and coal gas comes next as the medium of buoyancy. This
+for the free and non-navigable balloon, though for the airship,
+carrying means of combustion, and in military work liable to
+ignition by explosives, the gas helium seems likely to replace
+hydrogen, being non-combustible.
+
+In spite of the development of the dirigible airship, there
+remains work for the free, spherical type of balloon in the
+scientific field. Blanchard's companion on the first Channel
+crossing by balloon, Dr Jeffries, was the first balloonist to
+ascend for purely scientific purposes; as early as 1784 he made
+an ascent to a height of 9,000 feet, and observed a fall in
+temperature of from degrees--at the level of London, where he
+began his ascent--to 29 degrees at the maximum height reached.
+He took up an electrometer, a hydrometer, a compass, a
+thermometer, and a Toricelli barometer, together with bottles of
+water, in order to collect samples of the air at different
+heights. In 1785 he made a second ascent, when trigonometrical
+observations of the height of the balloon were made from the
+French coast, giving an altitude of 4,800 feet.
+
+The matter was taken up on its scientific side very early in
+America, experiments in Philadelphia being almost simultaneous
+with those of the Montgolfiers in France. The flight of Rozier
+and d'Arlandes inspired two members of the Philadelphia
+Philosophical Academy to construct a balloon or series of
+balloons of their own design; they made a machine which consisted
+of no less than 47 small hydrogen balloons attached to a wicker
+car, and made certain preliminary trials, using animals as
+passengers. This was followed by a captive ascent with a man as
+passenger, and eventually by the first free ascent in America,
+which was undertaken by one James Wilcox, a carpenter, on
+December 28th, 1783. Wilcox, fearful of falling into a river,
+attempted to regulate his landing by cutting slits in some of the
+supporting balloons, which was the method adopted for regulating
+ascent or descent in this machine. He first cut three, and then,
+finding that the effect produced was not sufficient, cut three
+more, and then another five--eleven out of the forty-seven. The
+result was so swift a descent that he dislocated his wrist on
+landing.
+
+ A NOTE ON BALLONETS OR AIR BAGS.
+
+Meusnier, toward the end of the eighteenth century, was first to
+conceive the idea of compensating for the loss of gas due to
+expansion by fitting to the interior of a free balloon a
+ballonet, or air bag, which could be pumped full of air so as to
+retain the shape and rigidity of the envelope.
+
+The ballonet became particularly valuable as soon as airship
+construction became general, and it was in the course of advance
+in Astra Torres design that the project was introduced of using
+the ballonets in order to give inclination from the horizontal.
+In the earlier Astra Torres, trimming was accomplished by moving
+the car fore and aft--this in itself was an advance on the
+separate 'sliding weigh' principle--and this was the method
+followed in the Astra Torres bought by the British Government
+from France in 1912 for training airship pilots. Subsequently,
+the two ballonets fitted inside the envelope were made to serve
+for trimming by the extent of their inflation, and this method of
+securing inclination proved the best until exterior rudders, and
+greater engine power, supplanted it, as in the Zeppelin and, in
+fact, all rigid types.
+
+In the kite balloon, the ballonet serves the purpose of a
+rudder, filling itself through the opening being kept pointed
+toward the wind--there is an ingenious type of air scoop with
+non-return valve which assures perfect inflation. In the S.S.
+type of airship, two ballonets are provided, the supply of air
+being taken from the propeller draught by a slanting aluminium
+tube to the underside of the envelope, where it meets a
+longitudinal fabric hose which connects the two ballonet air
+inlets. In this hose the non-return air valves, known as
+'crab-pots,' are fitted, on either side of the junction with the
+air-scoop. Two automatic air valves, one for each ballonet, are
+fitted in the underside of the envelope, and, as the air
+pressure tends to open these instead of keeping them shut, the
+spring of the valve is set inside the envelope. Each spring is
+set to open at a pressure of 25 to 28 mm.
+
+
+
+II. THE FIRST DIRIGIBLES
+
+Having got off the earth, the very early balloonists set about
+the task of finding a means of navigating the air but, lacking
+steam or other accessory power to human muscle, they failed to
+solve the problem. Joseph Montgolfier speedily exploded the
+idea of propelling a balloon either by means of oars or sails,
+pointing out that even in a dead calm a speed of five miles an
+hour would be the limit achieved. Still, sailing balloons were
+constructed, even up to the time of Andree, the explorer, who
+proposed to retard the speed of the balloon by ropes dragging on
+the ground, and then to spread a sail which should catch the
+wind and permit of deviation of the course. It has been proved
+that slight divergences from the course of the wind can be
+obtained by this means, but no real navigation of the air could
+be thus accomplished.
+
+Professor Wellner, of Brunn, brought up the idea of a sailing
+balloon in more practical fashion in 1883. He observed that
+surfaces inclined to the horizontal have a slight lateral motion
+in rising and falling, and deduced that by alternate lowering
+and raising of such surfaces he would be able to navigate the
+air, regulating ascent and descent by increasing or decreasing
+the temperature of his buoyant medium in the balloon. He
+calculated that a balloon, 50 feet in diameter and 150 feet in
+length, with a vertical surface in front and a horizontal
+surface behind, might be navigated at a speed of ten miles per
+hour, and in actual tests at Brunn he proved that a single rise
+and fall moved the balloon three miles against the wind. His
+ideas were further developed by Lebaudy in the construction of
+the early French dirigibles.
+
+According to Hildebrandt,[*] the first sailing balloon was built
+in 1784 by Guyot, who made his balloon egg-shaped, with the
+smaller end at the back and the longer axis horizontal; oars
+were intended to propel the craft, and naturally it was a
+failure. Carra proposed the use of paddle wheels, a step in the
+right direction, by mounting them on the sides of the car, but
+the improvement was only slight. Guyton de Morveau, entrusted
+by the Academy of Dijon with the building of a sailing balloon,
+first used a vertical rudder at the rear end of his
+construction--it survives in the modern dirigible. His
+construction included sails and oars, but, lacking steam or
+other than human propulsive power, the airship was a failure
+equally with Guyot's.
+
+[*] Airships Past and Present.
+
+Two priests, Miollan and Janinet, proposed to drive balloons
+through the air by the forcible expulsion of the hot air in the
+envelope from the rear of the balloon. An opening was made
+about half-way up the envelope, through which the hot air was to
+escape, buoyancy being maintained by a pan of combustibles in
+the car. Unfortunately, this development of the Montgolfier type
+never got a trial, for those who were to be spectators of the
+first flight grew exasperated at successive delays, and in the
+end, thinking that the balloon would never rise, they destroyed
+it.
+
+Meusnier, a French general, first conceived the idea of
+compensating for loss of gas by carrying an air bag inside the
+balloon, in order to maintain the full expansion of the
+envelope. The brothers Robert constructed the first balloon in
+which this was tried and placed the air bag near the neck of the
+balloon which was intended to be driven by oars, and steered by
+a rudder. A violent swirl of wind which was encountered on the
+first ascent tore away the oars and rudder and broke the ropes
+which held the air bag in position; the bag fell into the
+opening of the neck and stopped it up, preventing the escape of
+gas under expansion. The Duc de Chartres, who was aboard,
+realised the extreme danger of the envelope bursting as the
+balloon ascended, and at 16,000 feet he thrust a staff through
+the envelope--another account says that he slit it with his
+sword--and thus prevented disaster. The descent after this rip
+in the fabric was swift, but the passengers got off without
+injury in the landing.
+
+Meusnier, experimenting in various ways, experimented with
+regard to the resistance offered by various shapes to the air,
+and found that an elliptical shape was best; he proposed to make
+the car boat--shaped, in order further to decrease the
+resistance, and he advocated an entirely rigid connection
+between the car and the body of the balloon, as indispensable to
+a dirigible.[*] He suggested using three propellers, which were
+to be driven by hand by means of pulleys, and calculated that a
+crew of eighty would be required to furnish sufficient motive
+power. Horizontal fins were to be used to assure stability, and
+Meusnier thoroughly investigated the pressures exerted by gases,
+in order to ascertain the stresses to which the envelope would be
+subjected. More important still, he went into detail with
+regard to the use of air bags, in order to retain the shape of
+the balloon under varying pressures of gas due to expansion and
+consequent losses; he proposed two separate envelopes, the inner
+one containing gas, and the space between it and the outer one
+being filled with air. Further, by compressing the air inside
+the air bag, the rate of ascent or descent could be regulated.
+Lebaudy, acting on this principle, found it possible to pump air
+at the rate of 35 cubic feet per second, thus making good loss
+of ballast which had to be thrown overboard.
+
+[*] Hildebrandt.
+
+Meusnier's balloon, of course, was never constructed, but his
+ideas have been of value to aerostation up to the present time.
+His career ended in the revolutionary army in 1793, when he was
+killed in the fighting before Mayence, and the King of Prussia
+ordered all firing to cease until Meusnier had been buried. No
+other genius came forward to carry on his work, and it was
+realised that human muscle could not drive a balloon with
+certainty through the air; experiment in this direction was
+abandoned for nearly sixty years, until in 1852 Giffard
+brought the first practicable power-driven dirigible to being.
+
+Giffard, inventor of the steam injector, had already made
+balloon ascents when he turned to aeronautical propulsion, and
+constructed a steam engine of 5 horsepower with a weight of only
+100 lbs.--a great achievement for his day. Having got his
+engine, he set about making the balloon which it was to drive;
+this he built with the aid of two other enthusiasts, diverging
+from Meusnier's ideas by making the ends pointed, and keeping the
+body narrowed from Meusnier's ellipse to a shape more resembling
+a rather fat cigar. The length was 144 feet, and the greatest
+diameter only 40 feet, while the capacity was 88,000 cubic feet.
+A net which covered the envelope of the balloon supported a
+spar, 66 feet in length, at the end of which a triangular sail
+was placed vertically to act as rudder. The car, slung 20 feet
+below the spar, carried the engine and propeller. Engine and
+boiler together weighed 350 lbs., and drove the 11 foot
+propeller at 110 revolutions per minute.
+
+As precaution against explosion, Giffard arranged wire gauze in
+front of the stoke-hole of his boiler, and provided an exhaust
+pipe which discharged the waste gases from the engine in a
+downward direction. With this first dirigible he attained to a
+speed of between 6 and 8 feet per second, thus proving that the
+propulsion of a balloon was a possibility, now that steam had
+come to supplement human effort.
+
+Three years later he built a second dirigible, reducing the
+diameter and increasing the length of the gas envelope, with a
+view to reducing air resistance. The length of this was 230
+feet, the diameter only 33 feet, and the capacity was 113,000
+cubic feet, while the upper part of the envelope, to which the
+covering net was attached, was specially covered to ensure a
+stiffening effect. The car of this dirigible was dropped rather
+lower than that of the first machine, in order to provide more
+thoroughly against the danger of explosions. Giffard, with a
+companion named Yon as passenger, took a trial trip on this
+vessel, and made a journey against the wind, though slowly. In
+commencing to descend, the nose of the envelope tilted upwards,
+and the weight of the car and its contents caused the net to
+slip, so that just before the dirigible reached the ground, the
+envelope burst. Both Giffard and his companion escaped with very
+slight injuries.
+
+Plans were immediately made for the construction of a third
+dirigible, which was to be 1,970 feet in length, 98 feet in
+extreme diameter, and to have a capacity of 7,800,000 cubic feet
+of gas. The engine of this giant was to have weighed 30 tons,
+and with it Giffard expected to attain a speed of 40 miles per
+hour. Cost prevented the scheme being carried out, and Giffard
+went on designing small steam engines until his invention of the
+steam injector gave him the funds to turn to dirigibles again.
+He built a captive balloon for the great exhibition in London in
+1868, at a cost of nearly L30,000, and designed a dirigible
+balloon which was to have held a million and three quarters
+cubic feet of gas, carry two boilers, and cost about L40,000.
+The plans were thoroughly worked out, down to the last detail,
+but the dirigible was never constructed. Giffard went blind, and
+died in 1882--he stands as the great pioneer of dirigible
+construction, more on the strength of the two vessels which he
+actually built than on that of the ambitious later conceptions
+of his brain.
+
+In 1872 Dupuy de Lome, commissioned by the French government,
+built a dirigible which he proposed to drive by man-power--it
+was anticipated that the vessel would be of use in the siege of
+Paris, but it was not actually tested till after the conclusion
+of the war. The length of this vessel was 118 feet, its
+greatest diameter 49 feet, the ends being pointed, and the
+motive power was by a propeller which was revolved by the
+efforts of eight men. The vessel attained to about the same
+speed as Giffard's steam-driven airship; it was capable of
+carrying fourteen men, who, apart from these engaged in driving
+the propeller, had to manipulate the pumps which controlled the
+air bags inside the gas envelope.
+
+In the same year Paul Haenlein, working in Vienna, produced an
+airship which was a direct forerunner of the Lebaudy type, 164
+feet in length, 30 feet greatest diameter, and with a cubic
+capacity of 85,000 feet. Semi-rigidity was attained by placing
+the car as close to the envelope as possible, suspending it by
+crossed ropes, and the motive power was a gas engine of the
+Lenoir type, having four horizontal cylinders, and giving about
+5 horse-power with a consumption of about 250 cubic feet of gas
+per hour. This gas was sucked from the envelope of the balloon,
+which was kept fully inflated by pumping in compensating air to
+the air bags inside the main envelope. A propeller, 15 feet in
+diameter, was driven by the Lenoir engine at 40 revolutions per
+minute. This was the first instance of the use of an internal
+combustion engine in connection with aeronautical experiments.
+
+The envelope of this dirigible was rendered airtight by means of
+internal rubber coating, with a thinner film on the outside.
+Coal gas, used for inflation, formed a suitable fuel for the
+engine, but limited the height to which the dirigible could
+ascend. Such trials as were made were carried out with the
+dirigible held captive, and a speed of I 5 feet per second was
+attained. Full experiment was prevented through funds running
+low, but Haenlein's work constituted a distinct advance on all
+that had been done previously.
+
+Two brothers, Albert and Gaston Tissandier, were next to enter
+the field of dirigible construction; they had experimented with
+balloons during the Franc-Prussian War, and had attempted to get
+into Paris by balloon during the siege, but it was not until
+1882 that they produced their dirigible.
+
+This was 92 feet in length and 32 feet in greatest diameter,
+with a cubic capacity of 37,500 feet, and the fabric used was
+varnished cambric. The car was made of bamboo rods, and in
+addition to its crew of three, it carried a Siemens dynamo, with
+24 bichromate cells, each of which weighed 17 lbs. The motor
+gave out 1 1/2 horse-power, which was sufficient to drive the
+vessel at a speed of up to 10 feet per second. This was not so
+good as Haenlein's previous attempt and, after L2,000 had been
+spent, the Tissandier abandoned their experiments, since a 5-mile
+breeze was sufficient to nullify the power of the motor.
+
+Renard, a French officer who had studied the problem of
+dirigible construction since 1878, associated himself first with
+a brother officer named La Haye, and subsequently with another
+officer, Krebs, in the construction of the second dirigible to
+be electrically-propelled. La Haye first approached Colonel
+Laussedat, in charge of the Engineers of the French Army, with a
+view to obtaining funds, but was refused, in consequence of the
+practical failure of all experiments since 1870. Renard, with
+whom Krebs had now associated himself, thereupon went to
+Gambetta, and succeeded in getting a promise of a grant of
+L8,000 for the work; with this promise Renard and Krebs set to
+work.
+
+They built their airship in torpedo shape, 165 feet in length,
+and of just over 27 feet greatest diameter--the greatest diameter
+was at the front, and the cubic capacity was 66,000 feet. The
+car itself was 108 feet in length, and 4 1/2 feet broad, covered
+with silk over the bamboo framework. The 23 foot diameter
+propeller was of wood, and was driven by an electric motor
+connected to an accumulator, and yielding 8.5 horsepower. The
+sweep of the propeller, which might have brought it in contact
+with the ground in landing, was counteracted by rendering it
+possible to raise the axis on which the blades were mounted, and
+a guide rope was used to obviate damage altogether, in case of
+rapid descent. There was also a 'sliding weight' which was
+movable to any required position to shift the centre of gravity
+as desired. Altogether, with passengers and ballast aboard, the
+craft weighed two tons.
+
+In the afternoon of August 8th, 1884, Renard and Krebs ascended
+in the dirigible--which they had named 'La France,' from the
+military ballooning ground at Chalais-Meudon, making a circular
+flight of about five miles, the latter part of which was in the
+face of a slight wind. They found that the vessel answered well
+to her rudder, and the five-mile flight was made successfully in
+a period of 23 minutes. Subsequent experimental flights
+determined that the air speed of the dirigible was no less than
+14 1/2 miles per hour, by far the best that had so far been
+accomplished in dirigible flight. Seven flights in all were
+made, and of these five were completely successful, the
+dirigible returning to its starting point with no difficulty. On
+the other two flights it had to be towed back.
+
+Renard attempted to repeat his construction on a larger scale,
+but funds would not permit, and the type was abandoned; the
+motive power was not sufficient to permit of more than short
+flights, and even to the present time electric motors, with
+their necessary accumulators, are far too cumbrous to compete
+with the self-contained internal combustion engine. France had
+to wait for the Lebaudy brothers, just as Germany had to wait
+for Zeppelin and Parseval.
+
+Two German experimenters, Baumgarten and Wolfert, fitted a
+Daimler motor to a dirigible balloon which made its first ascent
+at Leipzig in 1880. This vessel had three cars, and placing a
+passenger in one of the outer cars[*] distributed the load
+unevenly, so that the whole vessel tilted over and crashed to
+the earth, the occupants luckily escaping without injury. After
+Baumgarten's death, Wolfert determined to carry on with his
+experiments, and, having achieved a certain measure of success,
+he announced an ascent to take place on the Tempelhofer Field,
+near Berlin, on June 12th, 1897. The vessel, travelling with
+the wind, reached a height of 600 feet, when the exhaust of the
+motor communicated flame to the envelope of the balloon, and
+Wolfert, together with a passenger he carried, was either killed
+by the fall or burnt to death on the ground. Giffard had taken
+special precautions to avoid an accident of this nature, and
+Wolfert, failing to observe equal care, paid the full penalty.
+
+[*] Hildebrandt.
+
+Platz, a German soldier, attempting an ascent on the Tempelhofer
+Field in the Schwartz airship in 1897, merely proved the
+dirigible a failure. The vessel was of aluminium, 0.008 inch
+in thickness, strengthened by an aluminium lattice work; the
+motor was two-cylindered petrol-driven; at the first trial the
+metal developed such leaks that the vessel came to the ground
+within four miles of its starting point. Platz, who was aboard
+alone as crew, succeeded in escaping by jumping clear before the
+car touched earth, but the shock of alighting broke up the
+balloon, and a following high wind completed the work of full
+destruction. A second account says that Platz, finding the
+propellers insufficient to drive the vessel against the wind,
+opened the valve and descended too rapidly.
+
+The envelope of this dirigible was 156 feet in length, and the
+method of filling was that of pushing in bags, fill them with
+gas, and then pulling them to pieces and tearing them out of the
+body of the balloon. A second contemplated method of filling
+was by placing a linen envelope inside the aluminium casing,
+blowing it out with air, and then admitting the gas between the
+linen and the aluminium outer casing. This would compress the
+air out of the linen envelope, which was to be withdrawn when
+the aluminium casing had been completely filled with gas.
+
+All this, however, assumes that the Schwartz type--the first
+rigid dirigible, by the way--would prove successful. As it
+proved a failure on the first trial, the problem of filling it
+did not arise again.
+
+By this time Zeppelin, retired from the German army, had begun
+to devote himself to the study of dirigible construction, and, a
+year after Schwartz had made his experiment and had failed, he
+got together sufficient funds for the formation of a
+limitedliability company, and started on the construction of the
+first of his series of airships. The age of tentative
+experiment was over, and, forerunner of the success of the
+heavier-than-air type of flying machine, successful dirigible
+flight was accomplished by Zeppelin in Germany, and by
+Santos-Dumont in France.
+
+
+
+III. SANTOS-DUMONT
+
+A Brazilian by birth, Santos-Dumont began in Paris in the year
+1898 to make history, which he subsequently wrote. His book, My
+Airships, is a record of his eight years of work on
+lighter-than-air machines, a period in which he constructed no
+less than fourteen dirigible balloons, beginning with a cubic
+capacity of 6,350 feet, and an engine of 3 horse-power, and
+rising to a cubic capacity of 71,000 feet on the tenth dirigible
+he constructed, and an engine of 60 horse-power, which was
+fitted to the seventh machine in order of construction, the one
+which he built after winning the Deutsch Prize.
+
+The student of dirigible construction is recommended to
+Santos-Dumont's own book not only as a full record of his work,
+but also as one of the best stories of aerial navigation that
+has ever been written. Throughout all his experiments, he
+adhered to the non-rigid type; his first dirigible made its
+first flight on September 18th, 1898, starting from the Jardin
+d'Acclimatation to the west of Paris; he calculated that his 3
+horse-power engine would yield sufficient power to enable him to
+steer clear of the trees with which the starting-point was
+surrounded, but, yielding to the advice of professional
+aeronauts who were present, with regard to the placing of the
+dirigible for his start, he tore the envelope against the trees.
+Two days later, having repaired the balloon, he made an ascent of
+1,300 feet. In descending, the hydrogen left in the balloon
+contracted, and Santos-Dumont narrowly escaped a serious accident
+in coming to the ground.
+
+His second machine, built in the early spring of 1899, held over
+7,000 cubic feet of gas and gave a further 44 lbs. of ascensional
+force. The balloon envelope was very long and very narrow; the
+first attempt at flight was made in wind and rain, and the
+weather caused sufficient contraction of the hydrogen for a wind
+gust to double the machine up and toss it into the trees near its
+starting-point. The inventor immediately set about the
+construction of 'Santos-Dumont No. 3,' on which he made a number
+of successful flights, beginning on November 13th, 1899. On the
+last of his flights, he lost the rudder of the machine and made a
+fortunate landing at Ivry. He did not repair the balloon,
+considering it too clumsy in form and its motor too small.
+Consequently No. 4 was constructed, being finished on the 1st,
+August, 1900. It had a cubic capacity of 14,800 feet, a length
+of 129 feet and greatest diameter of 16.7 feet, the power
+plant being a 7 horse-power Buchet motor. Santos-Dumont sat on
+a bicycle saddle fixed to the long bar suspended under the
+machine, which also supported motor propeller, ballast; and
+fuel. The experiment of placing the propeller at the stem
+instead of at the stern was tried, and the motor gave it a speed
+of 100 revolutions per minute. Professor Langley witnessed the
+trials of the machine, which proved before the members of the
+International Congress of Aeronautics, on September 19th, that
+it was capable of holding its own against a strong wind.
+
+Finding that the cords with which his dirigible balloon cars were
+suspended offered almost as much resistance to the air as did
+the balloon itself, Santos-Dumont substituted piano wire and
+found that the alteration constituted greater progress than many
+a more showy device. He altered the shape and size of his No. 4
+to a certain extent and fitted a motor of 12 horse-power.
+Gravity was controlled by shifting weights worked by a cord;
+rudder and propeller were both placed at the stern. In
+Santos-Dumont's book there is a certain amount of confusion
+between the No. 4 and No. 5 airships, until he explains that
+'No. 5' is the reconstructed 'No. 4.' It was with No. 5 that
+he won the Encouragement Prize presented by the Scientific
+Commission of the Paris Aero Club. This he devoted to the first
+aeronaut who between May and October of 1900 should start from
+St Cloud, round the Eiffel Tower, and return. If not won in
+that year, the prize was to remain open the following year from
+May 1st to October 1st, and so on annually until won. This was a
+simplification of the conditions of the Deutsch Prize itself, the
+winning of which involved a journey of 11 kilometres in 30
+minutes.
+
+The Santos-Dumont No. 5, which was in reality the modified No. 4
+with new keel, motor, and propeller, did the course of the
+Deutsch Prize, but with it Santos-Dumont made no attempt to win
+the prize until July of 1901, when he completed the course in 40
+minutes, but tore his balloon in landing. On the 8th August,
+with his balloon leaking, he made a second attempt, and narrowly
+escaped disaster, the airship being entirely wrecked. Thereupon
+he built No. 6 with a cubic capacity of 22,239 feet and a lifting
+power of 1,518 lbs.
+
+With this machine he won the Deutsch Prize on October 19th,
+1901, starting with the disadvantage of a side wind of 20 feet
+per second. He reached the Eiffel Tower in 9 minutes and,
+through miscalculating his turn, only just missed colliding
+with it. He got No. 6 under control again and succeeded in
+getting back to his starting-point in 29 1/2 minutes, thus
+winning the 125,000 francs which constituted the Deutsch Prize,
+together with a similar sum granted to him by the Brazilian
+Government for the exploit. The greater part of this money was
+given by Santos-Dumont to charities.
+
+He went on building after this until he had made fourteen
+non-rigid dirigibles; of these No. 12 was placed at the disposal
+of the military authorities, while the rest, except for one that
+was sold to an American and made only one trip, were matters of
+experiment for their maker. His conclusions from his experiments
+may be gathered from his own work:--
+
+'On Friday, 31st July, 1903, Commandant Hirschauer and
+Lieutenant-Colonel Bourdeaux spent the afternoon with me at my
+airship station at Neuilly St James, where I had my three newest
+airships--the racing 'No. 7,' the omnibus 'No. 10,' and the
+runabout 'No. 9'--ready for their study. Briefly, I may say
+that the opinions expressed by the representatives of the
+Minister of War were so unreservedly favourable that a practical
+test of a novel character was decided to be made. Should the
+airship chosen pass successfully through it the result will be
+conclusive of its military value.
+
+'Now that these particular experiments are leaving my exclusively
+private control I will say no more of them than what has been
+already published in the French press. The test will probably
+consist of an attempt to enter one of the French frontier towns,
+such as Belfort or Nancy, on the same day that the airship
+leaves Paris. It will not, of course, be necessary to make the
+whole journey in the airship. A military railway wagon may be
+assigned to carry it, with its balloon uninflated, with tubes of
+hydrogen to fill it, and with all the necessary machinery and
+instruments arranged beside it. At some station a short
+distance from the town to be entered the wagon may be uncoupled
+from the train, and a sufficient number of soldiers accompanying
+the officers will unload the airship and its appliances,
+transport the whole to the nearest open space, and at once begin
+inflating the balloon. Within two hours from quitting the train
+the airship may be ready for its flight to the interior of the
+technically-besieged town.
+
+'Such may be the outline of the task--a task presented
+imperiously to French balloonists by the events of 1870-1, and
+which all the devotion and science of the Tissandier brothers
+failed to accomplish. To-day the problem may be set with better
+hope of success. All the essential difficulties may be revived
+by the marking out of a hostile zone around the town that must
+be entered; from beyond the outer edge of this zone, then, the
+airship will rise and take its flight--across it.
+
+'Will the airship be able to rise out of rifle range? I have
+always been the first to insist that the normal place of the
+airship is in low altitudes, and I shall have written this book
+to little purpose if I have not shown the reader the real
+dangers attending any brusque vertical mounting to considerable
+heights. For this we have the terrible Severo accident before
+our eyes. In particular, I have expressed astonishment at
+hearing of experimenters rising to these altitudes without
+adequate purpose in their early stages of experience with
+dirigible balloons. All this is very different, however, from a
+reasoned, cautious mounting, whose necessity has been foreseen
+and prepared for.'
+
+Probably owing to the fact that his engines were not of
+sufficient power, Santos-Dumont cannot be said to have solved
+the problem of the military airship, although the French
+Government bought one of his vessels. At the same time, he
+accomplished much in furthering and inciting experiment with
+dirigible airships, and he will always rank high among the
+pioneers of aerostation. His experiments might have gone
+further had not the Wright brothers' success in America and
+French interest in the problem of the heavier-than-air machine
+turned him from the study of dirigibles to that of the
+aeroplane, in which also he takes high rank among the pioneers,
+leaving the construction of a successful military dirigible to
+such men as the Lebaudy brothers, Major Parseval, and Zeppelin.
+
+
+
+IV. THE MILITARY DIRIGIBLE
+
+Although French and German experiment in connection with the
+production of an airship which should be suitable for military
+purposes proceeded side by side, it is necessary to outline the
+development in the two countries separately, owing to the
+differing character of the work carried out. So far as France
+is concerned, experiment began with the Lebaudy brothers,
+originally sugar refiners, who turned their energies to airship
+construction in 1899. Three years of work went to the production
+of their first vessel, which was launched in 1902, having been
+constructed by them together with a balloon manufacturer named
+Surcouf and an engineer, Julliot. The Lebaudy airships were
+what is known as semi-rigids, having a spar which ran
+practically the full length of the gas bag to which it was
+attached in such a way as to distribute the load evenly. The
+car was suspended from the spar, at the rear end of which both
+horizontal and vertical rudders were fixed, whilst stabilising
+fins were provided at the stern of the gas envelope itself. The
+first of the Lebaudy vessels was named the 'Jaune'; its length
+was 183 feet and its maximum diameter 30 feet, while the cubic
+capacity was 80,000 feet. The power unit was a 40 horse-power
+Daimler motor, driving two propellers and giving a maximum speed
+of 26 miles per hour. This vessel made 29 trips, the last of
+which took place in November, 1902, when the airship was wrecked
+through collision with a tree.
