<h2><SPAN name="wright" id="wright"></SPAN>The Wright Brothers’ Aeroplane</h2>
<p class="center"><em>By Orville and Wilbur Wright</em></p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/first.png" width-obs="100" height-obs="103" alt="First word" title="Though" /></div>
<p class="cap1"><span class="inv">T</span>HOUGH the subject of aerial navigation is generally considered new, it
has occupied the minds of men more or less from the earliest ages. Our
personal interest in it dates from our childhood days. Late in the
autumn of 1878 our father came into the house one evening with some
object partly concealed in his hands, and before we could see what it
was, he tossed it into the air. Instead of falling to the floor, as we
expected, it flew across the room, till it struck the ceiling, where it
fluttered awhile, and finally sank to the floor. It was a little toy,
known to scientists as a “helicoptere,” but which we, with sublime
disregard for science, at once dubbed a “bat.” It was a light frame of
cork and bamboo, covered with paper, which formed two screws, driven in
opposite directions by rubber bands under torsion. A toy so delicate
lasted only a short time in the hands of small boys, but its memory was
abiding.</p>
<p>Several years later we began building these helicopteres for ourselves,
making each one larger than that preceding. But, to our astonishment, we
found that the larger the “bat” the less it flew. We did not know that a
machine having only twice the linear dimensions of another would require
eight times the power. We finally became discouraged, and returned to
kite-flying, a sport to which we had devoted so much attention that we
were regarded as experts. But as we became older we had to give up this
fascinating sport as unbecoming to boys of our ages.</p>
<p>It was not till the news of the sad death of Lilienthal reached America
in the summer of 1896 that we again gave more than passing attention to
the subject of flying. We then studied with great interest Chanute’s
“Progress in Flying Machines,” Langley’s “Experiments in Aerodynamics,”
the “Aeronautical Annuals” of 1905, 1906, and 1907, and several
pamphlets published by the Smithsonian Institution, especially articles
by Lilienthal and extracts from Mouillard’s “Empire of the Air.” The
larger works gave us a good understanding of the nature of the flying
problem, and the difficulties in past attempts to solve it, while
Mouillard and Lilienthal, the great missionaries of the flying cause,
infected us with their own unquenchable enthusiasm, and transformed idle
curiosity into the active zeal of workers.</p>
<p>In the field of aviation there were two schools. The first, represented
by such men as Professor Langley and Sir Hiram Maxim, gave chief
attention to power flight; the second, represented by Lilienthal,
Mouillard, and Chanute, to soaring flight. Our sympathies were with the
latter school, partly from impatience at the wasteful extravagance of
mounting delicate and costly machinery on wings which no one knew how to
manage, and partly, no doubt, from the extraordinary charm and
enthusiasm with which the apostles of soaring flight set forth the
beauties of sailing through the air on fixed wings, deriving the motive
power from the wind itself.</p>
<p>The balancing of a flyer may seem, at first thought, to be a very simple
matter, yet almost every experimenter had found in this one point which
he could not satisfactorily master. Many different methods<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></SPAN></span> were tried.
Some experimenters placed the center of gravity far below the wings, in
the belief that the weight would naturally seek to remain at the lowest
point. It is true, that, like the pendulum, it tended to seek the lowest
point; but also, like the pendulum, it tended to oscillate in a manner
destructive of all stability. A more satisfactory system, especially for
lateral balance, was that of arranging the wings in the shape of a broad
V, to form a dihedral angle, with the center low and the wing-tips
elevated. In theory this was an automatic system, but in practice it had
two serious defects: first, it tended to keep the machine oscillating;
and second, its usefulness was restricted to calm air.</p>
<p>In a slightly modified form the same system was applied to the
fore-and-aft balance. The main aeroplane was set at a positive angle,
and a horizontal tail at a negative angle, while the center of gravity
was placed far forward. As in the case of lateral control, there was a
tendency to constant undulation, and the very forces which caused a
restoration of balance in calms caused a disturbance of the balance in
winds. Notwithstanding the known limitations of this principle, it had
been embodied in almost every prominent flying machine which had been
built.</p>
<p>After considering the practical effect of the dihedral principle, we
reached the conclusion that a flyer founded upon it might be of interest
from a scientific point of view, but could be of no value in a practical
way. We therefore resolved to try a fundamentally different principle.
We would arrange the machine so that it would not tend to right itself.
