In Search of the Real Wright Flyer
Building a replica of the first airplane requires a certain resourcefulness. Anybody got any horsehide glue?
- By Phaedra Hise
- Air & Space magazine, January 2003
Occupying the exalted position reserved for research aircraft, Ken Hyde’s 1902 glider replica undergoes tests in a wind tunnel at NASA’s Langley center in Virginia.
Jeff Caplan/NASA Research Center
(Page 5 of 7)
Like the Wrights, Kellett first built and flew replicas of the 1900 and 1902 Wright gliders. That training is important to success in the Flyer, says Rick Young, who has built and flown reproductions of every Wright glider. “There are things that you wouldn’t discover on a simulator because you don’t have the static and inertia component…of attitudes and acceleration.” In simpler words, you’re not really moving when you’re in the simulator chair. Hyde’s team will also train on his 1902 glider. “That’s where the Wrights got all their training from, and there’s really no substitute,” he says.
Kellett now builds and restores airplanes for Kermit Weeks’ Fantasy of Flight Museum in Polk City, Florida. He spent nearly a year and $3,000 building his Flyer in the mid-1970s. The main challenge in creating an accurate reproduction, he remembers, was to make the thing as rough as the original. “Ken Hyde does exquisite work,” Kellett says. “But the undercarriage nails on the original are hammered over on the backside. I want to see him do that, bang a nail through there and smash it flat on the other side. I couldn’t bring myself to do it. I can’t make an airplane that crude. People would slam my work.”
Kellett built his two-part ribs according to the blueprints because he hadn’t seen Orville’s sketch. He dismisses the wing rib as the least interesting problem the airplane poses. He found something else to obsess about. “Everyone wants to take one tiny thing and microscope it,” he says. “My microscope was on the canard assembly.” The two-surface elevator on the front of the Flyer “physically will not take the movement it is supposed to do,” he found. “The geometry doesn’t work.” Kellett’s elevator “binds up,” he says, instead of moving smoothly. In 1985, Kellett was invited to visit the National Air and Space Museum during its conservation of the 1903 Flyer. He manipulated the original elevator controls, he says, and found that they bound up the same way.
Wright experts don’t consider Kellett’s Flyer absolutely accurate because he made modifications to the airframe and his engine is lighter and more powerful than the original. Kellett argues that the modifications fall into the gray area every builder will have to negotiate, and that between his greater body weight and his running the engine at lower rpm, he came close to matching the Flyer performance. Accurate or not, Kellett has logged 23 flights in his, for a total of four minutes (the Wrights had just over a minute between them). “This plane is unstable,” he warns. “Once it comes off the track, it’s going to do what it wants to do.”
Fred Culick agrees, and as the first pilot in line to fly the AIAA model, he’s taking steps to minimize the risk. The AIAA team has studied data from wind tunnel tests of two subscale models built in 1980 and a full-scale airframe replica built in 1999. The team won’t fly that one, however. “The airplane is very seriously unstable in pitch and roll, very unstable directionally,” Culick says. “Well, we’re making a few changes.”
Jack Cherne, a longtime aerospace engineer and the AIAA Wright project director, explains that the team is changing the airfoil shape slightly, and adding more power in response to the wind tunnel results. The 40-horsepower engine contrasts sharply with the 10 to 12 horsepower that the Wrights’ engine generated, so they must beef up the airframe. “We’re making sure the plane can handle the added power,” Cherne says.
The AIAA team isn’t bothered by the accuracy of details. The members are not obsessing about horsepower, or finding the definitive strut placement or determining the exact bracket weight. “Those aren’t the problems the Wrights were obsessed with,” says Culick. They wanted to get an airplane into the air and fly it, he says, and that is exactly what AIAA plans to do.
Cherne points out that the team hopes to fly its Flyer regularly at airshows. “The idea is to give the impressions of the first flight,” Culick says. “Take off, fly low, land safely, don’t bust the airplane. For that you’re not going to worry about a quarterinch on the length of a strut.”
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Comments (2)
Recent unsuccessful attempts to fly the powered Wright Flyer demonstrate the gulf which exists bvetween the thinking of the Wright Brothers and that of 'modern' aviator and engineers. Their aircraft have been condemned by modern engineers as dangerous and very unstable around the pitching axis.
Were this to have been true, with the original aircraft, how could two men with no previous flying experience have successfully learned to fly then and to have experienced as little trouble as they had - including Orvilles crash which killed Lt. Selfridge?
One can ask how it was that the Wrights succeeded where modern pilots and engineers failed in the attempt to fly their aircraft. Maybe, it has to do with the attitude of modern engineers and pilots - something to do with the idea that you no longer have to pay your dues to the great god Experience.
Maybe, it's because the modern replica, built for the 100 year anniversary of the Wrights Historic Flight, did not emerge from the same process that produced the original aircraft - a long, slow, tedious process, during which two events occurred: the evolution of a workable flight concept and through experience the ability to fly the resulting aircraft.
Afterall, they made a zillion little short flights, interspersed with adjustments of the aircraft and aircraft design - each producing a tiny little improvement in both the aircraft performance and the pilot's knowledge and proficiency.
Their attempts at flight were nothing like the crash course program attempted by the Ford Foundation in the attempt to build and fly a Wright Flyer. And, nobody has shown up who was willing to pay the dues needed to make that flight successful.
I guess we are all just too busy and important, today, to walk even 20 yards in the footsteps of the inventors who brought us the things that we now take for granted, whether we understand them (and their inventions) or not. Conrad K. Warren II
Posted by Conrad K. Warren II on April 14,2010 | 11:46 AM
The attempt to fly the replica Wright Flyer on the 100th Anniversary did not, in my opinion fail for any esoteric mind set deficiency of the pilot. Those who were there (including friends with whom I shared the task of building a Wright replica here in Los Angeles) reported that it was raining, there was little or no wind and the replica never even got close to flying speed that day.
Orville and Wilbur had the steady head wind that they had chosen Kitty Hawk for on that historic day. In the absence of that breeze, the short run down the wooden rail did not come close to allowing the replica to reach flying speed.
As someone has said, sometimes a lactating bovine animal is just a cow.
www.timeleft.org
Posted by Wm Haynes on August 3,2010 | 08:55 PM