+
+The second airship of Lebaudy construction was 7 feet longer
+than the first, and had a capacity of 94,000 cubic feet of gas
+with a triple air bag of 17,500 cubic feet to compensate for
+loss of gas; this latter was kept inflated by a rotary fan. The
+vessel was eventually taken over by the French Government and
+may be counted the first dirigible airship considered fit on its
+tests for military service.
+
+Later vessels of the Lebaudy type were the 'Patrie' and
+'Republique,' in which both size and method of construction
+surpassed those of the two first attempts. The 'Patrie' was
+fitted with a 60 horse-power engine which gave a speed of 28
+miles an hour, while the vessel had a radius of 280 miles,
+carrying a crew of nine. In the winter of 1907 the 'Patrie' was
+anchored at Verdun, and encountered a gale which broke her hold
+on her mooring-ropes. She drifted derelict westward across
+France, the Channel, and the British Isles, and was lost in the
+Atlantic.
+
+The 'Republique' had an 80 horse-power motor, which, however,
+only gave her the same speed as the 'Patrie.' She was launched
+in July, 1908, and within three months came to an end which
+constituted a tragedy for France. A propeller burst while the
+vessel was in the air, and one blade, flying toward the
+envelope, tore in it a great gash; the airship crashed to earth,
+and the two officers and two non-commissioned officers who were
+in the car were instantaneously killed.
+
+The Clement Bayard, and subsequently the Astra-Torres,
+non-rigids, followed on the early Lebaudys and carried French
+dirigible construction up to 1912. The Clement Bayard was a
+simple non-rigid having four lobes at the stern end to assist
+stability. These were found to retard the speed of the airship,
+which in the second and more successful construction was driven
+by a Clement Bayard motor of l00 horse-power at a speed of 30
+miles an hour. On August 23rd, 1909, while being tried for
+acceptance by the military authorities, this vessel achieved a
+record by flying at a height of 5,000 feet for two hours. The
+Astra-Torres non-rigids were designed by a Spaniard, Senor
+Torres, and built by the Astra Company. The envelope was of
+trefoil shape, this being due to the interior rigging from the
+suspension band; the exterior appearance is that of two lobes
+side by side, overlaid by a third. The interior rigging, which
+was adopted with a view to decreasing air resistance, supports a
+low-hung car from the centre of the envelope; steering is
+accomplished by means of horizontal planes fixed on the envelope
+at the stern, and vertical planes depending beneath the envelope,
+also at the stern end.
+
+One of the most successful of French pre-war dirigibles was a
+Clement Bayard built in 1912. In this twin propellers were
+placed at the front and horizontal and vertical rudders in a
+sort of box formation under the envelope at the stern. The
+envelope was stream-lined, while the car of the machine was
+placed well forward with horizontal controlling planes above it
+and immediately behind the propellers. This airship, which was
+named 'Dupuy de Lome,' may be ranked as about the most
+successful non-rigid dirigible constructed prior to the War.
+
+Experiments with non-rigids in Germany was mainly carried on by
+Major Parseval, who produced his first vessel in 1906. The main
+feature of this airship consisted in variation in length of the
+suspension cables at the will of the operator, so that the
+envelope could be given an upward tilt while the car remained
+horizontal in order to give the vessel greater efficiency in
+climbing. In this machine, the propeller was placed above and
+forward of the car, and the controlling planes were fixed
+directly to the envelope near the forward end. A second vessel
+differed from the first mainly in the matter of its larger size,
+variable suspension being again employed, together with a similar
+method of control. The vessel was moderately successful, and
+under Major Parseval's direction a third was constructed for
+passenger carrying, with two engines of 120 horsepower, each
+driving propellers of 13 feet diameter. This was the most
+successful of the early German dirigibles; it made a number of
+voyages with a dozen passengers in addition to its crew, as well
+as proving its value for military purposes by use as a scout
+machine in manoeuvres. Later Parsevals were constructed of
+stream-line form, about 300 feet in length, and with engines
+sufficiently powerful to give them speeds up to 50 miles an hour.
+
+Major Von Gross, commander of a Balloon Battalion, produced
+semi-rigid dirigibles from 1907 onward. The second of these,
+driven by two 75 horse-power Daimler motors, was capable of a
+speed of 27 miles an hour; in September of 1908 she made a trip
+from and back to Berlin which lasted 13 hours, in which period
+she covered 176 miles with four passengers and reached a height
+of 4,000 feet. Her successor, launched in April of 1909,
+carried a wireless installation, and the next to this, driven by
+four motors of 75 horse-power each, reached a speed of 45 miles
+an hour. As this vessel was constructed for military purposes,
+very few details either of its speed or method of construction
+were made public.
+
+Practically all these vessels were discounted by the work of
+Ferdinand von Zeppelin, who set out from the first with the idea
+of constructing a rigid dirigible. Beginning in 1898, he built a
+balloon on an aluminium framework covered with linen and silk,
+and divided into interior compartments holding linen bags which
+were capable of containing nearly 400,000 cubic feet of
+hydrogen. The total length of this first Zeppelin airship was
+420 feet and the diameter 38 feet. Two cars were rigidly
+attached to the envelope, each carrying a 16 horse-power motor,
+driving propellers which were rigidly connected to the aluminium
+framework of the balloon. Vertical and horizontal screws were
+used for lifting and forward driving and a sliding weight was
+used to raise or lower the stem of the vessel out of the
+horizontal in order to rise or descend without altering the load
+by loss of ballast or the lift by loss of gas.
+
+The first trial of this vessel was made in July of 1900, and was
+singularly unfortunate. The winch by which the sliding weight
+was operated broke, and the balloon was so bent that the working
+of the propellers was interfered with, as was the steering. A
+speed of 13 feet per second was attained, but on descending, the
+airship ran against some piles and was further damaged. Repairs
+were completed by the end of September, 1900, and on a second
+trial flight made on October 21st a speed of 30 feet per second
+was reached.
+
+Zeppelin was far from satisfied with the performance of this
+vessel, and he therefore set about collecting funds for the
+construction of a second, which was completed in 1905. By this
+time the internal combustion engine had been greatly improved,
+and without any increase of weight, Zeppelin was able to instal
+two motors of 85 horse-power each. The total capacity was
+367,000 cubic feet of hydrogen, carried in 16 gas bags inside
+the framework, and the weight of the whole construction was 9
+tons--a ton less than that of the first Zeppelin airship. Three
+vertical planes at front and rear controlled horizontal
+steering, while rise and fall was controlled by horizontal
+planes arranged in box form. Accident attended the first trial
+of this second airship, which took place over the Bodensee on
+November 30th, 1905, 'It had been intended to tow the raft, to
+which it was anchored, further from the shore against the wind.
+But the water was too low to allow the use of the raft. The
+balloon was therefore mounted on pontoons, pulled out into the
+lake, and taken in tow by a motor-boat. It was caught by a
+strong wind which was blowing from the shore, and driven ahead
+at such a rate that it overtook the motor-boat. The tow rope
+was therefore at once cut, but it unexpectedly formed into knots
+and became entangled with the airship, pulling the front end
+down into the water. The balloon was then caught by the wind
+and lifted into the air, when the propellers were set in motion.
+The front end was at this instant pointing in a downward
+direction, and consequently it shot into the water, where it was
+found necessary to open the valves.'[*]
+
+[*] Hildebrandt, Airships Past and Present.
+
+The damage done was repaired within six weeks, and the second
+trial was made on January 17th, 1906. The lifting force was too
+great for the weight, and the dirigible jumped immediately to
+1,500 feet. The propellers were started, and the dirigible
+brought to a lower level, when it was found possible to drive
+against the wind. The steering arrangements were found too
+sensitive, and the motors were stopped, when the vessel was
+carried by the wind until it was over land--it had been intended
+that the trial should be completed over water. A descent was
+successfully accomplished and the dirigible was anchored for the
+night, but a gale caused it so much damage that it had to be
+broken up. It had achieved a speed of 30 feet per second with
+the motors developing only 36 horse-power and, gathering from
+this what speed might have been accomplished with the full 170
+horse-power, Zeppelin set about the construction of No. 3, with
+which a number of successful voyages were made, proving the value
+of the type for military purposes.
+
+No. 4 was the most notable of the early Zeppelins, as much on
+account of its disastrous end as by reason of any superior merit
+in comparison with No. 3. The main innovation consisted in
+attaching a triangular keel to the under side of the envelope,
+with two gaps beneath which the cars were suspended. Two Daimler
+Mercedes motors of 110 horse-power each were placed one in each
+car, and the vessel carried sufficient fuel for a 60-hour cruise
+with the motors running at full speed. Each motor drove a pair
+of three-bladed metal propellers rigidly attached to the
+framework of the envelope and about 15 feet in diameter. There
+was a vertical rudder at the stern of the envelope and horizontal
+controlling planes were fixed on the sides of the envelope. The
+best performances and the end of this dirigible were summarised
+as follows by Major Squier:--
+
+'Its best performances were two long trips performed during the
+summer of 1908. The first, on July 4th, lasted exactly 12
+hours, during which time it covered a distance of 235 miles,
+crossing the mountains to Lucerne and Zurich, and returning to
+the balloon-house near Friedrichshafen, on Lake Constance. The
+average speed on this trip was 32 miles per hour. On August
+4th, this airship attempted a 24-hour flight, which was one of
+the requirements made for its acceptance by the Government. It
+left Friedrichshafen in the morning with the intention of
+following the Rhine as far as Mainz, and then returning to its
+starting-point, straight across the country. A stop of 3 hours
+30 minutes was made in the afternoon of the first day on the
+Rhine, to repair the engine. On the return, a second stop was
+found necessary near Stuttgart, due to difficulties with the
+motors, and some loss of gas. While anchored to the ground, a
+storm arose which broke loose the anchorage, and, as the balloon
+rose in the air, it exploded and took fire (due to causes which
+have never been actually determined and published) and fell to
+the ground, where it was completely destroyed. On this journey,
+which lasted in all 31 hours 15 minutes, the airship was in the
+air 20 hours 45 minutes, and covered a total distance of 378
+miles.
+
+'The patriotism of the German nation was aroused. Subscriptions
+were immediately started, and in a short space of time a quarter
+of a million pounds had been raised. A Zeppelin Society was
+formed to direct the expenditure of this fund. Seventeen
+thousand pounds has been expended in purchasing land near
+Friedrichshafen; workshops were erected, and it was announced
+that within one year the construction of eight airships of the
+Zeppelin type would be completed. Since the disaster to
+'Zeppelin IV.' the Crown Prince of Germany made a trip in
+'Zeppelin No. 3,' which had been called back into service, and
+within a very few days the German Emperor visited Friedrichshafen
+for the purpose of seeing the airship in flight. He decorated
+Count Zeppelin with the order of the Black Eagle. German
+patriotism and enthusiasm has gone further, and the "German
+Association for an Aerial Fleet" has been organised in
+sections throughout the country. It announces its intention of
+building 50 garages (hangars) for housing airships.'
+
+By January of 1909, with well over a quarter of a million in
+hand for the construction of Zeppelin airships, No. 3 was again
+brought out, probably in order to maintain public enthusiasm in
+respect of the possible new engine of war. In March of that
+year No. 3 made a voyage which lasted for 4 hours over and in
+the vicinity of Lake Constance; it carried 26 passengers for a
+distance of nearly 150 miles.
+
+Before the end of March, Count Zeppelin determined to voyage
+from Friedrichshafen to Munich, together with the crew of the
+airship and four military officers. Starting at four in the
+morning and ascertaining their route from the lights of railway
+stations and the ringing of bells in the towns passed over, the
+journey was completed by nine o'clock, but a strong south-west
+gale prevented the intended landing. The airship was driven
+before the wind until three o'clock in the afternoon, when it
+landed safely near Dingolfing; by the next morning the wind had
+fallen considerably and the airship returned to Munich and
+landed on the parade ground as originally intended. At about
+3.30 in the afternoon, the homeward journey was begun,
+Friedrichshafen being reached at about 7.30.
+
+These trials demonstrated that sufficient progress had been made
+to justify the construction of Zeppelin airships for use with
+the German army. No. 3 had been manoeuvred safely if not
+successfully in half a gale of wind, and henceforth it was known
+as 'SMS. Zeppelin I.,' at the bidding of the German Emperor,
+while the construction of 'SMS. Zeppelin II.' was rapidly
+proceeded with. The fifth construction of Count Zeppelin's was
+446 feet in length, 42 1/2 feet in diameter, and contained
+530,000 cubic feet of hydrogen gas in 17 separate compartments.
+Trial flights were made on the 26th May, 1909, and a week later
+she made a record voyage of 940 miles, the route being from Lake
+Constance over Ulm, Nuremberg, Leipzig, Bitterfeld, Weimar,
+Heilbronn, and Stuttgart, descending near Goppingen; the time
+occupied in the flight was upwards of 38 hours.
+
+In landing, the airship collided with a pear-tree, which damaged
+the bows and tore open two sections of the envelope, but repairs
+on the spot enabled the return journey to Friedrichshafen to be
+begun 24 hours later. In spite of the mishap the Zeppelin had
+once more proved itself as a possible engine of war, and
+thenceforth Germany pinned its faith to the dirigible, only
+developing the aeroplane to such an extent as to keep abreast of
+other nations. By the outbreak of war, nearly 30 Zeppelins had
+been constructed; considerably more than half of these were
+destroyed in various ways, but the experiments carried on with
+each example of the type permitted of improvements being made.
+The first fatality occurred in September, 1913, when the
+fourteenth Zeppelin to be constructed, known as Naval Zeppelin
+L.1, was wrecked in the North Sea by a sudden storm and her
+crew of thirteen were drowned. About three weeks after this,
+Naval Zeppelin L.2, the eighteenth in order of building,
+exploded in mid-air while manoeuvring over Johannisthal. She
+was carrying a crew of 25, who were all killed.
+
+By 1912 the success of the Zeppelin type brought imitators.
+Chief among them was the Schutte-Lanz, a Mannheim firm, which
+produced a rigid dirigible with a wooden framework, wire braced.
+This was not a cylinder like the Zeppelin, but reverted to the
+cigar shape and contained about the same amount of gas as the
+Zeppelin type. The Schutte-Lanz was made with two gondolas
+rigidly attached to the envelope in which the gas bags were
+placed. The method of construction involved greater weight than
+was the case with the Zeppelin, but the second of these vessels,
+built with three gondolas containing engines, and a navigating
+cabin built into the hull of the airship itself, proved quite
+successful as a naval scout until wrecked on the islands off the
+coast of Denmark late in 1914. The last Schutte-Lanz to be
+constructed was used by the Germans for raiding England, and was
+eventually brought down in flames at Cowley.
+
+
+
+V. BRITISH AIRSHIP DESIGN
+
+As was the case with the aeroplane, Great Britain left France
+and Germany to make the running in the early days of airship
+construction; the balloon section of the Royal Engineers was
+compelled to confine its energies to work with balloons pure and
+simple until well after the twentieth century had dawned, and
+such experiments as were made in England were done by private
+initiative. As far back as 1900 Doctor Barton built an airship
+at the Alexandra Palace and voyaged across London in it. Four
+years later Mr E. T. Willows of Cardiff produced the first
+successful British dirigible, a semi-rigid 74 feet in length and
+18 feet in diameter, engined with a 7 horse-power Peugot
+twin-cylindered motor. This drove a two-bladed propeller at the
+stern for propulsion, and also actuated a pair of auxiliary
+propellers at the front which could be varied in their direction
+so as to control the right and left movements of the airship.
+This device was patented and the patent was taken over by the
+British Government, which by 1908 found Mr Willow's work of
+sufficient interest to regard it as furnishing data for
+experiment at the balloon factory at Farnborough. In 1909,
+Willows steered one of his dirigibles to London from Cardiff in
+a little less than ten hours, making an average speed of over 14
+miles an hour. The best speed accomplished was probably
+considerably greater than this, for at intervals of a few miles,
+Willows descended near the earth to ascertain his whereabouts
+with the help of a megaphone. It must be added that he carried
+a compass in addition to his megaphone. He set out for Paris in
+November of 1910, reached the French coast, and landed near
+Douai. Some damage was sustained in this landing, but, after
+repair, the trip to Paris was completed.
+
+Meanwhile the Government balloon factory at Farnborough began
+airship construction in 1907; Colonel Capper, R.E., and S. F.
+Cody were jointly concerned in the production of a semi-rigid.
+Fifteen thicknesses of goldbeaters' skin--about the most
+expensive covering obtainable--were used for the envelope, which
+was 25 feet in diameter. A slight shower of rain in which the
+airship was caught led to its wreckage, owing to the absorbent
+quality of the goldbeaters' skin, whereupon Capper and Cody set
+to work to reproduce the airship and its defects on a larger
+scale. The first had been named 'Nulli Secundus' and the second
+was named 'Nulli Secundus II.' Punch very appropriately
+suggested that the first vessel ought to have been named 'Nulli
+Primus,' while a possible third should be christened 'Nulli
+Tertius.' 'Nulli Secundus II.' was fitted with a 100 horse-power
+engine and had an envelope of 42 feet in diameter, the
+goldbeaters' skin being covered in fabric and the car being
+suspended by four bands which encircled the balloon envelope.
+In October of 1907, 'Nulli Secundus II.' made a trial flight
+from Farnborough to London and was anchored at the Crystal
+Palace. The wind sprung up and took the vessel away from its
+mooring ropes, wrecking it after the one flight.
+
+Stagnation followed until early in 1909, when a small airship
+fitted with two 12 horse-power motors and named the 'Baby' was
+turned out from the balloon factory. This was almost
+egg-shaped, the blunt end being forward, and three inflated fins
+being placed at the tail as control members. A long car with
+rudder and elevator at its rear-end carried the engines and
+crew; the 'Baby' made some fairly successful flights and gave a
+good deal of useful data for the construction of later vessels.
+
+Next to this was 'Army Airship 2A 'launched early in 1910 and
+larger, longer, and narrower in design than the Baby. The
+engine was an 80 horse-power Green motor which drove two pairs
+of propellers; small inflated control members were fitted at the
+stern end of the envelope, which was 154 feet in length. The
+suspended car was 84 feet long, carrying both engines and crew,
+and the Willows idea of swivelling propellers for governing the
+direction was used in this vessel. In June of that year a new,
+small-type dirigible, the 'Beta,' was produced, driven by a 30
+horse-power Green engine with which she flew over 3,000 miles.
+She was the most successful British dirigible constructed up to
+that time, and her successor, the 'Gamma,' was built on similar
+lines. The 'Gamma' was a larger vessel, however, produced in
+1912, with flat, controlling fins and rudder at the rear end of
+the envelope, and with the conventional long car suspended at
+some distance beneath the gas bag. By this time, the mooring
+mast, carrying a cap of which the concave side fitted over the
+convex nose of the airship, had been originated. The cap was
+swivelled, and, when attached to it, an airship was held nose on
+to the wind, thus reducing by more than half the dangers
+attendant on mooring dirigibles in the open.
+
+Private subscription under the auspices of the Morning Post got
+together sufficient funds in 1910 for the purchase of a Lebaudy
+airship, which was built in France, flown across the Channel, and
+presented to the Army Airship Fleet. This dirigible was 337 feet
+long, and was driven by two 135 horse-power Panhard motors, each
+of which actuated two propellers. The journey from Moisson to
+Aldershot was completed at a speed of 36 miles an hour, but the
+airship was damaged while being towed into its shed. On May of
+the following year, the Lebaudy was brought out for a flight,
+but, in landing, the guide rope fouled in trees and sheds and
+brought the airship broadside on to the wind; she was driven into
+some trees and wrecked to such an exteent that rebuilding was
+considered an impossibility. A Clement Bayard, bought by the
+army airship section, became scrap after even less flying than
+had been accomplished by the Lebaudy.
+
+In April of 1910,, the Admiralty determined on a naval air
+service, and set about the production of rigid airships which
+should be able to compete with Zeppelins as naval scouts. The
+construction was entrusted to Vickers, Ltd., who set about the
+task at their Barrow works and built something which, when tested
+after a year's work, was found incapable of lifting its own
+weight. This defect was remedied by a series of alterations, and
+meanwhile the unofficial title of 'Mayfly' was given to the
+vessel.
+
+Taken over by the Admiralty before she had passed any flying
+tests, the 'Mayfly' was brought out on September 24th, 1911, for
+a trial trip, being towed out from her shed by a tug. When ha]f
+out from the shed, the envelope was caught by a light
+cross-wind, and, in spite of the pull from the tug, the great
+fabric broke in half, nearly drowning the crew, who had to dive
+in order to get clear of the wreckage.
+
+There was considerable similarity in form, though not in
+performance, between the Mayfly and the prewar Zeppelin. The
+former was 510 feet in length, cylindrical in form, with a
+diameter of 48 feet, and divided into 19 gas-bag compartments.
+The motive power consisted of two 200 horse-power Wolseley
+engines. After its failure, the Naval Air Service bought an
+Astra-Torres airship from France and a Parseval from Germany,
+both of which proved very useful in the early days of the War,
+doing patrol work over the Channel before the Blimps came into
+being.
+
+Early in 1915 the 'Blimp' or 'S.S.' type of coastal airship
+was evolved in response to the demand for a vessel which could
+be turned out quickly and in quantities. There was urgent
+demand, voiced by Lord Fisher, for a type of vessel capable of
+maintaining anti-submarine patrol off the British coasts, and
+the first S.S. airships were made by combining a gasbag with
+the most available type of aeroplane fuselage and engine, and
+fitting steering gear. The 'Blimp' consisted of a B.E. fuselage
+with engine and geared-down propeller, and seating for pilot and
+observer, attached to an envelope about 150 feet in length.
+With a speed of between 35 and 40 miles an hour, the 'Blimp' had
+a cruising capacity of about ten hours; it was fitted with
+wireless set, camera, machine-gun, and bombs, and for submarine
+spotting and patrol work generally it proved invaluable, though
+owing to low engine power and comparatively small size, its uses
+were restricted to reasonably fair weather. For work farther out
+at sea and in all weathers, airships known as the coast patrol
+type, and more commonly as 'coastals,' were built, and later the
+'N.S.' or North Sea type, still larger and more weather-worthy,
+followed. By the time the last year of the War came, Britain
+led the world in the design of non-rigid and semi-rigid
+dirigibles. The 'S.S.' or 'Blimp' had been improved to a speed
+of 50 miles an hour, carrying a crew of three, and the endurance
+record for the type was 18 1/2 hours, while one of them had
+reached a height of 10,000 feet. The North Sea type of
+non-rigid was capable of travelling over 20 hours at full speed,
+or forty hours at cruising speed, and the number of non-rigids
+belonging to the British Navy exceeded that of any other
+country.
+
+It was owing to the incapacity--apparent or real-- of the
+British military or naval designers to produce a satisfactory
+rigid airship that the 'N.S.' airship was evolved. The first of
+this type was produced in 1916, and on her trials she was voted
+an unqualified success, in consequence of which the building of
+several more was pushed on. The envelope, of 360,000 cubic feet
+capacity, was made on the Astra-Torres principle of three lobes,
+giving a trefoil section. The ship carried four fins, to three
+of which the elevator and rudder flaps were attached; petrol
+tanks were placed inside the envelope, under which was rigged a
+long covered-in car, built up of a light steel tubular framework
+35 feet in length. The forward portion was covered with
+duralumin sheeting, an aluminium alloy which, unlike aluminium
+itself, is not affected by the action of sea air and water, and
+the remainder with fabric laced to the framework. Windows and
+port-holes were provided to give light to the crew, and the
+controls and navigating instruments were placed forward, with the
+sleeping accommodation aft. The engines were mounted in a power
+unit structure, separate from the car and connected by wooden
+gang ways supported by wire cables. A complete electrical
+installation of two dynamos and batteries for lights, signalling
+lamps, wireless, telephones, etc., was carried, and the motive
+power consisted of either two 250 horse-power Rolls-Royce engines
+or two 240 horse-power Fiat engines. The principal dimensions of
+this type are length 262 feet, horizontal diameter 56 feet 9
+inches, vertical diameter 69 feet 3 inches. The gross lift is
+24,300 lbs. and the disposable lift without crew, petrol, oil,
+and ballast 8,500 lbs. The normal crew carried for patrol work
+was ten officers and men. This type holds the record of 101
+hours continuous flight on patrol duty.
+
+In the matter of rigid design it was not until 1913 that the
+British Admiralty got over the fact that the 'Mayfly' would not,
+and decided on a further attempt at the construction of a rigid
+dirigible. The contract for this was signed in March of 1914;
+work was suspended in the following February and begun again in
+July, 1915, but it was not until January of 1917 that the
+ship was finished, while her trials were not completed until
+March of 1917, when she was taken over by the Admiralty. The
+details of the construction and trial of this vessel, known as
+'No. 9,' go to show that she did not quite fill the contract
+requirements in respect of disposable lift until a number of
+alterations had been made. The contract specified that a speed
+of at least 45 miles per hour was to be attained at full engine
+power, while a minimum disposable lift of 5 tons was to be
+available for movable weights, and the airship was to be capable
+of rising to a height of 2,000 feet. Driven by four Wolseley
+Maybach engines of 180 horse-power each, the lift of the vessel
+was not sufficient, so it was decided to remove the two engines
+in the after car and replace them by a single engine of 250
+horsepower. With this the vessel reached the contract speed of
+45 miles per hour with a cruising radius of 18 hours, equivalent
+to 800 miles when the engines were running at full speed. The
+vessel served admirably as a training airship, for, by the time
+she was completed, the No. 23 class of rigid airship had come to
+being, and thus No. 9 was already out of date.
+
+Three of the 23 class were completed by the end of 1917; it was
+stipulated that they should be built with a speed of at least 55
+miles per hour, a minimum disposable lift of 8 tons, and a
+capability of rising at an average rate of not less than 1,000
+feet per minute to a height of 3,000 feet. The motive power
+consisted of four 250 horse-power Rolls-Royce engines, one in
+each of the forward and after cars and two in a centre car.
+Four-bladed propellers were used throughout the ship.
+
+A 23X type followed on the 23 class, but by the time two ships
+had been completed, this was practically obsolete. The No. 31
+class followed the 23X; it was built on Schutte-Lanz lines, 615
+feet in length, 66 feet diameter, and a million and a half cubic
+feet capacity. The hull was similar to the later types of
+Zeppelin in shape, with a tapering stern and a bluff, rounded
+bow. Five cars each carrying a 250 horse-power Rolls-Royce
+engine, driving a single fixed propeller, were fitted, and on
+her trials R.31 performed well, especially in the matter of
+speed. But the experiment of constructing in wood in the
+Schutte-Lanz way adopted with this vessel resulted in failure
+eventually, and the type was abandoned.
+
+Meanwhile, Germany had been pushing forward Zeppelin design and
+straining every nerve in the improvement of rigid dirigible
+construction, until L.33 was evolved; she was generally known as
+a super-Zeppelin, and on September 24th, 1916, six weeks
+after her launching, she was damaged by gun-fire in a raid over
+London, being eventually compelled to come to earth at Little
+Wigborough in Essex. The crew gave themselves up after having
+set fire to the ship, and though the fabric was totally
+destroyed, the structure of the hull remained intact, so that
+just as Germany was able to evolve the Gotha bomber from the
+HandleyPage delivered at Lille, British naval constructors were
+able to evolve the R.33 type of airship from the Zeppelin
+framework delivered at Little Wigborough. Two vessels, R.33 and
+R.34, were laid down for completion; three others were also put
+down for construction, but, while R.33 and R.34 were built
+almost entirely from the data gathered from the wrecked L.33,
+the three later vessels embody more modern design, including a
+number of improvements, and more especially greater disposable
+lift. It has been commented that while the British authorities
+were building R.33 and R.34, Germany constructed 30 Zeppelins on
+4 slips, for which reason it may be reckoned a matter for
+congratulation that the rigid airship did not decide the fate of
+the War. The following particulars of construction of the R.33
+and R.34 types are as given by Major Whale in his survey of
+British Airships:--
+
+'In all its main features the hull structure of R.33 and R.34
+follows the design of the wrecked German Zeppelin airship L.33.