We would make it as inert as possible to the effects of change of
direction or speed, and thus reduce the effects of wind-gusts to a
minimum. We would do this in the fore-and-aft stability by giving the
aeroplanes a peculiar shape; and in the lateral balance by arching the
surfaces from tip to tip, just the reverse of what our predecessors had
done. Then by some suitable contrivance, actuated by the operator,
forces should be brought into play to regulate the balance.</p>
<p>Lilienthal and Chanute had guided and balanced their machines, by
shifting the weight of the operator’s body. But this method seemed to us
incapable of expansion to meet large conditions, because the weight to
be moved and the distance of possible motion were limited, while the
disturbing forces steadily increased, both with wing area and with wind
velocity. In order to meet the needs of large machines, we wished to
employ some system whereby the operator could vary at will the
inclination of different parts of the wings, and thus obtain from the
wind forces to restore the balance which the wind itself had disturbed.
This could easily be done by using wings capable of being warped, and by
supplementary adjustable surfaces in the shape of rudders. As the forces
obtainable for control would necessarily increase in the same ratio as
the disturbing forces, the method seemed capable of expansion to an
almost unlimited extent. A happy device was discovered whereby the
apparently rigid system of superposed surfaces, invented by Wenham, and
improved by Stringfellow and Chanute, could be warped in a most
unexpected way, so that the aeroplanes could be presented on the right
and left sides at different angles to the wind. This, with an
adjustable, horizontal front rudder, formed the main feature of our
first glider.</p>
<p>The period from 1885 to 1900 was one of unexampled activity in
aeronautics, and for a time there was high hope that the age of flying
was at hand. But Maxim, after spending $100,000, abandoned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></SPAN></span> the work;
the Ader machine, built at the expense of the French Government, was a
failure; Lilienthal and Pilcher were killed in experiments; and Chanute
and many others, from one cause or another, had relaxed their efforts,
though it subsequently became known that Professor Langley was still
secretly at work on a machine for the United States Government. The
public, discouraged by the failures and tragedies just witnessed,
considered flight beyond the reach of man, and classed its adherents
with the inventors of perpetual motion.</p>
<p>We began our active experiments at the close of this period, in October,
1900, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Our machine was designed to be
flown as a kite, with a man on board, in winds from 15 to 20 miles an
hour. But, upon trial, it was found that much stronger winds were
required to lift it. Suitable winds not being plentiful, we found it
necessary, in order to test the new balancing system, to fly the machine
as a kite without a man on board, operating the levers through cords
from the ground. This did not give the practice anticipated, but it
inspired confidence in the new system of balance.</p>
<p>In the summer of 1901 we became personally acquainted with Mr. Chanute.
When he learned that we were interested in flying as a sport, and not
with any expectation of recovering the money we were expending on it, he
gave us much encouragement. At our invitation, he spent several weeks
with us at our camp at Kill Devil Hill, four miles south of Kitty Hawk,
during our experiments of that and the two succeeding years. He also
witnessed one flight of the power machine near Dayton, Ohio, in October,
1904.</p>
<p>The machine of 1901 was built with the shape of surface used by
Lilienthal, curved from front to rear like the segment of a parabola,
with a curvature <span class="frac"><sup>1</sup>/<sub>12</sub></span> the depth of its cord; but to make doubly sure
that it would have sufficient lifting capacity when flown as a kite in
15 or 20-mile winds, we increased the area from 165 square feet, used in
1900, to 308 square feet—a size much larger than Lilienthal, Pilcher,
or Chanute had deemed safe. Upon trial, however, the lifting capacity
again fell very far short of calculation, so that the idea of securing
practice while flying as a kite had to be abandoned. Mr. Chanute, who
witnessed the experiments, told us that the trouble was not due to poor
construction of the machine. We saw only one other explanation—that the
tables of air-pressures in general use were incorrect.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i003b.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="241" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>We then turned to gliding—coasting downhill on the air—as the only
method of getting the desired practice in balancing a machine. After a
few minutes’ practice we were able to make glides of over 300 feet, and
in a few days were safely operating in 27-mile winds. In these
experiments we met with several unexpected phenomena. We found that,
contrary to the teachings of the books, the center of pressure on a
curved surface traveled backward when the surface was inclined, at small
angles, more and more edgewise to the wind. We also discovered that in
free flight, when the wing on one side of the machine was presented to
the wind at a greater angle than the one on the other side, the wing
with the greater angle descended, and the machine turned in a direction
just the reverse of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></SPAN></span> what we were led to expect when flying the machine
as a kite. The larger angle gave more resistance to forward motion, and
reduced the speed of the wing on that side. The decrease in speed more
than counterbalanced the effect of the larger angle. The addition of a
fixed vertical vane in the rear increased the trouble, and made the
machine absolutely dangerous. It was some time before a remedy was
discovered. This consisted of movable rudders working in conjunction
with the twisting of the wings. The details of this arrangement are
given in specifications published several years ago.</p>
<p>The experiments of 1901 were far from encouraging. Although Mr. Chanute
assured us that, both in control and in weight carried per horse-power,
the results obtained were better than those of any of our predecessors,
yet we saw that the calculations upon which all flying machines had been
based were unreliable, and that all were simply groping in the dark.
