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 6 of 7)
The airplane will look like a Wright Flyer, and will have most of its flight characteristics. It will be, Culick says, “not what you’d call a safe plane, but not as unsafe as the Wrights found out themselves.”
Today, the original 1903 Wright Flyer floats silently above the entry of the National Air and Space Museum keeping its secrets. The white muslin-covered wings and fragile-looking wooden spars barely seem to support the mannequin lying on the lower wing. Millions of visitors have looked at this symbol of craftsmanship, courage, and ingenuity with admiration and awe.
But Ken Hyde, Rick Young, and the engineers of AIAA see instead a confusing puzzle of wrong fittings, misplaced nail holes, uneven struts, a faulty elevator, and two-piece wing ribs. The questions that it raises are maddening. We know that it flew, but the details are a mystery that may never be solved. Perhaps that is the best monument to the genius of Wilbur and Orville Wright.
Sidebar: More Flyers
To celebrate the centennial of powered flight next year, more than 25 Wright Flyer replicas, built to varying degrees of accuracy and airworthiness, will be hung in lobbies and paraded through towns. A select few will even fly with some brave pilot in the hip cradle.
Master woodworker and pilot Nick Engler of West Milton, Ohio, re-created all of the Wrights’ gliders under the auspices of his nonprofit business, the Wright Aeroplane Company, before attempting the 1903 Flyer this year. He’s also working on a reproduction of the 1905 model. He plans to fly all the aircraft at an airshow in Dayton, Ohio, in July.
In a piece of derringdo that the Wrights would have admired, Lieutenant Commander Klas Ohman, a pilot for the U.S. Navy, will fly Engler’s 1903 replica off the deck of the USS Kitty Hawk in Tokyo harbor this winter. The aircraft carrier will be underway to simulate the wind conditions that the original needed in order to fly.
Dana Smith, a pilot and restorer in Limerick, Maine, who ran an aviation maintenance technicians school for 25 years, bypassed the 1903 aircraft for what he calls “safer, more stable” designs. He has been flying his replica of a Wrights’ 1909 airplane for four years and has built three other models, including the Wright Model R, which in 1910 could fly 70 mph. He will fly several this May at the Festival of Flight in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
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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