AEA Cygnet

AEA Cygnet
Role Early experimental aircraft
Manufacturer Aerial Experiment Association
Designer Alexander Graham Bell
First flight 1907-12-06
Retired 1910s
Primary user Aerial Experiment Association
Produced 1907-1912
Number built 4

The Cygnet (or Aerodrome #5) was an extremely unorthodox early Canadian aircraft, with a wall-like "wing" made up of 3,393[1] tetrahedral cells. It was a powered version of the Cygnet tetrahedral kite designed by Dr Alexander Graham Bell in 1907 and built by the newly-founded Aerial Experiment Association.

On December 6, Thomas Selfridge piloted the aircraft as it was towed into the air behind a motorboat, eventually reaching a height of 168 ft (51 m). While demonstrably able to fly as a person-carrying kite, it seemed unpromising as a direction for research into powered flight. It was difficult to control, and was in fact destroyed when it hit the water at the end of the flight.

The following year, a smaller copy of the design was built as the Cygnet II, now equipped with wheeled undercarriage and a Curtiss V-8 engine. Attempts to fly it at Baddeck, Nova Scotia between February 22 and 24 1909 met with failure.

Rebuilt again as the Cygnet III with a more powerful engine, it finally flew on March 1, 1912, at Bras d'Or Lake, Nova Scotia, piloted by John McCurdy.

Contents

Specifications (Cygnet II)

General characteristics

Performance

Specifications (Cygnet III)

General characteristics

Performance

See also

References

Footnotes

See also

Related lists