Having set out with absolute faith in the existing scientific data, we
were driven to doubt one thing after another, till finally, after two
years of experiment, we cast it all aside, and decided to rely entirely
upon our own investigations. Truth and error were everywhere so
intimately mixed as to be undistinguishable. Nevertheless, the time
expended in preliminary study of books was not misspent, for they gave
us a good general understanding of the subject, and enabled us at the
outset to avoid effort in many directions in which results would have
been hopeless.</p>
<p>The standard measurements of wind-pressures is the force produced by a
current of air of one mile per hour velocity striking square against a
plane of one square foot area. The practical difficulties of obtaining
an exact measurement of this force have been great. The measurements by
different recognized authorities vary 50 per cent. When this simplest of
measurements presents so great difficulties, what shall be said of the
troubles encountered by those who attempt to find the pressure at each
angle as the plane is inclined more and more edgewise to the wind? In
the eighteenth century the French Academy prepared tables giving such
information, and at a later date the Aeronautical Society of Great
Britain made similar experiments. Many persons likewise published
measurements and formulas; but the results were so discordant that
Professor Langley undertook a new series of measurements, the results of
which form the basis of his celebrated work, “Experiments in
Aerodynamics.” Yet a critical examination of the data upon which he
based his conclusions as to the pressures at small angles shows results
so various as to make many of his conclusions little better than
guesswork.</p>
<p>To work intelligently, one needs to know the effects of a multitude of
variations that could be incorporated in the surfaces of flying
machines. The pressures on squares are different from those on
rectangles, circles, triangles, or ellipses; arched surfaces differ from
planes, and vary among themselves according to the depth of curvature;
true arcs differ from parabolas, and the latter differ among themselves;
thick surfaces differ from thin, and surfaces thicker in one place than
another vary in pressure when the positions of maximum thickness are
different; some surfaces are most efficient at one angle, others at
other angles. The shape of the edge also makes a difference, so that
thousands of combinations are possible in so simple a thing as a wing.</p>
<p>We had taken up aeronautics merely as a sport. We reluctantly entered
upon the scientific side of it. But we soon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></SPAN></span> found the work so
fascinating that we were drawn into it deeper and deeper. Two testing
machines were built, which we believed would avoid the errors to which
the measurements of others had been subject. After making preliminary
measurements on a great number of different-shaped surfaces, to secure a
general understanding of the subject, we began systematic measurements
of standard surfaces, so varied in design as to bring out the underlying
causes of differences noted in their pressures. Measurements were
tabulated on nearly 50 of these at all angles from zero to 45 degrees at
intervals of 2<span class="frac"><sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub></span> degrees. Measurements were also secured showing the
effects on each other when surfaces are superposed, or when they follow
one another.</p>
<p>Some strange results were obtained. One surface, with a heavy roll at
the front edge, showed the same lift for all angles from 7<span class="frac"><sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub></span> to 45
degrees. A square plane, contrary to the measurements of all our
predecessors, gave a greater pressure at 30 degrees than at 45 degrees.
