Title: COMMUNICATIONS SKILLS
1Developing Aircraft
2Overview
- Key individuals involved in early aircraft
development - The names and anatomy of period aircraft
- The significance of other American pioneers in
aviation following the Wright brothers
3Quick Write
- Both the Wright Brothers and Glenn Curtiss were
heavily involved with bicycles before taking up
flight. - What similarities do you see between bicycles,
early motorcycles, and early airplanes?
4Key Individuals Involved in Early Aircraft
Development
- In the first decade of the 1900s the Wright
brothers were making aviation history - But other people were also becoming aviation
pioneers
Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institute(Dumont)
Taken from wikipedia.com (Bierot and Rogers)
5Glenn Curtiss
- Thomas Baldwin was looking for a lightweight
engine for his dirigible - He saw how well Curtisss bike engine performed
and asked if he could buy one - Curtiss agreed and tweaked one of his engines for
use in an aircraft - Baldwins aircraft, with a Curtiss engine, was
the first powered dirigible in America
Courtesy of Underwood Underwood/Corbis
6 The Aerial Experiment Association
- Curtiss joined the Aerial Experiment Association
- Alexander Graham Bellbest known as inventor of
the telephoneformed this group - The group made some important design
breakthroughs - First, they built the first American plane
equipped with ailerons
7The Aerial Experiment Association
Courtesy of the Library of Congress
8 Ailerons
- An aileron is a small flap on the wing for
controlling turns - Ailerons replaced the Wright brothers
wing-warping technique - The aileron was a more effective means to move an
aircraft left or right - It also provided lateral balance
- The association introduced ailerons to America
but the idea originated in England
9First Seaplane
- Members of the group also built and flew the
countrys first seaplane - Curtiss would later win the first government
contract with the US Navy for seaplanes
Courtesy of the US Navy
10Curtisss Fame Grows
- He won awards for distance and speed (the
Scientific American trophy and an award at the
Rheims Air Meet in France) - Curtiss opened a flight school in 1910, the same
year the Wright brothers opened their school - Curtisss effect on aviation can still be felt
today
Courtesy of Bettman/Corbis
11Louis Blériot
- French pilot Louis Blériot was the first man to
cross the English Channel in a heavier-than-air
craft - Although Blériot encountered problemshe got lost
and his engine overheatedhe managed to land
safely - The flight took 37 minutes
12Blériot XI
- Blériot built and flew the first powered
monoplane
Courtesy of the Library of Congress
13 Names and Anatomy of Period Aircraft
- Frenchman Robert Esnault-Pelterie was the first
to fully enclose the fuselage and use ailerons - A fuselage is the body of an airplane containing
the crew and passengers (or cargo) - Enclosed cabins protected pilots and passengers
from the wind and rain
14Multiengine Planes
- English brothers Eustace, Howard, and Oswald
Short experimented with adding engines to their
aircraft - A multiengine plane is a plane with more than one
engine - Two (or more) engines upped an aircrafts power,
reliability, and safety
15The Triple Twin
- The Short brothers built the Triple Twin, a
two-engine, three-propeller aircraft, in 1911 - They placed one engine in front of the cockpita
space inside the fuselage where the crew sits - They mounted the second engine behind the cockpit
16Le Grand
- Russian pilot Igor Sikorsky designed a
four-engine aircraft called Le Grand - He flew it on 13 May 1913
- He used four 100-horsepower engines to lift the
92-foot-wingspan airplane
Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institute
17Rotary Engines
- The earliest engines were relatively heavy and
inefficient - One reason was that these early engines used
water as a coolant - Brothers Laurent and Gustav Seguin of France set
out to reduce the motor weight - Their solution? Rotary engines
18Rotary Engines
- Rotary engines used circulating air, rather than
water, as a coolant - The Seguins placed the engines cylinders in a
radial, or round, pattern - They fitted each cylinder with a fin to draw out
the heat as the plane flew - With these changes, engines became more efficient
and their weight dropped
19Helicopters
- Helicopters are different from other aircraft in
two important ways - First, they dont have fixed wingsthey have
rotating wings - Second, they take off and land vertically
Courtesy of Branger/Getty Images
20Helicopters
- The wings of helicopters, like those of other
aircraft, must be in constant motion - Helicopters have rotorsanother name for
propellers - Rotors are made up of blades, each of which acts
as a wing, and as the blades rotate, they lift
the helicopter - Helicopters are also known as rotary-wing
aircraft
21Manned Helicopters
- In 1842 W. H. Phillips got a model helicopter
with a steam engine into the air - In 1907 Frenchman Louis Bréguet flew one, as did
his countryman Paul Cornu - In 1909 Americans Emile and Henry Berliner also
built and piloted a helicopter - All these men faced one common problem
helicopters are difficult to balance - No one would find a solution for 30 years
22American Aviation Pioneers
- While some aircraft pioneers were achieving fame
as inventors, others were breaking barriers as
pilots - Those barriers ranged from distance to altitude
to gender and race - The early 20th century was a time when all kinds
of records could be broken
23The Vin Fiz Flyer
- Could Calbraith Perry Rodgers fly across the