+'The hull follows more nearly a true stream-line shape than in
+the previous ships constructed of duralumin, in which a greater
+proportion of the greater length was parallel-sided. The
+Germans adopted this new shape from the Schutte-Lanz design and
+have not departed from this practice. This consists of a short,
+parallel body with a long, rounded bow and a long tapering stem
+culminating in a point. The overall length of the ship is 643
+feet with a diameter of 79 feet and an extreme height of 92
+feet.
+
+'The type of girders in this class has been much altered from
+those in previous ships. The hull is fitted with an internal
+triangular keel throughout practically the entire length. This
+forms the main corridor of the ship, and is fitted with a
+footway down the centre for its entire length. It contains water
+ballast and petrol tanks, bomb storage and crew accommodation,
+and the various control wires, petrol pipes, and electric leads
+are carried along the lower part.
+
+'Throughout this internal corridor runs a bridge girder, from
+which the petrol and water ballast tanks are supported. These
+tanks are so arranged that they can be dropped clear of the
+ship. Amidships is the cabin space with sufficient room for a
+crew of twenty-five. Hammocks can be swung from the bridge
+girder before mentioned.
+
+'In accordance with the latest Zeppelin practice, monoplane
+rudders and elevators are fitted to the horizontal and vertical
+fins.
+
+'The ship is supported in the air by nineteen gas bags, which
+give a total capacity of approximately two million cubic feet of
+gas. The gross lift works out at approximately 59 1/2 tons, of
+which the total fixed weight is 33 tons, giving a disposable
+lift of 26 1/2 tons.
+
+'The arrangement of cars is as follows: At the forward end the
+control car is slung, which contains all navigating instruments
+and the various controls. Adjoining this is the wireless cabin,
+which is also fitted for wireless telephony. Immediately aft of
+this is the forward power car containing one engine, which gives
+the appearance that the whole is one large car.
+
+'Amidships are two wing cars, each containing a single engine.
+These are small and just accommodate the engines with sufficient
+room for mechanics to attend to them. Further aft is another
+larger car which contains an auxiliary control position and two
+engines.
+
+'It will thus be seen that five engines are installed in the
+ship; these are all of the same type and horsepower, namely, 250
+horse-power Sunbeam. R.33 was constructed by Messrs Armstrong,
+Whitworth, Ltd.; while her sister ship R.34 was built by Messrs
+Beardmore on the Clyde.'
+
+Of the two vessels, R.34 appeared rather more airworthy than her
+sister ship; the lift of the ship justified the carrying of a
+greater quantity of fuel than had been provided for, and, as she
+was considered suitable for making a Transatlantic crossing,
+extra petrol tanks were fitted in the hull and a new type of
+outer cover was fitted with a view to her making the Atlantic
+crossing. She made a 21-hour cruise over the North of England
+and the South of Scotland at the end of May, 1919, and
+subsequently went for a longer cruise over Denmark, the Baltic,
+and the north coast of Germany, remaining in the air for 56 hours
+in spite of very bad weather conditions. Finally, July 2nd was
+selected as the starting date for the cross Atlantic flight; the
+vessel was commanded by Major G. H. Scott, A.F.C., with Captain
+G. S. Greenland as first officer, Second-Lieut. H. F. Luck as
+second officer, and Lieut. J. D. Shotter as engineer officer.
+There were also on board Brig.-Gen. E. P. Maitland, representing
+the Air Ministry, Major J. E. M. Pritchard, representing the
+Admiralty, and Lieut.-Col. W. H. Hemsley of the Army Aviation
+Department. In addition to eight tons of petrol, R.34 carried a
+total number of 30 persons from East Fortune to Long Island, N.Y.
+
+There being no shed in America capable of accommodating the
+airship, she had to be moored in the open for refilling with fuel
+and gas, and to make the return journey almost immediately.
+
+Brig.-Gen. Maitland's account of the flight, in itself a record
+as interesting as valuable, divides the outward journey into two
+main stages, the first from East Fortune to Trinity Bay,
+Newfoundland, a distance of 2,050 sea miles, and the second and
+more difficult stage to Mineola Field, Long Island, 1,080 sea
+miles. An easy journey was experienced until Newfoundland was
+reached, but then storms and electrical disturbances rendered it
+necessary to alter the course, in consequence of which petrol
+began to run short. Head winds rendered the shortage still more
+acute, and on Saturday, July 5th, a wireless signal was sent out
+asking for destroyers to stand by to tow. However, after an
+anxious night, R.33 landed safely at Mineola Field at 9.55 a.m.
+on July 6th, having accomplished the journey in 108 hours 12
+minutes.
+
+She remained at Mineola until midnight of July 9th, when,
+although it had been intended that a start should be made by
+daylight for the benefit of New York spectators, an approaching
+storm caused preparations to be advanced for immediate
+departure. She set out at 5.57 a.m. by British summer time,
+and flew over New York in the full glare of hundreds of
+searchlights before heading out over the Atlantic. A following
+wind assisted the return voyage, and on July 13th, at 7.57 a.m.,
+R.34 anchored at Pulham, Norfolk, having made the return journey
+in 75 hours 3 minutes, and proved the suitability of the
+dirigible for Transatlantic commercial work. R.80, launched on
+July 19th, 1920, afforded further proof, if this were needed.
+
+It is to be noted that nearly all the disasters to airships have
+been caused by launching and landing-- the type is safe enough
+in the air, under its own power, but its bulk renders it
+unwieldy for ground handling. The German system of handling
+Zeppelins in and out of their sheds is, so far, the best
+devised: this consists of heavy trucks running on rails through
+the sheds and out at either end; on descending, the trucks are
+run out, and the airship is securely attached to them outside
+the shed; the trucks are then run back into the shed, taking the
+airship with them, and preventing any possibility of the wind
+driving the envelope against the side of the shed before it is
+safely housed; the reverse process is adopted in launching,
+which is thus rendered as simple as it is safe.
+
+
+
+VI. THE AIRSHIP COMMERCIALLY
+
+Prior to the war period, between the years 1910 and 1914, a
+German undertaking called the Deutsche Luftfahrt Actien
+Gesellschaft conducted a commercial Zeppelin service in which
+four airships known as the Sachsan, Hansa, Victoria Louise, and
+Schwaben were used. During the four years of its work, the
+company carried over 17,000 passengers, and over 100,000 miles
+were flown without incurring one fatality and with only minor
+and unavoidable accidents to the vessels composing the service.
+Although a number of English notabilities made voyages in these
+airships, the success of this only experiment in commercial
+aerostation seems to have been forgotten since the war. There
+was beyond doubt a military aim in this apparently peaceful use
+of Zeppelin airships; it is past question now that all Germany's
+mechanical development in respect of land sea, and air transport
+in the years immediately preceding the war, was accomplished
+with the ulterior aim of military conquest, but, at the same
+time, the running of this service afforded proof of the
+possibility of establishing a dirigible service for peaceful
+ends, and afforded proof too, of the value of the dirigible as a
+vessel of purely commercial utility.
+
+In considering the possibility of a commercial dirigible
+service, it is necessary always to bear in mind the
+disadvantages of first cost and upkeep as compared with the
+aeroplane. The building of a modern rigid is an exceedingly
+costly undertaking, and the provision of an efficient supply of
+hydrogen gas to keep its compartments filled is a very large
+item in upkeep of which the heavier-than-air machine goes free.
+Yet the future of commercial aeronautics so far would seem to
+lie with the dirigible where very long voyages are in question.
+No matter how the aeroplane may be improved, the possibility of
+engine failure always remains as a danger for work over water.
+In seaplane or flying boat form, the danger is still present in
+a rough sea, though in the American Transatlantic flight, N.C.3,
+taxi-ing 300 miles to the Azores after having fallen to the
+water, proved that this danger is not so acute as is generally
+assumed. Yet the multiple-engined rigid, as R.34 showed on her
+return voyage, may have part of her power plant put out of
+action altogether and still complete her voyage very
+successfully, which, in the case of mail carrying and services
+run strictly to time, gives her an enormous advantage over the
+heavier-than-air machine.
+
+'For commercial purposes,' General Sykes has remarked, 'the
+airship is eminently adapted for long distance journeys
+involving non-stop flights. It has this inherent advantage over
+the aeroplane, that while there appears to be a limit to the
+range of the aeroplane as at present constructed, there is
+practically no limit whatever to that of the airship, as this
+can be overcome by merely increasing the size. It thus appears
+that for such journeys as crossing the Atlantic, or crossing the
+Pacific from the west coast of America to Australia or Japan,
+the airship will be peculiarly suitable. It having been
+conceded that the scope of the airship is long distance travel,
+the only type which need be considered for this purpose is the
+rigid. The rigid airship is still in an embryonic state, but
+sufficient has already been accomplished in this country, and
+more particularly in Germany, to show that with increased
+capacity there is no reason why, within a few years' time,
+airships should not be built capable of completing the circuit
+of the globe and of conveying sufficient passengers and
+merchandise to render such an undertaking a paying proposition.'
+
+The British R.38 class, embodying the latest improvements in
+airship design outside Germany, gives a gross lift per airship
+of 85 tons and a net lift of about 45 tons. The capacity of
+the gas bags is about two and three-quarter million cubic feet,
+and, travelling at the rate of 45 miles per hour, the cruising
+range of the vessel is estimated at 8.8 days. Six engines, each
+of 350 horse-power, admit of an extreme speed of 70 miles per
+hour if necessary.
+
+The last word in German design is exemplified in the rigids L.70
+and L.71, together with the commercial airship 'Bodensee.'
+Previous to the construction of these, the L.65 type is
+noteworthy as being the first Zeppelin in which direct drive of
+the propeller was introduced, together with an improved and
+lighter type of car. L.70 built in 1918 and destroyed by the
+British naval forces, had a speed of about 75 miles per hour;
+L.71 had a maximum speed of 72 miles per hour, a gas bag
+capacity of 2,420,000 cubic feet, and a length of 743 feet,
+while the total lift was 73 tons. Progress in design is best
+shown by the progress in useful load; in the L.70 and L.71
+class, this has been increased to 58.3 per cent, while in the
+Bodensee it was ever higher.
+
+As was shown in R.34's American flight, the main problem in
+connection with the commercial use of dirigibles is that of
+mooring in the open. The nearest to a solution of this problem,
+so far, consists in the mast carrying a swivelling cap; this has
+been tried in the British service with a non-rigid airship,
+which was attached to a mast in open country in a gale of 52
+miles an hour without the slightest damage to the airship. In
+its commercial form, the mast would probably take the form of a
+tower, at the top of which the cap would revolve so that the
+airship should always face the wind, the tower being used for
+embarkation and disembarkation of passengers and the provision
+of fuel and gas. Such a system would render sheds unnecessary
+except in case of repairs, and would enormously decrease the
+establishment charges of any commercial airship.
+
+All this, however, is hypothetical. Remains the airship of
+to-day, developed far beyond the promise of five years ago,
+capable, as has been proved by its achievements both in Britain
+and in Germany, of undertaking practically any given voyage with
+success.
+
+
+
+VII. KITE BALLOONS
+
+As far back as the period of the Napoleonic wars, the balloon
+was given a place in warfare, but up to the Franco-Prussian
+Prussian War of 1870-71 its use was intermittent. The Federal
+forces made use of balloons to a small extent in the American
+Civil War; they came to great prominence in the siege of Paris,
+carrying out upwards of three million letters and sundry carrier
+pigeons which took back messages into the besieged city.
+Meanwhile, as captive balloons, the German and other armies used
+them for observation and the direction of artillery fire. In
+this work the ordinary spherical balloon was at a grave
+disadvantage; if a gust of wind struck it, the balloon was blown
+downward and down wind, generally twirling in the air and
+upsetting any calculations and estimates that might be made by
+the observers, while in a wind of 25 miles an hour it could not
+rise at all. The rotatory movement caused by wind was stopped
+by an experimenter in the Russo-Japanese war, who fixed to the
+captive observation balloons a fin which acted as a rudder. This
+did not stop the balloon from being blown downward and away from
+its mooring station, but this tendency was overcome by a
+modification designed in Germany by the Parseval-Siegsfield
+Company, which originated what has since become familiar as the
+'Sausage' or kite balloon. This is so arranged that the forward
+end is tilted up into the wind, and the underside of the gas
+bag, acting as a plane, gives the balloon a lifting tendency in
+a wind, thus counteracting the tendency of the wind to blow it
+downward and away from its mooring station. Smaller bags are
+fitted at the lower and rear end of the balloon with openings
+that face into the wind; these are thus kept inflated, and they
+serve the purpose of a rudder, keeping the kite balloon steady
+in the air.
+
+Various types of kite balloon have been introduced; the original
+German Parseval-Siegsfield had a single air bag at the stern
+end, which was modified to two, three, or more lobes in later
+varieties, while an American experimental design attempted to do
+away with the attached lobes altogether by stringing out a
+series of small air bags, kite fashion, in rear of the main
+envelope. At the beginning of the War, Germany alone had kite
+balloons, for the authorities of the Allied armies con-sidered
+that the bulk of such a vessel rendered it too conspicuous a
+mark to permit of its being serviceable. The Belgian arm alone
+possessed two which, on being put into service, were found
+extremely useful. The French followed by constructing kite
+balloons at Chalais Meudon, and then, after some months of
+hostilities and with the example of the Royal Naval Air Service
+to encourage them, the British military authorities finally took
+up the construction and use of kite balloons for
+artillery-spotting and general observation purposes. Although
+many were brought down by gun-fire, their uses far outweighed
+their disadvantages, and toward the end of the War, hardly a
+mile of front was without its 'Sausage.'
+
+For naval work, kite balloons were carried in a specially
+constructed hold in the forepart of certain vessels; when
+required for use, the covering of the hold was removed, the
+kite balloon inflated and released to the required height by
+means of winches as in the case of the land work. The
+perfecting of the 'Coastal' and N.S. types of airship, together
+with the extension of wireless telephony between airship and
+cruiser or other warship, in all probability will render the use
+of the kite balloon unnecessary in connection with naval
+scouting. But, during the War, neither wireless telephony nor
+naval airships had developed sufficiently to render the Navy
+independent of any means that might come to hand, and the
+fitting of kite balloons in this fashion filled a need of the
+times.
+
+A necessary accessory of the kite balloon is the parachute,
+which has a long history. Da Vinci and Veranzio appear to have
+been the first exponents, the first in the theory and the latter
+in the practice of parachuting. Montgolfier experimented at
+Annonay before he constructed his first hot air-balloon, and in
+1783 a certain Lenormand dropped from a tree in a parachute.
+Blanchard the balloonist made a spectacle of parachuting, and
+made it a financial success; Cocking, in 1836, attempted to use
+an inverted form of parachute; taken up to a height of 3,000
+feet, he was cut adrift, when the framework of the parachute
+collapsed and Cocking was killed.
+
+The rate of fall is slow in parachuting to the ground. Frau
+Poitevin, making a descent from a height of 6,000 feet, took 45
+minutes to reach the ground, and, when she alighted, her
+husband, who had taken her up, had nearly got his balloon packed
+up. Robertson, another parachutist is said to have descended
+from a height of 10,000 feet in 35 minutes, or at a rate of
+nearly 5 feet per second. During the War Brigadier-General
+Maitland made a parachute descent from a height of 10,000 feet,
+the time taken being about 20 minutes.
+
+The parachute was developed considerably during the War period,
+the main requirement, that of certainty in opening, being
+considerably developed. Considered a necessary accessory for
+kite balloons, the parachute was also partially adopted for use
+with aeroplanes in the later War period, when it was contended
+that if a machine were shot down in flames, its occupants would
+be given a far better chance of escape if they had parachutes.
+Various trials were made to demonstrate the extreme efficiency
+of the parachute in modern form, one of them being a descent
+from the upper ways of the Tower Bridge to the waters of the
+Thames, in which short distance the 'Guardian Angel' type of
+parachute opened and cushioned the descent for its user.
+
+For dirigibles, balloons, and kite balloons the parachute is
+an essential. It would seem to be equally essential in the case
+of heavier-than-air machines, but this point is still debated.
+Certainly it affords the occupant of a falling aeroplane a
+chance, no matter how slender, of reaching the ground in safety,
+and, for that reason, it would seem to have a place in aviation
+as well as in aerostation.
+
+
+
+PART IV. ENGINE DEVELOPMENT
+
+I. THE VERTICAL TYPE
+
+The balloon was but a year old when the brothers Robert, in 1784
+attempted propulsion of an aerial vehicle by hand-power,
+and succeeded, to a certain extent, since they were able to make
+progress when there was only a slight wind to counteract their
+work. But, as may be easily understood, the manual power
+provided gave but a very slow speed, and in any wind it all the
+would-be airship became an uncontrolled balloon.
+
+Henson and Stringfellow, with their light steam engines, were
+first to attempt conquest of the problem of mechanical
+propulsion in the air; their work in this direction is so fully
+linked up with their constructed models that it has been
+outlined in the section dealing with the development of the
+aeroplane. But, very shortly after these two began, there came
+into the field a Monsieur Henri Giffard, who first achieved
+success in the propulsion by mechanical means of dirigible
+balloons, for his was the first airship to fly against the wind.
+He employed a small steam-engine developing about 3 horse-power
+and weighing 350 lbs. with boiler, fitting the whole in a car
+suspended from the gas-bag of his dirigible. The propeller which
+this engine worked was 11 feet in diameter, and the inventor, who
+made several flights, obtained a speed of 6 miles an hour against
+a slight wind. The power was not sufficient to render the
+invention practicable, as the dirigible could only be used in
+calm weather, but Giffard was sufficiently encouraged by his
+results to get out plans for immense dirigibles, which through
+lack of funds he was unable to construct. When, later, his
+invention of the steam-injector gave him the means he desired, he
+became blind, and in 1882 died, having built but the one famous
+dirigible.
+
+This appears to have been the only instance of a steam engine
+being fitted to a dirigible; the inherent disadvantage of this
+form of motive power is that a boiler to generate the steam must
+be carried, and this, together with the weight of water and
+fuel, renders the steam engine uneconomical in relation to the
+lift either of plane or gas-bag. Again, even if the weight
+could be brought down to a reasonable amount, the attention
+required by steam plant renders it undesirable as a motive power
+for aircraft when compared with the internal combustion engine.
+
+Maxim, in Artificial and Natural Flight, details the engine
+which he constructed for use with his giant experimental flying
+machine, and his description is worthy of reproduction since it
+is that of the only steam engine besides Giffard's, and apart
+from those used for the propulsion of models, designed for
+driving an aeroplane. 'In 1889,' Maxim says, 'I had my
+attention drawn to some very thin, strong, and comparatively
+cheap tubes which were being made in France, and it was only
+after I had seen these tubes that I seriously considered the
+question of making a flying machine. I obtained a large
+quantity of them and found that they were very light, that they
+would stand enormously high pressures, and generate a very large
+quantity of steam. Upon going into a mathematical calculation of
+the whole subject, I found that it would be possible to make a
+machine on the aeroplane system, driven by a steam engine, which
+would be sufficiently strong to lift itself into the air. I
+first made drawings of a steam engine, and a pair of these
+engines was afterwards made. These engines are constructed, for
+the most part, of a very high grade of cast steel, the cylinders
+being only 3/32 of an inch thick, the crank shafts hollow, and
+every part as strong and light as possible. They are compound,
+each having a high-pressure piston with an area of 20 square
+inches, a low-pressure piston of 50.26 square inches, and a
+common stroke of 1 foot. When first finished they were found to
+weigh 300 lbs. each; but after putting on the oil cups, felting,
+painting, and making some slight alterations, the weight was
+brought up to 320 lbs. each, or a total of 640 lbs. for the
+two engines, which have since developed 362 horsepower with a
+steam pressure of 320 lbs. per square inch.'
+
+The result is remarkable, being less than 2 lbs. weight per
+horse-power, especially when one considers the state of
+development to which the steam engine had attained at the time
+these experiments were made. The fining down of the internal
+combustion engine, which has done so much to solve the problems
+of power in relation to weight for use with aircraft, had not
+then been begun, and Maxim had nothing to guide him, so far as
+work on the part of his predecessors was concerned, save the
+experimental engines of Stringfellow, which, being constructed
+on so small a scale in comparison with his own, afforded little
+guidance. Concerning the factor of power, he says: 'When first
+designing this engine, I did not know how much power I might
+require from it. I thought that in some cases it might be
+necessary to allow the high-pressure steam to enter the
+low-pressure cylinder direct, but as this would involve a
+considerable loss, I constructed a species of injector. This
+injector may be so adjusted (hat when the steam in the boiler
+rises above a certain predetermined point, say 300 lbs., to the
+square inch, it opens a valve and escapes past the high-pressure
+cylinder instead of blowing off at the safety valve. In
+escaping through this valve, a fall of about 200 lbs. pressure
+per square inch is made to do work on the surrounding steam and
+drive it forward in the pipe, producing a pressure on the
+low-pressure piston considerably higher than the back-pressure
+on the high-pressure piston. In this way a portion of the work
+which would otherwise be lost is utilised, and it is possible,
+with an unlimited supply of steam, to cause the engines to
+develop an enormous amount of power.'
+
+With regard to boilers, Maxim writes,
+
+'The first boiler which I made was constructed something on the
+Herreshof principle, but instead of having one simple pipe in
+one very long coil, I used a series of very small and light
+pipes, connected in such a manner that there was a rapid
+circulation through the whole--the tubes increasing in size and
+number as the steam was generated. I intended that there should
+be a pressure of about 100 lbs. more on the feed water end of
+the series than on the steam end, and I believed that this
+difference in pressure would be sufficient to ensure direct and
+positive circulation through every tube in the series. The first
+boiler was exceedingly light, but the workmanship, as far as
+putting the tubes together was concerned, was very bad, and it
+was found impossible to so adjust the supply of water as to make
+dry steam without overheating and destroying the tubes.
+
+'Before making another boiler I obtained a quantity of copper
+tubes, about 8 feet long, 3/8 inch external diameter, and 1/50 of
+an inch thick. I subjected about 100 of these tubes to an
+internal pressure of 1 ton per square inch of cold kerosene oil,
+and as none of them leaked I did not test any more, but
+commenced my experiments by placing some of them in a white-hot
+petroleum fire. I found that I could evaporate as much as 26
+1/2 lbs. of water per square foot of heating surface per hour,
+and that with a forced circulation, although the quantity of
+water passing was very small but positive, there was no danger
+of overheating. I conducted many experiments with a pressure of
+over 400 lbs. per square inch, but none of the tubes failed.
+I then mounted a single tube in a white-hot furnace, also with a
+water circulation, and found that it only burst under steam at a
+pressure of 1,650 lbs. per square inch. A large boiler,
+having about 800 square feet of heating surface, including the
+feed-water heater, was then constructed. This boiler is about 4
+1/2 feet wide at the bottom, 8 feet long and 6 feet high. It
+weighs, with the casing, the dome, and the smoke stack and
+connections, a little less than 1,000 lbs. The water first
+passes through a system of small tubes--1/4 inch in diameter and
+1/60 inch thick--which were placed at the top of the boiler and
+immediately over the large tubes.... This feed-water heater is
+found to be very effective. It utilises the heat of the
+products of combustion after they have passed through the boiler
+proper and greatly reduces their temperature, while the
+feed-water enters the boiler at a temperature of about 250 F. A
+forced circulation is maintained in the boiler, the feed-water
+entering through a spring valve, the spring valve being adjusted
+in such a manner that the pressure on the water is always 30
+lbs. per square inch in excess of the boiler pressure. This
+fall of 30 lbs. in pressure acts upon the surrounding hot water
+which has already passed through the tubes, and drives it down
+through a vertical outside tube, thus ensuring a positive and
+rapid circulation through all the tubes. This apparatus is
+found to act extremely well.'
+
+Thus Maxim, who with this engine as power for his large
+aeroplane achieved free flight once, as a matter of experiment,
+though for what distance or time the machine was actually off
+the ground is matter for debate, since it only got free by
+tearing up the rails which were to have held it down in the
+experiment. Here, however, was a steam engine which was
+practicable for use in the air, obviously, and only the rapid
+success of the internal combustion engine prevented the
+steam-producing type from being developed toward perfection.
+
+The first designers of internal combustion engines, knowing
+nothing of the petrol of these days, constructed their examples
+with a view to using gas as fuel. As far back as 1872 Herr Paul
+Haenlein obtained a speed of about 10 miles an hour with a
+balloon propelled by an internal combustion engine, of which the
+fuel was gas obtained from the balloon itself. The engine in
+this case was of the Lenoir type, developing some 6 horse-power,
+and, obviously, Haenlein's flights were purely experimental and
+of short duration, since he used the gas that sustained him and
+decreased the lifting power of his balloon with every stroke of
+the piston of his engine. No further progress appears to have
+been made with the gas-consuming type of internal combustion
+engine for work with aircraft; this type has the disadvantage of
+requiring either a gas-producer or a large storage capacity for
+the gas, either of which makes the total weight of the power
+plant much greater than that of a petrol engine. The latter type
+also requires less attention when working, and the fuel is more
+convenient both for carrying and in the matter of carburation.
+
+The first airship propelled by the present-day type of internal
+combustion engine was constructed by Baumgarten and Wolfert in
+1879 at Leipzig, the engine being made by Daimler with a view to
+working on benzine--petrol as a fuel had not then come to its
+own. The construction of this engine is interesting since it was
+one of the first of Daimler's make, and it was the development
+brought about by the experimental series of which this engine
+was one that led to the success of the motor-car in very few
+years, incidentally leading to that fining down of the internal
+combustion engine which has facilitated the development of the
+aeroplane with such remarkable rapidity. Owing to the faulty
+construction of the airship no useful information was obtained
+from Daimler's pioneer installation, as the vessel got out of
+control immediately after it was first launched for flight, and
+was wrecked. Subsequent attempts at mechanically-propelled
+flight by Wolfert ended, in 1897, in the balloon being set on
+fire by an explosion of benzine vapour, resulting in the death
+of both the aeronauts.
+
+Daimler, from 1882 onward, devoted his attention to the
+perfecting of the small, high-speed petrol engine for motor-car
+work, and owing to his efforts, together with those of other
+pioneer engine-builders, the motorcar was made a success. In a
+few years the weight of this type of engine was reduced from near
+on a hundred pounds per horse-power to less than a tenth of that
+weight, but considerable further improvement had to be made
+before an engine suitable for use with aircraft was evolved.
+
+The increase in power of the engines fitted to airships has made
+steady progress from the outset; Haenlein's engine developed
+about 6 horse-power; the Santos-Dumont airship of 1898 was
+propelled by a motor of 4 horse-power; in 1902 the Lebaudy
+airship was fitted with an engine of 40 horse-power, while, in
+1910, the Lebaudy brothers fitted an engine of nearly 300
+horsepower to the airship they were then constructing--1,400
+horse-power was common in the airships of the War period, and
+the later British rigids developed yet more.
+
+Before passing on to consideration of the petrol-driven type of
+engine, it is necessary to accord brief mention to the dirigible
+constructed in 1884 by Gaston and Albert Tissandier, who at
+Grenelle, France, achieved a directed flight in a wind of 8
+miles an hour, obtaining their power for the propeller from 1 1/3
+horse-power Siemens electric motor, which weighed 121 lbs. and
+took its current from a bichromate battery weighing 496 lbs. A
+two-bladed propeller, 9 feet in diameter, was used, and the
+horse-power output was estimated to have run up to 1 1/2 as the
+dirigible successfully described a semicircle in a wind of 8
+miles an hour, subsequently making headway transversely to a wind
+of 7 miles an hour. The dirigible with which this motor was used
+was of the conventional pointed-end type, with a length of 92
+feet, diameter of 30 feet, and capacity of 37,440 cubic feet of
+gas. Commandant Renard, of the French army balloon corps,
+followed up Tissandier's attempt in the next year--1885--making a
+trip from Chalais-Meudon to Paris and returning to the point of
+departure quite successfully. In this case the motive power was
+derived from an electric plant of the type used by the
+Tissandiers, weighing altogether 1,174 lbs., and developing 9
+horsepower. A speed of 14 miles an hour was attained with this
+dirigible, which had a length of 165 feet, diameter of 27 feet,
+and capacity of 65,836 cubic feet of gas.
+
+Reverting to the petrol-fed type again, it is to be noted that
+Santos-Dumont was practically the first to develop the use of
+the ordinary automobile engine for air work--his work is of such
+importance that it has been considered best to treat of it as
+one whole, and details of the power plants are included in the
+account of his experiments. Coming to the Lebaudy brothers and
+their work, their engine of 1902 was a 40 horse-power Daimler,
+four-cylindered; it was virtually a large edition of the Daimler
+car engine, the arrangement of the various details being on the
+lines usually adopted for the standard Daimler type of that
+period. The cylinders were fully water-jacketed, and no special
+attempt toward securing lightness for air work appears to have
+been made.