This seemed so anomalous that we were almost ready to doubt our own
measurements, when a simple test was suggested. A weather-vane, with two
planes attached to the pointer at an angle of 80 degrees with each
other, was made. According to our tables, such a vane would be in
unstable equilibrium when pointing directly into the wind; for if by
chance the wind should happen to strike one plane at 39 degrees and the
other at 41 degrees, the plane with the smaller angle would have the
greater pressure, and the pointer would be turned still farther out of
the course of the wind until the two vanes again secured equal
pressures, which would be at approximately 30 and 50 degrees. But the
vane performed in this very manner. Further corroboration of the tables
was obtained in experiments with the new glider at Kill Devil Hill the
next season.</p>
<p>In September and October, 1902, nearly 1,000 gliding flights were made,
several of which covered distances of over 600 feet. Some, made against
a wind of 36 miles an hour, gave proof of the effectiveness of the
devices for control. With this machine, in the autumn of 1903, we made a
number of flights in which we remained in the air for over a minute,
often soaring for a considerable time in one spot, without any descent
at all. Little wonder that our unscientific assistant should think the
only thing needed to keep it indefinitely in the air would be a coat of
feathers to make it light!</p>
<p>With accurate data for making calculations, and a system of balance
effective in winds as well as in calms, we were now in a position, we
thought, to build a successful power-flyer. The first designs provided
for a total weight of 600 lbs., including the operator and an eight
horse-power motor. But, upon completion, the motor gave more power than
had been estimated, and this allowed 150 lbs. to be added for
strengthening the wings and other parts.</p>
<p>Our tables made the designing of the wings an easy matter, and as
screw-propellers are simply wings traveling in a spiral course, we
anticipated no trouble from this source. We had thought of getting the
theory of the screw-propeller from the marine engineers, and then, by
applying our tables of air-pressures to their formulas, of designing
air-propellers suitable for our purpose. But so far as we could learn,
the marine engineers possessed only empirical formulas, and the exact
action of the screw-propeller, after a century of use, was still very
obscure. As we were not in a position to undertake a long series of
practical experiments to discover a propeller suitable<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></SPAN></span> for our machine,
it seemed necessary to obtain such a thorough understanding of the
theory of its reactions as would enable us to design them from
calculations alone. What at first seemed a problem became more complex
the longer we studied it. With the machine moving forward, the air
flying backward, the propellers turning sidewise, and nothing standing
still, it seemed impossible to find a starting-point from which to trace
the various simultaneous reactions. Contemplation of it was confusing.
After long arguments we often found ourselves in the ludicrous position
of each having been converted to the other’s side, with no more
agreement than when the discussion began.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i006a.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="318" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>It was not till several months had passed, and every phase of the
problem had been thrashed over and over, that the various reactions
began to untangle themselves. When once a clear understanding had been
obtained there was no difficulty in designing suitable propellers, with
proper diameter, pitch, and area of blade, to meet the requirements of
the flyer. High efficiency in a screw-propeller is not dependent upon
any particular or peculiar shape; and there is no such thing as a “best”
screw. A propeller giving a high dynamic efficiency when used upon one
machine may be almost worthless when used upon another. The propeller
should in every case be designed to meet the particular conditions of
the machine to which it is to be applied. Our first propellers, built
entirely from calculation, gave in useful work 66 per cent. of the power
expended. This was about one-third more than had been secured by Maxim
or Langley.</p>
<p>The first flights with the power machine were made on December 17, 1903.
Only five persons besides ourselves were present. These were Messrs.
John T. Daniels, W. S. Dough, and A. D. Etheridge, of the Kill Devil
Life-Saving Station; Mr. W. C. Brinkley, of Manteo; and Mr. John Ward,
of Naghead. Although a general invitation had been extended to the
people living within five or six miles, not many were willing to face
the rigors of a cold December wind in order to see, as they no doubt
thought, another flying machine not fly. The first flight lasted only 12
seconds, a flight very modest compared with that of birds, but it was,
nevertheless, the first in the history of the world in which a machine
carrying a man had raised itself by its own power into the air in free
flight, had sailed forward on a level course without reduction of speed,
and had finally landed without being wrecked. The second and third
flights were a little longer, and the fourth lasted 59 seconds, covering
a distance of 852 feet over the ground against a 20-mile wind.</p>
<p>After the last flight the machine was carried back to camp and set down
in what was thought to be a safe place. But a few minutes later, while
we were engaged in conversation about the flights, a sudden gust of wind
struck the machine, and started to turn it over. All made a rush to stop
it, but we were too late. Mr. Daniels, a giant in stature and strength,
was lifted off his feet, and falling inside, between the surfaces, was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></SPAN></span>
shaken about like a rattle in a box as the machine rolled over and over.
