How It Flies; or, The Conquest of the Air. Richard Ferris

How It Flies; or, The Conquest of the Air - Richard Ferris


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       CLAUDE GRAHAME-WHITE.

       LOUIS PAULHAN.

       CLIFFORD B. HARMON.

       WALTER BROOKINS.

       JOHN B. MOISANT.

       J. ARMSTRONG DREXEL.

       RALPH JOHNSTONE.

       Chapter XIX. CHRONICLE OF AVIATION ACHIEVEMENTS.

       NOTABLE AVIATION RECORDS TO CLOSE OF 1910

       Chapter XX. EXPLANATION OF AERONAUTICAL TERMS.

       A

       B

       C

       D

       E

       F

       G

       H

       K

       L

       M

       N

       O

       P

       R

       S

       T

       U

       V

       W

       THE END

       Table of Contents

      In these pages, by means of simple language and suitable pictures, the author has told the story of the Ships of the Air. He has explained the laws of their flight; sketched their development to the present day; shown how to build the flying machine and the balloon, and how to operate them; recounted what man has done, and what he hopes to do with their aid. In a word, all the essential facts that enter into the Conquest of the Air have been gathered into orderly form, and are here presented to the public.

      We who live to-day have witnessed man’s great achievement; we have seen his dream of ages come true. Man has learned to fly!

      The air which surrounds us, so intangible and so commonplace that it seldom arrests our attention, is in reality a vast, unexplored ocean, fraught with future possibilities. Even now, the pioneers of a countless fleet are hovering above us in the sky, while steadily, surely these wonderful possibilities are unfolded.

      The Publishers take pleasure in acknowledging their indebtedness to the Scientific American for their courtesy in permitting the use of many of the illustrations appearing in this book.

      New York, October 20, 1910.

       Table of Contents

       INTRODUCTORY.

       Table of Contents

      The sudden awakening—Early successes—Influence of the gasoline engine on aeroplanes—On dirigible balloons—Interested inquiry—Some general terms defined.

      In the year 1908 the world awakened suddenly to the realization that at last the centuries of man’s endeavor to fly mechanically had come to successful fruition.

      There had been a little warning. In the late autumn of 1906, Santos-Dumont made a flight of 720 feet in a power-driven machine. There was an exclamation of wonder, a burst of applause—then a relapse into unconcern.

      In August, 1907, Louis Bleriot sped free of the ground for 470 feet; and in November, Santos-Dumont made two flying leaps of barely 500 feet. That was the year’s record, and it excited little comment. It is true that the Wright brothers had been making long flights, but they were in secret. There was no public knowledge of them.

      In 1908 came the revelation. In March, Delagrange flew in a Voisin biplane 453 feet, carrying Farman with him as a passenger. Two weeks later he flew alone nearly 2½ miles. In May he flew nearly 8 miles. In June his best flight was 10½ miles. Bleriot came on the scene again in July with a monoplane, in which he flew 3¾ miles. In September, Delagrange flew 15 miles—in less than 30 minutes. In the same month the Wrights began their wonderful public flights. Wilbur, in France, made records of 41, 46, 62, and 77 miles, while Orville flew from 40 to 50 miles at Fort Myer, Va. Wilbur Wright’s longest flight kept him in the air 2 hours and 20 minutes.

      The goal had been reached—men had achieved the apparently impossible. The whole world was roused to enthusiasm.

      Since then, progress has been phenomenally rapid, urged on by the striving of the inventors, the competition of the aircraft builders, and the contests for records among the pilots.

      By far the largest factor in the triumph of the aeroplane is the improved gasoline engine, designed originally for automobiles. Without this wonderful type of motor, delivering a maximum of power with a minimum of weight, from concentrated fuel, the flying machine would still be resting on the earth.


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