+
+The fining down of detail that brought weight to such limits as
+would fit the engine for work with heavier-than-air craft
+appears to have waited for the brothers Wright. Toward the end
+of 1903 they fitted to their first practicable flying machine the
+engine which made the historic first aeroplane flight; this
+engine developed 30 horse-power, and weighed only about 7 lbs.
+per horse-power developed, its design and workmanship being far
+ahead of any previous design in this respect, with the exception
+of the remarkable engine, designed by Manly, installed in
+Langley's ill-fated aeroplane--or 'aerodrome,' as he preferred to
+call it--tried in 1903.
+
+The light weight of the Wright brothers' engine did not
+necessitate a high number of revolutions per minute to get the
+requisite power; the speed was only 1,300 revolutions per
+minute, which, with a piston stroke of 3.94 inches, was quite
+moderate. Four cylinders were used, the cylinder diameter being
+4.42 inches; the engine was of the vertical type, arranged to
+drive two propellers at a rate of about 350 revolutions per
+minute, gearing being accomplished by means of chain drive from
+crank-shaft end to propeller spindle.
+
+The methods adopted by the Wrights for obtaining a light-weight
+engine were of considerable interest, in view of the fact that
+the honour of first achieving flight by means of the driven plane
+belongs to them--unless Ader actually flew as he claimed. The
+cylinders of this first Wright engine were separate castings of
+steel, and only the barrels were jacketed, this being done by
+fixing loose, thin aluminium covers round the outside of each
+cylinder. The combustion head and valve pockets were cast
+together with the cylinder barrel, and were not water cooled.
+The inlet valves were of the automatic type, arranged on the tops
+of the cylinders, while the exhaust valves were also overhead,
+operated by rockers and push-rods. The pistons and piston rings
+were of the ordinary type, made of cast-iron, and the connecting
+rods were circular in form, with a hole drilled down the middle
+of each to reduce the weight.
+
+Necessity for increasing power and ever lighter weight in
+relation to the power produced has led to the evolution of a
+number of different designs of internal combustion engines. It
+was quickly realised that increasing the number of cylinders on
+an engine was a better way of getting more power than that of
+increasing the cylinder diameter, as the greater number of
+cylinders gives better torque-even turning effect--as well as
+keeping down the weight--this latter because the bigger
+cylinders must be more stoutly constructed than the small sizes;
+this fact has led to the construction of engines having as many
+as eighteen cylinders, arranged in three parallel rows in order
+to keep the length of crankshaft within reasonable limits. The
+aero engine of to-day may, roughly, be divided into four
+classes: these are the V type, in which two rows of cylinders
+are set parallel at a certain angle to each other; the radial
+type, which consists of cylinders arranged radially and
+remaining stationary while the crankshaft revolves; the rotary,
+where the cylinders are disposed round a common centre and
+revolve round a stationary shaft, and the vertical type, of four
+or six cylinders--seldom more than this--arranged in one row. A
+modification of the V type is the eighteen-cylindered engine--
+the Sunbeam is one of the best examples--in which three rows of
+cylinders are set parallel to each other, working on a common
+crankshaft. The development these four types started with that
+of the vertical--the simplest of all; the V, radial, and rotary
+types came after the vertical, in the order given.
+
+The evolution of the motor-car led to the adoption of the
+vertical type of internal combustion engine in preference to any
+other, and it followed naturally that vertical engines should be
+first used for aeroplane propulsion, as by taking an engine that
+had been developed to some extent, and adapting it to its new
+work, the problem of mechanical flight was rendered easier than
+if a totally new type had had to be evolved. It was quickly
+realised--by the Wrights, in fact-that the minimum of weight per
+horse-power was the prime requirement for the successful
+development of heavier-than-air machines, and at the same time
+it was equally apparent that the utmost reliability had to be
+obtained from the engine, while a third requisite was economy,
+in order to reduce the weight of petrol necessary for flight.
+
+Daimler, working steadily toward the improvement of the internal
+combustion engine, had made considerable progress by the end of
+last century. His two-cylinder engine of 1897 was approaching
+to the present-day type, except as regards the method of
+ignition; the cylinders had 3.55 inch diameter, with a 4.75 inch
+piston stroke, and the engine was rated at 4.5 brake horse-power,
+though it probably developed more than this in actual running at
+its rated speed of 800 revolutions per minute. Power was limited
+by the inlet and exhaust passages, which, compared with
+present-day practice, were very small. The heavy castings of
+which the engine was made up are accounted for by the necessity
+for considering foundry practice of the time, for in 1897
+castings were far below the present-day standard. The crank-case
+of this two-cylinder vertical Daimler engine was the only part
+made of aluminium, and even with this no attempt was made to
+attain lightness, for a circular flange was cast at the bottom to
+form a stand for the engine during machining and erection. The
+general design can be followed from the sectional views, and
+these will show, too, that ignition was by means of a hot tube on
+the cylinder head, which had to be heated with a blow-lamp before
+starting the engine. With all its well known and hated troubles,
+at that time tube ignition had an advantage over the magneto, and
+the coil and accumulator system, in reliability; sparking plugs,
+too, were not so reliable then as they are now. Daimler fitted a
+very simple type of carburettor to this engine, consisting only
+of a float with a single jet placed in the air passage. It may
+be said that this twin-cylindered vertical was the first of the
+series from which has been evolved the Mercedes-Daimler car and
+airship engines, built in sizes up to and even beyond 240
+horse-power.
+
+In 1901 the development of the petrol engine was still so slight
+that it did not admit of the construction, by any European
+maker, of an engine weighing less than 12 lbs. per horse-power.
+Manly, working at the instance of Professor Langley, produced a
+five-cylindered radial type engine, in which both the design and
+workmanship showed a remarkable advance in construction. At 950
+revolutions per minute it developed 52.4 horse-power, weighing
+only 2.4 pounds per horse-power; it was a very remarkable
+achievement in engine design, considering the power developed in
+relation to the total weight, and it was, too, an interruption
+in the development of the vertical type which showed that there
+were other equally great possibilities in design.
+
+In England, the first vertical aero-engine of note was that
+designed by Green, the cylinder dimensions being 4.15 inch
+diameter by 4.75 stroke--a fairly complete idea of this engine
+can be obtained from the accompanying diagrams. At a speed of
+1,160 revolutions per minute it developed 35 brake horse-power,
+and by accelerating up to 1,220 revolutions per minute a maximum
+of 40 brake horse-power could be obtained--the first-mentioned
+was the rated working speed of the engine for continuous runs.
+A flywheel, weighing 23.5 lbs., was fitted to the engine, and
+this, together with the ignition system, brought the weight up
+to 188 lbs., giving 5.4 lbs. per horse-power. In comparison with
+the engine fitted to the Wrights' aeroplane a greater power was
+obtained from approximately the same cylinder volume, and an
+appreciable saving in weight had also been effected. The
+illustration shows the arrangement of the vertical valves at the
+top of the cylinder and the overhead cam shaft, while the
+position of the carburettor and inlet pipes can be also seen.
+The water jackets were formed by thin copper casings, each
+cylinder being separate and having its independent jacket rigidly
+fastened to the cylinder at the top only, thus allowing for free
+expansion of the casing; the joint at the bottom end was formed
+by sliding the jacket over a rubber ring. Each cylinder was
+bolted to the crank-case and set out of line with the crankshaft,
+so that the crank has passed over the upper dead centre by the
+time that the piston is at the top of its stroke when receiving
+the full force of fuel explosion. The advantage of this
+desaxe setting is that the pressure in the cylinder acts on the
+crank-pin with a more effective leverage during that part of the
+stroke when that pressure is highest, and in addition the side
+pressure of the piston on the cylinder wall, due to the thrust of
+the connecting rod, is reduced. Possibly the charging of the
+cylinder is also more complete by this arrangement, owing to the
+slower movement of the piston at the bottom of its stroke
+allowing time for an increased charge of mixture to enter the
+cylinder.
+
+A 60 horse-power engine was also made, having four vertical
+cylinders, each with a diameter of 5.5 inches and stroke of 5.75
+inches, developing its rated power at 1,100 revolutions per
+minute. By accelerating up to 1,200 revolutions per minute 70
+brake horsepower could be obtained, and a maximum of 80 brake
+horse-power was actually attained with the type. The flywheel,
+fitted as with the original 35 horse-power engine, weighed 37
+lbs.; with this and with the ignition system the total weight of
+the engine was only 250 lbs., or 4.2 lbs. per horse-power at
+the normal rating. In this design, however, low weight in
+relation to power was not the ruling factor, for Green gave more
+attention to reliability and economy of fuel consumption, which
+latter was approximately 0.6 pint of petrol per brake
+horse-power per hour. Both the oil for lubricating the bearings
+and the water for cooling the cylinders were circulated by
+pumps, and all parts of the valve gear, etc., were completely
+enclosed for protection from dust.
+
+A later development of the Green engine was a six-cylindered
+vertical, cylinder dimensions being 5.5 inch diameter by 6 inch
+stroke, developing 120 brake horsepower when running at 1,250
+revolutions per minute. The total weight of the engine with
+ignition system 398 was 440 lbs., or 3.66 lbs. per horse-power.
+One of these engines was used on the machine which, in 1909, won
+the prize of L1,000 for the first circular mile flight, and it
+may be noted, too, that S. F. Cody, making the circuit of England
+in 1911, used a four-cylinder Green engine. Again, it was a
+Green engine that in 1914 won the L5,000 prize offered for the
+best aero engine in the Naval and Military aeroplane engine
+competition.
+
+Manufacture of the Green engines, in the period of the War, had
+standardised to the production of three types. Two of these were
+six-cylinder models, giving respectively 100 and 150 brake
+horse-power, and the third was a twelve-cylindered model rated
+at 275 brake horse-power.
+
+In 1910 J. S. Critchley compiled a list showing the types of
+engine then being manufactured; twenty-two out of a total of
+seventy-six were of the four-cylindered vertical type, and in
+addition to these there were two six-cylindered verticals.
+The sizes of the four-cylinder types ranged from 26 up to 118
+brake horse-power; fourteen of them developed less than 50
+horse-power, and only two developed over 100 horse-power.
+
+It became apparent, even in the early stages of heavier-than-air
+flying, that four-cylinder engines did not produce the even
+torque that was required for the rotation of the power shaft,
+even though a flywheel was fitted to the engine. With this type
+of engine the breakage of air-screws was of frequent occurrence,
+and an engine having a more regular rotation was sought, both
+for this and to avoid the excessive vibration often experienced
+with the four-cylinder type. Another, point that forced itself
+on engine builders was that the increased power which was
+becoming necessary for the propulsion of aircraft made an
+increase in the number of cylinders essential, in order to obtain
+a light engine. An instance of the weight reduction obtainable
+in using six cylinders instead of four is shown in Critchley's
+list, for one of the four-cylinder engines developed 118.5 brake
+horse-power and weighed 1,100 lbs., whereas a six-cylinder engine
+by the same manufacturer developed 117.5 brake horse-power with a
+weight of 880 lbs., the respective cylinder dimensions being
+7.48 diameter by 9.06 stroke for the four-cylinder engine, and
+6.1 diameter by 7.28 stroke for the six-cylinder type.
+
+A list of aeroplane engines, prepared in 1912 by Graham Clark,
+showed that, out of the total number of 112 engines then
+being manufactured, forty-two were of the vertical type, and of
+this number twenty-four had four-cylinders while sixteen were
+six-cylindered. The German aeroplane engine trials were held a
+year later, and sixty-six engines entered the competition,
+fourteen of these being made with air-cooled cylinders. All of
+the ten engines that were chosen for the final trials were of
+the water-cooled type, and the first place was won by a Benz
+four-cylinder vertical engine which developed 102 brake
+horse-power at 1,288 revolutions per minute. The cylinder
+dimensions of this engine were 5.1 inch diameter by 7.1 inch
+stroke, and the weight of the engine worked out at 3.4 lbs. per
+brake horse-power. During the trials the full-load petrol
+consumption was 0.53 pint per horse-power per hour, and the
+amount of lubricating oil used was 0.0385 pint per brake
+horse-power per hour. In general construction this Benz engine
+was somewhat similar to the Green engine already described; the
+overhead valves, fitted in the tops of the cylinders, were
+similarly arranged, as was the cam-shaft; two springs were
+fitted to each of the valves to guard against the possibility of
+the engine being put out of action by breakage of one of the
+springs, and ignition was obtained by two high-tension magnetos
+giving simultaneous sparks in each cylinder by means of two
+sparking plugs--this dual ignition reduced the possibility of
+ignition troubles. The cylinder jackets were made of welded
+sheet steel so fitted around the cylinder that the head was also
+water-cooled, and the jackets were corrugated in the middle to
+admit of independent expansion. Even the lubrication system was
+duplicated, two sets of pumps being used, one to circulate the
+main supply of lubricating oil, and the other to give a
+continuous supply of fresh oil to the bearings, so that if the
+supply from one pump failed the other could still maintain
+effective lubrication.
+
+Development of the early Daimler type brought about the
+four-cylinder vertical Mercedes-Daimler engine of 85 horse-power,
+with cylinders of 5.5 diameter with 5.9 inch stroke, the
+cylinders being cast in two pairs. The overhead arrangement of
+valves was adopted, and in later designs push-rods were
+eliminated, the overhead cam-shaft being adopted in their place.
+By 1914 the four-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler had been partially
+displaced from favour by a six-cylindered model, made in two
+sizes; the first of these gave a nominal brake horse-power of 80,
+having cylinders of 4.1 inches diameter by 5.5 inches stroke; the
+second type developed 100 horse-power with cylinders 4.7 inches
+in diameter and 5.5 inches stroke, both types being run at 1,200
+revolutions per minute. The cylinders of both these types were
+cast in pairs, and, instead of the water jackets forming part of
+the casting, as in the design of the original four-cylinder
+Mercedes-Daimler engine, they were made of steel welded to
+flanges on the cylinders. Steel pistons, fitted with cast-iron
+rings, were used, and the overhead arrangement of valves and
+cam-shaft was adopted. About 0.55 pint per brake horse-power per
+hour was the usual fuel consumption necessary to full load
+running, and the engine was also economical as regards the
+consumption of lubricating oil, the lubricating system being
+'forced' for all parts, including the cam-shaft. The shape of
+these engines was very well suited for work with aircraft, being
+narrow enough to admit of a streamline form being obtained, while
+all the accessories could be so mounted as to produce little or
+no wind resistance, and very little obstruction to the pilot's
+view.
+
+The eight-cylinder Mercedes-Daimler engine, used for airship
+propulsion during the War, developed 240 brake horse-power at
+1,100 revolutions per minute; the cylinder dimensions were 6.88
+diameter by 6.5 stroke--one of the instances in which the short
+stroke in relation to bore was very noticeable.
+
+Other instances of successful vertical design-the types already
+detailed are fully sufficient to give particulars of the type
+generally--are the Panhard, Chenu, Maybach, N.A.G., Argus,
+Mulag, and the well-known Austro-Daimler, which by 1917 was
+being copied in every combatant country. There are also the
+later Wright engines, and in America the Wisconsin six-cylinder
+vertical, weighing well under 4 lbs. per horse-power, is
+evidence of the progress made with this first type of aero
+engine to develop.
+
+
+
+II. THE VEE TYPE
+
+An offshoot from the vertical type, doubling the power of this
+with only a very slight--if any--increase in the length of
+crankshaft, the Vee or diagonal type of aero engine leaped to
+success through the insistent demand for greater power.
+Although the design came after that of the vertical engine, by
+1910, according to Critchley's list of aero engines, there
+were more Vee type engines being made than any other type,
+twenty-five sizes being given in the list, with an average
+rating of 57.4 brake horse-power.
+
+The arrangement of the cylinders in Vee form over the
+crankshaft, enabling the pistons of each pair of opposite
+cylinders to act upon the same crank pin, permits of a very
+short, compact engine being built, and also permits of reduction
+of the weight per horsepower, comparing this with that of the
+vertical type of engine, with one row of cylinders. Further, at
+the introduction of this type of engine it was seen that
+crankshaft vibration, an evil of the early vertical engines, was
+practically eliminated, as was the want of longitudinal
+stiffness that characterised the higher-powered vertical
+engines.
+
+Of the Vee type engines shown in Critchley's list in 1910
+nineteen different sizes were constructed with eight cylinders,
+and with horse-powers ranging from thirty to just over the
+hundred; the lightest of these weighed 2.9 lbs. per
+horse-power--a considerable advance in design on the average
+vertical engine, in this respect of weight per horse-power.
+There were also two sixteen-cylinder engines of Vee design, the
+larger of which developed 134 horse-power with a weight of only 2
+lbs. per brake horse-power. Subsequent developments have
+indicated that this type, with the further development from it of
+the double-Vee, or engine with three rows of cylinders, is likely
+to become the standard design of aero engine where high powers
+are required. The construction permits of placing every part so
+that it is easy of access, and the form of the engine implies
+very little head resistance, while it can be placed on the
+machine--supposing that machine to be of the single-engine
+type--in such a way that the view of the pilot is very little
+obstructed while in flight.
+
+An even torque, or great uniformity of rotation, is transmitted
+to the air-screw by these engines, while the design also permits
+of such good balance of the engine itself that vibration is
+practically eliminated. The angle between the two rows of
+cylinders is varied according to the number of cylinders, in
+order to give working impulses at equal angles of rotation and
+thus provide even torque; this angle is determined by dividing
+the number of degrees in a circle by the number of cylinders in
+either row of the engine. In an eight-cylindered Vee type
+engine, the angle between the cylinders is 90 degrees; if it is
+a twelve-cylindered engine, the angle drops to 60 degrees.
+
+One of the earliest of the British-built Vee type engines was an
+eight-cylinder 50 horse-power by the Wolseley Company,
+constructed in 1908 with a cylinder bore of 3.75 inches and
+stroke of 5 inches, running at a normal speed of 1,350
+revolutions per minute. With this engine, a gearing was
+introduced to enable the propeller to run at a lower speed than
+that of the engine, the slight loss of efficiency caused by the
+friction of the gearing being compensated by the slower speed of
+the air-screw, which had higher efficiency than would have been
+the case if it had been run at the engine speed. The ratio of
+the gearing--that is, the speed of the air-screw relatively to
+that of the engine, could be chosen so as to suit exactly the
+requirements of the air-screw, and the gearing itself, on this
+engine, was accomplished on the half-speed shaft actuating the
+valves.
+
+Very soon after this first design had been tried out, a second
+Vee type engine was produced which, at 1,200 revolutions per
+minute, developed 60 horse-power; the size of this engine was
+practically identical with that of its forerunner, the only
+exception being an increase of half an inch in the cylinder
+stroke--a very long stroke of piston in relation to the bore of
+the cylinder. In the first of these two engines, which was
+designed for airship propulsion, the weight had been about 8
+lbs. per brake horse-power, no special attempt appearing to
+have been made to fine down for extreme lightness; in this 60
+horse-power design, the weight was reduced to 6.1 lbs. per
+horse-power, counting the latter as normally rated; the
+engine actually gave a maximum of 75 brake horse-power, reducing
+the ratio of weight to power very considerably below the figure
+given.
+
+The accompanying diagram illustrates a later Wolseley model, end
+elevation, the eight-cylindered 120 horse-power Vee type aero
+engine of the early war period. With this engine, each crank
+pin has two connecting rods bearing on it, these being placed
+side by side and connected to the pistons of opposite cylinders
+and the two cylinders of the pair are staggered by an amount
+equal to the width of the connecting rod bearing, to afford
+accommodation for the rods. The crankshaft was a nickel chrome
+steel forging, machined hollow, with four crank pins set at 180
+degrees to each other, and carried in three bearings lined with
+anti-friction metal. The connecting rods were made of tubular
+nickel chrome steel, and the pistons of drawn steel, each being
+fitted with four piston rings. Of these the two rings nearest to
+the piston head were of the ordinary cast-iron type, while the
+others were of phosphor bronze, so arranged as to take the side
+thrust of the piston. The cylinders were of steel, arranged in
+two groups or rows of four, the angular distance between them
+being 90 degrees. In the space above the crankshaft, between the
+cylinder rows, was placed the valve-operating mechanism, together
+with the carburettor and ignition system, thus rendering this a
+very compact and accessible engine. The combustion heads of the
+cylinders were made of cast-iron, screwed into the steel cylinder
+barrels; the water-jacket was of spun aluminium, with one end
+fitting over the combustion head and the other free to slide on
+the cylinder; the water-joint at the lower end was made tight by
+a Dermatine ring carried between small flanges formed on the
+cylinder barrel. Overhead valves were adopted, and in order to
+make these as large as possible the combustion chamber was made
+slightly larger in diameter than the cylinder, and the valves set
+at an angle. Dual ignition was fitted in each cylinder, coil and
+accumulator being used for starting and as a reserve in case of
+failure of the high-tension magneto system fitted for normal
+running. There was a double set of lubricating pumps, ensuring
+continuity of the oil supply to all the bearings of the engine.
+
+The feature most noteworthy in connection with the running of
+this type of engine was its flexibility; the normal output of
+power was obtained with 1,150 revolutions per minute of the
+crankshaft, but, by accelerating up to 1,400 revolutions, a
+maximum of 147 brake horse-power could be obtained. The weight
+was about 5 lbs. per horse-power, the cylinder dimensions being
+5 inches bore by 7 inches stroke. Economy in running was
+obtained, the fuel consumption being 0.58 pint per brake
+horse-power per hour at full load, with an expenditure of about
+0.075 pint of lubricating oil per brake horse-power per hour.
+
+Another Wolseley Vee type that was standardised was a 90
+horse-power eight-cylinder engine running at 1,800 revolutions
+per minute, with a reducing gear introduced by fitting the air
+screw on the half-speed shaft. First made semi-cooled--the
+exhaust valve was left air-cooled, and then entirely
+water-jacketed--this engine demonstrated the advantage of full
+water cooling, for under the latter condition the same power was
+developed with cylinders a quarter of an inch less in diameter
+than in the semi-cooled pattern; at the same time the weight was
+brought down to 4 1/2 lbs. per horsepower.
+
+A different but equally efficient type of Vee design was the
+Dorman engine, of which an end elevation is shown; this
+developed 80 brake horse-power at a speed of 1,300 revolutions
+per minute, with a cylinder bore of 5 inches; each cylinder was
+made in cast-iron in one piece with the combustion chamber, the
+barrel only being water-jacketed. Auxiliary exhaust ports were
+adopted, the holes through the cylinder wall being uncovered by
+the piston at the bottom of its stroke--the piston, 4.75 inches
+in length, was longer than its stroke, so that these ports were
+covered when it was at the top of the cylinder. The exhaust
+discharged through the ports into a belt surrounding the
+cylinder, the belts on the cylinders being connected so that the
+exhaust gases were taken through a single pipe. The air was
+drawn through the crank case, before reaching the carburettor,
+this having the effect of cooling the oil in the crank case as
+well as warming the air and thus assisting in vaporising the
+petrol for each charge of the cylinders. The inlet and exhaust
+valves were of the overhead type, as may be gathered from the
+diagram, and in spite of cast-iron cylinders being employed a
+light design was obtained, the total weight with radiator,
+piping, and water being only 5.5 lbs. per horse-power.
+
+Here was the antithesis of the Wolseley type in the matter of
+bore in relation to stroke; from about 1907 up to the beginning
+of the war, and even later, there was controversy as to which
+type--that in which the bore exceeded the stroke, or vice
+versa--gave greater efficiency. The short-stroke enthusiasts
+pointed to the high piston speed of the long-stroke type, while
+those who favoured the latter design contended that full power
+could not be obtained from each explosion in the short-stroke
+type of cylinder. It is now generally conceded that the
+long-stroke engine yields higher efficiency, and in addition to
+this, so far as car engines are concerned, the method of rating
+horse-power in relation to bore without taking stroke into
+account has given the long-stroke engine an advantage, actual
+horse-power with a long stroke engine being in excess of the
+nominal rating. This may have had some influence on aero engine
+design, but, however this may have been, the long-stroke engine
+has gradually come to favour, and its rival has taken second
+place.
+
+For some time pride of place among British Vee type engines was
+held by the Sunbeam Company, which, owing to the genius of Louis
+Coatalen, together with the very high standard of construction
+maintained by the firm, achieved records and fame in the middle
+and later periods of the war. Their 225 horse-power
+twelve-cylinder engine ran at a normal speed of 2,000 revolutions
+per minute; the air screw was driven through gearing at half this
+speed, its shaft being separate from the timing gear and carried
+in ball-bearings on the nose-piece of the engine. The cylinders
+were of cast-iron, entirely water-cooled; a thin casing formed
+the water-jacket, and a very light design was obtained, the
+weight being only 3.2 lbs. per horse-power. The first engine of
+Sunbeam design had eight cylinders and developed 150 horse-power
+at 2,000 revolutions per minute; the final type of Vee design
+produced during the war was twelve-cylindered, and yielded 310
+horse-power with cylinders 4.3 inches bore by 6.4 inches stroke.
+Evidence in favour of the long-stroke engine is afforded in this
+type as regards economy of working; under full load, working at
+2,000 revolutions per minute, the consumption was 0.55 pints of
+fuel per brake horse-power per hour, which seems to indicate that
+the long stroke permitted of full use being made of the power
+resulting from each explosion, in spite of the high rate of speed
+of the piston.
+
+Developing from the Vee type, the eighteen-cylinder 475 brake
+horse-power engine, designed during the war, represented
+for a time the limit of power obtainable from a single plant.
+It was water-cooled throughout, and the ignition to each
+cylinder was duplicated; this engine proved fully efficient, and
+economical in fuel consumption. It was largely used for
+seaplane work, where reliability was fully as necessary as high
+power.
+
+The abnormal needs of the war period brought many British firms
+into the ranks of Vee-type engine-builders, and, apart from
+those mentioned, the most notable types produced are the
+Rolls-Royce and the Napier. The first mentioned of these firms,
+previous to 1914 had concentrated entirely on car engines, and
+their very high standard of production in this department of
+internal combustion engine work led, once they took up the
+making of aero engines, to extreme efficiency both of design and
+workmanship. The first experimental aero engine, of what became
+known as the 'Eagle' type, was of Vee design--it was completed
+in March of 1915--and was so successful that it was standardised
+for quantity production. How far the original was from the
+perfection subsequently ascertained is shown by the steady
+increase in developed horse-power of the type; originally
+designed to develop 200 horse-power, it was developed and
+improved before its first practical trial in October of 1915,
+when it developed 255 horsepower on a brake test. Research and
+experiment produced still further improvements, for, without any
+enlargement of the dimensions, or radical alteration in design,
+the power of the engine was brought up to 266 horse-power by
+March of 1916, the rate of revolutions of 1,800 per minute being
+maintained throughout. July, 1916 gave 284 horse-power; by the
+cud of the year this had been increased to 322 horse-power; by
+September of 1917 the increase was to 350 horse-power, and by
+February of 1918 then 'Eagle' type of engine was rated at 360
+horse-power, at which standard it stayed. But there is no more
+remarkable development in engine design than this, a 75 per cent
+increase of power in the same engine in a period of less than
+three years.
+
+To meet the demand for a smaller type of engine for use on
+training machines, the Rolls-Royce firm produced the 'Hawk'
+Vee-type engine of 100 horsepower, and, intermediately between
+this and the 'Eagle,' the 'Falcon' engine came to being with an
+original rated horse-power of 205 at 1,800 revolutions per
+minute, in April of 1916. Here was another case of growth of
+power in the same engine through research, almost similar to
+that of the 'Eagle' type, for by July of 1918 the 'Falcon' was
+developing 285 horse-power with no radical alteration of
+design. Finally, in response to the constant demand for
+increase of power in a single plant, the Rolls-Royce company
+designed and produced the 'Condor' type of engine, which yielded
+600 horse-power on its first test in August of 1918. The
+cessation of hostilities and consequent falling off in the
+demand for extremely high-powered plants prevented the 'Condor'
+being developed to its limit, as had been the 'Falcon' and
+'Eagle' types.
+
+The 'Eagle 'engine was fitted to the two Handley-Page
+aeroplanes--which made flights from England to India--it was
+virtually standard on the Handley-Page bombers of the later War
+period, though to a certain extent the American 'Liberty' engine
+was also used. Its chief record, however, is that of being the
+type fitted to the Vickers-Vimy aeroplane which made the first
+Atlantic flight, covering the distance of 1,880 miles at a speed
+averaging 117 miles an hour.