He finally fell out upon the sand with nothing worse than painful
bruises, but the damage to the machine caused a discontinuance of
experiments.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1904, through the kindness of Mr. Torrence Huffman, of
Dayton, Ohio, we were permitted to erect a shed, and to continue
experiments, on what is known as the Huffman Prairie, at Simms Station,
eight miles east of Dayton. The new machine was heavier and stronger,
but similar to the one flown at Kill Devil Hill. When it was ready for
its first trial every newspaper in Dayton was notified, and about a
dozen representatives of the Press were present. Our only request was
that no pictures be taken, and that the reports be unsensational, so as
not to attract crowds to our experiment grounds. There were probably 50
persons altogether on the ground. When preparations had been completed a
wind of only three or four miles was blowing—insufficient for starting
on so short a track—but since many had come a long way to see the
machine in action, an attempt was made. To add to the other difficulty,
the engine refused to work properly. The machine, after running the
length of the track, slid off the end without rising into the air at
all. Several of the newspaper men returned the next day, but were again
disappointed. The engine performed badly, and after a glide of only 60
feet, the machine came to the ground. Further trial was postponed till
the motor could be put in better running condition. The reporters had
now, no doubt, lost confidence in the machine, though their reports, in
kindness, concealed it. Later, when they heard that we were making
flights of several minutes’ duration, knowing that longer flights had
been made with airships, and not knowing any essential difference
between airships and flying machines, they were but little interested.</p>
<p>We had not been flying long in 1904 before we found that the problem of
equilibrium had not as yet been entirely solved. Sometimes, in making a
circle, the machine would turn over sidewise despite anything the
operator could do, although, under the same conditions in ordinary
straight flight, it could have been righted in an instant. In one
flight, in 1905, while circling around a honey locust tree at a height
of about 50 feet, the machine suddenly began to turn up on one wing, and
took a course toward the tree. The operator, not relishing the idea of
landing in a thorn-tree, attempted to reach the ground. The left wing,
however, struck the tree at a height of 10 or 12 feet from the ground
and carried away several branches; but the flight, which had already
covered a distance of six miles, was continued to the starting-point.</p>
<p>The causes of these troubles—too technical for explanation here—were
not entirely overcome till the end of September, 1905. The flights then
rapidly increased in length, till experiments were discontinued after
October 5, on account of the number of people attracted to the field.
Although made on a ground open on every side, and bordered on two sides
by much-traveled thoroughfares, with electric cars passing every hour,
and seen by all the people living in the neighborhood for miles around,
and by several hundred others, yet these flights have been made by some
newspapers the subject of a great “mystery.”</p>
<p>A practical flyer having been finally realized, we spent the years 1906
and 1907 in constructing new machines and in business negotiations. It
was not till May of this year that experiments (discontinued in October,
1905) were resumed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span> at Kill Devil Hill, North Carolina. The recent
flights were made to test the ability of our machine to meet the
requirements of a contract with the United States Government to furnish
a flyer capable of carrying two men and sufficient fuel supplies for a
flight of 125 miles, with a speed of 40 miles an hour. The machine used
in these tests was the same one with which the flights were made at
Simms Station in 1905, though several changes had been made to meet
present requirements. The operator assumed a sitting position, instead
of lying prone, as in 1905, and a seat was added for a passenger. A
larger motor was installed, and radiators and gasoline reservoirs of
larger capacity replaced those previously used. No attempt was made to
make high or long flights.</p>
<p>In order to show the general reader the way in which the machine
operates, let us fancy ourselves ready for the start. The machine is
placed upon a single-rail track facing the wind, and is securely
fastened with a cable. The engine is put in motion, and the propellers
in the rear whir. You take your seat at the center of the machine beside
the operator. He slips the cable, and you shoot forward. An assistant
who has been holding the machine in balance on the rail starts forward
with you, but before you have gone 50 feet the speed is too great for
him, and he lets go. Before reaching the end of the track the operator
moves the front rudder, and the machine lifts from the rail like a kite
supported by the pressure of the air underneath it. The ground under you
is at first a perfect blur, but as you rise the objects become clearer.
At a height of 100 feet you feel hardly any motion at all, except for
the wind which strikes your face. If you did not take the precaution to
fasten your hat before starting, you have probably lost it by this
time. The operator moves a lever: the right wing rises, and the machine
swings about to the left. You make a very short turn, yet you do not
feel the sensation of being thrown from your seat, so often experienced
in automobile and railway travel. You find yourself facing toward the
point from which you started. The objects on the ground now seem to be
moving at much higher speed, though you perceive no change in the
pressure of the wind on your face. You know then that you are traveling
with the wind. When you near the starting-point the operator stops the
motor while still high in the air. The machine coasts down at an oblique
angle to the ground, and after sliding 50 or 100 feet, comes to rest.
Although the machine often lands when traveling at a speed of a mile a
minute, you feel no shock whatever, and cannot, in fact, tell the exact
moment at which it first touched the ground. The motor close beside you
kept up an almost deafening roar during the whole flight, yet in your
excitement you did not notice it till it stopped!</p>
<p>Our experiments have been conducted entirely at our own expense. In the
beginning we had no thought of recovering what we were expending, which
was not great, and was limited to what we could afford in recreation.
Later, when a successful flight had been made with a motor, we gave up
the business in which we were engaged, to devote our entire time and
capital to the development of a machine for practical uses. As soon as
our condition is such that constant attention to business is not
required, we expect to prepare for publication the results of our
laboratory experiments, which alone made an early solution of the flying
problem possible.</p>
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