Early flight

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This article is a listing of primarily pre-20th century flying machines and work, and an analysis of the debates over early flying machines. The goal is to examine the properties of flying machines, and to list the claims to allow a proper analysis of all the early flying machines. Heavier than air flying machines are included, as lighter than air machines are subject to much less controversy.

Contents

[edit] Theories

Early attempts at flight are the subject of much debate, both for the often sketchy details of machines and people that have vanished away in time and perhaps as a matter of pride for some given group, like a country. The main focus is the attempts at gliders and powered aircraft in the decades before and soon after the Wright Flyer. Ancient flying machines, gliders, or balloons if they existed are not generally known about or recorded at any level of accepted validity. The first verifiable attempt at controlled flight took place in the 9th century.

In 875, at an age of 65 years, Abbas Ibn Firnas (Armen Firman) built his own hang glider, and launched himself from the Mount of the Bride (Jabal al-'arus) in the Rusafa Area, near Córdoba. The flight was largely successful, and was widely observed by a crowd that he had invited. However, the landing was bad. He injured his back, and left critics saying he hadn't taken proper account of the way birds pull up into a stall, and land on their tails. He'd provided neither a tail, nor means for such a maneuver. He died twelve years later.

"Ibn Firnas was the first man in history to make a scientific attempt at flying."

Philip Hitti, History of the Arabs

Along with many inventions developed during the Industrial revolution, such as the steam engine, flying machines followed a slow process of study and analysis by various people but culminated in a pivotal design. Following this pivotal design, development continues but with the benefit of some new breakthrough or a slightly new direction. Who receives the award for a specific achievement can be difficult to decide with some developments due to the nature of what was developed, the definition of the award, and veracity of claims. Also, if something was invented independently by different people, conflict can arise as well.

The various benchmarks awarded to flying machines are especially vulnerable to all these.

[edit] Veracity of claims

Early flying machines, such those that predated the development of practical photography are often doubted for lack of proof, and ancient machines are almost entirely dismissed for a lack of credibility. Recreations or claims made long after events can add confusion to even the more straightforward cases. The number and quality of witnesses is also often analyzed. Various governments and other organisations will often only give some claims a 'official' approval in attempt to elevate one attempt over another, usually in the interest of a national or cultural pride, or in order to set themselves up as technical and historical authority figures. A great deal of disinformation and revisions can take place as well with some claims, both from individuals and governments, to adjust the level of importance of some respective claims.

[edit] Definition of the title

It can be especially rough for more general titles falling prey to technical definitions versus common usage, or differences between languages. More general titles can be favoured for their greater weight, such as a title like 'Father of flight', but could be greatly debated because of being open to interpretation. On the other hand very specific claims can begin to sound trivial, carry less weight, and in being so specific fall prey to debates over accuracy of the claim. What constitutes the most import criteria for a given award is also a matter of debate in early aircraft. Is the 'oldest ancestor of modern aircraft' the earliest design, the earliest prototype, one that actually flew? The arbitrary nature of many titles will automatically create controversy if its not defined specifically. For example, debates over the tallest building tend to break into debates around what constitutes a building and what is the most important measure of such structures height. In the same way some records of flying machines can come down to the exact definition of what constitutes a fixed-wing aircraft.

[edit] The nature of what was developed

This is an especially important source of controversy for early flying machines. The source of trouble is the transition between what are considered gliders and what are powered aircraft. Just as objects that displace less water than their weight will sink (see buoyancy), objects that displace less than their weight in air sink also. Balloons and other lighter-than-air craft 'fly' by displacing more than their weight in air to rise, but a flying machine must supply an upward force some other way to remain aloft. Supplying this force requires energy, which brings us to the benchmarks given to the various flying machines. With gliders this energy comes out of potential energy of their height as they trade the energy "stored" by their height for lift and forward speed (aside from taking advantage of air currents).

In powered flight, energy comes from fuel stored aboard (or given to) the machine which is turned into lift in some way. For example, in many aircraft gasoline fuels an internal combustion engine which turns a propeller causing forward motion, which in turn allows the wing to generate lift. Also considered to be important is the ability in early flying machines to control where the device goes, very important for making the device practically useful.