+
+The Napier Company specialised on one type of engine from the
+outset, a power plant which became known as the 'Lion' engine,
+giving 450 horse-power with twelve cylinders arranged in three
+rows of four each. Considering the engine as 'dry,' or without
+fuel and accessories, an abnormally light weight per
+horse-power--only 1.89 lbs.--was attained when running at the
+normal rate of revolution. The cylinders and water-jackets are
+of steel, and there is fitted a detachable aluminium cylinder
+head containing inlet and exhaust valves and valve actuating
+mechanism; pistons are of aluminium alloy, and there are two
+inlet and two exhaust valves to each cylinder, the whole of the
+valve mechanism being enclosed in an oil-tight aluminium case.
+Connecting rods and crankshaft are of steel, the latter being
+machined from a solid steel forging and carried in five roller
+bearings and one plain bearing at the forward end. The front end
+of the crank-case encloses reduction gear for the propeller
+shaft, together with the shaft and bearings. There are two
+suction and one pressure type oil pumps driven through gears at
+half-engine speed, and two 12 spark magnetos, giving 2 sparks in
+each cylinder.
+
+The cylinders are set with the central row vertical, and the two
+side rows at angles of 60 degrees each; cylinder bore is 5 1/2
+inches, and stroke 5 1/8 inches; the normal rate of revolution
+is 1,350 per minute, and the reducing gear gives one revolution
+of the propeller shaft to 1.52 revolutions of crankshaft. Fuel
+consumption is 0.48lbs. of fuel per brake horse-power hour at
+full load, and oil consumption is 0.020 lbs. per brake horsepower
+hour. The dry weight of the engine, complete with propeller
+boss, carburettors, and induction pipes, is 850 lbs., and the
+gross weight in running order, with fuel and oil for six hours
+working, is 2,671 lbs., exclusive of cooling water.
+
+To this engine belongs an altitude record of 30,500 feet, made at
+Martlesham, near Ipswich, on January 2nd, 1919, by Captain Lang,
+R.A.F., the climb being accomplished in 66 minutes 15 seconds.
+Previous to this, the altitude record was held by an Italian
+pilot, who made 25,800 feet in an hour and 57 minutes in 1916.
+Lang's climb was stopped through the pressure of air, at the
+altitude he reached, being insufficient for driving the small
+propellers on the machine which worked the petrol and oil pumps,
+or he might have made the height said to have been attained by
+Major Schroeder on February 27th, 1920, at Dayton, Ohio.
+Schroeder is said to have reached an altitude of 36,020 feet on a
+Napier biplane, and, owing to failure of the oxygen supply, to
+have lost consciousness, fallen five miles, righted his machine
+when 2,000 feet in the air, and alighted successfully. Major
+Schroeder is an American.
+
+Turning back a little, and considering other than British design
+of Vee and double-Vee or 'Broad arrow' type of engine, the
+Renault firm from the earliest days devoted considerable
+attention to the development of this type, their air-cooled
+engines having been notable examples from the earliest days of
+heavier-than-air machines. In 1910 they were making three sizes
+of eight-cylindered Vee-type engines, and by 1915 they had
+increased to the manufacture of five sizes, ranging from 25 to
+100 brake horse-power, the largest of the five sizes having
+twelve cylinders but still retaining the air-cooled principle.
+The De Dion firm, also, made Vee-type engines in 1914, being
+represented by an 80 horse-power eight-cylindered engine,
+air-cooled, and a 150 horse-power, also of eight cylinders,
+water-cooled, running at a normal rate of 1,600 revolutions per
+minute. Another notable example of French construction was the
+Panhard and Levassor 100 horse-power eight-cylinder Vee engine,
+developing its rated power at 1,500 revolutions per minute, and
+having the--for that time--low weight of 4.4 lbs. per
+horse-power.
+
+American Vee design has followed the British fairly cclosely;
+the Curtiss Company produced originally a 75 horse-power
+eight-cylinder Vee type running at 1,200 revolutions per minute,
+supplementing this with a 170 horse-power engine running at
+1,600 revolutions per minute, and later with a twelve-cylinder
+model Vee type, developing 300 horse-power at 1,500 revolutions
+per minute, with cylinder bore of 5 inches and stroke of 7
+inches. An exceptional type of American design was the Kemp Vee
+engine of 80 horse-power in which the cylinders were cooled by a
+current of air obtained from a fan at the forward end of the
+engine. With cylinders of 4.25 inches bore and 4.75 inches
+stroke, the rater power was developed at 1,150 revolutions per
+minute, and with the engine complete the weight was only 4.75
+lbs. per horse-power.
+
+
+
+III. THE RADIAL TYPE
+
+The very first successful design of internal combustion aero
+engine made was that of Charles Manly, who built a five-cylinder
+radial engine in 1901 for use with Langley's 'aerodrome,' as the
+latter inventor decided to call what has since become known as
+the aeroplane. Manly made a number of experiments, and finally
+decided on radial design, in which the cylinders are so rayed
+round a central crank-pin that the pistons act successively upon
+it; by this arrangement a very short and compact engine is
+obtained, with a minimum of weight, and a regular crankshaft
+rotation and perfect balance of inertia forces.
+
+When Manly designed his radial engine, high speed internal
+combustion engines were in their infancy, and the difficulties in
+construction can be partly realised when the lack of
+manufacturing methods for this high-class engine work, and the
+lack of experimental data on the various materials, are taken
+into account. During its tests, Manly's engine developed 52.4
+brake horsepower at a speed of 950 revolutions per minute, with
+the remarkably low weight of only 2.4 lbs. per horsepower; this
+latter was increased to 3.6 lbs. when the engine was completed by
+the addition of ignition system, radiator, petrol tank, and all
+accessories, together with the cooling water for the cylinders.
+
+In Manly's engine, the cylinders were of steel, machined outside
+and inside to 1/16 of an inch thickness; on the side of cylinder,
+at the top end, the valve chamber was brazed, being machined
+from a solid forging, The casing which formed the water-jacket
+was of sheet steel, 1/50 of an inch in thickness, and this also
+was brazed on the cylinder and to the valve chamber. Automatic
+inlet valves were fitted, and the exhaust valves were operated
+by a cam which had two points, 180 degrees apart; the cam was
+rotated in the opposite direction to the engine at one-quarter
+engine speed. Ignition was obtained by using a one-spark coil
+and vibrator for all cylinders, with a distributor to select the
+right cylinder for each spark--this was before the days of the
+high-tension magneto and the almost perfect ignition systems that
+makers now employ. The scheme of ignition for this engine was
+originated by Manly himself, and he also designed the sparking
+plugs fitted in the tops of the cylinders. Through fear of
+trouble resulting if the steel pistons worked on the steel
+cylinders, cast iron liners were introduced in the latter, 1/16
+of an inch thick.
+
+The connecting rods of this engine were of virtually the same
+type as is employed on nearly all modern radial engines. The
+rod for one cylinder had a bearing along the whole of the crank
+pin, and its end enclosed the pin; the other four rods had
+bearings upon the end of the first rod, and did not touch the
+crank pin. The accompanying diagram shows this construction,
+together with the means employed for securing the ends of the
+four rods--the collars were placed in position after the rods
+had been put on. The bearings of these rods did not receive any
+of the rubbing effect due to the rotation of the crank pin, the
+rubbing on them being only that of the small angular displacement
+of the rods during each revolution; thus there was no difficulty
+experienced with the lubrication.
+
+Another early example of the radial type of engine was the
+French Anzani, of which type one was fitted to the machine with
+which Bleriot first crossed the English Channel--this was of 25
+horse-power. The earliest Anzani engines were of the
+three-cylinder fan type, one cylinder being vertical, and the
+other two placed at an angle of 72 degrees on each side, as the
+possibility of over-lubrication of the bottom cylinders was
+feared if a regular radial construction were adopted. In order
+to overcome the unequal balance of this type, balance weights
+were fitted inside the crank case.
+
+The final development of this three-cylinder radial was the 'Y'
+type of engine, in which the cylinders were regularly disposed
+at 120 degrees apart, the bore was 4.1, stroke 4.7 inches, and
+the power developed was 30 brake horse-power at 1,300
+revolutions per minute.
+
+Critchley's list of aero engines being constructed in 1910 shows
+twelve of the radial type, with powers of between 14 and 100
+horse-power, and with from three to ten cylinder--this last is
+probably the greatest number of cylinders that can be
+successfully arranged in circular form. Of the twelve types of
+1910, only two were water-cooled, and it is to be noted that
+these two ran at the slowest speeds and had the lowest weight per
+horse-power of any.
+
+The Anzani radial was considerably developed special attention
+being paid to this type by its makers and by 1914 the Anzani
+list comprised seven different sizes of air-cooled radials. Of
+these the largest had twenty cylinders, developing 200 brake
+horse-power--it was virtually a double radial--and the smallest
+was the original 30 horse-power three-cylinder design. A
+six-cylinder model was formed by a combination of two groups of
+three cylinders each, acting upon a double-throw crankshaft; the
+two crank pins were set at 180 degrees to each other, and the
+cylinder groups were staggered by an amount equal to the
+distance between the centres of the crank pins. Ten-cylinder
+radial engines are made with two groups of five cylinders acting
+upon two crank pins set at 180 degrees to each other, the largest
+Anzani 'ten' developed 125 horsepower at 1,200 revolutions per
+minute, the ten cylinders being each 4.5 inches in bore with
+stroke of 5.9 inches, and the weight of the engine being 3.7 lbs.
+per horse-power. In the 200 horse-power Anzani radial the
+cylinders are arranged in four groups of five each, acting on two
+crank pins. The bore of the cylinders in this engine is the same
+as in the three-cylinder, but the stroke is increased to 5.5
+inches. The rated power is developed at 1,300 revolutions per
+minute, and the engine complete weighs 3.4 lbs. per horse-power.
+
+With this 200 horse-power Anzani, a petrol consumption of as low
+as 0.49 lbs. of fuel per brake horse-power per hour has been
+obtained, but the consumption of lubricating oil is
+compensatingly high, being up to one-fifth of the fuel used. The
+cylinders are set desaxe with the crank shaft, and are of
+cast-iron, provided with radiating ribs for air-cooling; they are
+attached to the crank case by long bolts passing through bosses
+at the top of the cylinders, and connected to other bolts at
+right angles through the crank case. The tops of the cylinders
+are formed flat, and seats for the inlet and exhaust valves are
+formed on them. The pistons are cast-iron, fitted with ordinary
+cast-iron spring rings. An aluminium crank case is used, being
+made in two halves connected together by bolts, which latter also
+attach the engine to the frame of the machine. The crankshaft
+is of nickel steel, made hollow, and mounted on ball-bearings in
+such a manner that practically a combination of ball and plain
+bearings is obtained; the central web of the shaft is bent to
+bring the centres of the crank pins as close together as
+possible, leaving only room for the connecting rods, and the pins
+are 180 degrees apart. Nickel steel valves of the cone-seated,
+poppet type are fitted, the inlet valves being automatic, and
+those for the exhaust cam-operated by means of push-rods. With
+an engine having such a number of cylinders a very uniform
+rotation of the crankshaft is obtained, and in actual running
+there are always five of the cylinders giving impulses to the
+crankshaft at the same time.
+
+An interesting type of pioneer radial engine was the Farcot, in
+which the cylinders were arranged in a horizontal plane, with a
+vertical crankshaft which operated the air-screw through bevel
+gearing. This was an eight-cylinder engine, developing 64
+horse-power at 1,200 revolutions per minute. The R.E.P. type,in
+the early days, was a 'fan' engine, but the designer, M. Robert
+Pelterie, turned from this design to a seven-cylinder radial,
+which at 1,100 revolutions per minute gave 95 horse-power.
+Several makers entered into radial engine development in the
+years immediately preceding the War, and in 1914 there were some
+twenty-two different sizes and types, ranging from 30 to 600
+horse-power, being made, according to report; the actual
+construction of the latter size at this time, however, is
+doubtful.
+
+Probably the best example of radial construction up to the
+outbreak of War was the Salmson (Canton-Unne) water-cooled, of
+which in 1914 six sizes were listed as available. Of these
+the smallest was a seven-cylinder 90 horse-power engine, and the
+largest, rated at 600 horse-power, had eighteen cylinders.
+These engines, during the War, were made under license by the
+Dudbridge Ironworks in Great Britain.
+
+The accompanying diagram shows the construction of the cylinders
+in the 200 horse-power size, showing the method of cooling, and
+the arrangement of the connecting rods. A patent planetary gear,
+also shown in the diagram, gives exactly the same stroke to all
+the pistons. The complete engine has fourteen cylinders, of
+forged steel machined all over, and so secured to the crank
+case that any one can be removed without parting the crank case.
+The water-jackets are of spun copper, brazed on to the cylinder,
+and corrugated so as to admit of free expansion; the water is
+circulated by means of a centrifugal pump. The pistons are of
+cast-iron, each fitted with three rings, and the connecting rods
+are of high grade steel, machined all over and fitted with
+bushes of phosphor bronze; these rods are connected to a central
+collar, carried on the crank pin by two ball-bearings. The
+crankshaft has a single throw, and is made in two parts to allow
+the cage for carrying the big end-pins of the connecting rods to
+be placed in position.
+
+The casing is in two parts, on one of which the brackets for
+fixing the engine are carried, while the other part carries the
+valve-gear. Bolts secure the two parts together. The
+mechanically-operated steel valves on the cylinders are each
+fitted with double springs and the valves are operated by rods
+and levers. Two Zenith carburettors are fitted on the rear half
+of the crank case, and short induction pipes are led to each
+cylinder; each of the carburettors is heated by the exhaust
+gases. Ignition is by two high-tension magnetos, and a
+compressed air self-starting arrangement is provided. Two oil
+pumps are fitted for lubricating purposes, one of which forces
+oil to the crankshaft and connecting-rod bearings, while the
+second forces oil to the valve gear, the cylinders being so
+arranged that the oil which flows along the walls cannot flood
+the lower cylinders. This engine operates upon a six-stroke
+cycle, a rather rare arrangement for internal combustion engines
+of the electrical ignition type; this is done in order to obtain
+equal angular intervals for the working impulses imparted to the
+rotating crankshaft, as the cylinders are arranged in groups of
+seven, and all act upon the one crankshaft. The angle,
+therefore, between the impulses is 77 1/7 degrees. A diagram is
+inset giving a side view of the engine, in order to show the
+grouping of the cylinders.
+
+The 600 horse-power Salmson engine was designed with a view to
+fitting to airships, and was in reality two nine-cylindered
+engines, with a gear-box connecting them; double air-screws were
+fitted, and these were so arranged that either or both of them
+might be driven by either or both engines; in addition to this,
+the two engines were complete and separate engines as regards
+carburation and ignition, etc., so that they could be run
+independently of each other. The cylinders were exceptionally
+'long stroke,' being 5.9 inches bore to 8.27 inches stroke, and
+the rated power was developed at 1,200 revolutions per minute,
+the weight of the complete engine being only 4.1 lbs. per
+horse-power at the normal rating.
+
+A type of engine specially devised for airship propulsion is
+that in which the cylinders are arranged horizontally instead of
+vertically, the main advantages of this form being the reduction
+of head resistance and less obstruction to the view of the
+pilot. A casing, mounted on the top of the engine, supports the
+air-screw, which is driven through bevel gearing from the upper
+end of the crankshaft. With this type of engine a better rate
+of air-screw efficiency is obtained by gearing the screw down to
+half the rate of revolution of the engine, this giving a more
+even torque. The petrol consumption of the type is very low,
+being only 0.48 lbs. per horse-power per hour, and equal
+economy is claimed as regards lubricating oil, a consumption of
+as little as 0.04 lbs. per horse-power per hour being claimed.
+
+Certain American radial engines were made previous to 1914, the
+principal being the Albatross six-cylinder engines of 50 and 100
+horse-powers. Of these the smaller size was air-cooled, with
+cylinders of 4.5 inches bore and 5 inches stroke, developing the
+rated power at 1,230 revolutions per minute, with a weight of
+about 5 lbs. per horse-power. The 100 horse-power size had
+cylinders of 5.5 inches bore, developing its rated power at 1,230
+revolutions per minute, and weighing only 2.75 lbs. per
+horse-power. This engine was markedly similar to the
+six-cylindered Anzani, having all the valves mechanically
+operated, and with auxiliary exhaust ports at the bottoms of the
+cylinders, overrun by long pistons. These Albatross engines had
+their cylinders arranged in two groups of three, with each group
+of three pistons operating on one of two crank pins, each
+180 degrees apart.
+
+The radial type of engine, thanks to Charles Manly, had the
+honour of being first in the field as regards aero work. Its
+many advantages, among which may be specially noted the very
+short crankshaft as compared with vertical, Vee, or 'broad arrow'
+type of engine, and consequent greater rigidity, ensure it
+consideration by designers of to-day, and render it certain that
+the type will endure. Enthusiasts claim that the 'broad arrow'
+type, or Vee with a third row of cylinders inset between the
+original two, is just as much a development from the radial
+engine as from the vertical and resulting Vee; however this may
+be, there is a place for the radial type in air-work for as long
+as the internal combustion engine remains as a power plant.
+
+
+
+IV. THE ROTARY TYPE
+
+M. Laurent Seguin, the inventor of the Gnome rotary aero engine,
+provided as great a stimulus to aviation as any that was given
+anterior to the war period, and brought about a great advance in
+mechanical flight, since these well-made engines gave a
+high-power output for their weight, and were extremely smooth
+in running. In the rotary design the crankshaft of the engine
+is stationary, and the cylinders, crank case, and all their
+adherent parts rotate; the working is thus exactly opposite in
+principle to that of the radial type of aero engine, and the
+advantage of the rotary lies in the considerable flywheel effect
+produced by the revolving cylinders, with consequent evenness of
+torque. Another advantage is that air-cooling, adopted in all
+the Gnome engines, is rendered much more effective by the
+rotation of the cylinders, though there is a tendency to
+distortion through the leading side of each cylinder being more
+efficiently cooled than the opposite side; advocates of other
+types are prone to claim that the air resistance to the
+revolving cylinders absorbs some 10 per cent of the power
+developed by the rotary engine, but that has not prevented the
+rotary from attaining to great popularity as a prime mover.
+
+There were, in the list of aero engines compiled in 1910,
+five rotary engines included, all air-cooled. Three of these
+were Gnome engines, and two of the make known as 'International.'
+They ranged from 21.5 to 123 horse-power, the latter being rated
+at only 1.8 lbs. weight per brake horse-power, and having
+fourteen cylinders, 4.33 inches in diameter by 4.7 inches stroke.
+By 1914 forty-three different sizes and types of rotary engine
+were being constructed, and in 1913 five rotary type engines were
+entered for the series of aeroplane engine trials held in
+Germany. Minor defects ruled out four of these, and only the
+German Bayerischer Motoren Flugzeugwerke completed the seven-hour
+test prescribed for competing engines. Its large fuel
+consumption barred this engine from the final trials, the
+consumption being some 0.95 pints per horse-power per hour. The
+consumption of lubricating oil, also was excessive, standing at
+0.123 pint per horse-power per hour. The engine gave 37.5
+effective horse-power during its trial, and the loss due to air
+resistance was 4.6 horse-power, about 11 per cent. The
+accompanying drawing shows the construction of the engine, in
+which the seven cylinders are arranged radially on the crank
+case; the method of connecting the pistons to the crank pins can
+be seen. The mixture is drawn through the crank chamber, and to
+enter the cylinder it passes through the two automatic valves in
+the crown of the piston; the exhaust valves are situated in the
+tops of the cylinders, and are actuated by cams and push-rods.
+Cooling of the cylinder is assisted by the radial rings, and the
+diameter of these rings is increased round the hottest part of
+the cylinder. When long flights are undertaken the advantage of
+the light weight of this engine is more than counterbalanced by
+its high fuel and lubricating oil consumption, but there are
+other makes which are much better than this seven-cylinder German
+in respect of this.
+
+Rotation of the cylinders in engines of this type is produced by
+the side pressure of the pistons on the cylinder walls, and in
+order to prevent this pressure from becoming abnormally large it
+is necessary to keep the weight of the piston as low as possible,
+as the pressure is produced by the tangential acceleration and
+retardation of the piston. On the upward stroke the
+circumferential velocity of the piston is rapidly increased,
+which causes it to exert a considerable tangential pressure on
+the side of the cylinder, and on the return stroke there is a
+corresponding retarding effect due to the reduction of the
+circumferential velocity of the piston. These side pressures
+cause an appreciable increase in the temperatures of the
+cylinders and pistons, which makes it necessary to keep the
+power rating of the engines fairly low.
+
+Seguin designed his first Gnome rotary as a 34 horse-power
+engine when run at a speed of 1,300 revolutions per minute. It
+had five cylinders, and the weight was 3.9 lbs. per horse-power.
+A seven-cylinder model soon displaced this first engine, and
+this latter, with a total weight of 165 lbs., gave 61.5
+horse-power. The cylinders were machined out of solid nickel
+chrome-steel ingots, and the machining was carried out so that
+the cylinder walls were under 1/6 of an inch in thickness. The
+pistons were cast-iron, fitted each with two rings, and the
+automatic inlet valve to the cylinder was placed in the crown of
+the piston. The connecting rods, of 'H' section, were of nickel
+chrome-steel, and the large end of one rod, known as the
+'master-rod' embraced the crank pin; on the end of this rod six
+hollow steel pins were carried, and to these the remaining six
+connecting-rods were attached. The crankshaft of the engine was
+made of nickel chrome-steel, and was in two parts connected
+together at the crank pin; these two parts, after the master-rod
+had been placed in position and the other connecting rods had
+been attached to it, were firmly secured. The steel crank case
+was made in five parts, the two central ones holding the
+cylinders in place, and on one side another of the five castings
+formed a cam-box, to the outside of which was secured the
+extension to which the air-screw was attached. On the other
+side of the crank case another casting carried the thrust-box,
+and the whole crank case, with its cylinders and gear, was
+carried on the fixed crank shaft by means of four ball-bearings,
+one of which also took the axial thrust of the air-screw.
+
+For these engines, castor oil is the lubricant usually adopted,
+and it is pumped to the crankshaft by means of a gear-driven oil
+pump; from this shaft the other parts of the engine are
+lubricated by means of centrifugal force, and in actual practice
+sufficient unburnt oil passes through the cylinders to lubricate
+the exhaust valve, which partly accounts for the high rate of
+consumption of lubricating oil. A very simple carburettor of
+the float less, single-spray type was used, and the mixture was
+passed along the hollow crankshaft to the interior of the crank
+case, thence through the automatic inlet valves in the tops of
+the pistons to the combustion chambers of the cylinders.
+Ignition was by means of a high-tension magneto specially geared
+to give the correct timing, and the working impulses occurred at
+equal angular intervals of 102.85 degrees. The ignition was
+timed so that the firing spark occurred when the cylinder was 26
+degrees before the position in which the piston was at the outer
+end of its stroke, and this timing gave a maximum pressure in
+the cylinder just after the piston had passed this position.
+
+By 1913, eight different sizes of the Gnome engine were being
+constructed, ranging from 45 to 180 brake horse-power; four of
+these were single-crank engines one having nine and the other
+three having seven cylinders. The remaining four were
+constructed with two cranks; three of them had fourteen
+cylinders apiece, ranged in groups of seven, acting on the
+cranks, and the one other had eighteen cylinders ranged in two
+groups of nine, acting on its two cranks. Cylinders of the
+two-crank engines are so arranged (in the fourteen-cylinder
+type) that fourteen equal angular impulses occur during each
+cycle; these engines are supported on bearings on both sides of
+the engine, the air-screw being placed outside the front
+support. In the eighteen-cylinder model the impulses occur at
+each 40 degrees of angular rotation of the cylinders, securing
+an extremely even rotation of the air-screw.
+
+In 1913 the Gnome Monosoupape engine was introduced, a model in
+which the inlet valve to the cylinder was omitted, while the
+piston was of the ordinary cast-iron type. A single exhaust
+valve in the cylinder head was operated in a manner similar to
+that on the previous Gnome engines, and the fact of this being
+the only valve on the cylinder gave the engine its name. Each
+cylinder contained ports at the bottom which communicated with
+the crank chamber, and were overrun by the piston when this
+was approaching the bottom end of its stroke. During the
+working cycle of the engine the exhaust valve was opened early
+to allow the exhaust gases to escape from the cylinder, so that
+by the time the piston overran the ports at the bottom the
+pressure within the cylinder was approximately equal to that in
+the crank case, and practically no flow of gas took place in
+either direction through the ports. The exhaust valve remained
+open as usual during the succeeding up-stroke of the piston, and
+the valve was held open until the piston had returned through
+about one-third of its downward stroke, thus permitting fresh air
+to enter the cylinder. The exhaust valve then closed, and the
+downward motion of the piston, continuing, caused a partial
+vacuum inside the cylinder; when the piston overran the ports,
+the rich mixture from the crank case immediately entered. The
+cylinder was then full of the mixture, and the next upward stroke
+of the piston compressed the charge; upon ignition the working
+cycle was repeated. The speed variation of this engine was
+obtained by varying the extent and duration of the opening of the
+exhaust valves, and was controlled by the pilot by hand-operated
+levers acting on the valve tappet rollers. The weight per
+horsepower of these engines was slightly less than that of the
+two-valve type, while the lubrication of the gudgeon pin and
+piston showed an improvement, so that a lower lubricating oil
+consumption was obtained. The 100 horse-power Gnome Monosoupape
+was built with nine cylinders, each 4.33 inches bore by 5.9
+inches stroke, and it developed its rated power at 1,200
+revolutions per minute.
+
+An engine of the rotary type, almost as well known as the Gnome,
+is the Clerget, in which both cylinders and crank case are made
+of steel, the former having the usual radial fins for cooling.
+In this type the inlet and exhaust valves are both located in
+the cylinder head, and mechanically operated by push-rods and
+rockers. Pipes are carried from the crank case to the inlet
+valve casings to convey the mixture to the cylinders, a
+carburettor of the central needle type being used. The
+carburetted mixture is taken into the crank case chamber in a
+manner similar to that of the Gnome engine. Pistons of
+aluminium alloy, with three cast-iron rings, are fitted, the top
+ring being of the obturator type. The large end of one of the
+nine connecting rods embraces the crank pin and the pressure is
+taken on two ball-bearings housed in the end of the rod. This
+carries eight pins, to which the other rods are attached, and the
+main rod being rigid between the crank pin and piston pin
+determines the position of the pistons. Hollow connecting-rods
+are used, and the lubricating oil for the piston pins passes from
+the crankshaft through the centres of the rods. Inlet and
+exhaust valves can be set quite independently of one another--a
+useful point, since the correct timing of the opening of these
+valves is of importance. The inlet valve opens 4 degrees from
+top centre and closes after the bottom dead centre of the piston;
+the exhaust valve opens 68 degrees before the bottom centre and
+closes 4 degrees after the top dead centre of the piston. The
+magnetos are set to give the spark in the cylinder at 25 degrees
+before the end of the compression stroke--two high-tension
+magnetos are used: if desired, the second one can be adjusted to
+give a later spark for assisting the starting of the engine. The
+lubricating oil pump is of the valveless two-plunger type, so
+geared that it runs at seven revolutions to 100 revolutions of
+the engine; by counting the pulsations the speed of the engine
+can be quickly calculated by multiplying the pulsations by 100
+and dividing by seven. In the 115 horse-power nine-cylinder
+Clerget the cylinders are 4.7 bore with a 6.3 inches stroke, and
+the rated power of the engine is obtained at 1,200 revolutions
+per minute. The petrol consumption is 0.75 pint per horse-power
+per hour.
+
+A third rotary aero engine, equally well known with the
+foregoing two, is the Le Rhone, made in four different sizes
+with power outputs of from 50 to 160 horse-power; the two
+smaller sizes are single crank engines with seven and nine
+cylinders respectively, and the larger sizes are of double-crank
+design, being merely the two smaller sizes doubled--fourteen and
+eighteen-cylinder engines. The inlet and exhaust valves are
+located in the cylinder head, and both valves are mechanically
+operated by one push-rod and rocker, radial pipes from crank
+case to inlet valve casing taking the mixture to the cylinders.
+The exhaust valves are placed on the leading, or air-screw side,
+of the engine, in order to get the fullest possible cooling
+effect. The rated power of each type of engine is obtained at
+1,200 revolutions per minute, and for all four sizes the
+cylinder bore is 4.13 inches, with a 5.5 inches piston stroke.
+Thin cast-iron liners are shrunk into the steel cylinders in
+order to reduce the amount of piston friction. Although the Le
+Rhone engines are constructed practically throughout of steel,
+the weight is only 2.9 lbs. per horse-power in the
+eighteen-cylinder type.