United States in 30 days? That was his goal in
1911 - Newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst was
offering a 50,000 prize - Rodgers asked soft drink manufacturer Vin Fiz if
it would provide financial support for his flight
in exchange for nationwide publicity
24The Vin Fiz Flyer
- Rodgers took off on 17 September 1911 from
Sheepshead Bay on New Yorks Long Island - The plane needed countless repairs and made many
stops along the way - It took 49 daysRodgers didnt win the award
because the flight took too longbut he made
history
25The Vin Fiz Flyer
- Rodgers had earned a place in aviation historyhe
made the first airplane crossing of the US from
coast to coast
Taken from centennialofflight.gov
26 First Enlisted Pilot Gets His Wings
- PFC Vernon Burge was the first enlisted man to
become a pilot - The US Army Signal Corps Aeronautical Division
had a general rule that only officers could be
pilots - Enlisted men trained as mechanics
- Burge was one of eight enlisted men who joined
the division in 1907
27 First Enlisted Pilot Gets His Wings
- Burge helped build a landing system for 1st Lt
Benjamin Foulois airplane - During this time, Burge learned as much as he
could about airplanes - He became a pilot in 1912
- It wasnt until 18 July 1914 that the US House of
Representatives passed a bill that authorized
enlisted men to fly - It also gave official status to the Armys
aviation arm
28Bessie Coleman
- Bessie Coleman faced two obstacles to becoming a
pilother race and her gender she overcame both - In 1921 Coleman became the first black woman to
get a pilots license - She had to go to France for training because no
flight school in the United States would accept
her - She died in an airplane crash only four years
after getting her license
29Blanche Stuart Scott
- Scott was Glenn Curtisss only female student in
1910 - Curtiss worried about thisif Scott crashed, he
feared hed be blamed for putting a woman in
harms way - So Curtiss did what he could to keep Scott from
being able to take off
30Blanche Stuart Scott
- Nonetheless, Scott managed to fly one of
Curtisss planes one day - Scott had become the first American woman to solo
in a fixed-wing airplane
Courtesy of Hill Air Force Museum
31Bessica Medlar Raiche
- Some aviation historians think Bessica Medlar
Raiche was really the first woman to go solo - She made that flight on 13 October 1910
- Raiche never got a license, but flying excited
her - She and her husband, François, formed a
lightweight airplane company called the
French-American Aeroplane Company
32Harriet Quimby
- In 1911, Quimby became the first American woman
to earn her pilots license - She was also the first woman to fly at night
(1911) and to pilot across the English Channel
(1912) - She broke a fashion barrier, too, by designing
and wearing a jumpsuit
Courtesy of the Library of Congress
33Harriet Quimby
- Quimby entered the Boston Air Meet in 1912
- She and her passenger took off over Boston Harbor
in hopes of making a record 58 mph flight over a
body of water - At 5,000 feet, the plane flipped and nosed
downward - Quimby and Willard fell from the plane and
plunged into the watersboth perished
34Matilde Moisant
- On 13 April 1911, Moisant became the second woman
in America to get a pilots license - She won the Rodman Wanamaker Trophy for flying at
an attitude of 2,500 feet - She also a court to acknowledge it was legal to
fly on Sundays - Her brother John Moisant, also a pilot, had died
in a crash in 1910 - His death deeply affected her and on 13 April
1912, she said shed make her last flight the
next day
35Julia Clark
- On 19 May 1912, Julia Clark was the third
American woman to gain her pilots license - Sadly, she was also the first woman pilot to die
in a crash - She learned to fly at the Curtiss Flying School
at North Island in San Diego - After soloing in a Curtiss plane, she joined an
exhibition group - She took a text flight on 17 June 1912 she hit a
tree limb, crashed, and died
36 Katherine and Marjorie Stinson
- Katherine Stinson earned her pilots license on
24 July 1912 - She was the fourth American woman to do so, and
at age 16, she was also the youngest - She would eventually become one of the most
successful women in aviation - Her younger sister, Marjorie, graduated from the
Wright Flying School in August 1914 - When WWI began, the sisters opened a school to
train Americans and Canadians as pilots for the
war
37Review
- The first powered dirigible in America was
equipped with a Glenn Curtiss engine - Louis Blériot was the first man to build and fly
a powered monoplane - A multiengine plane had greater power,
reliability, and safety than a single-engine
plane - Laurent and Gustav Seguin of France invented
rotary engines that used circulating air rather
than water
38Review
- Calbraith Perry Rodgers made the first airplane
crossing of the United States from coast to coast - PFC Vernon Burge was the first enlisted man to
become a pilot - Bessie Coleman became the first black woman to
get a pilots license
39Review
- Blanche Stuart Scott was the first American woman
to solo in a fixed-wing airplane - Harriet Quimby was the first American woman to
earn her pilots license - Bessica Medlar Raiche, Matilde Moisant, Julia
Clark, and Katherine and Marjorie Stinson were
also famous female aviators of the period
40Summary
- Key individuals involved in early aircraft
development - The names and anatomy of period aircraft
- The significance of other American pioneers in
aviation following the Wright brothers
41Next.
- Donedeveloping aircraft
- Nextair power in World War I
Courtesy of the EAA/Jim Koepnick