[edit] Energy to lift

Anything that falls can trade height for some forward motion, so what becomes very important with powered flying machines is turning stored energy into lift. With a wing, turning forward motion into lift requires turning energy into forward motion or with helicopters directly into lift. The end result requires a moving airfoil to generate an upward force. A good breakpoint for powered flight in design would be if it can not lose altitude or speed in level flight by turning energy into lift. Unfortunately such a device could not take off under its own power(barring numerous complicated exceptions), and such a benchmark would also depends on the conditions of the air, especially the air density. Of course wind conditions can have a big effect as well, with wind from behind extending range and from the front shortening it (for both gliders and powered aircraft).

Also, for example, an engine could be used to build up speed (as could going down a hill) and then forward speed could be traded for lift while maintaining level flight. Other difficulties include a fixed-wing aircraft that derives some lift from attaching itself to lighter than air objects, thus becoming a hybrid. Other matters expand to other facets of claims. Since claims are event based, the veracity of a claim is thought to be capable of being tested by making a recreation of the event. Unfortunately, improvements to a new model can be added or removed, weather condition can vary significantly and even things such as the quality of fuel used can effect a recreation attempt. To make matters worse accurate blueprints are usually difficult to find, and for often the bordline designs small changes can have a big effect. The inability to recreate exactly results in most attempts being of dubious value to the ultimate credibility of a claim, but regardless, a success or a failure can figure heavily in analyzation of a flying machine.

Other issues include a design taking advantage of ground effect which is an aerodynamic effect that adds lift when very close to the ground. If a design is not reported to have risen high enough it is often considered a 'hop', or unsustained leap into the air. Also, starting height, and any additional energy given to aircraft can become a subject of debate. If a motorised design is given energy, and does not demonstrate the ability to climb it may or may not be considered a power flight.

[edit] Conclusion

The end result of all this is that it ends up becoming very complicated giving definitions at the borderline of flying machines that are gliders and flying machines that are powered aircraft. Disputes over important titles, such as 'first powered heavier than air flight' can descend into the particulars of design. More general titles like 'father of aviation' add another layer of complexity by implying a societal effect and an effect on other machines.

Many of titles given to various claims vary from country to county, and indeed among various references and encyclopedias - that all use different criteria when considering the validity of a claim, the meaning of the title used, and all the other issues mentioned above. Various advancements are presented here, mostly prototype machines and also some important pieces of literature.

[edit] Table of flying machines

Literature, Designs only:

Designer/Maker Title or specialty Year Status/Description
Roger Bacon Secrets of Art and Nature c. 1250 (ornithopter design)
Leonardo da Vinci The Ornithopter c. 1490 (design, literature)
Emanuel Swedenborg Flying Machine 1714 (design, literature)
Sir George Cayley The Forces of Flight 1799 (technical literature)
William Samuel Henson The Aerial Steam Carriage 1842 Design, publicity illustrations
Le Comte Ferdinand Charles Honore Phillipe d'Esterno On The Flight Of Birds (Du Vol des Oiseaux) 1864 (technical literature)
Louis Pierre Mouillard The Empire Of The Air(L'Empire de L'Air) 1865 (literature)
Horatio Frederick Phillips Sustainers 1884 -1907 (design literature)
James Means The Problem of Manflight ,Aeronautical Annual 1894 - 1897 (literature)
Martin Wiberg "Luftmaskin" 1903 Received a patent for a design powered by a liquid fuel rocket powered machine

[edit] More than design or literature:

Designer/Maker Machine name/description Year Claimed Achieved
John Childs Unnamed Flying Device 1757 Three successful flights in two days
John Stringfellow The Stringfellow Machines 1848, 1868
Sir George Cayley Cayley Gliders(prototypes) 1849-1853
Rufus Porter The New York to California Aerial Transport 1849
Jean Marie Le Bris The Artificial Albatross 1857, 1867
Felix and Louis du Temple de la Croix Temple Steam Powered Monoplane(prototype) 1857 - 1877
James William Butler and Edmund Edwards The Steam-Jet Dart 1865
Francis Herbert Wenham Wenham's Aerial Locomotion 1866
Jan Wnęk glider 1866-1869 Controlled flights from local church tower
Frederick Marriott Marriott flying machines 1869
Alphonse Penaud The Planophore, The Penaud Toy Helicopter 1871
Thomas Moy The Moy Aerial Steamer, 1875
Thomas Moy The Military Kite 1879
Charles F. Ritchel Ritchel Hand-powered Airship 1878
Victor Tatin Tatin flying machines 1879
J. B. Biot The Biot Kite 1880
Alexandre Goupil Goupi Monoplane,La Locomotion Aerienne 1883
John Joseph Montgomery Montgomery Monoplane and Tandem-Wing Gliders 1883 to 1911
Aleksandr Fyodorovich Mozhaiski The Mozhaiski Monoplane 1884
Massia and Biot The Massia-Biot Glider 1887
Pichancourt Mechanical Birds 1889
Lawrence Hargrave Hargave flying machines and Box Kites 1889 to 1893
Clement Ader The Ader Bats 1890 - 1897
Chuhachi Ninomiya The Tamamushi(model) 1891
Otto Lilienthal Lilienthal Gliders 1891 - 1896
Horatio Phillips Phillips Flying Machine 1893, 1906
Hiram Stevens Maxim The Maxim Biplane 1894
Pablo Suarez The Suarez Glider 1895
Percy Sinclair Pilcher The Hawk 1896
Octave Chanute and Augustus Herring Chanute and Herring Gliding Machines 1896
William Paul Butusov Albatross Soaring Machine 1896
Samuel Pierpont Langley Langley Aerodrome, unmanned, steam-powered. 1896 5000 ft. (1.7km)
William Frost The Frost Airship Glider 1896
Carl Rickard Nyberg Flugan 1897 and on Just some hops
Edson F. Gallaudet The Gallaudet Wing Warping Kite 1898
Lyman Wiswell Gilmore, Jr. The Gilmore Monoplane, steam driven 1898 Too little info
Gustave Whitehead monoplane with pilot and passenger, steam powered 1899 Flew 500m, crash
Wilhelm Kress The Kress Waterborne Aeroplane 1901 Long hops
Gustave Whitehead The Whitehead Albatross, glider 1901
Gustave Whitehead No. 21, 20hp motor 1901 800m, 4 flights
Gustave Whitehead No. 22, 40 hp motor 1902 Flew 10 km circle
Richard William Pearse The Pearse Monoplane 1903 150m, unstable
Wright Brothers Wright Flyer 1903 Four flights, longest 260m, 59s, controlled
Karl Jatho The Jatho Biplane 1903 70m, unstable
Guido Dinelli Dinelli Glider, The Aereoplano 1903 70 m, no motor
Wilbur Wright Wright Flyer III 1905 24 miles (39km)
Louis Blériot&Gabriel Voisin Blériot-Voisin floatplane glider, biplane 1905 Towed up, 600m
Alberto Santos-Dumont 14-bis 1906 200m, 21s
Jacob Ellehammer Second European monoplane, helicopter 1906, 1912
Traian Vuia Vuia I, Vuia II monoplanes 1906-1907
Louis Blériot Blériot XI 1909 Crossed the English Channel, 23 miles (37km)
Glenn H. Curtiss June Bug; Curtiss is sometimes called the father of US aviation industry 1908 First official 1 km U.S. flight
Aerial Experiment Association (A.E.A) Silver Dart 1909 First controlled powered flight in Canada
Edvard Rusjan EDA 1 1909
Ivan Sarić Sarić 1 1910
Duigan Brothers Duigan Pusher Biplane 1910


To bring some order into this we can divide it up into:

The era of development of gliders and ballons, until 1900. In practical use into modern times.

[edit] Heavier than air

Some important names from the development of the airplane:

Samuel Pierpont Langley, 1896

Gustave Whitehead, 1897-1902

Wright Brothers, 1903-1909

Alberto Santos-Dumont, 1906

Glen Curtiss, US aviation industry starts 1908-1930

In other countries the airplane was developed by other people, from around 1906, after the basic design of an airplane had been formulated and had become known all over the world. Bleriot published a design of a well working airplane and thousands were built all over the world.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links