+
+American enterprise in the construction of the rotary type is
+perhaps best illustrated in the 'Gyro 'engine; this was first
+constructed with inlet valves in the heads of the pistons, after
+the Gnome pattern, the exhaust valves being in the heads of the
+cylinders. The inlet valve in the crown of each piston was
+mechanically operated in a very ingenious manner by the
+oscillation of the connecting-rod. The Gyro-Duplex engine
+superseded this original design, and a small cross-section
+illustration of this is appended. It is constructed in seven and
+nine-cylinder sizes, with a power range of from 50 to 100
+horse-power; with the largest size the low weight of 2.5 lbs..
+per horse-power is reached. The design is of considerable
+interest to the internal combustion engineer, for it embodies a
+piston valve for controlling auxiliary exhaust ports, which also
+acts as the inlet valve to the cylinder. The piston uncovers the
+auxiliary ports when it reaches the bottom of its stroke, and at
+the end of the power stroke the piston is in such a position that
+the exhaust can escape over the top of it. The exhaust valve in
+the cylinder head is then opened by means of the push-rod and
+rocker, and is held open until the piston has completed its
+upward stroke and returned through more than half its subsequent
+return stroke. When the exhaust valve closes, the cylinder has a
+charge of fresh air, drawn in through the exhaust valve, and the
+further motion of the piston causes a partial vacuum; by the time
+the piston reaches bottom dead centre the piston-valve has moved
+up to give communication between the cylinder and the crank case,
+therefore the mixture is drawn into the cylinder. Both the
+piston valve and exhaust valve are operated by cams formed on the
+one casting, which rotates at seven-eighths engine speed for the
+seven-cylinder type, and nine-tenths engine speed for the
+nine-cylinder engines. Each of these cams has four or five
+points respectively, to suit the number of cylinders.
+
+The steel cylinders are machined from solid forgings and
+provided with webs for air-cooling as shown. Cast-iron pistons
+are used, and are connected to the crankshaft in the same manner
+as with the Gnome and Le Rhone engines. Petrol is sprayed into
+the crank case by a small geared pump and the mixture is taken
+from there to the piston valves by radial pipes. Two separate
+pumps are used for lubrication, one forcing oil to the crank-pin
+bearing and the other spraying the cylinders.
+
+Among other designs of rotary aero engines the E.J.C. is
+noteworthy, in that the cylinders and crank case of this engine
+rotate in opposite directions, and two air-screws are used, one
+being attached to the end of the crankshaft, and the other to the
+crank case. Another interesting type is the Burlat rotary, in
+which both the cylinders and crankshaft rotate in the same
+direction, the rotation of the crankshaft being twice that of the
+cylinders as regards speed. This engine is arranged to work on
+the four-stroke cycle with the crankshaft making four, and the
+cylinders two, revolutions per cycle.
+
+It would appear that the rotary type of engine is capable of but
+little more improvement--save for such devices as these of the
+last two engines mentioned, there is little that Laurent Seguin
+has not already done in the Gnome type. The limitation of the
+rotary lies in its high fuel and lubricating oil consumption,
+which renders it unsuited for long-distance aero work; it was,
+in the war period, an admirable engine for such short runs as
+might be involved in patrol work 'over the lines,' and for
+similar purposes, but the watercooled Vee or even vertical, with
+its much lower fuel consumption, was and is to be preferred for
+distance work. The rotary air-cooled type has its uses, and for
+them it will probably remain among the range of current types
+for some time to come. Experience of matters aeronautical is
+sufficient to show, however, that prophecy in any direction is
+most unsafe.
+
+
+
+V. THE HORIZONTALLY-OPPOSED ENGINE
+
+Among the first internal combustion engines to be taken into use
+with aircraft were those of the horizontally-opposed four-stroke
+cycle type, and, in every case in which these engines were used,
+their excellent balance and extremely even torque rendered them
+ideal-until the tremendous increase in power requirements
+rendered the type too long and bulky for placing in the fuselage
+of an aeroplane. As power increased, there came a tendency
+toward placing cylinders radially round a central crankshaft,
+and, as in the case of the early Anzani, it may be said that the
+radial engine grew out of the horizontal opposed piston type.
+There were, in 1910--that is, in the early days of small power
+units, ten different sizes of the horizontally opposed engine
+listed for manufacture, but increase in power requirements
+practically ruled out the type for air work.
+
+The Darracq firm were the leading makers of these engines in
+1910; their smallest size was a 24 horsepower engine, with two
+cylinders each of 5.1 inches bore by 4.7 inches stroke. This
+engine developed its rated power at 1,500 revolutions per
+minute, and worked out at a weight of 5 lbs. per horse-power.
+With these engines the cranks are so placed that two regular
+impulses are given to the crankshaft for each cycle of working,
+an arrangement which permits of very even balancing of the
+inertia forces of the engine. The Darracq firm also made a
+four-cylindered horizontal opposed piston engine, in which two
+revolutions were given to the crankshaft per revolution, at
+equal angular intervals.
+
+The Dutheil-Chambers was another engine of this type, and had
+the distinction of being the second largest constructed. At
+1,000 revolutions per minute it developed 97 horse-power; its
+four cylinders were each of 4.93 inches bore by 11.8 inches
+stroke--an abnormally long stroke in comparison with the bore.
+The weight--which owing to the build of the engine and its length
+of stroke was bound to be rather high, actually amounted to 8.2
+lbs. per horse-power. Water cooling was adopted, and the engine
+was, like the Darracq four-cylinder type, so arranged as to give
+two impulses per revolution at equal angular intervals of
+crankshaft rotation.
+
+One of the first engines of this type to be constructed in
+England was the Alvaston, a water-cooled model which was made in
+20, 30, and 50 brake horse-power sizes, the largest being a
+four-cylinder engine. All three sizes were constructed to run
+at 1,200 revolutions per minute. In this make the cylinders
+were secured to the crank case by means of four long tie bolts
+passing through bridge pieces arranged across the cylinder
+heads, thus relieving the cylinder walls of all longitudinal
+explosion stresses. These bridge pieces were formed from chrome
+vanadium steel and milled to an 'H' section, and the bearings
+for the valve-tappet were forged solid with them. Special
+attention was given to the machining of the interiors of the
+cylinders and the combustion heads, with the result that the
+exceptionally high compression of 95 lbs. per square inch was
+obtained, giving a very flexible engine. The cylinder heads
+were completely water-jacketed, and copper water-jackets were
+also fitted round the cylinders. The mechanically operated
+valves were actuated by specially shaped cams, and were so
+arranged that only two cams were required for the set of eight
+valves. The inlet valves at both ends of the engine were
+connected by a single feed-pipe to which the carburettor was
+attached, the induction piping being arranged above the engine
+in an easily accessible position. Auxiliary air ports were
+provided in the cylinder walls so that the pistons overran them
+at the end of their stroke. A single vertical shaft running in
+ball-bearings operated the valves and water circulating pump,
+being driven by spiral gearing from the crankshaft at half
+speed. In addition to the excellent balance obtained with this
+engine, the makers claimed with justice that the number of
+working parts was reduced to an absolute minimum.
+
+In the two-cylinder Darracq, the steel cylinders were machined
+from solid, and auxiliary exhaust ports, overrun by the piston
+at the inner end of its stroke, were provided in the cylinder
+walls, consisting of a circular row of drilled holes--this
+arrangement was subsequently adopted on some of the Darracq
+racing car engines. The water jackets were of copper, soldered
+to the cylinder walls; both the inlet and exhaust valves were
+located in the cylinder heads, being operated by rockers and
+push-rods actuated by cams on the halftime shaft driven from one
+end of the crankshaft. Ignition was by means of a high-tension
+magneto, and long induction pipes connected the-ends of the
+cylinders to the carburettor, the latter being placed underneath
+the engine. Lubrication was effected by spraying oil into the
+crank case by means of a pump, and a second pump circulated the
+cooling water.
+
+Another good example of this type of engine was the Eole, which
+had eight opposed pistons, each pair of which was actuated by a
+common combustion chamber at the centre of the engine, two
+crankshafts being placed at the outer ends of the engine. This
+reversal of the ordinary arrangement had two advantages; it
+simplified induction, and further obviated the need for cylinder
+heads, since the explosion drove at two piston heads instead of
+at one piston head and the top of the cylinder; against this,
+however, the engine had to be constructed strongly enough to
+withstand the longitudinal stresses due to the explosions, as
+the cranks are placed on the outer ends and the cylinders and
+crank-cases take the full force of each explosion. Each
+crankshaft drove a separate air-screw.
+
+This pattern of engine was taken up by the Dutheil-Chambers firm
+in the pioneer days of aircraft, when the firm in question
+produced seven different sizes of horizontal engines. The
+Demoiselle monoplane used by Santos-Dumont in 1909 was fitted
+with a two-cylinder, horizontally-opposed Dutheil-Chambers
+engine, which developed 25 brake horse-power at a speed of
+1,100 revolutions per minute, the cylinders being of 5 inches
+bore by 5.1 inches stroke, and the total weight of the engine
+being some 120 lbs. The crankshafts of these engines were
+usually fitted with steel flywheels in order to give a very even
+torque, the wheels being specially constructed with wire spokes.
+In all the Dutheil-Chambers engines water cooling was adopted,
+and the cylinders were attached to the crank cases by means of
+long bolts passing through the combustion heads.
+
+For their earliest machines, the Clement-Bayard firm constructed
+horizontal engines of the opposed piston type. The best known of
+these was the 30 horse-power size, which had cylinders of 4.7
+inches diameter by 5.1 inches stroke, and gave its rated power
+at 1,200 revolutions per minute. In this engine the steel
+cylinders were secured to the crank case by flanges, and
+radiating ribs were formed around the barrel to assist the
+air-cooling. Inlet and exhaust valves were actuated by
+push-rods and rockers actuated from the second motion shaft
+mounted above the crank case; this shaft also drove the
+high-tension magneto with which the engine was fitted. A ring
+of holes drilled round each cylinder constituted auxiliary ports
+which the piston uncovered at the inner end of its stroke, and
+these were of considerable assistance not only in expelling
+exhaust gases, but also in moderating the temperature of the
+cylinder and of the main exhaust valve fitted in the cylinder
+head. A water-cooled Clement-Bayard horizontal engine was also
+made, and in this the auxiliary exhaust ports were not embodied;
+except in this particular, the engine was very similar to the
+water-cooled Darracq.
+
+The American Ashmusen horizontal engine, developing 100
+horse-power, is probably the largest example of this type
+constructed. It was made with six cylinders arranged on each
+side of a common crank case, with long bolts passing through the
+cylinder heads to assist in holding them down. The induction
+piping and valve-operating gear were arranged below the engine,
+and the half-speed shaft carried the air-screw.
+
+Messrs Palons and Beuse, Germans, constructed a light-weight,
+air-cooled, horizontally-opposed engine, two-cylindered. In
+this the cast-iron cylinders were made very thin, and were
+secured to the crank case by bolts passing through lugs cast on
+the outer ends of the cylinders; the crankshaft was made hollow,
+and holes were drilled through the webs of the connecting-rods
+in order to reduce the weight. The valves were fitted to the
+cylinder heads, the inlet valves being of the automatic type,
+while the exhaust valves were mechanically operated from the
+cam-shaft by means of rockers and push-rods. Two carburettors
+were fitted, to reduce the induction piping to a minimum; one
+was attached to each combustion chamber, and ignition was by the
+normal high-tension magneto driven from the halftime shaft.
+
+There was also a Nieuport two-cylinder air-cooled horizontal
+engine, developing 35 horse-power when running at 1,300
+revolutions per minute, and being built at a weight of 5.1 lbs.
+per horse-power. The cylinders were of 5.3 inches diameter by
+5.9 inches stroke; the engine followed the lines of the Darracq
+and Dutheil-Chambers pretty closely, and thus calls for no
+special description.
+
+The French Kolb-Danvin engine of the horizontal type, first
+constructed in 1905, was probably the first two-stroke cycle
+engine designed to be applied to the propulsion of aircraft; it
+never got beyond the experimental stage, although its trials
+gave very good results. Stepped pistons were adopted, and the
+charging pump at one end was used to scavenge the power cylinder
+at the other ends of the engine, the transfer ports being formed
+in the main casting. The openings of these ports were
+controlled at both ends by the pistons, and the location of the
+ports appears to have made it necessary to take the exhaust from
+the bottom of one cylinder and from the top of the other. The
+carburetted mixture was drawn into the scavenging cylinders, and
+the usual deflectors were cast on the piston heads to assist in
+the scavenging and to prevent the fresh gas from passing out of
+the exhaust ports.
+
+
+
+VI. THE TWO-STROKE CYCLE ENGINE
+
+Although it has been little used for aircraft propulsion, the
+possibilities of the two-stroke cycle engine render some study
+of it desirable in this brief review of the various types of
+internal combustion engine applicable both to aeroplanes and
+airships. Theoretically the two-stroke cycle engine--or as it
+is more commonly termed, the 'two-stroke,' is the ideal power
+producer; the doubling of impulses per revolution of the
+crankshaft should render it of very much more even torque than
+the four-stroke cycle types, while, theoretically, there should
+be a considerable saving of fuel, owing to the doubling of the
+number of power strokes per total of piston strokes. In
+practice, however, the inefficient scavenging of virtually every
+two-stroke cycle engine produced nullifies or more than
+nullifies its advantages over the four-stroke cycle engine; in
+many types, too, there is a waste of fuel gases through the
+exhaust ports, and much has yet to be done in the way of
+experiment and resulting design before the two-stroke cycle
+engine can be regarded as equally reliable, economical, and
+powerful with its elder brother.
+
+The first commercially successful engine operating on the
+two-stroke cycle was invented by Mr Dugald Clerk, who in 1881
+proved the design feasible. As is more or less generally
+understood, the exhaust gases of this engine are discharged from
+the cylinder during the time that the piston is passing the
+inner dead centre, and the compression, combustion, and
+expansion of the charge take place in similar manner to that of
+the four-stroke cycle engine. The exhaust period is usually
+controlled by the piston overrunning ports in the cylinder at
+the end of its working stroke, these ports communicating direct
+with the outer air--the complication of an exhaust valve is thus
+obviated; immediately after the escape of the exhaust gases,
+charging of the cylinder occurs, and the fresh gas may be
+introduced either through a valve in the cylinder head or
+through ports situated diametrically opposite to the exhaust
+ports. The continuation of the outward stroke of the piston,
+after the exhaust ports have been closed, compresses the charge
+into the combustion chamber of the cylinder, and the ignition of
+the mixture produces a recurrence of the working stroke.
+
+Thus, theoretically, is obtained the maximum of energy with the
+minimum of expenditure; in practice, however, the scavenging of
+the power cylinder, a matter of great importance in all internal
+combustion engines, is often imperfect, owing to the opening of
+the exhaust ports being of relatively short duration; clearing
+the exhaust gases out of the cylinder is not fully accomplished,
+and these gases mix with the fresh charge and detract from its
+efficiency. Similarly, owing to the shorter space of time
+allowed, the charging of the cylinder with the fresh mixture is
+not so efficient as in the four-stroke cycle type; the fresh
+charge is usually compressed slightly in a separate
+chamber--crank case, independent cylinder, or charging pump, and
+is delivered to the working cylinder during the beginning of the
+return stroke of the piston, while in engines working on the
+four-stroke cycle principle a complete stroke is devoted to the
+expulsion of the waste gases of the exhaust, and another full
+stroke to recharging the cylinder with fresh explosive mixture.
+
+Theoretically the two-stroke and the four-stroke cycle engines
+possess exactly the same thermal efficiency, but actually this
+is modified by a series of practical conditions which to some
+extent tend to neutralise the very strong case in favour of the
+two-stroke cycle engine. The specific capacity of the engine
+operating on the two-stroke principle is theoretically twice
+that of one operating on the four-stroke cycle, and
+consequently, for equal power, the former should require only
+about half the cylinder volume of the latter; and, owing to the
+greater superficial area of the smaller cylinder, relatively,
+the latter should be far more easily cooled than the larger
+four-stroke cycle cylinder; thus it should be possible to get
+higher compression pressures, which in turn should result in
+great economy of working. Also the obtaining of a working
+impulse in the cylinder for each revolution of the crankshaft
+should give a great advantage in regularity of rotation--which
+it undoubtedly does--and the elimination of the operating gear
+for the valves, inlet and exhaust, should give greater
+simplicity of design.
+
+In spite of all these theoretical--and some practical--advantages
+the four-stroke cycle engine was universally adopted for aircraft
+work; owing to the practical equality of the two principles of
+operation, so far as thermal efficiency and friction losses are
+concerned, there is no doubt that the simplicity of design (in
+theory) and high power output to weight ratio (also in theory)
+ought to have given the 'two-stroke' a place on the aeroplane.
+But this engine has to be developed so as to overcome its
+inherent drawbacks; better scavenging methods have yet to be
+devised--for this is the principal drawback--before the
+two-stroke can come to its own as a prime mover for aircraft.
+
+Mr Dugald Clerk's original two-stroke cycle engine is indicated
+roughly, as regards principle, by the accompanying diagram, from
+which it will be seen that the elimination of the ordinary inlet
+and exhaust valves of the four-stroke type is more than
+compensated by a separate cylinder which, having a piston worked
+from the connecting-rod of the power cylinder, was used to
+charging, drawing the mixture from the carburettor past the
+valve in the top of the charging cylinder, and then forcing it
+through the connecting pipe into the power cylinder. The inlet
+valves both on the charging and the power cylinders are
+automatic; when the power piston is near the bottom of its
+stroke the piston in the charging cylinder is compressing the
+carburetted air, so that as soon as the pressure within the
+power cylinder is relieved by the exit of the burnt gases
+through the exhaust ports the pressure in the charging cylinder
+causes the valve in the head of the power cylinder to open, and
+fresh mixture flows into the cylinder, replacing the exhaust
+gases. After the piston has again covered the exhaust ports the
+mixture begins to be compressed, thus automatically closing the
+inlet valve. Ignition occurs near the end of the compression
+stroke, and the working stroke immediately follows, thus giving
+an impulse to the crankshaft on every down stroke of the piston.
+If the scavenging of the cylinder were complete, and the cylinder
+were to receive a full charge of fresh mixture for every stroke,
+the same mean effective pressure as is obtained with four-stroke
+cycle engines ought to be realised, and at an equal speed of
+rotation this engine should give twice the power obtainable from
+a four-stroke cycle engine of equal dimensions. This result was
+not achieved, and, with the improvements in construction brought
+about by experiment up to 1912, the output was found to be only
+about fifty per cent more than that of a four-stroke cycle engine
+of the same size, so that, when the charging cylinder is
+included, this engine has a greater weight per horse-power, while
+the lowest rate of fuel consumption recorded was 0.68 lb. per
+horse-power per hour.
+
+In 1891 Mr Day invented a two-stroke cycle engine which used the
+crank case as a scavenging chamber, and a very large number of
+these engines have been built for industrial purposes. The
+charge of carburetted air is drawn through a non-return valve
+into the crank chamber during the upstroke of the piston, and
+compressed to about 4 lbs. pressure per square inch on the
+down stroke. When the piston approaches the bottom end of its
+stroke the upper edge first overruns an exhaust port, and almost
+immediately after uncovers an inlet port on the opposite side of
+the cylinder and in communication with the crank chamber; the
+entering charge, being under pressure, assists in expelling the
+exhaust gases from the cylinder. On the next upstroke the
+charge is compressed into the combustion space of the cylinder,
+a further charge simultaneously entering the crank case to be
+compressed after the ignition for the working stroke. To
+prevent the incoming charge escaping through the exhaust ports
+of the cylinder a deflector is formed on the top of the piston,
+causing the fresh gas to travel in an upward direction, thus
+avoiding as far as possible escape of the mixture to the
+atmosphere. From experiments conducted in 1910 by Professor
+Watson and Mr Fleming it was found that the proportion of fresh
+gases which escaped unburnt through the exhaust ports diminished
+with increase of speed; at 600 revolutions per minute about 36
+per cent of the fresh charge was lost; at 1,200 revolutions per
+minute this was reduced to 20 per cent, and at 1,500 revolutions
+it was still farther reduced to 6 per cent.
+
+So much for the early designs. With regard to engines of this
+type specially constructed for use with aircraft, three designs
+call for special mention. Messrs A. Gobe and H. Diard, Parisian
+engineers, produced an eight-cylindered two-stroke cycle engine
+of rotary design, the cylinders being co-axial. Each pair of
+opposite pistons was secured together by a rigid connecting rod,
+connected to a pin on a rotating crankshaft which was mounted
+eccentrically to the axis of rotation of the cylinders. The
+crankshaft carried a pinion gearing with an internally toothed
+wheel on the transmission shaft which carried the air-screw. The
+combustible mixture, emanating from a common supply pipe, was led
+through conduits to the front ends of the cylinders, in which the
+charges were compressed before being transferred to the working
+spaces through ports in tubular extensions carried by the
+pistons. These extensions had also exhaust ports, registering
+with ports in the cylinder which communicated with the outer air,
+and the extensions slid over depending cylinder heads attached to
+the crank case by long studs. The pump charge was compressed in
+one end of each cylinder, and the pump spaces each delivered
+into their corresponding adjacent combustion spaces. The charges
+entered the pump spaces during the suction period through
+passages which communicated with a central stationary supply
+passage at one end of the crank case, communication being cut off
+when the inlet orifice to the passage passed out of register with
+the port in the stationary member. The exhaust ports at the
+outer end of the combustion space opened just before and closed a
+little later than the air ports, and the incoming charge assisted
+in expelling the exhaust gases in a manner similar to that of the
+earlier types of two-stroke cycle engine; The accompanying rough
+diagram assists in showing the working of this engine.
+
+Exhibited in the Paris Aero Exhibition of 1912, the Laviator
+two-stroke cycle engine, six-cylindered, could be operated either
+as a radial or as a rotary engine, all its pistons acting on a
+single crank. Cylinder dimensions of this engine were 3.94
+inches bore by 5.12 inches stroke, and a power output of 50
+horse-power was obtained when working at a rate of 1,200
+revolutions per minute. Used as a radial engine, it developed
+65 horse-power at the same rate of revolution, and, as the total
+weight was about 198 lbs., the weight of about 3 lbs. per
+horse-power was attained in radial use. Stepped pistons were
+employed, the annular space between the smaller or power piston
+and the walls of the larger cylinder being used as a charging
+pump for the power cylinder situated 120 degrees in rear of it.
+The charging cylinders were connected by short pipes to ports in
+the crank case which communicated with the hollow crankshaft
+through which the fresh gas was supplied, and once in each
+revolution each port in the case registered with the port in the
+hollow shaft. The mixture which then entered the charging
+cylinder was transferred to the corresponding working
+cylinder when the piston of that cylinder had reached the end of
+its power stroke, and immediately before this the exhaust ports
+diametrically opposite the inlet ports were uncovered; scavenging
+was thus assisted in the usual way. The very desirable feature
+of being entirely valveless was accomplished with this engine,
+which is also noteworthy for exceedingly compact design.
+
+The Lamplough six-cylinder two-stroke cycle rotary, shown at the
+Aero Exhibition at Olympia in 1911, had several innovations,
+including a charging pump of rotary blower type. With the six
+cylinders, six power impulses at regular intervals were given on
+each rotation; otherwise, the cycle of operations was carried
+out much as in other two-stroke cycle engines. The pump
+supplied the mixture under slight pressure to an inlet port in
+each cylinder, which was opened at the same time as the exhaust
+port, the period of opening being controlled by the piston. The
+rotary blower sucked the mixture from the carburettor and
+delivered it to a passage communicating with the inlet ports in
+the cylinder walls. A mechanically-operated exhaust valve was
+placed in the centre of each cylinder head, and towards the end
+of the working stroke this valve opened, allowing part of the
+burnt gases to escape to the atmosphere; the remainder was
+pushed out by the fresh mixture going in through the ports at
+the bottom end of the cylinder. In practice, one or other of
+the cylinders was always taking fresh mixture while working,
+therefore the delivery from the pump was continuous and the
+mixture had not to be stored under pressure.
+
+The piston of this engine was long enough to keep the ports
+covered when it was at the top of the stroke, and a bottom ring
+was provided to prevent the mixture from entering the crank
+case. In addition to preventing leakage, this ring no doubt
+prevented an excess of oil working up the piston into the
+cylinder. As the cylinder fired with every revolution, the
+valve gear was of the simplest construction, a fixed cam lifting
+each valve as the cylinder came into position. The spring of
+the exhaust valve was not placed round the stem in the usual
+way, but at the end of a short lever, away from the heat of the
+exhaust gases. The cylinders were of cast steel, the crank case
+of aluminium, and ball-bearings were fitted to the crankshaft,
+crank pins, and the rotary blower pump. Ignition was by means
+of a high-tension magneto of the two-spark pattern, and with a
+total weight of 300 lbs. the maximum output was 102 brake
+horse-power, giving a weight of just under 3 lbs. per
+horse-power.
+
+One of the most successful of the two-stroke cycle engines was
+that designed by Mr G. F. Mort and constructed by the New
+Engine Company. With four cylinders of 3.69 inches bore by 4.5
+inches stroke, and running at 1,250 revolutions per minute, this
+engine developed 50 brake horse-power; the total weight of the
+engine was 155 lbs., thus giving a weight of 3.1 lbs. per
+horse-power. A scavenging pump of the rotary type was employed,
+driven by means of gearing from the engine crankshaft, and in
+order to reduce weight to a minimum the vanes were of aluminium.
+This engine was tried on a biplane, and gave very satisfactory
+results.
+
+American design yields two apparently successful two-stroke
+cycle aero engines. A rotary called the Fredericson engine was
+said to give an output of 70 brake horse-power with five
+cylinders 4.5 inches diameter by 4.75 inches stroke, running
+at 1,000 revolutions per minute. Another, the Roberts
+two-stroke cycle engine, yielded 100 brake horse-power from six
+cylinders of the stepped piston design; two carburettors, each
+supplying three cylinders, were fitted to this engine. Ignition
+was by means of the usual high-tension magneto, gear-driven from
+the crankshaft, and the engine, which was water-cooled, was of
+compact design.
+
+It may thus be seen that the two-stroke cycle type got as far as
+actual experiment in air work, and that with considerable
+success. So far, however, the greater reliability of the
+four-stroke cycle has rendered it practically the only aircraft
+engine, and the two-stroke has yet some way to travel before it
+becomes a formidable competitor, in spite of its admitted
+theoretical and questioned practical advantages.
+
+
+
+VII. ENGINES OF THE WAR PERIOD
+
+The principal engines of British, French, and American design
+used in the war period and since are briefly described under the
+four distinct types of aero engine; such notable examples as the
+Rolls-Royce, Sunbeam, and Napier engines have been given special
+mention, as they embodied--and still embody--all that is best in
+aero engine practice. So far, however, little has been said
+about the development of German aero engine design, apart from
+the early Daimler and other pioneer makes.
+
+At the outbreak of hostilities in 1914, thanks to subsidies to
+contractors and prizes to aircraft pilots, the German aeroplane
+industry was in a comparatively flourishing condition. There
+were about twenty-two establishments making different types of
+heavier-thanair machines, monoplane and biplane, engined for the
+most part with the four-cylinder Argus or the six-cylinder
+Mercedes vertical type engines, each of these being of 100
+horse-power--it was not till war brought increasing demands on
+aircraft that the limit of power began to rise. Contemporary
+with the Argus and Mercedes were the Austro-Daimler, Benz, and
+N.A.G., in vertical design, while as far as rotary types were
+concerned there were two, the Oberursel and the Stahlhertz; of
+these the former was by far the most promising, and it came to
+virtual monopoly of the rotary-engined plane as soon as the war
+demand began. It was practically a copy of the famous Gnome
+rotary, and thus deserves little description.
+
+Germany, from the outbreak of war, practically, concentrated on
+the development of the Mercedes engine; and it is noteworthy
+that, with one exception, increase of power corresponding with
+the increased demand for power was attained without increasing
+the number of cylinders. The various models ranged between 75
+and 260 horse-power, the latter being the most recent production
+of this type. The exception to the rule was the eight-cylinder
+240 horse-power, which was replaced by the 260 horse-power
+six-cylinder model, the latter being more reliable and but very
+slightly heavier. Of the other engines, the 120 horsepower
+Argus and the 160 and 225 horse-power Benz were the most used,
+the Oberursel being very largely discarded after the Fokker
+monoplane had had its day, and the N.A.G. and Austro-Daimler
+Daimler also falling to comparative disuse. It may be said that
+the development of the Mercedes engine contributed very largely
+to such success as was achieved in the war period by German
+aircraft, and, in developing the engine, the builders were
+careful to make alterations in such a way as to effect the least
+possible change in the design of aeroplane to which they were to
+be fitted. Thus the engine base of the 175 horse-power model
+coincided precisely with that of the 150 horse-power model, and
+the 200 and 240 horse-power models retained the same base
+dimensions. It was estimated, in 1918, that well over eighty
+per cent of German aircraft was engined with the Mercedes type.
+
+In design and construction, there was nothing abnormal about the
+Mercedes engine, the keynote throughout being extreme
+reliability and such simplification of design as would permit of
+mass production in different factories. Even before the war,
+the long list of records set up by this engine formed practical
+application of the wisdom of this policy; Bohn's flight of 24
+hours 10 minutes, accomplished on July 10th and 11th, 1914,
+9is an instance of this--the flight was accomplished on an
+Albatross biplane with a 75 horsepower Mercedes engine. The
+radial type, instanced in other countries by the Salmson and
+Anzani makes, was not developed in Germany; two radial engines
+were made in that country before the war, but the Germans seemed
+to lose faith in the type under war conditions, or it may have
+been that insistence on standardisation ruled out all but the
+proved examples of engine.
+
+Details of one of the middle sizes of Mercedes motor, the 176
+horse-power type, apply very generally to the whole range; this
+size was in use up to and beyond the conclusion of hostilities,
+and it may still be regarded as characteristic of modern (1920)
+German practice. The engine is of the fixed vertical type,
+has six cylinders in line, not off-set, and is water-cooled.
+The cam shaft is carried in a special bronze casing, seated on
+the immediate top of the cylinders, and a vertical shaft is
+interposed between crankshaft and camshaft, the latter being
+driven by bevel gearing.
+
+On this vertical connecting-shaft the water pump is located,
+serving to steady the motion of the shaft. Extending immediately
+below the camshaft is another vertical shaft, driven by bevel
+gears from the crank-shaft, and terminating in a worm which
+drives the multiple piston oil pumps.
+
+The cylinders are made from steel forgings, as are the valve
+chamber elbows, which are machined all over and welded together.
+A jacket of light steel is welded over the valve elbows and
+attached to a flange on the cylinders, forming a water-cooling
+space with a section of about 7/16 of an inch. The cylinder
+bore is 5.5 inches, and the stroke 6.29 inches. The cylinders
+are attached to the crank case by means of dogs and long through
+bolts, which have shoulders near their lower ends and are bolted
+to the lower half of the crank chamber. A very light and rigid
+structure is thus obtained, and the method of construction won
+the flattery of imitation by makers of other nationality.
+
+The cooling system for the cylinders is extremely efficient.
+After leaving the water pump, the water enters the top of the
+front cylinders and passes successively through each of the six
+cylinders of the row; short tubes, welded to the tops of the
+cylinders, serve as connecting links in the system. The Panhard
+car engines for years were fitted with a similar cooling system,
+and the White and Poppe lorry engines were also similarly
+fitted; the system gives excellent cooling effect where it is
+most needed, round the valve chambers and the cylinder heads.
+
+The pistons are built up from two pieces; a dropped forged steel
+piston head, from which depend the piston pin bosses, is
+combined with a cast-iron skirt, into which the steel head is
+screwed. Four rings are fitted, three at the upper and one at
+the lower end of the piston skirt, and two lubricating oil
+grooves are cut in the skirt, in addition to the ring grooves.
+Two small rivets retain the steel head on the piston skirt after
+it has been screwed into position, and it is also welded at two
+points. The coefficient of friction between the cast-iron and
+steel is considerably less than that which would exist between
+two steel parts, and there is less tendency for the skirt to
+score the cylinder walls than would be the case if all steel were
+used--so noticeable is this that many makers, after giving steel
+pistons a trial, discarded them in favour of cast-iron; the Gnome
+is an example of this, being originally fitted with a steel
+piston carrying a brass ring, discarded in favour of a cast-iron
+piston with a percentage of steel in the metal mixture. In the
+Le Rhone engine the difficulty is overcome by a cast-iron liner
+to the cylinders.
+
+The piston pin of the Mercedes is of chrome nickel steel, and is
+retained in the piston by means of a set screw and cotter pin.
+The connecting rods, of I section, are very short and rigid,
+carrying floating bronze bushes which fit the piston pins at the
+small end, and carrying an oil tube on each for conveying oil
+from the crank pin to the piston pin.
+
+The crankshaft is of chrome nickel steel, carried on seven
+bearings. Holes are drilled through each of the crank pins and
+main bearings, for half the diameter of the shaft, and these are
+plugged with pressed brass studs. Small holes, drilled through
+the crank cheeks, serve to convey lubricant from the main
+bearings to the crank pins. The propeller thrust is taken by a
+simple ball thrust bearing at the propeller end of the
+crankshaft, this thrust bearing being seated in a steel retainer
+which is clamped between the two halves of the crank case. At
+the forward end of the crankshaft there is mounted a master
+bevel gear on six splines; this bevel floats on the splines
+against a ball thrust bearing, and, in turn, the thrust is taken
+by the crank case cover. A stuffing box prevents the loss of
+lubricant out of the front end of the crank chamber, and an oil
+thrower ring serves a similar purpose at the propeller end of the
+crank chamber.
+
+With a motor speed of 1,450 r.p.m., the vertical shaft at the
+forward end of the motor turns at 2,175 r.p.m., this being the
+speed of the two magnetos and the water pump. The lower
+vertical shaft bevel gear and the magneto driving gear are made
+integral with the vertical driving shaft, which is carried in
+plain bearings in an aluminium housing. This housing is clamped
+to the upper half of the crank case by means of three studs.
+The cam-shaft carries eighteen cams, these being the inlet and
+exhaust cams, and a set of half compression cams which are
+formed with the exhaust cams and are put into action when
+required by means of a lever at the forward end of the
+cam-shaft. The cam-shaft is hollow, and serves as a channel for
+the conveyance of lubricating oil to each of the camshaft
+bearings. At the forward end of this shaft there is also
+mounted an air pump for maintaining pressure on the fuel supply
+tank, and a bevel gear tachometer drive.
+
+Lubrication of the engine is carried out by a full pressure
+system. The oil is pumped through a single manifold, with seven
+branches to the crankshaft main bearings, and then in turn
+through the hollow crankshaft to the connecting-rod big ends and
+thence through small tubes, already noted, to the small end
+bearings. The oil pump has four pistons and two double valves
+driven from a single eccentric shaft on which are mounted four
+eccentrics. The pump is continuously submerged in oil; in order
+to avoid great variations in pressure in the oil lines there is
+a piston operated pressure regulator, cut in between the pump
+and the oil lines. The two small pistons of the pump take fresh
+oil from a tank located in the fuselage of the machine; one of
+these delivers oil to the cam shaft, and one delivers to the
+crankshaft; this fresh oil mixes with the used oil, returns to
+the base, and back to the main large oil pump cylinders. By
+means of these small pump pistons a constant quantity of oil is
+kept in the motor, and the oil is continually being freshened by
+means of the new oil coming in. All the oil pipes are very
+securely fastened to the lower half of the crank case, and some
+cooling of the oil is effected by air passing through channels
+cast in the crank case on its way to the carburettor.
+
+A light steel manifold serves to connect the exhaust ports of
+the cylinders to the main exhaust pipe, which is inclined about
+25 degrees from vertical and is arranged to give on to the
+atmosphere just over the top of the upper wing of the aeroplane.
+
+As regards carburation, an automatic air valve surrounds the
+throat of the carburettor, maintaining normal composition of
+mixture. A small jet is fitted for starting and running without
+load. The channels cast in the crank chamber, already alluded
+to in connection with oil-cooling, serve to warm the air before
+it reaches the carburettor, of which the body is water-jacketed.
+
+Ignition of the engine is by means of two Bosch ZH6 magnetos,
+driven at a speed of 2,175 revolutions per minute when the engine
+is running at its normal speed of 1,450 revolutions. The maximum
+advance of spark is 12 mm., or 32 degrees before the top dead
+centre, and the firing order of the cylinders is 1,5,3,6,2,4.
+
+The radiator fitted to this engine, together with the
+water-jackets, has a capacity of 25 litres of water, it is
+rectangular in shape, and is normally tilted at an angle of 30
+degrees from vertical. Its weight is 26 kg., and it offers but
+slight head resistance in flight.
+
+The radial type of engine, neglected altogether in Germany, was
+brought to a very high state of perfection at the end of the
+War period by British makers. Two makes, the Cosmos Engineering
+Company's 'Jupiter' and 'Lucifer,' and the A.B.C. 'Wasp II' and
+'Dragon Fly 1A' require special mention for their light weight
+and reliability on trials.
+
+The Cosmos 'Jupiter' was--for it is no longer being made--a 450
+horse-power nine-cylinder radial engine, air-cooled, with the
+cylinders set in one single row; it was made both geared to
+reduce the propeller revolutions relatively to the crankshaft
+revolutions, and ungeared; the normal power of the geared type
+was 450 horse-power, and the total weight of the engine,
+including carburettors, magnetos, etc., was only 757 lbs.; the
+engine speed was 1,850 revolutions per minute, and the propeller
+revolutions were reduced by the gearing to 1,200. Fitted to a
+'Bristol Badger' aeroplane, the total weight was 2,800 lbs.,
+including pilot, passenger, two machine-guns, and full military
+load; at 7,000 feet the registered speed, with corrections for
+density, was 137 miles per hour; in climbing, the first 2,000
+feet was accomplished in 1 minute 4 seconds; 4,000 feet was
+reached in 2 minutes 10 seconds; 6,000 feet was reached in 3
+minutes 33 seconds, and 7,000 feet in 4 minutes 15 seconds.
+It was intended to modify the plane design and fit a new
+propeller, in order to attain even better results, but, if
+trials were made with these modifications, the results are not
+obtainable.
+
+The Cosmos 'Lucifer' was a three-cylinder radial type engine of
+100 horse-power, inverted Y design, made on the simplest possible
+principles with a view to quantity production and extreme
+reliability. The rated 100 horse-power was attained at 1,600
+revolutions per minute, and the cylinder dimensions were 5.75
+bore by 6.25 inches stroke. The cylinders were of aluminium and
+steel mixture, with aluminium heads; overhead valves, operated by
+push rods on the front side of the cylinders, were fitted, and a
+simple reducing gear ran them at half engine speed. The crank
+case was a circular aluminium casting, the engine being attached
+to the fuselage of the aeroplane by a circular flange situated at
+the back of the case; propeller shaft and crankshaft were
+integral. Dual ignition was provided, the generator and
+distributors being driven off the back end of the engine and the
+distributors being easily accessible. Lubrication was by means
+of two pumps, one scavenging and one suction, oil being fed under
+pressure from the crankshaft. A single carburettor fed all three
+cylinders, the branch pipe from the carburettor to the circular
+ring being provided with an exhaust heater. The total weight of
+the engine, 'all on,' was 280 lbs.
+
+The A.B.C. 'Wasp II,' made by Walton Motors, Limited, is a
+seven-cylinder radial, air-cooled engine, the cylinders having a
+bore of 4.75 inches and stroke 6.25 inches. The normal brake
+horse-power at 1,650 revolutions is 160, and the maximum 200 at
+a speed of 1,850 revolutions per minute. Lubrication is by
+means of two rotary pumps, one feeding through the hollow
+crankshaft to the crank pin, giving centrifugal feed to big end
+and thence splash oiling, and one feeding to the nose of the
+engine, dropping on to the cams and forming a permanent sump for
+the gears on the bottom of the engine nose. Two carburettors
+are fitted, and two two-spark magnetos, running at one and
+three-quarters engine speed. The total weight of this engine is
+350 lbs., or 1.75 lbs. per horse-power. Oil consumption at 1,850
+revolutions is .03 pints per horse-power per hour, and petrol
+consumption is .56 pints per horsepower per hour. The engine
+thus shows as very economical in consumption, as well as very
+light in weight.
+
+The A.B.C. 'Dragon Fly 1A 'is a nine-cylinder radial engine
+having one overhead inlet and two overhead exhaust valves per
+cylinder. The cylinder dimensions are 5.5 inches bore by 6.5
+inches stroke, and the normal rate of speed, 1,650 revolutions
+per minute, gives 340 horse-power. The oiling is by means of
+two pumps, the system being practically identical with that of
+the 'Wasp II.' Oil consumption is .021 pints per brake
+horse-power per hour, and petrol consumption .56 pints--the
+same as that of the 'Wasp II.' The weight of the complete
+engine, including propeller boss, is 600 lbs., or 1,765 lbs.
+per horse-power.
+
+These A.B.C. radials have proved highly satisfactory on tests,
+and their extreme simplicity of design and reliability commend
+them as engineering products and at the same time demonstrate
+the value, for aero work, of the air-cooled radial
+design--when this latter is accompanied by sound workmanship.
+These and the Cosmos engines represent the minimum of weight per
+horse-power yet attained, together with a practicable degree of
+reliability, in radial and probably any aero engine design.
+
+
+
+ APPENDIX A
+
+GENERAL MENSIER'S REPORT ON THE TRIALS OF CLEMENT ADER'S AVION.
+
+ Paris, October 21, 1897.
+
+Report on the trials of M. Clement Ader's aviation apparatus.
+
+M. Ader having notified the Minister of War by letter, July 21,
+1897, that the Apparatus of Aviation which he had agreed to
+build under the conditions set forth in the convention of July
+24th, 1894, was ready, and therefore requesting that trials be
+undertaken before a Committee appointed for this purpose as per
+the decision of August 4th, the Committee was appointed as
+follows:--
+
+Division General Mensier, Chairman; Division General Delambre,
+Inspector General of the Permanent Works of Coast Defence,
+Member of the Technical Committee of the Engineering Corps;
+Colonel Laussedat, Director of the Conservatoire des Arts et
+Metiers; Sarrau, Member of the Institute, Professor of
+Mechanical Engineering at the Polytechnic School; Leaute, Member
+of the Institute, Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the
+Polytechnique School.
+
+Colonel Laussedat gave notice at once that his health and work
+as Director of the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers did not
+permit him to be a member of the Committee; the Minister
+therefore accepted his resignation on September 24th, and
+decided not to replace him.
+
+Later on, however, on the request of the Chairman of the
+Committee, the Minister appointed a new member General Grillon,
+commanding the Engineer Corps of the Military Government of
+Paris.
+
+To carry on the trials which were to take place at the camp of
+Satory, the Minister ordered the Governor of the Military Forces
+of Paris to requisition from the Engineer Corps, on the request
+of the Chairman of the Committee, the men necessary to prepare
+the grounds at Satory.
+
+After an inspection made on the 16th an aerodrome was chosen.
+M. Ader's idea was to have it of circular shape with a width of
+40 metres and an average diameter of 450 metres. The preliminary
+work, laying out the grounds, interior and exterior
+circumference, etc., was finished at the end of August; the work
+of smoothing off the grounds began September 1st with forty-five
+men and two rollers, and was finished on the day of the first
+tests, October 12th.
+
+The first meeting of the Committee was held August 18th in M.
+Ader's workshop; the object being to demonstrate the machine to
+the Committee and give all the information possible on the tests
+that were to be held. After a careful examination and after
+having heard all the explanations by the inventor which were
+deemed useful and necessary, the Committee decided that the
+apparatus seemed to be built with a perfect understanding of the
+purpose to be fulfilled as far as one could judge from a study
+of the apparatus at rest; they therefore authorised M. Ader to
+take the machine apart and carry it to the camp at Satory so as
+to proceed with the trials.
+
+By letter of August 19th the Chairman made report to the Minister
+of the findings of the Committee.
+
+The work on the grounds having taken longer than was anticipated,
+the Chairman took advantage of this delay to call the Committee
+together for a second meeting, during which M. Ader was to run
+the two propulsive screws situated at the forward end of the
+apparatus.
+
+The meeting was held October 2nd. It gave the Committee an
+opportunity to appreciate the motive power in all its details;
+firebox, boiler, engine, under perfect control, absolute
+condensation, automatic fuel and feed of the liquid to be
+vaporised, automatic lubrication and scavenging; everything, in
+a word, seemed well designed and executed.
+
+The weights in comparison with the power of the engine realised
+a considerable advance over anything made to date, since the two
+engines weighed together realised 42 kg., the firebox and boiler
+60 kg., the condenser 15 kg., or a total of 117 kg. for
+approximately 40 horse-power or a little less than 3 kg. per
+horse-power.
+
+One of the members summed up the general opinion by saying:
+'Whatever may be the result from an aviation point of view, a
+result which could not be foreseen for the moment, it was
+nevertheless proven that from a mechanical point of view M.
+Ader's apparatus was of the greatest interest and real
+ingeniosity. He expressed a hope that in any case the machine
+would not be lost to science.'
+
+The second experiment in the workshop was made in the presence
+of the Chairman, the purpose being to demonstrate that the
+wings, having a spread of 17 metres, were sufficiently strong
+to support the weight of the apparatus. With this object in
+view, 14 sliding supports were placed under each one of these,
+representing imperfectly the manner in which the wings would
+support the machine in the air; by gradually raising the
+supports with the slides, the wheels on which the machine rested
+were lifted from the ground. It was evident at that time that
+the members composing the skeleton of the wings supported the
+apparatus, and it was quite evident that when the wings were
+supported by the air on every point of their surface, the stress
+would be better equalised than when resting on a few supports,
+and therefore the resistance to breakage would be considerably
+greater.
+
+After this last test, the work on the ground being practically
+finished, the machine was transported to Satory, assembled and
+again made ready for trial.
+
+At first M. Ader was to manoeuvre the machine on the ground at
+a moderate speed, then increase this until it was possible to
+judge whether there was a tendency for the machine to rise; and
+it was only after M. Ader had acquired sufficient practice that
+a meeting of the Committee was to be called to be present at the
+first part of the trials; namely, volutions of the apparatus on
+the ground.
+
+The first test took place on Tuesday, October 12th, in the
+presence of the Chairman of the Committee. It had rained a good
+deal during the night and the clay track would have offered
+considerable resistance to the rolling of the machine;
+furthermore, a moderate wind was blowing from the south-west,
+too strong during the early part of the afternoon to allow of
+any trials.
+
+Toward sunset, however, the wind having weakened, M. Ader
+decided to make his first trial; the machine was taken out of
+its hangar, the wings were mounted and steam raised. M. Ader
+in his seat had, on each side of him, one man to the right and
+one to the left, whose duty was to rectify the direction of the
+apparatus in the event that the action of the rear wheel as a
+rudder would not be sufficient to hold the machine in a straight
+course.
+
+At 5.25 p.m. the machine was started, at first slowly and then
+at an increased speed; after 250 or 300 metres, the two men who
+were being dragged by the apparatus were exhausted and forced to
+fall flat on the ground in order to allow the wings to pass over
+them, and the trip around the track was completed, a total of
+1,400 metres, without incident, at a fair speed, which could be
+estimated to be from 300 to 400 metres per minute.
+Notwithstanding M. Ader's inexperience, this being the first
+time that he had run his apparatus, he followed approximately
+the chalk line which marked the centre of the track and he
+stopped at the exact point from which he started.
+
+The marks of the wheels on the ground, which was rather soft,
+did not show up very much, and it was clear that a part of the
+weight of the apparatus had been supported by the wings, though
+the speed was only about one-third of what the machine could do
+had M. Ader used all its motive power; he was running at a
+pressure of from 3 to 4 atmospheres, when he could have used 10
+to 12.
+
+This first trial, so fortunately accomplished, was of great
+importance; it was the first time that a comparatively heavy
+vehicle (nearly 400 kg., including the weight of the operator,
+fuel, and water) had been set in motion by a tractive apparatus,
+using the air solely as a propelling medium. The favourable
+report turned in by the Committee after the meeting of October
+2nd was found justified by the results demonstrated on the
+grounds, and the first problem of aviation, namely, the creation
+of efficient motive power, could be considered as solved, since
+the propulsion of the apparatus in the air would be a great deal
+easier than the traction on the ground, provided that the second
+part of the problem, the sustaining of the machine in the air,
+would be realised.
+
+The next day, Wednesday the 13th, no further trials were made
+on account of the rain and wind.
+
+On Thursday the 14th the Chairman requested that General
+Grillon, who had just been appointed a member of the Committee,
+accompany him so as to have a second witness.
+
+The weather was fine, but a fairly strong, gusty wind was
+blowing from the south. M. Ader explained to the two members
+of the Committee the danger of these gusts, since at two points
+of the circumference the wind would strike him sideways. The
+wind was blowing in the direction A B, the apparatus starting
+from C, and running in the direction shown by the arrow. The
+first dangerous spot would be at B. The apparatus had been kept
+in readiness in the event of the wind dying down. Toward sunset
+the wind seemed to die down, as it had done on the evening of
+the 12th. M. Ader hesitated, which, unfortunately, further
+events only justified, but decided to make a new trial.
+
+At the start, which took place at 5.15 p.m., the apparatus,
+having the wind in the rear, seemed to run at a fairly regular
+speed; it was, nevertheless, easy to note from the marks of the
+wheels on the ground that the rear part of the apparatus had been
+lifted and that the rear wheel, being the rudder, had not been in
+constant contact with the ground. When the machine came to the
+neighbourhood of B, the two members of the Committee saw the
+machine swerve suddenly out of the track in a semicircle, lean
+over to the right and finally stop. They immediately proceeded
+to the point where the accident had taken place and endeavoured
+to find an explanation for the same. The Chairman finally
+decided as follows:
+
+M. Ader was the victim of a gust of wind which he had feared as
+he explained before starting out; feeling himself thrown out of
+his course, he tried to use the rudder energetically, but at that
+time the rear wheel was not in contact with the ground, and
+therefore did not perform its function; the canvas rudder, which
+had as its purpose the manoeuvring of the machine in the air, did
+not have sufficient action on the ground. It would have been
+possible without any doubt to react by using the propellers at
+unequal speed, but M. Ader, being still inexperienced, had not
+thought of this. Furthermore, he was thrown out of his course so
+quickly that he decided, in order to avoid a more serious
+accident, to stop both engines. This sudden stop produced the
+half-circle already described and the fall of the machine on its
+side.
+
+The damage to the machine was serious; consisting at first sight
+of the rupture of both propellers, the rear left wheel and the
+bending of the left wing tip. It will only be possible to
+determine after the machine is taken apart whether the engine,
+and more particularly the organs of transmission, have been put
+out of line.
+
+Whatever the damage may be, though comparatively easy to repair,
+it will take a certain amount of time, and taking into
+consideration the time of year it is evident that the tests will
+have to be adjourned for the present.
+
+As has been said in the above report, the tests, though
+prematurely interrupted, have shown results of great importance,
+and though the final results are hard to foresee, it would seem
+advisable to continue the trials. By waiting for the return of
+spring there will be plenty of time to finish the tests and it
+will not be necessary to rush matters, which was a partial cause
+of the accident. The Chairman of the Committee personally has
+but one hope, and that is that a decision be reached accordingly.
+
+ Division General,
+ Chairman of the Committee,
+ Mensier.
+
+Boulogne-sur-Seine, October 21st, 1897.
+
+ Annex to the Report of October 21st.
+
+General Grillon, who was present at the trials of the 14th, and
+who saw the report relative to what happened during that day,
+made the following observations in writing, which are reproduced
+herewith in quotation marks. The Chairman of the Committee does
+not agree with General Grillon and he answers theseobservations
+paragraph by paragraph.
+
+1. 'If the rear wheel (there is only one of these) left but
+intermittent tracks on the ground, does that prove that the
+machine has a tendency to rise when running at a certain speed?'
+
+Answer.--This does not prove anything in any way, and I was very
+careful not to mention this in my report, this point being
+exactly what was needed and that was not demonstrated during the
+two tests made on the grounds.
+
+'Does not this unequal pressure of the two pair of wheels on the
+ground show that the centre of gravity of the apparatus is
+placed too far forward and that under the impulse of the
+propellers the machine has a tendency to tilt forward, due to
+the resistance of the air?'
+
+Answer.--The tendency of the apparatus to rise from the rear
+when it was running with the wind seemed to be brought about by
+the effects of the wind on the huge wings, having a spread of 17
+metres, and I believe that when the machine would have faced the
+wind the front wheels would have been lifted.
+
+During the trials of October 12th, when a complete circuit of
+the track was accomplished without incidents, as I and Lieut.
+Binet witnessed, there was practically no wind. I was therefore
+unable to verify whether during this circuit the two front
+wheels or the rear wheel were in constant contact with the
+ground, because when the trial was over it was dark (it was
+5.30) and the next day it was impossible to see anything because
+it had rained during the night and during Wednesday morning.
+But what would prove that the rear wheel was in contact with the
+ground at all times is the fact that M. Ader, though
+inexperienced, did not swerve from the circular track, which
+would prove that he steered pretty well with his rear
+wheel--this he could not have done if he had been in the air.
+
+In the tests of the 12th, the speed was at least as great as on
+the 14th.
+
+2. 'It would seem to me that if M. Ader thought that his rear
+wheels were off the ground he should have used his canvas rudder
+in order to regain his proper course; this was the best way of
+causing the machine to rotate, since it would have given an
+angular motion to the front axle.'
+
+Answer.--I state in my report that the canvas rudder whose
+object was the manoeuvre of the apparatus in the air could have
+no effect on the apparatus on the ground, and to convince
+oneself of this point it is only necessary to consider the small
+surface of this canvas rudder compared with the mass to be
+handled on the ground, a weight of approximately 400 kg.
+According to my idea, and as I have stated in my report, M. Ader
+should have steered by increasing the speed on one of his
+propellers and slowing down the other. He admitted afterward
+that this remark was well founded, but that he did not have time
+to think of it owing to the suddenness of the accident.
+
+3. 'When the apparatus fell on its side it was under the sole
+influence of the wind, since M. Ader had stopped the machine.
+Have we not a result here which will always be the same when the
+machine comes to the ground, since the engines will always have
+to be stopped or slowed down when coming to the ground? Here
+seems to be a bad defect of the apparatus under trial.'
+
+Answer.--I believe that the apparatus fell on its side after
+coming to a stop, not on account of the wind, but because the
+semicircle described was on rough ground and one of the wheels
+had collapsed.
+ Mensier.
+October 27th, 1897.
+
+
+
+ APPENDIX B
+
+Specification and Claims of Wright Patent, No. 821393.
+Filed March 23rd, 1903. Issued May 22nd, 1906. Expires May
+22nd, 1923.
+
+To all whom it may concern.
+
+Be it known that we, Orville Wright and Wilbur Wright, citizens
+of the United States, residing in the city of Dayton, county of
+Montgomery, and State of Ohio, have invented certain new and
+useful Improvements in Flying Machines, of which the following
+is a specification.
+
+Our invention relates to that class of flying-machines in which
+the weight is sustained by the reactions resulting when one or
+more aeroplanes are moved through the air edgewise at a small
+angle of incidence, either by the application of mechanical
+power or by the utilisation of the force of gravity.
+
+The objects of our invention are to provide means for
+maintaining or restoring the equilibrium or lateral balance of
+the apparatus, to provide means for guiding the machine both
+vertically and horizontally, and to provide a structure
+combining lightness, strength, convenience of construction and
+certain other advantages which will hereinafter appear.
+
+To these ends our invention consists in certain novel features,
+which we will now proceed to describe and will then particularly
+point out in the claims. In the accompanying drawings, Figure I
+1 is a perspective view of an apparatus embodying our invention
+in one form. Fig. 2 is a plan view of the same, partly in
+horizontal section and partly broken away. Fig. 3 is a side
+elevation, and Figs. 4 and 5 are detail views, of one form of
+flexible joint for connecting the upright standards with the
+aeroplanes.
+
+In flying machines of the character to which this invention
+relates the apparatus is supported in the air by reason of the
+contact between the air and the under surface of one or more
+aeroplanes, the contact surface being presented at a small angle
+of incidence to the air. The relative movements of the air and
+aeroplane may be derived from the motion of the air in the form
+of wind blowing in the direction opposite to that in which the
+apparatus is travelling or by a combined downward and forward
+movement of the machine, as in starting from an elevated
+position or by combination of these two things, and in either
+case the operation is that of a soaring-machine, while power
+applied to the machine to propel it positively forward will
+cause the air to support the machine in a similar manner. In
+either case owing to the varying conditions to be met there are
+numerous disturbing forces which tend to shift the machine from
+the position which it should occupy to obtain the desired
+results. It is the chief object of our invention to provide
+means for remedying this difficulty, and we will now proceed to
+describe the construction by means of which these results are
+accomplished.
+
+In the accompanying drawing we have shown an apparatus embodying
+our invention in one form. In this illustrative embodiment the
+machine is shown as comprising two parallel superposed
+aeroplanes, 1 and 2, may be embodied in a structure having a
+single aeroplane. Each aeroplane is of considerably greater width
+from side to side than from front to rear. The four corners of
+the upper aeroplane are indicated by the reference letters a, b,
+c, and d, while the corresponding corners of the lower aeroplane
+2 are indicated by the reference letters e, f, g, and h. The
+marginal lines ab and ef indicate the front edges of the
+aeroplanes, the lateral margins of the upper aeroplane are
+indicated, respectively, by the lines ad and bc, the lateral
+margins of the lower aeroplane are indicated, respectively, by
+the lines eh and fg, while the rear margins of the upper and
+lower aeroplanes are indicated, respectively, by the lines cd and
+gh.
+
+Before proceeding to a description of the fundamental theory of
+operation of the structure we will first describe the preferred
+mode of constructing the aeroplanes and those portions of the
+structure which serve to connect the two aeroplanes.
+
+Each aeroplane is formed by stretching cloth or other suitable
+fabric over a frame composed of two parallel transverse spars 3,
+extending from side to side of the machine, their ends being
+connected by bows 4 extending from front to rear of the machine.
+The front and rear spars 3 of each aeroplane are connected by a
+series of parallel ribs 5, which preferably extend somewhat
+beyond the rear spar, as shown. These spars, bows, and ribs are
+preferably constructed of wood having the necessary strength,
+combined with lightness and flexibility. Upon this framework
+the cloth which forms the supporting surface of the aeroplane is
+secured, the frame being enclosed in the cloth. The cloth for
+each aeroplane previous to its attachment to its frame is cut on
+the bias and made up into a single piece approximately the size
+and shape of the aeroplane, having the threads of the fabric
+arranged diagonally to the transverse spars and longitudinal
+ribs, as indicated at 6 in Fig. 2. Thus the diagonal threads of
+the cloth form truss systems with the spars and ribs, the threads
+constituting the diagonal members. A hem is formed at the rear
+edge of the cloth to receive a wire 7, which is connected to the
+ends of the rear spar and supported by the rearwardly-extending
+ends of the longitudinal ribs 5, thus forming a
+rearwardly-extending flap or portion of the aeroplane. This
+construction of the aeroplane gives a surface which has very
+great strength to withstand lateral and longitudinal strains, at
+the same time being capable of being bent or twisted in the
+manner hereinafter described.
+
+When two aeroplanes are employed, as in the construction
+illustrated, they are connected together by upright standards 8.
+These standards are substantially rigid, being preferably
+constructed of wood and of equal length, equally spaced along
+the front and rear edges of the aeroplane, to which they are
+connected at their top and bottom ends by hinged joints or
+universal joints of any suitable description. We have shown one
+form of connection which may be used for this purpose in Figs. 4
+and 5 of the drawings. In this construction each end of the
+standard 8 has secured to it an eye 9 which engages with a hook
+10, secured to a bracket plate 11, which latter plate is in
+turn fastened to the spar 3. Diagonal braces or stay-wires 12
+extend from each end of each standard to the opposite ends of
+the adjacent standards, and as a convenient mode of attaching
+these parts I have shown a hook 13 made integral with the hook
+10 to receive the end of one of the stay-wires, the other
+stay-wire being mounted on the hook 10. The hook 13 is shown
+as bent down to retain the stay-wire in connection to it, while
+the hook 10 is shown as provided with a pin 14 to hold the
+staywire 12 and eye 9 in position thereon. It will be seen that
+this construction forms a truss system which gives the whole
+machine great transverse rigidity and strength, while at the
+same time the jointed connections of the parts permit the
+aeroplanes to be bent or twisted in the manner which we will now
+proceed to describe.
+
+15 indicates a rope or other flexible connection extending
+lengthwise of the front of the machine above the lower
+aeroplane, passing under pulleys or other suitable guides 16 at
+the front corners e and f of the lower aeroplane, and extending
+thence upward and rearward to the upper rear corners c and d, of
+the upper aeroplane, where they are attached, as indicated at
+17. To the central portion of the rope there is connected a
+laterally-movable cradle 18, which forms a means for moving the
+rope lengthwise in one direction or the other, the cradle being
+movable toward either side of the machine. We have devised this
+cradle as a convenient means for operating the rope 15, and the
+machine is intended to be generally used with the operator lying
+face downward on the lower aeroplane, with his head to the
+front, so that the operator's body rests on the cradle, and the
+cradle can be moved laterally by the movements of the operator's
+body. It will be understood, however, that the rope 15 may be
+manipulated in any suitable manner.
+
+19 indicates a second rope extending transversely of the
+machine along the rear edge of the body portion of the lower
+aeroplane, passing under suitable pulleys or guides 20 at the
+rear corners g and h of the lower aeroplane and extending thence
+diagonally upward to the front corners a and b of the upper
+aeroplane, where its ends are secured in any suitable manner, as
+indicated at 21.
+
+Considering the structure so far as we have now described it,
+and assuming that the cradle 18 be moved to the right in Figs.
+1 and 2, as indicated by the arrows applied to the cradle in
+Fig. 1 and by the dotted lines in Fig. 2, it will be seen that
+that portion of the rope 15 passing under the guide pulley at
+the corner e and secured to the corner d will be under tension,
+while slack is paid out throughout the other side or half of the
+rope 15. The part of the rope 15 under tension exercises a
+downward pull upon the rear upper corner d of the structure and
+an upward pull upon the front lower corner e, as indicated by
+the arrows. This causes the corner d to move downward and the
+corner e to move upward. As the corner e moves upward it
+carries the corner a upward with it, since the intermediate
+standard 8 is substantially rigid and maintains an equal
+distance between the corners a and e at all times. Similarly,
+the standard 8, connecting the corners d and h, causes the
+corner h to move downward in unison with the corner d. Since
+the corner a thus moves upward and the corner h moves downward,
+that portion of the rope 19 connected to the corner a will be
+pulled upward through the pulley 20 at the corner h, and the
+pull thus exerted on the rope 19 will pull the corner b on the
+other wise of the machine downward and at the same time pull the
+corner g at said other side of the machine upward. This results
+in a downward movement of the corner b and an upward movement of
+the corner c. Thus it results from a lateral movement of the
+cradle 18 to the right in Fig. 1 that the lateral margins ad
+and eh at one side of the machine are moved from their normal
+positions in which they lie in the normal planes of their
+respective aeroplanes, into angular relations with said normal
+planes, each lateral margin on this side of the machine being
+raised above said normal plane at its forward end and depressed
+below said normal plane at its rear end, said lateral margins
+being thus inclined upward and forward. At the same time a
+reverse inclination is imparted to the lateral margins bc end fg
+at the other side of the machine, their inclination being
+downward and forward. These positions are indicated in dotted
+lines in Fig. 1 of the drawings. A movement of the cradle 18 in
+the opposite direction from its normal position will reverse the
+angular inclination of the lateral margins of the aeroplanes in
+an obvious manner. By reason of this construction it will be
+seen that with the particular mode of construction now under
+consideration it is possible to move the forward corner of the
+lateral edges of the aeroplane on one side of the machine either
+above or below the normal planes of the aeroplanes, a reverse
+movement of the forward corners of the lateral margins on the
+other side of the machine occurring simultaneously. During this
+operation each aeroplane is twisted or distorted around a line
+extending centrally across the same from the middle of one
+lateral margin to the middle of the other lateral margin, the
+twist due to the moving of the lateral margins to different
+angles extending across each aeroplane from side to side, so that
+each aeroplane surface is given a helicoidal warp or twist. We
+prefer this construction and mode of operation for the reason
+that it gives a gradually increasing angle to the body of each
+aeroplane from the centre longitudinal line thereof outward to
+the margin, thus giving a continuous surface on each side of the
+machine, which has a gradually increasing or decreasing angle of
+incidence from the centre of the machine to either side. We wish
+it to be understood, however, that our invention is not limited
+to this particular construction, since any construction whereby
+the angular relations of the lateral margins of the aeroplanes
+may be varied in opposite directions with respect to the normal
+planes of said aeroplanes comes within the scope of our
+invention. Furthermore, it should be understood that while the
+lateral margins of the aeroplanes move to different angular
+positions with respect to or above and below the normal planes of
+said aeroplanes, it does not necessarily follow that these
+movements bring the opposite lateral edges to different angles
+respectively above and below a horizontal plane since the normal
+planes of the bodies of the aeroplanes are inclined to the
+horizontal when the machine is in flight, said inclination being
+downward from front to rear, and while the forward corners on one
+side of the machine may be depressed below the normal planes of
+the bodies of the aeroplanes said depression is not necessarily
+sufficient to carry them below the horizontal planes passing
+through the rear corners on that side. Moreover, although we
+prefer to so construct the apparatus that the movements of the
+lateral margins on the opposite sides of the machine are equal in
+extent and opposite m direction, yet our invention is not limited
+to a construction producing this result, since it may be
+desirable under certain circumstances to move the lateral margins
+on one side of the machine just described without moving the
+lateral margins on the other side of the machine to an equal
+extent in the opposite direction. Turning now to the purpose of
+this provision for moving the lateral margins of the aeroplanes
+in the manner described, it should be premised that owing to
+various conditions of wind pressure and other causes the body of
+the machine is apt to become unbalanced laterally, one side
+tending to sink and the other side tending to rise, the machine
+turning around its central longitudinal axis. The provision
+which we have just described enables the operator to meet this
+difficulty and preserve the lateral balance of the machine.
+Assuming that for some cause that side of the machine which lies
+to the left of the observer in Figs. 1 and 2 has shown a
+tendency to drop downward, a movement of the cradle 18 to the
+right of said figures, as herein before assumed, will move the
+lateral margins of the aeroplanes in the manner already
+described, so that the margins ad and eh will be inclined
+downward and rearward, and the lateral margins bc and fg will be
+inclined upward and rearward with respect to the normal planes
+of the bodies of the aeroplanes. With the parts of the machine
+in this position it will be seen that the lateral margins ad
+and eh present a larger angle of incidence to the resisting
+air, while the lateral margins on the other side of the machine
+present a smaller angle of incidence. Owing to this fact, the
+side of the machine presenting the larger angle of incidence
+will tend to lift or move upward, and this upward movement will
+restore the lateral balance of the machine. When the other side
+of the machine tends to drop, a movement of the cradle 18 in the
+reverse direction will restore the machine to its normal lateral
+equilibrium. Of course, the same effect will be produced in the
+same way in the case of a machine employing only a single
+aeroplane.
+
+In connection with the body of the machine as thus operated we
+employ a vertical rudder or tail 22, so supported as to turn
+around a vertical axis. This rudder is supported at the rear
+ends on supports or arms 23, pivoted at their forward ends to
+the rear margins of the upper and lower aeroplanes, respectively.
+These supports are preferably V-shaped, as shown, so that their
+forward ends are comparatively widely separated, their pivots
+being indicated at 24. Said supports are free to swing upward at
+their free rear ends, as indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 3,
+their downward movement being limited in any suitable manner.
+The vertical pivots of the rudder 22 are indicated at 25, and one
+of these pivots has mounted thereon a sheave or pulley 26, around
+which passes a tiller-rope 27, the ends of which are extended out
+laterally and secured to the rope 19 on opposite sides of the
+central point of said rope. By reason of this construction the
+lateral shifting of the cradle 18 serves to turn the rudder to
+one side or the other of the line of flight. It will be observed
+in this connection that the construction is such that the rudder
+will always be so turned as to present its resisting surface on
+that side of the machine on which the lateral margins of the
+aeroplanes present the least angle of resistance. The reason of
+this construction is that when the lateral margins of the
+aeroplanes are so turned in the manner hereinbefore described as
+to present different angles of incidence to the atmosphere, that
+side presenting the largest angle of incidence, although being
+lifted or moved upward in the manner already described, at the
+same time meets with an increased resistance to its forward
+motion, while at the same time the other side of the machine,
+presenting a smaller angle of incidence, meets with less
+resistance to its forward motion and tends to move forward more
+rapidly than the retarded side. This gives the machine a
+tendency to turn around its vertical axis, and this tendency if
+not properly met will not only change the direction of the front
+of the machine, but will ultimately permit one side thereof to
+drop into a position vertically below the other side with the
+aero planes in vertical position, thus causing the machine to
+fall. The movement of the rudder, hereinbefore described,
+prevents this action, since it exerts a retarding influence on
+that side of the machine which tends to move forward too rapidly
+and keeps the machine with its front properly presented to the
+direction of flight and with its body properly balanced around
+its central longitudinal axis. The pivoting of the supports 23
+so as to permit them to swing upward prevents injury to the
+rudder and its supports in case the machine alights at such an
+angle as to cause the rudder to strike the ground first, the
+parts yielding upward, as indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 3,
+and thus preventing injury or breakage. We wish it to be
+understood, however, that we do not limit ourselves to the
+particular description of rudder set forth, the essential being
+that the rudder shall be vertical and shall be so moved as to
+present its resisting surface on that side of the machine which
+offers the least resistance to the atmosphere, so as to
+counteract the tendency of the machine to turn around a vertical
+axis when the two sides thereof offer different resistances to
+the air.
+
+From the central portion of the front of the machine struts 28
+extend horizontally forward from the lower aeroplane, and struts
+29 extend downward and forward from the central portion of the
+upper aeroplane, their front ends being united to the struts 28,
+the forward extremities of which are turned up, as indicated at
+30. These struts 28 and 29 form truss-skids projecting in front
+of the whole frame of the machine and serving to prevent the
+machine from rolling over forward when it alights. The struts 29
+serve to brace the upper portion of the main frame and resist its
+tendency to move forward after the lower aeroplane has been
+stopped by its contact with the earth, thereby relieving the rope
+19 from undue strain, for it will be understood that when the
+machine comes into contact with the earth, further forward
+movement of the lower portion thereof being suddenly arrested,
+the inertia of the upper portion would tend to cause it to
+continue to move forward if not prevented by the struts 29, and
+this forward movement of the upper portion would bring a very
+violent strain upon the rope 19, since it is fastened to the
+upper portion at both of its ends, while its lower portion is
+connected by the guides 20 to the lower portion. The struts 28
+and 29 also serve to support the front or horizontal rudder, the
+construction of which we will now proceed to describe.
+
+The front rudder 31 is a horizontal rudder having a flexible
+body, the same consisting of three stiff crosspieces or sticks
+32, 33, and 34, and the flexible ribs 35, connecting said
+cross-pieces and extending from front to rear. The frame thus
+provided is covered by a suitable fabric stretched over the same
+to form the body of the rudder. The rudder is supported from
+the struts 29 by means of the intermediate cross-piece 32, which
+is located near the centre of pressure slightly in front of a
+line equidistant between the front and rear edges of the rudder,
+the cross-piece 32 forming the pivotal axis of the rudder, so as
+to constitute a balanced rudder. To the front edge of the
+rudder there are connected springs 36 which springs are
+connected to the upturned ends 30 of the struts 28, the
+construction being such that said springs tend to resist any
+movement either upward or downward of the front edge of the
+horizontal rudder. The rear edge of the rudder lies immediately
+in front of the operator and may be operated by him in any
+suitable manner. We have shown a mechanism for this purpose
+comprising a roller or shaft 37, which may be grasped by the
+operator so as to turn the same in either direction. Bands 38
+extend from the roller 37 forward to and around a similar roller
+or shaft 39, both rollers or shafts being supported in suitable
+bearings on the struts 28. The forward roller or shaft has
+rearwardly-extending arms 40, which are connected by links 41
+with the rear edge of the rudder 31. The normal position of the
+rudder 31 is neutral or substantially parallel with the
+aeroplanes 1 and 2; but its rear edge may be moved upward or
+downward, so as to be above or below the normal plane of said
+rudder through the mechanism provided for that purpose. It will
+be seen that the springs 36 will resist any tendency of the
+forward edge of the rudder to move in either direction, so that
+when force is applied to the rear edge of said rudder the
+longitudinal ribs 35 bend, and the rudder thus presents a
+concave surface to the action of the wind either above or below
+its normal plane, said surface presenting a small angle of
+incidence at its forward portion and said angle of incidence
+rapidly increasing toward the rear. This greatly increases the
+efficiency of the rudder as compared with a plane surface of
+equal area. By regulating the pressure on the upper and lower
+sides of the rudder through changes of angle and curvature in
+the manner described a turning movement of the main structure
+around its transverse axis may be effected, and the course of
+the machine may thus be directed upward or downward at the will
+of the operator and the longitudinal balance thereof maintained.
+
+Contrary to the usual custom, we place the horizontal rudder in
+front of the aeroplanes at a negative angle and employ no
+horizontal tail at all. By this arrangement we obtain a forward
+surface which is almost entirely free from pressure under
+ordinary conditions of flight, but which even if not moved at
+all from its original position becomes an efficient
+lifting-surface whenever the speed of the machine is
+accidentally reduced very much below the normal, and thus
+largely counteracts that backward travel of the centre of
+pressure on the aeroplanes which has frequently been productive
+of serious injuries by causing the machine to turn downward and
+forward and strike the ground head-on. We are aware that a
+forward horizontal rudder of different construction has been
+used in combination with a supporting surface and a rear
+horizontal-rudder; but this combination was not intended to
+effect and does not effect the object which we obtain by the
+arrangement hereinbefore described.
+
+We have used the term 'aeroplane' in this specification and the
+appended claims to indicate the supporting surface or supporting
+surfaces by means of which the machine is sustained in the air,
+and by this term we wish to be understood as including any
+suitable supporting surface which normally is substantially
+flat, although. Of course, when constructed of cloth or other
+flexible fabric, as we prefer to construct them, these surfaces
+may receive more or less curvature from the resistance of the
+air, as indicated in Fig. 3.
+
+We do not wish to be understood as limiting ourselves strictly
+to the precise details of construction hereinbefore described
+and shown in the accompanying drawings, as it is obvious that
+these details may be modified without departing from the
+principles of our invention. For instance, while we prefer the
+construction illustrated in which each aeroplane is given a
+twist along its entire length in order to set its opposite
+lateral margins at different angles, we have already pointed out
+that our invention is not limited to this form of construction,
+since it is only necessary to move the lateral marginal
+portions, and where these portions alone are moved only those
+upright standards which support the movable portion require
+flexible connections at their ends.
+
+Having thus fully described our invention, what we claim as new,
+and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is:--
+
+1. In a flying machine, a normally flat aeroplane having
+lateral marginal portions capable of movement to different
+positions above or below the normal plane of the body of the
+aeroplane, such movement being about an axis transverse to the
+line of flight, whereby said lateral marginal portions may be
+moved to different angles relatively to the normal plane of the
+body of the aeroplane, so as to present to the atmosphere
+different angles of incidence, and means for so moving said
+lateral marginal portions, substantially as described.
+
+2. In a flying machine, the combination, with two normally
+parallel aeroplanes, superposed the one above the other, of
+upright standards connecting said planes at their margins, the
+connections between the standards and aeroplanes at the lateral
+portions of the aeroplanes being by means of flexible joints,
+each of said aeroplanes having lateral marginal portions capable
+of movement to different positions above or below the normal
+plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being about an
+axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said lateral
+marginal portions may be moved to different angles relatively to
+the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, so as to present
+to the atmosphere different angles of incidence, the standards
+maintaining a fixed distance between the portions of the
+aeroplanes which they connect, and means for imparting such
+movement to the lateral marginal portions of the aeroplanes,
+substantially as described.
+
+3. In a flying machine, a normally flat aeroplane having
+lateral marginal portions capable of movement to different
+positions above or below the normal plane of the body of the
+aeroplane, such movement being about an axis transverse to the
+line of flight, whereby said lateral marginal portions may be
+moved to different angles relatively to the normal plane of the
+body of the aeroplane, and also to different angles relatively
+to each other, so as to present to the atmosphere different
+angles of incidence, and means for simultaneously imparting such
+movement to said lateral marginal portions, substantially as
+described.
+
+4. In a flying machine, the combination, with parallel
+superposed aeroplanes, each having lateral marginal portions
+capable of movement to different positions above or below the
+normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, such movement being
+about an axis transverse to the line of flight, whereby said
+lateral marginal portions may be moved to different angles
+relatively to the normal plane of the body of the aeroplane, and
+to different angles relatively to each other, so as to present
+to the atmosphere different angles of incidence, of uprights
+connecting said aeroplanes at their edges, the uprights
+connecting the lateral portions of the aeroplanes being
+connected with said aeroplanes by flexible joints, and means for
+simultaneously imparting such movement to said lateral marginal
+portions, the standards maintaining a fixed distance between the
+parts which they connect, whereby the lateral portions on the
+same side of the machine are moved to the same angle,
+substantially as described.
+
+5. In a flying machine, an aeroplane having substantially the
+form of a normally flat rectangle elongated transversely to the
+line of flight, in combination which means for imparting to the
+lateral margins of said aeroplane a movement about an axis lying
+in the body of the aeroplane perpendicular to said lateral
+margins, and thereby moving said lateral margins into different
+angular relations to the normal plane of the body of the
+aeroplane, substantially as described.
+
+6. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed
+and normally parallel aeroplanes, each having substantially the
+form of a normally flat rectangle elongated transversely to the
+line of flight, of upright standards connecting the edges of
+said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance, those standards
+at the lateral portions of said aeroplanes being connected
+therewith by flexible joints, and means for simultaneously
+imparting to both lateral margins of both aeroplanes a movement
+about axes which are perpendicular to said margins and in the
+planes of the bodies of the respective aeroplanes, and thereby
+moving the lateral margins on the opposite sides of the machine
+into different angular relations to the normal planes of the
+respective aeroplanes, the margins on the same side of the
+machine moving to the same angle, and the margins on one side of
+the machine moving to an angle different from the angle to which
+the margins on the other side of the machine move, substantially
+as described.
+
+7. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, and
+means for simultaneously moving the lateral portions thereof
+into different angular relations to the normal plane of the body
+of the aeroplane and to each other, so as to present to the
+atmosphere different angles of incidence, of a vertical rudder,
+and means whereby said rudder is caused to present to the wind
+that side thereof nearest the side of the aeroplane having the
+smaller angle of incidence and offering the least resistance to
+the atmosphere, substantially as described.
+
+8. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed
+and normally parallel aeroplanes, upright standards connecting
+the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain their equidistance,
+those standards at the lateral portions of said aeroplanes being
+connected therewith by flexible joints, and means for
+simultaneously moving both lateral portions of both aeroplanes
+into different angular relations to the normal planes of the
+bodies of the respective aeroplanes, the lateral portions on one
+side of the machine being moved to an angle different from that
+to which the lateral portions on the other side of the machine
+are moved, so as to present different angles of incidence at the
+two sides of the machine, of a vertical rudder, and means
+whereby said rudder is caused to present to the wind that side
+thereof nearest the side of the aeroplanes having the smaller
+angle of incidence and offering the least resistance to the
+atmosphere, substantially as described.
+
+9. In a flying machine, an aeroplane normally flat and
+elongated transversely to the line of flight, in combination
+with means for imparting to said aeroplane a helicoidal warp
+around an axis transverse to the line of flight and extending
+centrally along the body aeroplane in the direction of the
+elongation aeroplane, substantially as described.
+
+10. In a flying machine, two aeroplanes, each normally flat and
+elongated transversely to the line of flight, and upright
+standards connecting the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain
+their equidistance, the connections between said standards and
+aeroplanes being by means of flexible joints, in combination
+with means for simultaneously imparting to each of said
+aeroplanes a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse to the
+line of flight and extending centrally along the body of the
+aeroplane in the direction of the aeroplane, substantially as
+described.
+
+11. In a flying machine, two aeroplanes, each normally flat
+and elongated transversely to the line of flight, and upright
+standards connecting the edges of said aeroplanes to maintain
+their equidistance, the connections between such standards and
+aeroplanes being by means of flexible joints, in combination
+with means for simultaneously imparting to each of said
+aeroplanes a helicoidal warp around an axis transverse to the
+line of flight and extending centrally along the body of the
+aeroplane in the direction of the elongation of the
+aeroplane, a vertical rudder, and means whereby said rudder is
+caused to present to the wind that side thereof nearest the side
+of the aeroplanes having the smaller angle of incidence and
+offering the least resistance to the atmosphere, substantially
+as described.
+
+12. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, of
+a normally flat and substantially horizontal flexible rudder,
+and means for curving said rudder rearwardly and upwardly or
+rearwardly and downwardly with respect to its normal plane,
+substantially as described.
+
+13. In a flying machine, the combination, with an aeroplane, of
+a normally flat and substantially horizontal flexible rudder
+pivotally mounted on an axis transverse to the line of flight
+near its centre, springs resisting vertical movement of the
+front edge of said rudder, and means for moving the rear edge of
+said rudder, above or below the normal plane thereof,
+substantially as described.
+
+14. A flying machine comprising superposed connected aeroplanes
+means for moving the opposite lateral portions of said
+aeroplanes to different angles to the normal planes thereof, a
+vertical rudder, means for moving said vertical rudder toward
+that side of the machine presenting the smaller angle of
+incidence and the least resistance to the atmosphere, and a
+horizontal rudder provided with means for presenting its upper
+or under surface to the resistance of the atmosphere,
+substantially as described.
+
+15. A flying machine comprising superposed connected
+aeroplanes, means for moving the opposite lateral portions of
+said aeroplanes to different angles to the normal planes
+thereof, a vertical rudder, means for moving said vertical
+rudder toward that side of the machine presenting the smaller
+angle of incidence and the least resistance to the atmosphere,
+and a horizontal rudder provided with means for presenting its
+upper or under surface to the resistance of the atmosphere, said
+vertical rudder being located at the rear of the machine and
+said horizontal rudder at the front of the machine,
+substantially as described.
+
+16. In a flying machine, the combination, with two superposed
+and connected aeroplanes, of an arm extending rearward from each
+aeroplane, said arms being parallel and free to swing upward at
+their rear ends, and a vertical rudder pivotally mounted in the
+rear ends of said arms, substantially as described.
+
+17. A flying machine comprising two superposed aeroplanes,
+normally flat but flexible, upright standards connecting the
+margins of said aeroplanes, said standards being connected to
+said aeroplanes by universal joints, diagonal stay-wires
+connecting the opposite ends of the adjacent standards, a rope
+extending along the front edge of the lower aeroplane, passing
+through guides at the front corners thereof, and having its ends
+secured to the rear corners of the upper aeroplane, and a rope
+extending along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, passing
+through guides at the rear corners thereof, and having its ends
+secured to the front corners of the upper aeroplane,
+substantially as described.
+
+18. A flying machine comprising two superposed aeroplanes,
+normally flat but flexible, upright standards connecting the
+margins of said aeroplanes, said standards being connected to
+said aeroplanes by universal joints, diagonal stay-wires
+connecting the opposite ends of the adjacent standards, a rope
+extending along the front edge of the lower aeroplane, passing
+through guides at the front corners thereof, and having its ends
+secured to the rear corners of the upper aeroplane, and a rope
+extending along the rear edge of the lower aeroplane, passing
+through guides at the rear corners thereof, and having its ends
+secured to the front corners of the upper aeroplane, in
+combination with a vertical rudder, and a tiller-rope connecting
+said rudder with the rope extending along the rear edge of the
+lower aeroplane, substantially as described.
+ ORVILLE WRIGHT.
+ WILBUR WRIGHT.
+Witnesses:
+Chas. E. Taylor.
+E. Earle Forrer.
+
+
+
+ APPENDIX C
+
+Proclamation published by the French Government on balloon
+ascents, 1783.
+
+ NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC! PARIS, 27TH AUGUST, 1783.
+
+On the Ascent of balloons or globes in the air. The one
+in question has been raised in Paris this day, 27th August,
+1783, at 5 p.m., in the Champ de Mars.
+
+A Discovery has been made, which the Government deems it right to
+make known, so that alarm be not occasioned to the people.
+
+On calculating the different weights of hot air, hydrogen gas,
+and common air, it has been found that a balloon filled with
+either of the two former will rise toward heaven till it is in
+equilibrium with the surrounding air, which may not happen until
+it has attained a great height.
+
+The first experiment was made at Annonay, in Vivarais, MM.
+Montgolfier, the inventors; a globe formed of canvas and paper,
+105 feet in circumference, filled with heated air, reached an
+uncalculated height. The same experiment has just been renewed
+in Paris before a great crowd. A globe of taffetas or light
+canvas covered by elastic gum and filled with inflammable air,
+has risen from the Champ de Mars, and been lost to view in the
+clouds, being borne in a north-westerly direction. One cannot
+foresee where it will descend.
+
+It is proposed to repeat these experiments on a larger scale.
+Any one who shall see in the sky such a globe, which resembles
+'la lune obscurcie,' should be aware that, far from being an
+alarming phenomenon, it is only a machine that cannot possibly
+cause any harm, and which will some day prove serviceable to the
+wants of society.
+
+(Signed) DE SAUVIGNY.
+LENOIR.
+
+
+
+
+
+End Project Gutenberg Etext of A History of Aeronautics
+
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